Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HOTEL BALAJI AND OTHERS ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND ORS. ETC. ETC
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/10/1992
BENCH:
[S. RANGANATHAN, V. RAMASWAMI AND B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, JJ.]
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957:
Section 6-A-Levy of tax on turnover relating to purchase of
certain goods-Nature of tax Neither use tax, consumption tax
nor consignment tax Hence valid.
Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 :
Section 15B r/w Rule 42-E-Levy of purchase tax Nature of tax
on purchase price of raw materials and not on manufactured
products-Not a tax on consignment-Legislature competent to
levy such tax as long as the levy retains the character of
tax on sale-Validity of the provision upheld.
Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act, 1948 :
Section 3-AAAA-Purchase tax-Levy of-Nature of levy-
Legislature-Whether competent to levy such a tax.
Constitution of India, 1950 :
Seventh Schedule-List ll-Entry 54-Sales Tax Acts of Gujarat,
Andhra Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh-Sections: 6-A, 15-B and 3-
AAAA respectively Legislative competence of and validity of
the provisions.
Interpretation of Statutes :
Liberal Construction-To be avoided if it defeats the
manifest object and purpose of the statute-Reasonable
construction to be followed-Where two constructions
possible, the one which sustains constitutionality to be
preferred.
HEADNOTE:
The constitutional validity of S.15B of Gujarat Sales
Tax Act, S.3-AAAA of Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act and S.6A of
the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act was challenged in
the present Appeals, Writ Petitions SLPs and Transferred
case.
S.15-B of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 was
introduced by Amendment Act, 1986. It provided for levy of
additional purchase tax on raw materials purchased by a
manufacturing dealer in case he used the said raw material
for the manufacture of other goods which he despatched to
his own place of business or to his agent’s place of
business outside the State but within India. By the
Amendment Act, 1987, the section was substituted.
Writ Petitions were filed before the High Court
challenging the validity of unamended S.15-B on the ground
that it levied a consignment tax and hence was outside the
competence of State Legislature. During the pendency of the
writ petitions, S.15-B was substituted by an Ordinance.
Subsequently the Gujarat Sales Tax Amendment Act 6 of 1990
was enacted in terms of and replacing the Ordinance. S.15-B
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was given retrospective effect from 1.4.1986, the date on
which it first came into force. In view of the said
Amendment Act, the Writ Petitions came to be dismissed as
infructuous. A fresh batch of Writ Petitions were filed
challenging the validity of substituted S.15-B on the ground
that it continued to be a consignment tax. The High Court
having dismissed the Writ Petitions, the matter has come up
before this Court.
Section 3-AAAA of the U.P. Sales Tax subjected the
purchase Of "goods liable to tax at the point of sale to
the consumer" to purchase tax payable by the purchasing
dealer, in a case where the selling dealer was not liable to
pay the sales tax on such sale. Purchase tax was payable at
the same rate as the sales tax. If, however, the purchasing
dealer resold such goods within the State or in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce, he was not liable to pay
the purchase tax. While the Civil Appeals were pending in
this Court as regards the validity of S.3-AAAA, the High
Court, while deciding some Writ Petitions, applied the ratio
in Good Year and held that section was ultra vires the
legislative competence of the State Legislature. It held
that under the said provision the taxable event was not the
purchase of the goods by the purchasing dealer but the
subsequent event namely use of the said goods in the
manufacture of other goods and their despatch without
effecting a sale within the State of U.P. to a place outside
U.P. To overcome this decision an Ordinance was issued which
was later replaced by the U.P. Sales Tax (Amendment) Act,
1992, the constitutional validity of which has been
challenged before this Court.
In the A.P. Sales Tax Act Section 6-A was inserted by
the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act of 1976
with effect from 1.9.76. The effect was that tax payable at
sale point became tax payable on purchase point in certain
circumstances. Writ Petitions were filed before the High
Court challenging the validity of S.6-A. It was contended
that the notification issued under S.9 of the Act exempted
from tax certain goods which were sought to be taxed under
S.6-A and that S.6-A was in fact a consumption or
consignment tax and hence void. Unable to succeed before
the High Court, the assessees challenged the vires of the
said section before this Court.
Apart from challenging the constitutional validity of
the above-said provisions of the three State Sales Tax Acts,
the correctness of Good Year India Ltd v. State of Haryana,
[1990] 2 SCC 71 which invalidated certain purchase tax
levied by the Haryana and Maharashtra Sales Tax Acts, was
also questioned by the Revenue before this Court.
Dismissing the matters. this Court,
HELD: (By the Court): S.15B of the Gujarat Sales Tax,
1969, S.3AAAA of Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act, 1948 and S.6-A
of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 are intra
vires the powers of the respective State Legislatures and
hence valid. [249-D]
Per B.P Jeevan Reddy, J: (for himself and V. Ramaswami,
J.)
1. The necessity and significance of the delegated
legislation is well-accepted and needs no elaboration. They
cannot travel beyond the purview of the Act. Where the Act
says that Rules on being made be deemed "as if enacted in
this Act", the position may be different. But where the Act
does not say so, the Rules do not become part of the Act.
[212-B, Cl
Halsbury’s Laws of England (3rd. Edn.) Vol. 36,
referred to.
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2. Entry 54 of List 11 of Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution must receive a liberal construction, it being a
legislative entry. The Legislature cannot be confined to
only one form of levy. So long as the levy retains the basic
character of a tax on sale, the Legislature can levy it in
such mode or in such manner as it thinks appropriate, the
well-established principles in such matters being that
reasonable construction should be followed and literal
construction may be avoided if that defeats the manifest
object and purpose of the Act. The Legislature must be
presumed to know its limitations and act within those
limits. Transgression must be clearly established, and is
not to be lightly assumed. [214-H; 215-A, B]
3. A person other than a registered dealer is not
amenable to the discipline of the Sales Tax Act. He cannot
indeed collect any tax and, therefore, will not make over or
pay any tax. This the legislature is justified in presuming.
If, however, in any case it is proved that such person has
paid the tax, the purchasing dealer will get an exemption to
that extent. If a benefit is claimed by the purchasing
dealer, it is for him to prove the fact which enables him to
claim the benefit. That burden cannot be passed on to any
one else. [222-C, D]
4. So far as registered dealers are concerned, all that
the purchasing dealer need to prove is that the said goods
have already been or may be subjected to tax under State Act
or Central Sales Tax Act. On this score, there is no
difficulty for the purchasing dealer. From the bill given by
the selling dealer, the purchasing dealers can prove the
payment. Or he can simply prove, as a matter of law that
the said goods are liable to be taxed under any other
provision of the Act or under the Central Sales Tax Act.
[222-E, F]
GUJARAT SALES TAX ACT/RULES:
5.1. S.15-B of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act read as a
whole, is applicable only to those goods which are used in
the manufacture of other goods. The levy is upon the
purchase price of raw material an not upon the value of the
manufactured products. [214-G, H]
5.2. Rule 14E of Gujarat Sales Tax Rules along with
S.15B of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act provide for set off
etc., in case the manufactured goods are sold within the
State of Gujarat. It no doubt means that set off etc. is not
available if the manufactured goods are disposed of
otherwise than by way of sale or are consigned to
manufacturer’s own depots or to the depots or his agents
outside the State of Gujarat. There is nothing objectionable
in the State doing so. It cannot be said that by reading
Rule 42-E into S.15-B, the levy becomes a consignment tax.
[213-E-F]
Godrej & Boyce Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax,
(1992) 4 J.T.(S.C.) 317 and Andhra Sugars Ltd. & Anr. v The
State of Andhra Pradesh and Anr., 21 S.T.C. 212, relied on.
Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana, [1990] 2 SCC
71, dissented from.
Ramkrishna v. State of Bihar, A.l.R. 1963 S.C.1667,
referred to.
U.P. SALES TAX ACT:
6.1. All that section 3-AAAA of the U.P. Sales Tax Act
prior to its substitution in 1992 provided was; (i) where
the goods liable to tax at the point of sale to the consumer
are sold to a dealer (ii) in circumstances in which no sales
tax is payable by the sellers and (iii) the purchasing
dealer does not re-sell the said purchased goods within the
State or in the course of inter-state trade or commerce (iv)
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the purchasing dealer shall be liable to pay the tax which
would have been payable by the seller. (v) If, however, it
was proved that the said goods have already suffered tax
under section 3-AAAA, no purchase tax was payable under
section 3-AAAA. It is obvious that the section did not
speak of the purchased goods being used in the manufacture
of other goods nor of the manner of disposal or despatch of
such manufactured goods. The only two conditions stipulated
(which conditions are not to be found in the present Section
3-AAAA) were that if the purchased goods are sold within the
State or sold in the course of inter-state trade or
commerce, the tax under it is not payable. This is for the
simple reason that in both the contingencies, the State
would get the revenue (in one case under the State Sales Tax
Act and in the other case, under the Central Sales Tax Act).
The policy of the legislature is not to tax the same goods
twice over. The fact that in a given case, the purchased
goods are consigned by the purchaser to his own depots or
agents outside the State makes no difference to the nature
and character of the tax. By doing so, he cannot escape even
one-time tax upon the goods purchased, which is the policy
of the Legislature. The tax was directed towards ensuring
levy of tax at least on one transaction of sale of the goods
and not towards taxing the consignment of goods purchased or
the products manufactured out of them. [223-G-H; 224-A-D]
6.2. There is no vagueness in the provision viz. sub-
sec.(2) of S.3-AAAA of U.P. Sales Tax Act nor can it be said
that it placed heavy and uncalled- for burden upon the
purchasing dealer or that it is not practicable for the
purchaser to establish that the seller (other than the
registered dealer) has paid the tax or not. [222-B]
6.3. The difficulty has really arisen because of the
attempt to look to the provisions of Section 3-AAAA through
the prism of Goodyear. There is a substantial and
qualitative difference between the language employed in
Section 9 of Haryana Act and Section 13-AA of Bombay Act on
the one hand and in Section 3-AAAA of U.P. Act on the other
(as it stood prior to 1992 Amendment Act or for that matter
as it stands now). These basic differences cannot be
ignored. [1224-E]
Constitutionality of Section 3-AAAA of the U.P. Sales
Tax Act ought to be judged on its own language and so
judged, the Section, both before and after the 1992
Amendment, represents a perfectly valid piece of
legislation. It is relatable to and fully warranted by Entry
54 of List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
[224-F]
Goodyear India Ltd v. State of Haryana, [1990] 2 SCC
71, dissented from.
ANDHRA PRADESH GENERAL SALES TAX ACT/RULES:
7.1. The real object of clauses (i) to (iii) in Section
6-A of the A.P. Sales Tax Act is not to levy a consumption
tax, use tax or consignment tax but only to point out that
thereby the purchasing dealer converts himself into the last
purchaser in the state of such goods. The goods cease to
exist or cease to be available in the State for sale or
purchase attracting tax. In these circumstances, the
purchasing dealer of such goods is taxed, if the seller is
not or cannot be taxed. The tax imposed by S.6-A cannot be
described either as use tax, consumption tax or consignment
tax. It is a purchase tax perfectly warranted by Entry 54
of List-ll of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
[230-G & 231-B]
7.2. While exempting the sale or purchase of any
specified class of goods the Government is empowered to
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specify whether the exemption operates at all points or any
specified points in the series of sales or purchase of
successive dealers. Several notifications have been issued
the Government from time to time exempting certain dealers
or exempting certain goods at the point of sale or
purchase, as the case may be. G.O.Ms. 1091 is one of them.
The exemption is couched in qualified form. Thus, it is not
a general exemption but a qualified one. In the light of the
specific scheme of Section 9 of the A.P. Sales Tax Act and
the language of G.O.Ms No. 1091, the exemption at the point
of sale by a particular category of persons cannot be
construed as operating to exempt the purchase tax under
Section 6-A of the Act, as well, much less in all cases.
[233-B, C]
7.3. Fresh milk was taxable as general goods under
Section 5(l) of the Andhra Pradesh Sales Tax Act before it
was amended by Amendment Act 4 of 1989. After the coming
into force of the said Amendment Act, it falls under
Schedule VII, (which was introduced simultaneously with the
said Amendment Act) aud which takes in all goods other than
those specified in first to sixth Schedules. Milk was
subject to multi-point tax prior to the said Amendment Act
whereas after the said amendment it has become taxable only
at single point namely, point of first sale in the State. If
fresh milk was not at all taxable under the Act, there was
no necessity to issue notifications exempting its sale in
certain situations.[227-C-D]
Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana [1990] 2 SCC
71, dissented from.
RATIO OF GOODYEAR - RECONSIDERATION OF:
8.1. The ingredients of Section 9 of Haryana Sales Tax
Act are: (i) a dealer liable to pay tax under the Act
purchases goods (other than those specified in Schedule B)
from any source in the State and (ii) uses them in the State
in the manufacture of any other goods and (iii) either
disposes of the manufactured goods in any manner otherwise
than by way of sale in the State or despatches the
manufactured to a place outside the State in any manner
otherwise than by way of sale in the course of an inter-
state trade or commerce or in the course of export outside
the territory of India within the meaning of sub-section (1)
of Section 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. If all the
above three ingredients are satisfied the dealer becomes
liable to pay tax on the purchase of such goods at such
rate, as may be notified under Section 15. It applies only
in those cases where (a) the goods are purchased (referred
to as material) by a dealer liable to pay tax under the Act
in the State, (b) the goods so purchased cease to exist as
such goods for the reason they are consumed in the
manufacture of different commodities and (c) such
manufactured commodities are either disposed of within the
State otherwise than by way of sale or despatched to a place
outside the State otherwise than by way of sale or
despatched to a place outside the State otherwise than by
way of an inter-State sale or export sale. It is evident
that if such manufactured goods are not sold within the
State of Haryana, but yet disposed of within the State no
tax is payable on such disposition; similarly where
manufactured goods are despatched out of State as a result
of an inter-State sale or export sale no tax is payable on
such sale. Similarly against where such manufactured goods
are taken out of State to manufacturers own depots or to the
depots of his agents no tax is payable on such removal.
Goodyear takes only the last eventuality and holds that the
taxable event is the removal of goods from the State and
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since such removal is to dealers own depots/agents outside
the State it is consignment which cannot be taxed by the
State Legislature. This is not correct. The levy created by
the said provision is a levy on the purchase of raw material
purchased within the State which is consumed in the
manufacture of other goods within the State. If however the
manufactured goods are sold within the State no purchase tax
is collected on the raw material evidently because the State
gets larger revenue by taxing the sale of such goods. (The
value of manufactured goods is bound to be higher than the
value of the raw material). The State Legislature does not
wish to - in the interest of trade and general public - tax
both the raw material and the finished (manufactured)
product. This is a well-known policy in the field of
taxation. But where the manufactured goods are not sold
within the State but are yet disposed of or where the
manufactured goods are sent outside the State (otherwise
than by way of inter-State sale or export sale) the tax has
to be paid on the purchase value of the raw material. The
reason is simple: if the manufactured goods are disposed of
otherwise than by sale within the State or are sent out of
State (i.e. consigned to dealers own depots or agents) the
State does not get any revenue because no sale of
manufactured goods has taken place within Haryana. In such a
situation the State would retain the levy and collect it
since there is no reason for waiving the purchase tax in
these two situations. [239-B-D; 240-A-D]
8.2. In the case of inter-State sale the State of
Haryana does get the tax-revenue - may not be to the full
extent. Though the Central Sales Tax is levied and collected
by the Government of India Article 269 of the Constitution
provides for making over the tax collected to the State in
accordance with certain principles. Where of course the sale
is an export sale within the meaning of Section 5 (1) of the
Central Sales Tax Act (export sales) the State may not get
any revenue but larger national interest is served thereby.
It is for these reasons that tax on the purchase of raw
material is waived in these two situations. Thus, there is a
very sound and consistent policy underlying the provision.
The object is to tax the purchase of goods by a manufacturer
whose existence as such goods is put and end to by him by
using them in the manufacture of different goods in certain
circumstances. The tax is levied upon the purchase price of
raw material, not upon the sale price - or consignment value
- of manufactured goods. Levy materialises only when the
purchased goods (raw material) is consumed in the
manufacture of different goods and those goods are disposed
of within the State otherwise than by way of sale or are
consigned to the manufacturing-dealers’ depots/agents
outside the State of Haryana. Such postponement does not
convert what is avowedly a purchase tax on raw material
(levied on the purchase price of such raw material) to a
consignment tax on the manufactured goods. Saying otherwise
would defeat the very object and purpose of Section 9 and
amount to its nullification in effect. The most that can
perhaps be said is that it is plausible to characterise the
said tax both as purchase tax as well as consignment tax.
But where two interpretations are possible, one which
sustains the consititutionality and/or effectuates its
purpose and intendment and the other which effectively
nullifies the provisions, the former must be preferred,
according to all known canons of interpretation.
[240-E-H; 241-A-C]
8.3. In several enactments tax is levied at the last
sale point or last purchase point, as the case may be. The
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last purchase point in the State can be determined only when
one knows that no purchase took place within the State
thereafter. But that can only be known later. If there is a
subsequent purchase within the State, the purchase in
question ceases to be the last purchase. Applying the logic
of the dealers, it would not be possible to tax any goods at
the last purchase point in the State, inasmuch as the last
purchase point in regard to any goods could be determined
only when the goods are sold later and not when the goods
are purchased. [241-F-G]
8.4. The scheme of Section 9 of Haryana Sales Tax Act
is to levy the tax on purchase of raw material and not to
forego it where the goods manufactured out of them are
disposed of (or despatched, as the case may be) in a manner
not yielding any revenue to the State nor serving the
interests of the nation and its economy. The purchased goods
are put an end to by their consumption in manufacture of
other goods and yet the manufactured goods are dealt with in
a manner as to deprive the State of any revenue; in such
cases, there is no reason why the State should forego its
tax revenue on purchase of raw material. It would not be
right to say that the tax is not upon the purchase of raw
material but on the consignment of the manufactured goods.
It is well settled that taxing power can be utilised to
encourage commerce and industry. It can also be used to
serve the interests of economy and promote social and
economic planning. It is also not right to concentrate only
on one situation viz., consignment of goods to
manufacturer’s own depots (or to the depots of his agents)
outside the State. Disposal of goods within the State
without effecting a sale also stands on the same footing, an
instance of which may be captive consumption of manufactured
products in the manufacture of yet other products. Once the
scheme and policy of the provision is appreciated, there is
no room for saying that the tax is on the consignment of
manufactured goods.[243-G-H; 244-A-F]
8.5. When the tax is levied on the purchase of raw
material, on the purchase price - and not on the manufacture
of goods or on the consignment value (such a concept is
unknown to Haryana Act) or sale price of the manufactured
goods - the construction placed in Goodyear runs against the
very grain of the provision and has the effect of nullifying
the very provision. By placing the said interpretation,
Section 9 has been rendered nugatory. The tax purports to be
and is in truth a purchase tax levied on the purchase price
of raw material purchased by a manufacturer. [247-A-C]
8.6.S. 13AA of the Bombay Sales Tax Act is
substantially similar to Section 9 of Haryana Sales Tax
Act. Whatever is said with respect to the Haryana provision
applies equally to this provision. [249-D]
Andhra Sugars Ltd. & Anr. v. The State of Andhra
Pradesh & Anr., 21 S.T.C. 212 and State of Tamil Nadu v.
Kandaswami, 36 S.T.C. 191, relied on.
Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana, [1990] 2 SCC
71, dissented from.
Mukerian Papers Ltd. v. State of Punjab, [1991] 2
S.C.C. 580, Explained.
Murli Manohar and Company v. State of Haryana [199]1 1
S.C.C. 377, distinguished.
Malabar Fruit Products Co. v. S.T.O., 30 S.T.C. 537,
approved.
Hindustan Lever Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra, 79 S.T.C.
255; J.K Steel Ltd. v. Union of India, A.l.R. 1970 S.C.
1173; Bata India Ltd. v. State of Haryana, 54 S.T.C. 226;
Desraj Pushp Kumar Gulati v. State of Punjab, 58 S.T.C. 393;
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Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Bihar and Orissa v. Kirpa
Shankar Daya Shankar Vorah, (1971) 81 ITR 763; Yusuf
Shabeer and Ors. v. State of Kerala and Ors., (1973) 32
S.T.C. 359 and Income Tax Commissioners for City of London
v. Gibbs, (1942) 10 ITR Suppl. 121 (H.L.), referred to.
Per Ranganathan, J. (Concurring):
1. The provisions of the U.P. and Gujarat Sales Tax
Acts are clearly beyond challenge. The section in the U.P.
Act is a very direct and simple provision to the effect that
a tax will be levied on purchases made within the State in
certain circumstances. The ambit of Entry 54 in the State
List in the Constitution of India must be interpreted in the
widest possible manner. The State has full powers to levy a
tax with reference to sales or purchases inside the State
and to a certain extent even sales made in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce. It certainly comprehends a
power to tax the last sale in the State of certain goods.
The tax is nothing but a tax on purchase, pure and simple,
well within the scope of the State’s Legislative power. It
is true that one has to look at not merely the form but the
substance of the statute and examine what exactly is the
purport behind the levy, but should not permit one’s
imagination to read a purpose or words into the statute
which are not there. 1198-C-G]
2. The Gujarat provision is more careful but makes a
mention of the purchased goods being used for manufacture.
But, these are only words descriptive of a class of goods
the purchase of which is sought to be brought to tax. Here
again, the intention of the legislature is to tax, at
purchase point, a class of goods viz. goods purchased by a
manufacturer. It has no concern, with what the manufacturer
does with the manufactured goods. Presumably the idea is
that the manufacturer is able to profit by adding value to
the purchased raw material by utilising the infrastructure,
fillips or facilities provided in the State to encourage
setting up of industries therein and so can afford to pay
tax on the purchased raw materials. The concession provided
by rule 42E of the Gujarat Sales Tax Rules is an independent
provision relieving him and the public consuming the
manufactured goods of additional burden where such goods are
sold inside the State and get taxed on the added value.
[198-H; 199-A, B]
3. The marginal title to the provisions under challenge
indicates that their direct purpose is to levy a tax on
purchases effected in the State in certain circumstances.
The tax is couched as a tax on all goods (in U.P.) and on
raw or processing materials and consumable stores (in the
State of Gujarat). It is designated as a purchase tax. It is
levied on the turnover of such purchases. There is no
reference in the U.P. statute to any condition for
imposition of the tax except that it should be a sale to the
consumer and in the State of Gujarat that it should be a
purchase by a manufacturer. It is very difficult to read
into these provisions any ulterior motive on the part of the
States to levy a tax on use, consumption or consignment in
the guise of a purchase tax. The language of these two
provisions is wholly different from that used in the Haryana
and Bombay Acts. Even in the context of those Acts, it may
be equally plausible to consider the provisions either as a
purchase tax or a tax on consignment. There is no such
ambiguity in the language used in these provisions, and the
levy is only of a purchase tax. Such a levy is clearly
within the domain of the State Legislature. [199-C-F]
4. A person can be said to be the last purchaser of
certain goods only when he consumes those goods himself or,
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in case they are raw materials/stores and the like, unless
he uses them in the manufacture of other goods for sale.
From this category have to be excluded cases where the
manufactured goods are either sold in the State or sold in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce because, in
those two instances, the State will be in a position to
collect the tax in respect of the sale of the manufactured
goods - the sale price of which will also include the price
of raw materials on which apriori the State could have only
got a lesser amount of tax - and to tax both would escalate
the price and affect the consumer. Also excluded are cases
where the manufactured goods are exported abroad to earn
foreign currency. If these situations are borne in mind, one
would realise that the language used in the various clauses
and phrases used in these legislations is only to levy a tax
on the last purchase in the State and not with a view to
levy a tax either on the use or consumption of raw materials
or on the manufacture or production of manufactured goods or
on the despatch of the goods manufactured from the State
otherwise than by way of sale. In the Haryana case also the
statute mentioned these several alternatives but a
consideration of section 9(1)(b) of the Haryana Act as well
as of the corresponding clause of the Bombay Act were posed
in isolation and emphasis placed on consignment being a sine
qua non of the levy. This larger concept, namely, that these
various alternatives are not set out in the section with a
view to fasten the charge of tax at the point of use,
consumption, manufacture, production and consignment or
despatch but in an attempt to make clear that what is sought
to be levied is a tax on raw materials on the occasion of
their last purchase inside the State had not been projected
or considered. This approach would basically alter the
parameters and remove the provision from the area of
vulnerability. [200-F-H; 201-A-D]
5. It is difficult to define a last purchase except
with reference to the mode of the use of the purchased goods
subsequent to that purchase and in that sense the levy of
tax can crystallise only at a point of time when the goods
have been utilised in a particular way. The mere fact that
the purchase cannot be characterised as a last purchase
except by reference to the subsequent utilisation of those
goods cannot mean that the taxable event is not the purchase
but something else. The more appropriate test would be to
see whether the ambit of the power to levy a tax in respect
of sale of goods is very wide and will cover any tax which
has a nexus with the sale or purchase of goods including a
last purchase in the State. In this view of the matter the
levy under the A.P. Act is also within the legislative
competence of the State. [201-E, F; 202-A, B]
6. The conclusion reached as to the vires of the
provisions under challenge is contrary to the conclusion
reached in Goodyear on somewhat analogous provisions. No
final conclusion is expressed as to whether the conclusion
in Goodyear was rightly reached in the context of the
provisions of the statutes considered there, or would need a
second look and fresh consideration in the context of what
has been said now. There is no hesitation to accept the
point of view now presented and which appeals to be more
realistic, appropriate and preferable, particularly the view
one way or the other would affect the validity of a large
number of similar legislations all over India, merely
because it may not be consistent with the view taken in
Goodyear. Consistency, for the mere sake of it, is no
virtue. [202-C, D]
Distributors (Baroda) P. Ltd. v. Union of India, (1985
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)155 I.T.R. 120 S.C., relied on.
Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana, [1990] 2 SCC
71, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (c) Nos. 655-69 of
1983.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
WITH
W.P. (C) 8131-33/82, 8125-30/82, 8349-8368/52, 8146-
8166/82, 9610 9630/82, 3756-87/83, 3698-3755/83, 947-960/83,
250/86, C.A. Nos. 4099 4103/82, 10753-57/83, 10758-60/83,
10761/83, W.P. (C) No. 12834/85, C.A. Nos. 1280-83/92,
4737/91, 4302/91, 3410/91, 3481/91, 2850/91, 3171/91,
2866/91, 3905-12/91, 4202- 05/91, 70/92, SLP(C) No. 1045/89,
T.C. (C) No. 220/88, W.P. (C) No. 175/92.
G. Ramaswamy, Attorney General, G.L. Sanghi, B.K.
Mehta, Santosh Hegde., R.R. Aggarwal, Anil B. Divan, H.N.
Salve, K. Parasaran, Ms. Suman Bose, Dr. Debi Pal, A.B.
Rohtagi, R.N. Sachthey, A.C. Gulati, B.B. Sawhney, Mrs.
Janaki Ramachandran, S. Ganesh, Ravinder Narain,
S.Sukuraman, D.K. Sinha, J.R. Das, J. Gupta, Ashok K.
Srivastava, H.S. Munjral, S. Walia, G. Bansal, D.P.
Mukherjee, R. Mohan, Mukul Mudgal, A. Subba Rao, Ms. Lata
Krishnamurti, M.N. Shroff, D. Dave, Ms. Deepa Dixit, K.J.
John, A.T.M. Sampath, P. Sen, G.S. Chatterjee, Ashok Mathur,
M. Haravu, V.J. Francis, V. Subramaniam, P.S. Seetharaman,
Ms. Indu Malhotra, A.S. Bhasme, R.B. Misra Dr. B.S. Chauhan,
Ajay K. Aggarwal, Ms. Radha Rangaswamy, Anil Sachthey, Badri
Nath Sharma, T.V.S.N. Chari, B. Kanta Rao and Ms. Suruchi
Aggarwal for appearing parties.
The Judgments of the Court were delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. Taking a cue from the decision of this
Court in Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana [1990] 2
S.C.C. 71, to which I was a party, a contention has been
raised, in these appeals and writ petitions, that
corresponding provisions of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, the
U.P. Sales Tax Act and the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax
Act, are ultra vires the powers of the State Legislature
insofar as they seek to levy a purchase tax in certain
circumstances. My learned brother, Jeevan Reddy, J., has
discussed the provisions and contentions elaborately and
exhaustively in his judgment. It is unnecessary for me to
set out over again the statutory provisions considered in
Goodyear or those which are challenged in these petitions
and appeals or the details of the decision in Goodyear as
these have been discussed in great detail in the judgment of
my learned brother. I however, think that I owe it to myself
to add a separate judgment as I was a party to Goodyear and
explain my views on the provisions presently under challenge
in the light of what has already been stated by me in
Goodyear.
So far as the U.P. Sales Tax Act is concerned, I do not
think that the impugned provision of the said Act (viz.
S.3AAAA, as inserted in 1992 with retrospective effect from
1.4.1974) bears any comparison with the provisions that were
considered in Goodyear. S.3AAAA is a very simple provision.
According to its marginal note, its effect is the imposition
of a liability to purchase tax on certain transactions. This
liability is attracted in respect of goods, which are liable
to tax at the point of sale to the consumer. In other words,
the goods in question as such have run through their gamut
of sales in the State. There will be no more sales in the
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State of the goods in that form, which can be taxed by the
State, whether intra-State or inter-State, or in the course
of export. Such goods are then made liable to tax in the
hands of a purchaser dealer-cum-consumer either because he
purchases them from a registered dealer by whom tax is not
payable or because he purchases them from a person other
than a registered dealer i.e. a person who is not accessible
to the revenue, whose sales cannot be easily verified or
from whom tax may not be easily recovered. To put it
differently, since the tax is at the point of sale to the
consumer, the Legislature, in order to ensure that goods do
not escape tax in the State altogether, make the purchaser
liable in respect of the last sale in the State of the goods
in question, if otherwise the sale of the goods have not
borne tax earlier in the State. This, on the face of it, is
a provision which seems to be perfectly within the
legislative competence of the State Legislature.
The argument urged on behalf of the assessees, however,
is that no person can be said to be the "consumer" of the
goods in the State unless he consumes the goods himself or
utilises the goods (where they are in the nature of raw
material) for the manufacture or production of other goods.
It is urged, therefore, that as no sale can be postulated to
be a sale to the consumer unless and until one of the above
events happen, the real taxable event is not the purchase of
the goods but their consumption, manufacture or production
in the State, or their despatch, otherwise than by way of a
sale outside the State, whether in the same form or in a
manufactured condition. It is therefore said that, in
substance, the statutory provision is no different from the
one considered by us in Goodyear and that the ratio of
Goodyear will apply here equally.
So far as the Andhra Pradesh provision is concerned,
the argument is the same, with an added advantage to the
assessees that the section brings out more emphatically
their point of view. Under section 6-A(i), purchase of goods
from a registered dealer is subjected to tax because, though
the sale or purchase of that item of goods is generally
liable to tax, no tax became payable by the registered
dealer on the sale because of the circumstances set out in
section 5 or 6. This corresponds to s. 3AAAA(a) of the U.P.
Act. As against this, clause (ii) of section 6-A deals with
purchase of goods liable to tax from a person other than a
registered dealer and imposes a liability to pay tax where
the goods purchased are consumed by the purchaser either in
the manufacture of other goods for sale or otherwise and the
goods are disposed of otherwise than by way of sale or
despatched outside the State otherwise than in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce. In other words, the real
taxable event for the charge under section 6-A(ii), it is
said, is not the purchase of goods but the consumption,
manufacture or consignment of the same or other goods
outside the State. If that be so, it is said, the imposition
is ultra vires the State Legislature on the principle of the
decision in Goodyear.
So far as the State of Gujarat is concerned, the
provisions of section l5B, inserted by a retrospective
amendment of 1990, are somewhat different. Cutting out
certain words not relevant in the present context, it
provides that where a dealer, being liable to pay tax under
the Act, purchases any taxable goods and uses them in the
manufacture of taxable goods, a purchase tax will be levied
on the turnover of such purchases. Rule 42-E, which was also
framed w.e.f. 1.5.90, provides that, where the assessee is a
registered dealer and the goods manufactured by him have
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been sold in the State of Gujarat, he will be entitled to
relief in respect of the purchase tax levied under section
l5B. Here again, it is argued, the provision is tainted
because it refers to manufacture of the purchased goods and
the rule ensures that no purchase tax is levied if the
manufactured goods are sold in the State itself; in other
words, the levy comes in only if they are consigned outside
the State, attracting Goodyear.
It will be seen at once that the three provisions under
consideration vary from one another. S.3AAAA of the U.P. Act
does not make the tax conditional on the use or consumption
of raw materials purchased or the manner of dealing with the
goods manufactured out of such purchases of raw materials.
Section 15B of the Gujarat Act is slightly different. It
talks of the use of the goods purchased in the manufacture
of other taxable goods but it does not make any reference to
the consumption of the goods otherwise or their despatch or
consignment. The Andhra Pradesh Act is more elaborate and
deals with various situations in relation to the purchased
goods.
2Of these, I am of opinion that the provisions of the
U.P. and Gujarat Acts are clearly beyond challenge on the
grounds put forward by the petitioners. The section in the
U.P. Act is a very direct and simple provision to the
effect that a tax will be levied on purchases made within
the State in certain circumstances. The ambit of Entry 54 in
the State List in the Constitution of India must be
interpreted in the widest possible manner. The State has
full powers to levy a tax with reference to sales or
purchases inside the State and to a certain extent even
sales made in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
It certainly comprehends a power to tax the last sale in the
State of certain goods. I have explained earlier the reason
why the incidence of tax in such sales is thrown under the
Act on the consumer. The tax is nothing but a tax on
purchase, pure and simple, well within the scope of the
State’s Legislative power. The attempt, on behalf of the
petitioners, to undertake an analysis of what will
eventually happen to the purchased goods where the purchaser
is the consumer and, on the basis thereof, to suggest that
the legislature really intends to tax consumption,
production or consignment is no doubt ingenious but
farfetched, artificial and unrealistic. It is true that one
has to look at not merely the form but the substance of the
statute and examine what exactly it is that the State
purports to levy a tax in respect of but one should not
permit one’s imagination to read a purpose or words into the
statute which are not there.
The Gujarat provision is more careful but makes a
mention of the purchased goods being used for manufacture.
But, as pointed out by Mukharji J. in Goodyear, these are
only words descriptive of a class of goods the purchase of
which is sought to be brought to tax. Here again, the
intention of the legislature is to tax, at purchase point, a
class of goods viz. goods purchased by a manufacturer. It
has no concern, unlike the A.P. or Haryana Acts, with what
he does with the manufactured goods. Presumably the idea is
that the manufacturer is able to profit by adding value to
the purchased raw material by utilising the infrastructure,
fillips or facilities provided in the State to encourage
setting up of industries therein and so can afford to pay
tax on the purchased raw materials. The concession provided
by rule 42E is an independent provision relieving him and
the public consuming the manufactured goods of additional
burden where such goods are sold inside the State and get
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taxed on the added value.
In my opinion, there is considerable force in the
substance of the contention of these States that these
provisions only impose a tax on purchases. The marginal
title to the provisions indicates that their direct purpose
is to levy a tax on purchases effected in the State in
certain circumstances. The tax is couched as a tax on all
goods (in U.P.) and on raw or processing materials and
consumable stores (in the State of Gujarat). It is
designated as a purchase tax. It is levied on the turnover
of such purchases. There is no reference in the U.P. statute
to any condition for imposition of the tax except that it
should be a sale to the consumer and in the State of Gujarat
that it should be a purchase by a manufacturer. It is very
difficult to read into these provisions any ulterior motive
on the part of the States to Levy a tax on use, consumption
or consignment in the guise of a purchase tax. The language
of these two provisions is wholly different from that used
in the Haryana and Bombay Acts. As I have stated in my
judgment in Goodyear, even in the context of those Acts, it
may be equally plausible to consider the provision either as
a purchase tax or a tax consignment. There is no such
ambiguity in the language used in these provisioins. I have
no doubt that, so far as these provisions are concerned, on
the face of these acts, the levy is only of a purchase tax.
Such a levy is clearly within the domain of the State
Legislature.
The Andhra Pradesh Act, however, is different in its
arrangement. The provisions of section 6-A of this Act are
more or less analogous to the provisions of the Haryana Act
considered in Goodyear. The question, therefore, arises as
to whether the decision in Goodyear should be applied in the
context of the Andhra Pradesh Act. On behalf of the State of
Andhra Pradesh - and indeed the other two States also - it
has been contended that Goodyear needs reconsideration. Our
attention has been drawn to one angle of approach to the
statutory provisions in question which had perhaps escaped
our notice in the Goodyear case. It was pointed out that the
sum and substance of these provisions is that no sale or
purchase of any goods should go without being taxed atleast
once in the State. Primarily the tax is levied on sales.
Where a registered dealer sells his goods he will be liable
to tax normally in respect of the taxable goods except where
his turnover does not reach up to the minimum prescribed
under the Sales Tax Act. Sometimes, he may not pay any tax
or may pay a concessional rate of tax on his sales because
of certain declarations or certificates he may receive that
the goods will be used inside the State. Again, where goods
are purchased from a person other than a registered dealer,
the tax at the sales point may escape actual taxation for
many reasons: such person may not be a dealer at all or,
being an unregistered dealer, the State may not be able to
ascertain his whereabouts and ensure that he is taxed or
that the tax is collected. In cases where no sales tax is
paid at the point of sale, it becomes necessary for the
State Legislature to provide that the tax will be met by the
purchaser. Invariably in such cases the legislations attach
levy of tax to the last purchase made in the State, of a
particular item of goods. Of course, the legislation could
have simply said that the last purchase in the State will
attract tax unless the tax is payable or has been paid at
one of the earlier stages of sale and could not have been
objected to. But that type of legislative wording might lead
to difficult questions as to the definition of the
expression "last purchase". That is why the section imposing
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purchase tax is worded in the manner in which it has been
worded in the Andhra and Haryana Acts. As pointed out by the
learned counsel for the assessees in the U.P. cases, a
person can be said to be the last purchaser of certain goods
only when he consumes those goods himself or, in case they
are raw materials/stores and the like, unless he uses them
in the manufacture of other goods for sale. From this
category have to be excluded cases where the manufactured
goods are either sold in the State or sold in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce because, in those two
instances, the State will be in a position to collect the
tax in respect of the sale of the manufactured goods - the
sale price of which will also include the price of raw
materials on which a priori the State could have only got a
lesser amount of tax - and to tax both would escalate the
price and affect the consumer. Also excluded are cases where
the manufactured goods are exported abroad to earn foreign
currency. If these situations are
borne in mind, one would realise that the language used in
the various clauses and phrases used in these legislations
is only to levy a tax on the last purchase in the State and
not with a view to levy a tax either on the use or
consumption of raw materials or on the manufacture or
production of manufactured goods or on the despatch of the
goods manufactured from the State otherwise than by way of
sale. In the Haryana case also the statute mentioned these
several alternatives but a consideration of section 9(1) (b)
of the Haryana Act as well as of the corresponding clause of
the Bombay Act were posed in isolation before us and
emphasis placed on consignment being a sine qua non of the
levy. This larger concept, namely, that these various
alternatives are not set out in the section with a view to
fasten the charge of tax at the point of use, consumption,
manufacture, production and consignment or despatch but in
an attempt to make clear that what is sought to be levied
is a tax on raw materials on the occasion of their last
purchase inside the State had not been projected before, or
considered by us. I am inclined now to think that this is
an approach that basically alters the parameters and
removes the provision from the area of vulnerability.
It is true that it is difficult to define a last
purchase except with reference to the mode of the use of
the purchased goods subsequent to that purchase and in that
sense the levy of tax can crystallise only at a point of
time when the goods have been utilised in a particular way
but will it be correct to say that the power of the State to
levy a tax on sales or purchases cannot include a right or
power to tax goods at the point of their first sale in the
State or their last purchase in the State? The mere fact
that the purchase cannot be characterised as a last purchase
except by reference to the subsequent utilisation of those
goods cannot mean that the taxable event is not the purchase
but something else. What we are really concerned with in
deciding the question of constitutional validity of the levy
of a sales tax is to pose the question
"Is the tax levied one with
reference to the sale or purchase
of goods ?"
The ambit of the power to levy a tax in respect of sale
of goods is very wide and will cover any tax which has a
nexus with the sale or purchase of goods including a last
purchase in the State. This I think is a more appropriate
test to be applied in these cases rather than the test of
"taxable event" l which is somewhat ambiguous in the
context. I am not inclined to agree that a tax on the sale
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or purchase of goods will cease to be so merely because the
determination of its character as a last purchase would
depend upon certain subsequent events which may be spread
over a subsequent period of time. In this view of the matter
I am inclined to agree with my learned brother Jeevan Reddy,
J. that the levy under the Andhra Pradesh Act is also within
the legislative competence of the State.
I am quite conscious that the conclusion I have
expressed here as to the vires of the provision impugned is
contrary to the conclusion I reached in Goodyear on somewhat
analogous provisions. I need not, for the purposes of the
present cases, express any final conclusion as to whether
the conclusion in Goodyear was rightly reached in the
context of the provisions of the statutes there considered
or would need a second look and fresh consideration in the
context of what has been said here. But, I should not, I
think, hesitate to accept the point of view now presented to
us which appeals to me as more realistic, appropriate and
preferable, particularly when I see that the view one way or
the other would affect the validity of a large number of
similar legislations all over India, merely because it may
not be consistent with the view I took in Goodyear.
Consistency, for the mere sake of it, is no virtue. If
precedent is needed to justify my change of mind, I may
quote Bhagwati J. (as he then was) in Distributors (Baroda)
P. Ltd. v. Union of India, (1985) 155 I.T.R. 120 S.C.:
"We have given our most anxious
consideration to this question,
particularly since one of us,
namely, P.N. Bhagwati, J. was a
party to the decision in Cloth
Traders’ case. But having regard to
the various considerations to which
we shall advert in detail when we
examine the arguments advanced on
behalf of the parties, we are
compelled to reach the conclusion
that Cloth Traders’ case must be
regarded as wrongly decided. The
view taken in that case in regard
to the construction of s. 80M must
be held to be erroneous and it must
be corrected. To perpetuate an
error is no heroism. To rectify it
is the compulsion of the judicial
conscience. In this, we derive
comfort and strength from the wise
and inspiring words of Justice
Bronson in Pierce v. Delameter
(A.M.Y. at page 18): "a judge ought
to be wise enough to know that he
is fallible and, therefore, ever
ready to learn: great and honest
enough to discard all mere pride of
opinion and follows truth wherever
it may lead: and courageous enough
to acknowledge his errors".
For the reasons above mentioned, I agree with my
learned brother and hold that the impunged provisions under
all the three enactments are intra-vires the powers of the
concerned State Legislature.
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J. Validity of provisions of several
States Sales Tax enactments imposing purchase tax fall for
our consideration in this group of appeals and writ
petitions. Initially the matters arising from Andhra
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Pradesh (writ petitions 655-669/83 Hotel Balaji and Ors. v.
State of Andhra Pradesh and Civil Appeal No. 10753-57/83
Hindustan Milk Food Manufacturers Limited v. State of
Andhra Pradesh) came up for hearing. During the course of
hearing, counsel for the petitioners/appellants relied upon
the decision of this court in Goodyear India Ltd v. State of
Haryana (1990) 76 S.T.C. 71 whereas the counsel for the
State of Andhra Pradesh challenged the correctness of the
said decision and pleaded for re-consideration of the said
judgment. It was then brought to our notice that a large
number of matters coming from different States raising inter
alia the question relating to the correctness or the ratio
Or Goodyear were also posted before us. Indeed it was
brought to our notice that a bench of three-Judges
comprising M.N. Venkatachaliah, A.M. Ahmadi, JJ. and one of
us (B.P. Jeevan Reddy, J.) had directed two matters namely
State of Punjab v. Industrial Cables India Ltd., C.A. No.
2990 (N.T.) of 1991 and the State of Punjab v. Hindustan
Lever Ltd., C.A.480/91 raising a similar question to be
posted before a Bench of three-Judges. Those matters are
also before us. It is in this manner that a large number of
appeals and writ petitions arising from several States came
to be posted before us for hearing. During the course of
hearing, however, we found that on account of restriction of
time it would not be possible for this Bench to hear all the
matters. Accordingly, we indicated to the counsel that we
shall confine our attention only to three State enactments
namely, Gujarat. Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh. Counsel
appearing in these matters have been heard fully. This
judgment, therefore, deals only with the validity of Section
15B of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, Section 3-AAAA of Uttar
Pradesh Sales Tax Act and Section 6-A of the Andhra Pradesh
Sales Tax Act. We shall first take up Section 15B of the
Gujarat Sales Tax Act.
PART- 11 (GUJARAT)
Though several appeals and writ petitions from this
State are placed before us, it is sufficient to refer to the
facts in Civil Appeal No.3410 (N.T.) of 1992 as
representative of the facts in all the matters. This appeal
is preferred by the writ petitioner against the judgment of
a Division Bench of the High (Court of Gujarat upholding the
constitutional validity of Section 15B of the Gujarat Sales
Tax Act, 1969 as substituted by the Gujarat Sales Tax
(Amendment) Act 6 of 1990.
The Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 (being Act No. 1 of
1970) came into effect on and from May 6,1970, replacing the
Bombay Sales Tax Act, which was in force in the State of
Gujarat till then. Section 15 of the Act levied purchase tax
on purchases made by a dealer from a person who is not a
registered dealer. Section 15A was introduced by amendment
Act 7 of 1983. It provided for levy of concessional rate of
tax in respect of purchase of raw material made by
Recognised dealers (who are necessarily manufacturers),
provided the goods (raw material) purchased by them fell in
Schedule II or III (other than prohibited goods). Section
15B was introduced by Amendment Act Or 1986. It provided for
levy of an additional purchase tax on raw material purchased
by a manufacturing dealer in case he used the said raw
material for the manufacture of other goods which he
despatched to his own place of business or to his agent’s
place of business situated outside the State but within
India. By an Amendment Act made in 1987, the Section was
substituted. There was, however, no substantial change in
the Section. Following upon the decision of this court in
Goodyear, a batch of writ petitions was filed in the Gujarat
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High Court challenging the validity of Section 15B on the
ground that in truth and effect it levied a consignment tax
and, hence was outside the competence of the State
Legislature. While the said writ petitions were pending,
Section 15B was substituted by an Ordinance being Ordinance
No.3 of 1990 issued on 20.4.1990. Subsequently the Gujarat
Sales Tax Amendment Act 6 of 1990 was enacted in terms of
and replacing the Ordinance. The substituted Section 15(B)
was given retrospective effect on and from April 1, 1986,
the date on which Section 15(B) first came into force. In
view of the said Amendment Act, the batch of writ petitions
challenging Section 15(B), as it stood prior to its
substitution by the 1990 Amendment Act, were dismissed as
having become infructuous. A fresh batch of writ petitions
followed questioning the validity of the substituted Section
15(B), again on the ground that it continued to be, in
essence, a consignment tax. The contention was that Section
15(B) must be read along with Rule 42(E) of the Gujarat
Sales Tax, Rules (inserted by Notification dated 1.5.90) and
if so read, the position is the same as was obtaining prior
to 1990 Amendment. Yet another ground urged was that the
levy imposed by the new provision is really in the nature of
an excise duty, and thus beyond the competence of the State
legislature. The assessees placed strong reliance upon the
decision of the Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in
Hindustan Lever Ltd v. State of Maharashtra, 79 S.T.C. 255
where, the petitioners say, construing a similar provision
in the Bombay Sales Tax Act it was held that the levy
created by the said provision is in the nature of an excise
duty. Disagreeing with the Bombay judgment, the High Court
dismissed the writ petitions.
Counsel for the appellant/assessee urged that Section
15B (as substituted in 1990) is no different from the
earlier provision. The basic scheme of the earlier provision
is now split into two provisions namely, substituted Section
15B and Rule 42E, which Rule was inserted into the Rules
simultaneously. This is a clear instance of colourable
legislation and ought not to be countenanced by this court.
The High Court was in error in justifying the same on the
theory that just as it is open to an assesses to reduce the
tax burden by resorting to legitimate tax planning,
similarly it is open to a legislature to make an appropriate
enactment to remain outside the mischief pointed out by the
court. It is submitted that as rightly held by the Bombay
High Court construing a similar provision, the levy created
by the substituted Section 15B is really upon the
manufacture of goods and, therefore, not a tax referable to
Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution. On the other hand, it is argued by F Sri B.K.
Mehta, learned counsel appearing for the State of Gujarat
that the Legislative competence of the Gujarat Legislature
to enact Section 15B ought to be determined on its own
language and not with reference to a Rule made by the
Government of Gujarat as the delegate of the legislature. He
submitted that on its own language, Section 15B levies a
pure and simple purchase tax on raw material purchased by a
manufacturer. It is unconcerned with what happens to the
manufactured goods. For the purpose of Section 15B, it is
immaterial whether the manufactured goods are sold inside
the State or despatched to a place outside the State of
Gujarat or are dealt with or disposed of otherwise. The
principle of Goodyear has absolutely no application to this
provision. Counsel also submitted that when the tax is upon
the purchase price of the raw material and is relatable to
the act of purchase, it cannot he held to be an excise
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duty which is levied on the act of manufacture and is levied
with reference to the value of such manufactured goods.
For a proper appreciation of the contentions arising
herein it would be appropriate to notice a few relevant
provisions of the Act. Clause (16) in Section 2 defines the
expression ’manufacture’ in the following words:
"manufacture" with all its
grammatical variations and cognate
expressions, means producing,
making, extracting, collecting,
altering, ornamenting, finishing or
otherwise processing, treating, or
adapting any goods; but does not
include such manufactures or
manufacturing processes as may be
prescribed."
Clauses 35 and 36 define the expressions "turn-over of
purchases" and "turn-over of sales". It would be enough to
notice the definition of the expression "turn-over of
purchases". It reads:
"turn over of purchases’ means the
aggregate of the amounts of
purchase price paid and payable by
a dealer in respect of any purchase
of goods made by him during a given
period, after deducting the amount
of purchase price, if any, refunded
to the dealer by the seller in
respect of any goods purchased from
the seller and returned to him
within the prescribed period."
Section 3 is a charging section. Section 15 which
levied purchase tax on purchase of certain goods from a
person who is not a registered dealer read as follows at the
relevant time:
15 Purchase tax payable on certain purchases of goods.
Where a dealer who is liable to pay
tax under this Act purchases any
goods specified in Schedule II or
III from a person who is not a
Registered dealer, then, unless the
goods so purchased are resold by
the dealer. there shall be levied,
subject to the provisions of
section 9.
(i) in the case of goods specified
in Schedule 11. a purchase tax on
the turnover of such purchase at
the rate set out against them in
that Schedule, and
(ii) in the case of goods specified
in Schedule III, a purchase tax on
the turnover of such purchase at a
rate equivalent to the rate of
sales tax act out against them in
that Schedule."
The said Section has, however, been substituted by
Gujarat Amendment Act 9 of 1992 with effect from 1.4.1992,
but since the Amendment is not a retrospective one, it is
unnecessary to notice the amended provision.
Section 15A provides for a concessional rate of tax in
the case of purchases of raw material by a recognised dealer
provided the goods purchased are those specified in Schedule
II or III (other than the prohibited goods) and he issues a
certificate contemplated by Section 13(1)(B). Prior to the
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Amendment Act 9 of 1992, Section 15(A) read as follows:
"15A. Purchase tax payable on
purchases of goods by certain
dealers where - (i) a recognised
dealer purchases any goods
specified in Schedule II or III
other than prohibited goods, under
a certificate given by him under
clause (B) of sub-section (I) of
section 13, or
(ii) a commission agent holding
permit purchases any goods
specified in Schedule II or III
other than prohibited goods on
behalf of his principal who is
recognised under a certificate
given by him under clause (C) of
sub-section (1) of section 13,-
there shall be levied a purchase
tax on the turnover of such
purchase at the rate of two paise
in the rupee."
8
Since the Amendment of this provision in 1992 is also
not retrospective, it is unnecessary to notice the same.
We may now set out Section 15B both as it obtained
prior to Amendment Act 6 of 1990 and as substituted thereby.
Prior to Amendment it read thus:
"Where any dealer liable to pay tax
under this Act uses any goods other
than declared goods purchased by
him or through commission agent as
raw or processing materials or
consumable stores (irrespective of
whether such goods are prohibited
goods or not) in the manufacture of
taxable goods and despatches any of
the goods so manufactured to his
own place to business or to his
agents place of business situate
outside the State hut within India
such dealer will be liable to pay,
in addition to any tax paid or
payable under other provisions of
this Act, a purchase tax at the
rate of four paise in the rupee on
the purchase price of such raw or
processing materials or consumable
stores used in the goods so
manufactured and despatched and
accordingly he shall include the
purchase price thereof in his
turnover of purchases in his
declaration or return under section
40 which he is to furnish next
thereafter.
Provided that where the raw
materials so used is bullion or
specie, the purchase tax payable on
such bullion or specie under this
section shall not exceed the
aggregate of the rates of sales tax
and the general sales tax payable
on bullion or specie."
After it is substituted in 1990 with retrospective
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effect from 1.4.1986, this Section reads thus
"Where a dealer who being liable to
pay tax under this Act purchases
either directly or through a
commission agent any taxable goods
(not being declared goods) and uses
them as raw or processing materials
or consumable stores, in the
manufacture of taxable goods, then
there shall he levied in addition
to any tax levied under the other
provisions of this Act, a purchase
tax at the rate of
(a) two paise in a rupee on the
turnover of such purchases made
during the period commencing on the
1st April, 1986 and ending on the
5th August, 1988; and
(b) four paise in rupee on the
turnover of such purchases made at
any time after the 5th August,
1988, provided that where the raw
materials purchased for use in the
manufacture of goods are bullion or
specie, the rate of purchase tax on
the turnover of purchases of such
raw materials shall not exceed the
aggregate of the rates of sales tax
and general sales tax leviable on
bullion or specie under Entry I in
Schedule III."
Inasmuch as strong reliance is placed by the
assessee/appellants upon Rule 42E inserted by G.S.R. 1090
(64) T.H. dated 1.5.1990, it would he appropriate to read
the said Rule here:
"42-E. Drawback, set off or refund
of purchased Tax under section 15B:
42-E. In assessing the purchase tax
levied under section 15B and
payable by a dealer (hereinafter
referred to as "the assessee") the
Commissioner shall subject to
conditions of rule 47 in so far as
they apply, and further conditions
specified below, grant him a draw-
back, set off or as the case may
be refund of the whole of the
purchase tax paid in respect of
purchase of goods effect on and
from the 1st April, 1986 used by
him, as raw materials, processing
materials, or consumable stores, in
the manufacture of taxable goods."
Conditions:-(1) the assessee is a
registered dealer,
(2) the goods purchased are taxable
goods other than declared goods,
(3) the said goods have been used
by the assessee within the State as
raw materials or processing
materials or consumable stores in
the manufacture of taxable goods,
(4) the goods so manufactured have
been sold by the assessee in the
State of Gujarat."
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In view of the retrospective amendment of Section 15B,
it may not be necessary to refer to Section 15B as it
obtained prior to the 1990 amendment except to point out
that in material particulars, it was similar to Section 13AA
of Bombay Sales Tax Act, which was considered in Goodyear
and held to he outside the legislative competence of the
State legislature. The correctness of the ratio in Goodyear
has been discussed by us in Part V.
Section 15 makes the purchaser liable to pay the tax
provided thereunder in case he purchases the goods mentioned
in Schedule II and III from a person who is not a registered
dealer. If, however, the goods so purchased are resold by
him, he is not liable to pay the said tax. Section 15A
applies only to Recognised dealers. A recognised dealer is
defined in section 32 in short, it means a dealer who is a
manufacturer and whose turnover of sales or purchases
exceeds the specified limit. If the recognised dealer
purchases goods specified in Schedule II or III (other than
prohibited goods) and issues a certificate contempleted by
Section 13 (1)(B), he is entitled to pay purchase tax on a
concessional rate. Then comes Section 15B which provides for
levy of an additional purchase tax. An analysis of the
Section yields the following ingredients: (i) where a dealer
who being liable to pay tax under Act; (ii) purchases either
directly or through a commission agent; (iii) any taxable
goods not being declared goods and (iv) uses them as raw or
processing materials or as consumable stores in the
manufacture of taxable goods (v) then there shall be levied
in addition to any tax levied under other provisions of the
Act, a purchase tax at the rates specified. It is thus clear
that section 15B does not speak of nor does it refer in any
manner to the movement sale or disposal of manufactured
goods. According to this section, it is immaterial whether
the manufactured goods are sold within the State or dealt
with in some other manner. It is equally immaterial whether
the manufacturer consigns them to his own depots or the
depots of his agents outside the State. Therefore, the ratio
of Goodyear - keeping aside its correctness for the time
being - has absolutely no application. The Haryana and
Bombay provisions considered in the said decision spoke of
the manufactured goods being disposed of within the State
otherwise than by way of sale or despatched out of State
otherwise than in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce or in the course of export within the meaning of
Section 5(1) of the Central Sales Tax Act. Similarly the
Bombay provision spoke of the manufactured goods being sent
to the depots of the manufacturer or his agents outside the
State of Maharashtra. It was these features which weighed
with this court in characterising the tax as one in the
nature of a consignment tax (This aspect has been dealt with
in part V). Since the said feature is absent in the impugned
provision, we hold, agreeing with the High Court, that the
tax imposed by Section 15B cannot be characterised as a
consignment tax.
The main contention or the appellants, however, is that
Section 15B should not be read in isolation but in
conjunction with Rule 42E which was introduced in the Rules
simultaneously with the amendment of Section 15(B) and which
Rule indeed supplements Section 15B. They say that if both
the provisions are read together, the effect and consequence
is the same as that of Section 15B as it obtained prior to
1990 amendment, which means the tax is really upon the
consignment of manufactured goods.
We shall first notice what Rule 42E provides. It says
that, in assessing the purchase tax levied under Section
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15B, the assessee shall be granted a drawback, set-off or as
the case may be, refund of the whole of the purchase tax
paid in respect of purchase of goods effected on or after
1.4.1986 and which goods have been used by him as raw
material, processing material or as consumable stores in the
manufacture or taxable goods - subject however to the
conditions prescribed in the said Rule and further subject
to the conditions specified in Rule 47 in so far as they are
applicable. The four conditions specified in the Rule 42E
are:
(1) the assessee is a registered
dealer,
(2) the goods purchased are taxable
goods other than declared goods,
(3) the said goods have been used
by the assessee within the State as
raw materials or processing
materials or consumable stores in
the manufacture of taxable goods,
(4) the goods so manufactured have
been sold by the assessee in the
State of Gujarat.
Condition No. 4, emphasised by the assessees says that
the benefit of set off/drawback/refund shall be available
only if the manufactured goods are sold within the State of
Gujarat. According to them it means that, where the
manufactured goods are consigned by the manufacturer to his
own depots or to his agents, depots outside the State of
Gujarat, the benefit of drawback etc. will not be available,
which means that purchase tax shall be levied upon the
purchase of raw material. This, say the appellants, is
precisely what the old Section 15-B provided for. According
to them, the present Section 15B read with Rule 42E is
nothing but a re-incarnation of Section 15B as it stood
prior to 1990 Amendment Act and falls squarely within the
ratio of Goodyear This argument raises in turn the question:
how far is it permissible to refer to the Rules made under
an Act while judging the legislative competence of a
legislature to enact a particular provision? The necessity
and significance of the delegated legislation is well-
accepted and needs no elaboration at our hands. Even so, it
is well to remind ourselves that Rules represent subordinate
legislation. They cannot travel beyond the purview of the
Act. Where the Act says that Rules on being made shall be
deemed "as if enacted in this Act", the position may be
different. (It is not necessary to express any definite
opinion on this aspect for the purpose of this case). But
where the Act does not say so, the Rules do not become part
of the Act. Sri Mehta relies upon the following statement of
law in Halsbury’s Laws of England (3rd Edn.) Vol. 36 at page
40]:
"Where a statute provides that
subordinate legislation made under
it is to have effect as if enacted
in the statute such legislation may
be referred to for the purpose of
construing a provision in the
statute itself. Where a statute
does not contain such a provision,
and does not confer any power to
modify the application of the
statute by subordinate legislation,
it is clear that subordinate
legislation made under the statute
cannot after or vary the meaning of
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the statute itself where it is
unambiguous, and it is doubtful
whether such legislation can be
referred to for the purpose of
construing an expression in the
statute, even if the meaning of the
expression is ambiguous."
He says that this statement of law has been referred to
with approval by Hegde, J. in his opinion in J.K Steel Ltd.
v Union of India A.I.R. 1970 S.C. 1173. Though the opinion
of Hegde, J. is a dissenting one, he submits, the majority
has not held to the contrary on this aspect. He also relies
upon the English decisions referred to in the opinion of
Hegde, J. and points out that no decision of this court has
expressed any opinion on the subject, a fact noted by Hegde,
J.. He commends the view taken by Hegde, J. for our
acceptance. Sri Mehta points out further that Section 86
which confers the Rule making power upon the Government
does not say that the Rules when made shall be treated as if
enacted in the Act. Being a rule made by the Government, he
says, Rule 42E can be deleted, amended or modified at any
time. In such a situation, the legislative competence of a
legislature to enact a particular provision in the Act
cannot be made to depend upon the Rule or Rules, as the case
may be, obtaining at a given point of time, he submits. We
are inclined to agree with the learned counsel. His
submission appears to represent the correct principle in
matters where the legislative competence of a legislature to
enact a particular provision arises. If so, the very
foundation of the appellants’ arguments collapses.
Even if we agree with the appellants and read Rule 42E
along with Section 15(B), they cannot succeed. Rule 14E
provides for set off etc. in case the manufactured goods are
sold within the State of Gujarat. It no doubt means that set
off etc. is not available if the manufactured goods are
disposed of otherwise than by way of sale or are consigned
to manufacturer’s own depots (or to the depots of his
agents) outside the State of Gujarat. What in effect the
State says is this: "Raw material when purchased is taxable
but I won’t tax the raw material if you sell the goods
manufactured out of such raw material within the State
because I derive larger revenue there; I do not want to tax
both the raw material and the manufactured goods, in the
interest of trade and public. But if you dispose of the
manufactured goods in some other manner, I will tax the
purchase of raw material because there is no reason why I
should forego the purchase tax due on raw material, when I
am not getting any revenue from your method of disposal or
despatch of manufactured products." There is nothing
objectionable in the State saying so. It can indeed rely on
the principle of the decision of this court in Godrej &
Boyce Mfg. Co. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, reported in
(1992) 4 J.T. S.C. 317. It is difficult to see how can it be
said that by reading Rule 42E into Section 15B, the levy
becomes a consignment tax. In any event, the ratio of
Goodyear cannot be accepted as good law for the reasons
mentioned in part V.
We are equally not satisfied with the argument that the
Gujarat legislature has resorted to a device, a stratagem to
circumvent the decision or this court or that it is an
instance of fraud on power - what is sometimes referred to
as ‘colourable legislation’. That a legislature is empowered
to amend a provision to remove the defect pointed out by a
court is well-accepted. So far as the Gujarat Act is
concerned, it was never the subject matter of an adverse
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decision either by this court or the Gujarat High Court.
Writ Petitions were no doubt pending challenging the
validity of Section 15B as it then stood. It was perfectly
open to the Legislature to act to set its house in order to
obviate a possible adverse verdict applying the ratio of
Goodyear. The question is whether the provision now enacted,
with retrospective effect, is beyond the legislative
competence of Gujarat Legislature? It not, no further
question arises.
So far as the retrospectivity given to Section 15B by
the 1990 Amendment Act is concerned, it is hardly open to
doubt in the light of several decisions of this court
commencing from Ramakrishna v. State of Bihar, A.I.R. 1963
S.C. 1667. This is not even a case where the old provision
was struck down by a court. The period or retrospectivity
covers only the period during which Section 15B has been in
force. The levy was already there. In any event, in view of
our conclusion that Goodyear does not represent the correct
position in law, this aspect has really no relevance.
It is then contended that the levy is really in the
nature of excise duty or use tax inasmuch as it attaches not
on purchase of goods but on their use in manufacture of
other goods. This argument in our opinion misses the true
nature of tax. It is an additional tax on the purchase of
raw material used in manufacture of other goods. A certain
concession is given to manufacturers (recognised dealers) in
purchase of certain types of raw material (Section 15A); an
additional purchase tax is levied under Section 15B; and in
certain situations, this tax is refunded or set off, as the
case may be under Rule 42-E. All these provisions are
intended to encourage industry and to derive revenue at the
same time. Counsel for the assessees placed strong reliance
upon the word "then" occurring in the section and its
placement. He emphasised that the tax is payable only when
the dealer (1) purchases the goods and (2) uses them in the
manufacture of other goods. It is not possible to agree.
Heading of Section 15B is "Purchase tax on raw or processing
materials or consumable stores used in manufacture of goods
in certain cases." The Section, read as a whole, is
applicable only to those goods which are used in the
manufacture of other goods. The levy is upon the purchase
price of raw material and not upon the value of the
manufactured products. Entry 54 of List II must receive a
liberal construction, being a legislative entry. The
Legislature cannot be confined to only one form of levy. So
long as the levy retains the basic character of a tax on
sale, the legislature can levy it in such mode or in such
manner as it thinks appropriate. As affirmed by Mukharji, J.
in Goodyear, the well-established principles in such matters
is "that reasonable construction should be followed and
literal construction may be avoided if that defeats the
manifest object and purpose of the Act." The legislature
must he presumed to know its limitations and acted within
those limits. Transgression must be clearly established, and
is not lo be lightly assumed.
For the very same reasons, the argument that it is a
use tax also fails. In essence, the provision is akin to the
one considered by this court in Andhra Sugars Ltd. & Anr. v.
The State of Andhra Pradesh & Anr., 21 S.T.C. 212.
For the above reasons, the appeals and writ petitions
are dismissed with no order as to costs.
PART- III (UTTAR PRADESH)
These Civil Appeals and Writ Petition are filed by the
Tribeni Tissues Limited, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. The
Appeals are preferred against the Judgment of a learned
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Single Judge of Allahabad High Court allowing Sales Tax
Revisions No.325, 327 and 328 of 1989 preferred by the
Commissioner of Sales-tax, Uttar Pradesh against the orders
of the Sales-tax Appellate Tribunal. The assessment years
concerned are 1978-79 to 1981-82.
The appellant is a dealer registered under the U.P.
Sales tax Act, having an office at Varanasi. It has a paper
mill at Calcutta. The appellant purchases sun hemp, raw
jute, old hemp rope cuttings, Old Jute rope cuttings and
jute cuttings etc. at Varanasi and sends them to the paper-
mill at Calcutta for being used as raw material. These
purchases are made by the appellant from farmers, ‘kabadis’
and other persons who are not registered dealers. The
turnover relating to such purchases was subjected to
purchase-tax under section 3-AAAA by the assessing
authorities which the appellant objected to. The Tribunal,
by a majority of 2:1 held in favour of the appellant against
which the Commissioner preferred revisions before the High
Court. Section-3AAAA read as follows at the relevant time.
"3-AAAA. Liability to purchase tax
on certain transactions - Where any
goods liable to tax at the point of
sale to the consumer are sold to a
dealer but in view of any provision
of this Act no sales tax is payable
by the seller and the purchasing
dealer does not resell such goods
within the State or in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce,
in the same form and condition in
which he had purchased them the
purchasing dealer shall subject to
the provisions of Section 3, be
liable to pay tax on such purchases
at the rate at which tax is
leviable on sale of such goods to
the consumer within the State;
Provided that if it is proved to
the satisfaction of the assessing
authority that the goods so
purchased had already been
subjected to tax or may be
subjected to tax under Section 3-
AAA, no tax under this section
shall be payable."
The section subjected the purchase of "goods liable to
tax at the point of sale to the consumer" to purchase tax
payable by the purchasing-dealer, in a case where the
selling dealer was not liable to pay the sales-tax on such
sale. Purchase tax was payable at the same rate as the sales
tax. If, however, the purchasing dealer resold such goods
within the State or in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce, he was not liable to pay the purchase tax. The
expression "goods liable to tax at the point of the sale
to the consumer" is explained in Section 3-AAA. Section 3A
prescribes the rates of tax. As it stood at the relevant
time, sub-sections (1) and (2) prescribed different rates
for different goods. Sub-section (2A) which alone is
relevant herein, read as follows:
"3A (2A): The turnover in respect
of goods other than those referred
to in sub-sections (1) and (2)
shall be liable to tax at the point
of sale by the manufacturer or
importer at the rate of seven per
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cent, provided that the State
Government may from time to time by
notification in the Gazette modify
the rate or point or tax on the
turnover in respect of any such
goods with effect from such date as
may be notified in that behalf, so
however. that the rate does not
exceed seven per cent.
(The goods concerned herein, according to both the
parties, fall within sub-section (2A) of Section 3A).
The State Government issued a notification dated
30.5.1975 in terms of and as contemplated by the proviso to
sub-section (2A) of Section 3-A declaring that with effect
from June 1, 1975, the turnover in respect of goods
specified in column 2 of the Schedule to the notification
shall be liable to tax at the point of sale and at the rate
specified respectively in columns (3) and (4) thereof. The
Schedule, in so far as relevant may be set out:
"SCHEDULE
‘M’ stands for sale by manufacturer in Uttar Pradesh.
‘I’ stands for sale by the Importer in Uttar Pradesh.
------------------------------------------------------------
Sl. Description of goods Point at which Rate of tax
No. tax shall be
levied
------------------------------------------------------------
(Items No.1 to 14 omitted as
unnecessary.)
15. Old, discarded, unservice-
able or obsolete machinery,
stores or vehicles including
waste products except cinder,
coal ash and such items as are
included in any other
notification issued under the
Act.
(Item Nos. 16) to 25 omitted as sale to consumer 5 per cent
unnecessary.)
26. Jute and Hemp Goods M or I 4 per cent
------------------------------------------------------------
The controversy before the High Court was a limited
one. It was: "whether the said goods will fall under the
entry at SI. No. 15 of the notification dated 30th May, 1975
as contended by the learned standing counsel (for the State
of Uttar Pradesh) or under SI. No. 26 as Jute and Hemp goods
under the notification dated 1st October, 1975 as urged on
behalf of the assessee." (Quoted from the judgment of the
High Court.) The learned Judge held that the goods fall
under item No.15 and accordingly allowed the revisions filed
by the Commissioner. The correctness of the Judgment of the
High Court is questioned in these Civil Appeals.
While the Civil Appeals were pending in this Court, a
Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court held in
C.M.W.P.No.168 of 1983 and batch (decided on 3rd April,
1991) that Section 3-AAAA was ultra vires the legislative
competence of the legislature of Uttar Pradesh and,
therefore, void. The Division Bench followed and applied the
ratio of Goodyear and held that under the said provision the
taxable event is not the purchase of the goods by the
purchasing dealer but the subsequent event namely use of
said goods in the manufacture of other goods and their
despatch without effecting a sale within the State of Uttar
Pradesh to a place outside the Uttar Pradesh. To get over
the said decision and to remove the defect pointed out
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therein, the Governor of Uttar Pradesh issued an Ordinance
being Ordinance No. 45 of 1991 on 12th December, 1991
substituting Section 3-AAAA in its entirety with effect from
April 1, 1974. The said Ordinance has since been replaced by
U.P. Sales-tax (Amendment) Act 8 of 1992. Section 3-AAAA as
substituted by the aforesaid Amending Act reads thus:
"3-AAAA. Liability to purchase tax
on certain transactions.
(1) Except as provided in sub-
section (2) and subject to the
provision of Section 3, every
dealer, who purchases any goods
liable to tax at the point of sale
to consumer
(a) from any registered dealer in
circumstances in which no tax is
payable by such registered dealer,
shall be liable to pay tax on the
purchase price of such goods at the
same rate at which, but for such
circumstances, tax would have been
payable on the sale of such goods;
(b) from any person other than a
registered dealer, whether or not
tax is payable by such person,
shall be liable to pay tax on the
purchase price of such goods at the
same rate at which tax is payable
on the sale of such goods.
(2) Exemption shall be granted in
the tax payable under sub-section
(1) to the extent of the amount or
tax, (a) to which the goods
purchased from a registered dealer
have already been subjected or may
be subjected under any provision of
this Act or the Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956;
(b) already paid in respect of the
goods purchased from any person
other than a registered dealer;
(c) on the sale of goods liable to
be exempted under Section 4-A;
(d) to which the sale of dressed
hides and skins (or tanned leather)
and ginned cotton obtained from raw
hides and skins and raw cotton so
purchased or rice obtained from
paddy so purchased during the
period commencing on September 2,
1976 and ending with April 30,
1977, are liable under any
provision of this Act or the
Central Sales Tax Act. 1956."
Writ Petition No. 175 of 1992 is preferred questioning
the constitutional validity of the said provision.
We shall first deal with Civil Appeals. According to
the statement of facts contained in the Judgment of the High
Court, the appellant purchased "sun hemp, raw jute, old hemp
rope cuttings, old jute rope cuttings and jute cuttings
etc." Item No. 26 of the notification dated October 1, 1975
speaks of "jute and hemp goods". The appellant inter alia
purchased "sunhemp" and "raw jute". Certainly they do not
fall under item 26 of the Schedule. Coming to "old hemp rope
cuttings, old jute rope cuttings and jute cuttings" they
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fall, by their very nature more properly under item 15
because admittedly they are discarded, worn-out, and waste
material. It would he rather odd to call them "jute the hemp
goods" in the presence of item (15). The High Court was,
therefore, justified in holding that the goods purchased by
the appellant are properly relatable to item 15 and not to
item 26 of the notification.
The learned counsel for the appellant urged that item
15 is confined only to old, discarded, unserviceable and
obsolete "stores" which in the context means "stores"
maintained by a factory or industry. Having regard to the
language of item 15, he submitted. it does not take in old
discarded material coming from other sources We see no
warrant for this restricted reading of item 15. Be that as
it may, once the said goods do not fall under item 26, as
held by us, they must fall under item 15, since it is not
suggested that there is any other item which takes in these
goods. The (Civil Appeals accordingly fail and are
dismissed. No costs.
Writ Petition No. 175 of 1992.
In view of the fact that Section 3-AAAA has been
substituted by the 1992 Amendment Act with retrospective
effect from April 1, 1974, it is not really necessary for us
to deal at any length with the Section as it stood prior to
the said amendment or with the correctness of the judgment
of the Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court declaring
the same as beyond the legislative competence of the U.P.
Legislature. Suffice it to say that the decision of the
Division Bench closely follows and applies the ratio of
Goodyear which according to us does not represent the
correct position in law as explained in Part V.
Coming to Section 3-AAAA as it now stands, an analysis
of the Section yields the following ingredients:
A. (i) A dealer who purchases any
goods liable to tax at the point of
sale to the consumer,
(ii) from any registered dealer in
circumstances in which no tax is
payable by such registered dealer,
(iii) the purchasing dealer shall
he liable to pay tax on the
purchase price of such goods at the
same rate at which the tax would
have been payable on the sale of
such goods.
B. (i) A dealer who purchases any
goods liable to tax at the Joint of
sale to consumer,
(ii) from any person other than a
registered dealer, whether or not
such person is liable to pay the
tax on such sale,
(iii) the purchasing dealer shall
be liable to pay tax on the
purchase price of such goods at the
same rate at which tax is payable
on the sale of such goods.
C. The purchasing dealer is,
however, entitled to be exempted
from the tax payable under the
above two heads to the extent of
the amount of tax mentioned in
clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) of
sub-section (2). Clause (a) speaks
of the tax paid or payable under
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any of the provision of U.P. Act or
C.S.T. Act. Clause (b) speaks of
the tax already paid,
if any, in respect of goods
purchased from any person other
than a registered dealer. Clause
(c) refers to sale of goods
entitled to exemption under section
4A and clause (d) refers to sale of
dressed hides and skins.
In short, the scheme of the section is this: (I) if a
dealer purchases the goods liable to tax at the point of
sale to the consumer from any registered dealer who is not
liable to pay tax on such sale, the purchasing dealer shall
pay such tax. If, however, the purchasing dealer establishes
that the goods purchased by him have already been subjected
to or may be subjected to tax under the U.P. Act or Central
Sales Tax Act, he will get an exemption to that extent. (2)
If the said goods are purchased from a person other than a
registered dealer the purchasing dealer shall pay the tax
payable on sale of such goods. If, however, he proves that
tax payable has been paid, either wholly or partly, by the
seller, the tax payable by the purchasing dealer shall be
exempted to that extent. (3) Similar exemption will be
available to the purchasing dealer in case he establishes
any of the facts mentioned in clauses (c) and (d) of sub-
section (2). The central idea is that no transaction of sale
(of goods taxable at the point of sale to consumer) should
go untaxed. Either the seller pays the tax or the purchaser
pays. It is for achieving this central purpose that Section
3-AAAA has been enacted providing for several situations.
It would be immediately evident that section that
Section 3-AAAA does not speak of and does not refer in any
manner to the user of the goods purchased. It is immaterial
whether the goods purchased are used in the manufacture of
other goods or dealt with otherwise. Much less does it speak
of the manner in which the goods manufactured out of such
purchased goods, if any, are dealt with. The exemptions
provided in sub-section (2) are equally un-related to the
above aspects. Sub-section (1) is clear and simple. The tax
becomes payable by the purchasing dealer in the two
situations contemplated by clauses (a) and (b) of the said
sub-section. If he can establish any of the facts mentioned
in clauses (a) to (d) of sub-section (2), he gets an
appropriate exemption. Otherwise not. We are, therefore,
unable to see any room for contending that the tax imposed
by the said section is in the nature of consignment tax or a
use or consumption tax. Simply because the petitioner
chooses to take the goods purchased by him out of the State,
in the same form and condition or otherwise, for being used
as raw material in his factory at Calcutta, makes no
difference to the levy. The validity of the levy cannot
depend upon what a particular dealer or person chooses to do
with the goods.
It was argued for the petitioner that sub-section (2)
of Section 3-AAAA places a heavy and uncalled for burden
upon the purchasing dealer; that it is not practicable for
the purchaser to establish that the selling person (other
than the registered dealer) has paid the tax or not. It is
submitted that the petitioner purchases his goods from
hundreds of persons who are not registered dealers and it
cannot reasonably be expected of the petitioner to gather
the particulars of or from all such persons. We are unable
to appreciate this contention. A person other than a
registered dealer is not amenable to the discipline of the
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Act. He cannot indeed collect any tax [Section 8(A) (2) and,
therefore, will not, justified in presuming. If, however,
in any case it is proved that such person has paid the tax,
the purchasing dealer will get an exemption to that extent.
It a benefit is claimed by the purchasing dealer, it is for
him to prove the fact which enables him to claim the
benefit. That burden cannot be passed on to any one else.
So far as registered dealers are concerned, all that the
purchasing dealer need prove is that the said goods have
already been or may be subjected to tax under State Act or
Central Sales Tax Act. On this score, we see no difficulty
for the purchasing dealer. From the bill given by the
selling dealer, the purchasing dealer can prove the payment.
Or he can simply prove, as a matter of law that the said
goods are liable to be taxed under any other provision of
the Act or under the Central Sales Tax Act. We are equally
unable to see any vagueness in the provision nor is it
established that any such vagueness is operating to the
prejudice of the petitioner.
In this view of the matter, it is unnecessary, strictly
speaking, to consider whether the present Section 3-AAAA is
in effect and substance the same as the one obtaining prior
to 1992 Amendment Act. For the sake of completeness,
however, we may mention that under Section 3-AAAA (before it
was substituted in 19920 tax was payable by the purchasing
dealer where he purchased goods liable to tax was payable by
the purchasing dealer where he purchased goods liable to tax
at the point of sale to the consumer in circumstances where
no tax is payable by the seller, provided he did not resell
the said goods, in the same form and condition, within the
State or in the course of inter-State, trade or commerce.
The section was understood by the Division Bench in the
following manner:
" 23. That brings us to the vital
question as to which are the
circumstances in which sale of the
goods purchased within the State or
in the course of inter-State trade
and commerce in the same form and
condition in which the dealer
purchased the goods, may be
rendered impossible. To our mind,
keeping in view the usual course of
business, the normal possibilities
seem to be these:
1. use and consumption of the goods
purchased by the purchasing dealer
in the manufacture of some other
taxable goods within the State;
2. despatch of the manufactured
goods, without sale, outside the
State otherwise than in the course
of inter-State trade and commerce;
3. despatch of the goods out of the
territory of India pursuant to a
contract of sale, i.e. despatch in
the course of an export sale;
24. These then are the activities
or transactions that constitute the
taxable events on the happening of
which the tax would be immediately
attracted, that is to say, the tax
in question becomes exigible at
these points. Once these points are
reached the possibility of the sale
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of goods purchased within State or
in the course of inter-State trade
and commerce in the same form and
condition, shall stand excluded.
The fourth and the last condition
envisaged by Section 3-AAAA set out
hereinabove necessary for
attracting the levy would also
stand fulfilled. It is only on the
happening of these events that the
taxing authority can reach the
conclusion that the purchasing
dealer has be come liable under
Section 3-AAAA."
With respect we find ourselves unable to agree with the
above understanding of the section. All that the section
provided was: (i) where the goods liable to tax at the point
of sale to the consumer are sold to a dealer (ii) in
circumstances in which no sales tax is payable by the seller
and (iii) the purchasing dealer does not re-sell the said
purchased goods within the State or in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce (iv) the purchasing dealer shall be
liable to pay the tax which would have been payable by the
seller. (v) If however, it was proved that the said goods
have already suffered tax under Section 3-AA, no purchase
tax was payable under Section 3-AAAA. It is obvious that the
section did not speak or the purchased goods being used in
the manufacture of other goods nor of the manner of disposal
or despatch of such manufactured goods. The only two
conditions stipulated (which conditions are not to he found
in the present Section 3-AAAA) were that if the purchased
goods are sold within the State or sold in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce, the tax , under it is not
payable. This is for the simple reason that in both those
contingencies, the State would get the revenue (in one case
under the State Sales Tax Act and in the other case, under
the Central Sales Tax Act). The policy of the legislature is
not to tax the same goods twice over. The fact that in a
given case, the purchased goods are consigned by the
purchaser to his own depots or agents outside the State
makes no difference to the nature and character of the tax.
By doing so, he cannot escape even one-time tax upon the
goods purchased, which is the policy of the Legislature. The
tax was directed towards ensuring levy of tax atleast on one
transaction of sale of the goods and not towards taxing the
consignment of goods purchased or the products manufactured
out of them. The difficulty has really arisen because of the
attempt to look to the provisions of Section 3-AAAA through
the prism of Goodyear. There is a substantial and
qualitative difference between the language employed in
Section 9 of Haryana Act and Section 13-AA of Bombay Act and
in Section 3-AAAA of U.P. Act (as it stood prior to 1992
Amendment Act) or for that matter as it stands now. These
basic differences cannot be ignored. Constitutionality of
Section 3-AAAA ought to be judged on its own language and so
judged, the Section, both before and after the 1992
Amendment, represents a perfectly valid piece of
legislation. It is relatable to and fully warranted by
Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution.
PART - IV (ANDHRA PRADESH)
Writ Petitions No. 655-669 of 1983 are filed by Hotel
Balaji and 14 other hotels/restaurants for issuance of a
writ, order or direction directing the respondents viz.,
State of Andhra Pradesh and its Sales Tax Authorities not to
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levy and collect purchase tax on milk @ 4% under Section 6-A
as also the surcharge tax @ 10% of the tax. According to the
petitioners such a levy violates Article 14 as also the
fundamental right guaranteed to them by sub-clause (g) of
clause (1) of Article 19 of the Constitution. Civil Appeal
Nos. 10753-57 of 1983 are directed against the judgment and
order of a Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court
upholding the validity of Section 6-A of the Andhra Pradesh
General Sales Tax Act.
The case of the petitioners in the writ petitions is
this: They purchase the milk required by them both from
registered dealers as well as persons other than registered
dealers. The authorities are collecting purchase tax @ 4%
under Section 6-A from the petitioners which is illegal in
view of the fact that the sale of fresh milk is exempted
from tax by a notification issued by the Government of
Andhra Pradesh under Section 9 of the Act being G.O.Ms.
No.1091 dated 10.6.1957. Because of the said exemption
notification not only the seller is exempted but also the
purchaser. In some cases, the petitioners purchased milk
from registered dealers like Andhra Pradesh Dairy
Development Corporation which is exempted from sales tax by
virtue of a notification issued under Section 9. In such
cases, the tax is sought to be levied upon the petitioners
which is equally illegal. The milk purchased by the
petitioners is being consumed in preparing and serving to
consuming public tea, coffee and other eatables. The tax
levied under Section 6-A is really not upon the purchase but
upon the use and consumption.
G.O.Ms. No.1091 dated 10.6.1957 as originally issued
read as follows:
"In exercise of the power conferred
by sub-section (1) of Section 9 of
the Andhra Pradesh General Sales
Tax Act 1957 (Andhra Pradesh Act 6
of 57), the Governor of Andhra
Pradesh hereby exempts from the tax
payable under the said Act the
sales of following goods:
(1) and (2) - omitted as
unnecessary;
(3) fresh milk, curd and butter
milk."
By G.O,Ms. No. 60 (Revenue) dated 10.1.1961, item (3)
was substituted as follows:
"fresh milk, curd and butter milk
sold by dealers exclusively dealing
in them."
By G.O.Ms. No. 1786 dated 20.11.1962, the words "and
their byeproducts realised by utilisation of surpluses
thereof were added at the end of the entry. By yet another
amendment, the word "bye-products" was substituted by the
word "products". Thus, at the relevant time item 3 of the
said notification read as follows:
"fresh milk,.curd and butter milk
sold by dealers exclusively dealing
in them and their products realised
by utilisation of surpluses
thereof."
It is also brought to our notice that by G.O.Ms. No.
669 dated 26.5.1975, the Government of Andhra Pradesh
exempted the sale of pasturised milk by the Andhra Pradesh
Dairy Development Corporation from the levy of tax payable
under the said Act with effect from the 1st day of May,
1975.
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In the Civil Appeals the appellant is Hindustan Milk
Food Manufacturers Ltd. They purchased milk mainly from
persons other than registered dealers which they utilised in
manufacture of various products. Its products are sold not
only within the State of Andhra Pradesh but also in other
States of the country. It has an office at Dhawaleshwaram in
East Godavari Distt. of Andhra Pradesh. It is registered as
a dealer under the Act. In the course of their assessment
proceedings for the assessment year 1979-80 (among other
assessment years) the appellant contended that the milk
having been exempted by virtue of a notification issued
under Section 9 is not taxable and that levy of purchase tax
is incompetent. They questioned the constitutionality of
Section 6-A. The Assessing authority overruled the said
objections and levied the purchase tax on the turnover of
milk purchased by the appellant. The matter was brought to
the High Court which, as stated above. negatived the
challenge to the constitutionality of the provision .
So far as the exemption notification in G.O.Ms. No.
1091 dated 10.6.1957 is concerned, it must be noticed that
what was exempted there under was the tax payable on the
"sale of fresh milk sold by dealers exclusively dealing in
them. So far as agriculturists are concerned, they are not
dealers at all by virtue of Explanation II to the definition
of "dealer" H contained in clause (e) of Section 2. The
notification has, therefore, no application to sale of milk
by them. Since the purchase by Hindustan Milk Food is almost
wholly from such agriculturists, it cannot take advantage of
the said notification. If, however, any milk is purchased by
the appellant or the writ petitioners from dealers
exclusively dealing in milk, they would be liable to pay the
purchase tax only in cases where the selling dealer is not
liable to pay the tax either because of an exemption
notification or otherwise.
A contention was urged before us that the milk was not
at all taxable under the Act. It was submitted that milk is
not mentioned in any of the Schedules I to VI appended to
the Act. This argument in our opinion proceeds upon a mis-
apprehension of the scope and scheme of Section 5, as we
shall presently demonstrate. Fresh milk was taxable as
general goods under Section 5(1) of the Act before it was
amended by Amendment Act 4 of 1989. After the coming into
force of the said Amendment Act, it falls under Schedule
VII, (which was introduced simultaneously with the said
Amendment Act) and which takes in all goods other than those
specified in first to sixth Schedules. Milk was subject to
multi-point tax prior to the said Amendment Act whereas
after the said amendment if has become taxable only at
single point namely, point of first sale in the State. If
fresh milk was not at all taxable under the Act, there was
no necessity to issue notifications exempting its sale in
certain situations.
Section 6-A was inserted by Andhra Pradesh General
Sales Tax . (Amendment) Act, 49 of 1976 with effect from
September 1, 1976. As originally enacted, the section read
as follows:
"6-A: Levy of tax on turnover
relating to purchase of certain
goods:-
Every dealer, who in the course of
business-
(i) Purchases any goods (the sale
or purchase of which is liable to
tax under this Act) from a
registered dealer in circumstances
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in which no tax is payable under
Section 5 or under Section 6, as
the case may be, or
(ii) purchases any goods (the sale
or purchase of which is IV liable
to tax under this Act) from a
person other than a registered
dealer, and
(a) either consumes such goods in
the manufacture of other goods for
sale or otherwise, or
(b) disposes of such goods in any
manner other than by way of sale
in the State, or
(c) despatches them to a place
outside the State except as a
direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce,
shall pay tax on the turnover
relating to purchase aforesaid at
the same rate which but for the
existence of the aforementioned
circumstances, tile tax would have
been leviable on such goods under
Section 5 or 6".
The Section has been amended in some particulars by the
Amendment Act 18 of 1985 but these amendments do not make a
difference to nature or character of the tax. Be that as it
may , we may as well set the section as it stands now, in
view of the fact that the validity of the section as such is
questioned before us. It reads:
"6-A. Levy of tax on turnover
relating to purchase of certain
goods:
Every dealer, who in the course of
business:
(i) purchases any goods (the sale
or purchase of which is liable to
tax under this Act) from a
registered dealer in circumstances
in which no tax is payable under
section 5 or under Section 6, as
the case may be, or
(ii) purchases any goods (the sale
or purchase of which is liable to
tax under this Act) from a person
other than a registered dealer,
and
(a) consumes such goods in the
manufacture of other goods for
sale or consumes them otherwise, or
(b) discloses of such goods in any
manner other than by way of sale in
the state, or
(c) despatches them to a place
outside the State except as a
direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter- State trade
or commerce, shall pay tax on the
turnover relating to purchase
aforesaid at the same rate at
which but for the existence of the
aforementioned circumstances, the
tax would have been leviable on
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such goods under Section 5 or
Section 5-A or Section 6:
Provided that in respect Or
declared goods such rate together
with the rate of additional tax
specified in Section 5-A shall not
exceed four percent of the purchase
price of such goods."
An analysis of the Section yields
the following ingredients:
"A. (i) a dealer who in the course
of business purchases any goods
liable to tax under the Act,
(ii) from a registered dealer in
circumstances in which no tax is
payable by such selling dealer
under Section 5 or 6 and
(iii) consumes such goods in the
manufacture of other goods for sale
or consumes them otherwise or,
(iv) disposes of such goods in any
manner other than by way of sale in
the State or,
(v) despatches them to a place
outside the State except as a
direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter State trade
or commerce,
(vi) such purchasing dealer shall
pay the tax at the same rate at
which it would have been payable by
the selling dealer.
B.(i) A dealer who in the course of
his business purchases any goods
which are taxable under the Act
(ii) from a person other than a
registered dealer and,
(iii) consumes such goods in the
manufacture of other goods for
sale or consumes them otherwise or,
(iv) disposes of such goods in any
manner other than by way of sale
in the State or,
(v) despatches them to a place
outside the Stale except as a
direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter State trade
or commerce,
(vi) such purchasing dealer shall
pay the tax at the same rate at
which it would have been payable by
the selling dealer."
The proviso which governs both the above situations
provides that in case of declared goods the total tax shall
not exceed 4% of the purchase price of such goods.
Broadly speaking, the effect is Tax payable at sale
point becomes the tax payable on the purchase point, in
certain circumstances. Because, the seller is not or cannot
be taxed for certain reasons, the purchasing dealer is being
taxed. Two examples, each illustrating one of the two
situations envisaged by the Section may be given: (a) Andhra
Pradesh Dairy Development Corporation, a registered dealer,
is exempted from paying the tax on sale of pasturised milk.
The purchaser of pasturised milk from the Corporation is
taxed provided he satisfies one of the conditions specified
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in clauses (i) to (iii) mentioned in the Section, thereby
becoming the last purchaser in the State of such milk. (b)
Fresh milk is taxable at sale point. But when it is sold by
a farmer/agriculturist raising cattle on lands held by him,
he cannot be taxed because he is not a dealer. The purchaser
is taxed in such cases provided he satisfies one of the
conditions specified in clauses (i) to (iii) in the Section,
thereby becoming the last purchaser in the State of such
milk.
It would, therefore, be clear that the real object of
the clauses (i) to (iii) in the Section is not to levy a
consumption tax, use tax or consignment tax but only to
point out that thereby the purchasing dealer converts
himself into the last purchaser in the state of such goods.
The goods cease to exist or case to be available in the
State for sale or purchase attracting tax. In these
circumstances, the purchasing dealer of such goods is taxed,
if the seller is not or cannot be taxed. In this connection,
observations of P.S. Poti, J. in Malabar Fruit Products
Co.v. S.T.O., 30 S.T.(J. 537, which have been expressly
approved by this court in State of Tamil Nadu v. Kanda
Swami, 36 S.T.C. 191 = discussed in detail in part V may be
referred to. It is not necessary to set out the said
discussion here over again.
In the circumstances, we are unable to see how the tax
imposed by Section 6-A be described either as use tax,
consumption tax or consignment tax. Since we are of the
opinion, as explained in Part V, that Goodyear does not
interpret Section 9 of Haryana Act and Section 13AA of
Bombay Act correctly, its reasoning cannot be brought in
here to contend that clause (c) of Section 6-A imposes a
consignment tax. It is a purchase tax perfectly warranted by
Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution.
Reference to a few more provisions of the Act would be
appropriate at this stage to complete the picture.
The expression "dealer" has been defined in clause (e)
of Section 2. It is not necessary to notice the entire
definition except Explanation II which says that a grower of
agricultural or horticultural produce cannot be deemed to be
a dealer if he sells his produce. Explanation reads as
follows:
"Explanation II: Where a grower of
agricultural or hor ticultural
produce sells such producer grown
by himself on any land in which he
has an interest whether as owner,
usufructuary mortgage, tenant or
otherwise, in a form different
from the one in which it was
produced after subjecting it to any
physical, chemical or any process
other than mere cleaning, grading
or sorting he shall be deemed to be
a dealer for the purpose of this
Act."
Section 5 is the charging section. Prior to the
Amendment Act 4 of 1989, Section 5 had four sub-sections.
The first sub-section made all sales/purchases by dealers
within the State of Andhra Pradesh subject to tax. It,
however, the goods sold were those mentioned in Schedule I
they were taxable at a single point, viz., at the point of
sale and at the rate prescribed in the said Schedule.
Similarly, if the goods fell in the Second Schedule they too
were taxable only at one point namely, the point of purchase
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at the rate prescribed. [Sub-section (2)1 Schedule III
comprises of declared goods while Schedule IV sets out goods
which are totally exempted Income tax under Section 8 of the
Act. Schedule V deals with jaggery and Schedule VI with
2liquors. In other words, goods which did not fall in any of
the Schedules I to VI fell under sub-section (I) and were
taxed as general goods. In this sense, fresh milk which is
not mentioned in any of the Schedules i to VI was chargeable
as general goods under sub-section (I) of Section 5. By
Amendment Act 4 of 1989 the entire scheme of Section 5 has
been changed. The present section says that the goods
mentioned in Schedules I to VII shall be taxed at the point
and at the rate specified therein. Schedule VII which has
been inserted by the very same Amendment Act is in the
nature of a residuary Schedule, the good which do not fall
in any of the Schedules I to VI fall under Schedule VII.
Even such goods have also been made taxable only at one
point and at the rate specified. After the coming into force
of the said Amendment Act of 1989, fresh milk would fall
under Schedule VII and taxable as such. It is, therefore
wrong to say that sale of milk was or is not taxable under
the Act.
Section 9 empowers the Government to exempt either the
sale of certain goods or sates by certain persons either
wholly or partly. Section reads as follows:
"9. Power of State Government to
notify exemptions and reductions of
tax (or interest):
(1) The State Government may, by
notification in the Andhra Pradesh
Gazette, make an exemption, or
reduction in rate, in respect of
any tax or interest payable under
the Act-
(i) on the sale or purchase of any
specified class of goods, at all
points or at any specified point or
points in series of sales or
purchases by successive dealers; or
(ii) by any specified class of
persons, in regard to the whole or
any part of their turnover.
(2) Any exemption from tax or
interest or reduction in the rate
of tax notified under sub-section
(I)
(a) may extend to the whole of the
State or to any specified area or
areas therein;
(b) may he subject to such
restrictions and conditions as may
be specified in the notification,
including conditions as to licences
and licence fees."
It may be noticed that while exempting the sale or
purchase of any specified class of goods the Government is
empowered to specify whether the exemption operates at all
points or any specified point or points in the scries of
sales or purchases of successive dealers. Several
notifications have been issued by the Government from time
to time exempting certain dealers or exempting certain goods
at the point of sale or purchase, as the case may be.
G.O.Ms. No.1091 is one of them. We have already noticed the
rather qualified terms in which the exemption is couched. It
is not a general exemption but a qualified one. In the light
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of the specific scheme of Section 9 and the language of
G.O.Ms. No.1091, the exemption at the point of sale by a
particular category of persons cannot be construed as
operating to exempt the purchase tax under Section 6-A as
well, much less in all cases.
For the above reasons, appeals and writ petitions are
dismissed with no order as to costs.
PART- V
(DOES GOODYEAR REQUlRE RE-CONSIDERATION?)
As mentioned earlier, counsel for all the assessees in
these matters strongly rely on the decision of this Court
in Goodyear which invalidated a purchase tax levied by the
Haryana and Maharashtra Sales Tax Acts. We may, therefore,
notice this decision in some detail. What precisely is the
ratio of Goodyear?
Provisions relating to purchase tax in Haryana Sales
Tax Act and Bombay Sales Tax Act fall for consideration in
this case. Section 9 of the Haryana Act, before it was
amended by Haryana General Sales (Amendment and Validation)
Act, 1983, read as follows:
9, Where a dealer liable to pay tax
under this Act purchases goods
other than those specified in
Schedule B from any source in the
State and-
(a) uses them in the State in the
manufacture of,-
(i) goods specified In Schedule B
or
(ii) any other goods and disposes
of the manufactured goods in any
manner otherwise than by way of
sale whether within the State or in
the course of inter-State trade or
commerce or within the meaning of
sub-section (l) of Section 5 of the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, in the
course of export out of the
territory of India.
(b) exports them, in the
circumstances in which no tax is
payable under any other provisions
of this Act, there shall be levied,
of subject to the provisions of
Section 17, a tax on the purchase
of such goods at such rate as may
be notified under Section 15."
A notification dated 19th July, 1974 was issued by the
Government of Haryana under the said provision read with
Section 15(1) of the Act in purported implementation of the
said provision. Validity of Section 9 as well as of the
notification was challenged in a batch of writ petitions
filed in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana. The High
Court upheld the challenge holding that "whereas the said
provision (Section 9) provided only for the levy of a
purchase tax on the disposal of manufactured goods, the
notification by making a mere despatch of goods to the
dealers them selves taxable in essence, legislates and
imposes a substantive tax which it obviously cannot."
Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana (1990) 76 S.T.C. 71.
After it was amended by the aforesaid amendment Act,
sub-sections (] ) and (2) of Section 9 read as follows:
"9. Liability to pay purchase tax,
- (1) Where a dealer liable to pay
tax under this Act,-
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(a) purchases goods, other than
those specified in Schedule B, from
any source in the State and uses
them in the State in the
manufacture of goods specified in
Schedule B; or
(b) purchases goods, other than
those specified in Schedule B, from
any source in the State and uses
than in the State in the
manufacture of any other goods and
either disposes of the manufactured
goods in any manner otherwise than
by way of sale in the State or
despatches the manufactured goods
to a place outside the State in any
manner otherwise than by way of
sale in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce or in the course
of export outside the territory of
India within the meaning of sub-
section (1) of Section 5 of B the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956; or
(c) purchases goods, other than
those specified in Schedule B, from
any source in the State and exports
them, in the circumstances in which
no tax is payable under any other
provision of the Act, there shall
be levied, subject to the
provisions of Section 17 a tax on
the purchases of such goods at such
rate as may be notified under
Section 15.
(2) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this Act or the rules
made thereunder, if the goods
leviable to tax under this section
are exported in the same condition
in which they wore purchased, the
tax shall be levied, charged and
paid at the station of despatch or
at any other station before the
goods leave the State and the tax
so levied, charged and paid shall
be provisional and the same shall
be adjustable towards the tax due
from the dealer on such purchase as
a result of assessment or re-
assessment made in accordance with
the provisions of this Act and the
rules made there under on the
production of proof regarding the
payment thereof in the State."
Again a batch of writ petitions was filed questioning
the validity of the amended provision which challenge too
was upheld by the High Court in its decision in Bata India
Ltd. v. State of Haryana, 54 S.T.C. 226. The main ground
upon which the High Court allowed the writ petitions was
that mere despatch of goods to a place outside the State in
any manner other than by way of sale in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce is synonymous with or is in any case
included within the ambit of consignment of goods to the
person making it or to any other person in the course of
inter-state trade or commerce as specified in Article
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269(l)(iv) and Entry 92(B) of List-l of the Seventh Schedule
to the Constitution and thus beyond the competence of the
State legislature. According to the High Court, the taxable
event was not the purchase of goods nor the use of such
goods in manufacture of end-products but the despatch of
goods.
Doubting the view taken in Bata India, one of the
learned Judges of the Punjab and Haryana High Court,
Punchhi, J. (as he then was) referred the matter to a Bull
Bench which took a different view in Desraj Pushp Kumar
Gulati v. State of Punjab, 58 S.T.C.393. The Full Bench was
of the view that according to Section 9 (amended) the taxing
event is the act of purchase of goods which are used in the
manufacture of end-products and not the act of despatch or
consignment as held in Bata India.
The correctness of all the three decisions aforesaid
was questioned in appeals filed before this Court. The
appeals were heard by a Bench comprising Sabyasachi
Mukharji, J. (as he then was) and one of us (S.Ranganathan,
J.). Mukharji, J., in his separate judgment, set out the
test for determining the taxable event in the following
words: "It is well settled that the main test for
determining the taxable event is that on the happening of
which the charge is affixed. The realisation often is
postponed to further date. The quantification of the levy
and the recovery of tax are also postponed in some cases
Taxable event is that which on its occurrence creates or
attracts the liability to tax." Then the learned Judge
proceeded to analyse Section 9 (amended) and concluded as
follows: "Analysing the section it appears to us that
conditions specified, before the event of despatch outside
the State as mentioned in Section 9(1)(b) namely, (i)
purchase of goods in the State and (ii) using them for the
manufacture of any other goods in the State, are only
descriptive of the goods liable to tax under Section 9(1)(b)
in the event of despatch outside the State. If the goods do
not answer both the descriptions cumulatively, even though
these are despatched outside the State of Haryana, the
purchase of those goods would not be tax under Section
(I)(b) The liability to pay tax in this section does not
accrue on purchasing the goods simplicitor, but only when
these are despatched or consigned out of the State of
Haryana. In all these cases, it is necessary to find out
the true nature of the tax. Analysing the Section, if one
looks to the purchase tax under Section 9, one gets the
conclusion that the Section itself does not provide for
imposition of the purchase tax on the transaction of
purchase of the taxable goods but when further the said
taxable goods are used up and turned into independent
taxable goods, losing its original identity, and thereafter
when the manufactured goods are despatched outside the State
of Haryana and only then tax is levied and liability to pay
tax is created "According , the learned judge held , the is
in the nature of a consignment tax which the Parliament
alone could impose and not the State legislature.
The correctness of the said view is questioned by the
learned counsel for the State of Andhra Pradesh and other
counsel for the State Governments. The question for our
consideration is whether the learned Judge was not right in
holding that the taxable event under the section Is not the
purchase goods used in the manufacture of end-products but
the despatch of manufactured goods to out-state
destinations.
The other provision considered in the said decision is
the one contained in Section 13AA of the Bombay Sales Tax
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Act. The said provision which was introduced into the Act by
the Maharashtra Act (28 of 82) read as follows at the
relevant time:
"13AA. Purchase tax payable on
goods in Schedule C, Part I when
manufactured goods are transferred
to outside branches.-
Where a dealer, who is liable to
pay tax under this Act, purchases
any goods specified in Part I of
Schedule C, directly or through
Commission agent, from a person who
is or is not a Registered dealer
and uses such goods in the
manufacture of taxable goods and
despatches the goods, so
manufactured, to his own place of
business or to his agent’s place of
business situated outside the State
within Indian then such dealer
shall be liable to pay, in addition
to the sales tax paid or payable,
or as the case may be, the purchase
tax levied or leviable under the
other provisions of this Act in
respect of purchases of such goods,
a purchase tax at the rate of two
paise in the rupee on the purchase
price of the goods so used in the
manufacture, and accordingly the
dealer shall include purchase price
of such goods in his turnover of
purchases in his return under
Section 32, which he is to furnish
next thereafter.
The validity of the said provision was challenged inter
alia by Hindustan Lever Limited which was negatived by the
Bombay High Court in its decision reported in 72 S.T.C. 69.
The High Court was of the opinion that the additional
purchase tax leviable under the said provision is on the
purchase value of V.N.E.Oil used in the manufacture of goods
transferred outside the State and not on the value of the
manufactured goods so transferred. It held further that the
goods taxed under Section 13AA are consumed in the State as
raw material in the process of manufacturing other
commodities and therefore tax imposed thereon cannot be said
to hinder the free flow of trade within the meaning of
Article 301 of the Constitution.
The question again was which is the taxable event
according to Section 13AA. Mukharji, J. on an analysis of
the section held that the taxable event is the despatch of
manufactured goods outside the State which means that the
levy is beyond the competence of the State legislature. The
attack based upon Article 301 of the Constitution was,
however, repelled.
Though agreeing with the conclusion arrived at by
Mukharji, J., Ranganathan, J. made a few pertinent
observations in his separate opinion. The learned Judge
opined that both Section 9 of the Haryana Act and Section
13AA of the Bombay Sales Tax Act "purport only to levy a
purchase tax" and further that "the tax, however, becomes
exigible not on the occasion or event of purchase but only
later. It materialises only if the purchaser (a) utilises
the goods purchased in the manufacture of taxable goods and
(b) despatches the goods so manufactured (otherwise than by
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way of sale) to a place of business situated outside the
State. The legislature, however, is careful to impose the
tax only on the price at which the raw materials are
purchased and not on the value of the manufactured goods
consigned outside the State. The State describes the tax as
one levied on the purchase of a class of goods viz., those
purchased in the State and utilised as raw material in the
manufacture of goods which are consigned outside the State
otherwise than by way of sale." The learned Judge opined:
"to me it appeared as plausible to describe the levy as a
tax on purchase of goods inside the State (which attaches
itself only in certain eventualities) as to describe it as a
tax on goods consigned outside the state but limited to the
value of raw material purchase inside the State and utilised
therein." The learned Judge stated that he had "considerable
doubts" as to the taxable event but that on further
reflection he was inclined to agree with H S.Mukharji, J.
that the tax though described as a purchase tax actually
became effective with reference to a totally different class
of goods and that too only on the happening of an event
which is unrelated to the Act of purchase and therefore, in
truth and essence, it was a consignment tax.
The crucial question, therefore, is what is the basis
of taxation in either of the above provisions? In other
words, the question is whether levy of tax is on the
purchase of goods or upon the consignment of the
manufactured goods? Let us first deal with Section 9 of the
Haryana Act (as amended in 1983). Properly analysed, the
following are the ingredients of the Section: (i) a dealer
liable to pay tax under the Act purchases goods (other than
those specified in Schedule B) from any source in the State
and (ii) uses them in the State in the manufacture of any
other goods and (iii) either disposes of the manufactured
goods in any manner otherwise than by way of sale in the
State or despatches the manufactured goods to a place
outside the State in any manner otherwise than by way of
sale in the course of a inter-State trade or commerce or in
the course of export outside the territory of India within
the meaning of sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the (Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956. If all the above three ingredients are
satisfied, the dealer becomes liable to pay tax on the
purchase of such goods at such rate, as may be notified
under Section 15.
Now, what does the above analysis signify? The section
applies only in those cases where (a) the goods are
purchased (for convenience sake, I may refer to them as raw
material) by a dealer liable to pay tax under the Act in the
State. (b) the goods so purchased cease to exist as such
goods for the reason they are consumed in the manufacture of
different commodities and (e) such manufactured commodities
are either disposed of within the State otherwise than by
way of sale or despatched to a place outside the State
otherwise than by way of an inter-State sale or export sale.
It is evident that if such manufactured goods are not sold
within the State of Haryana, but yet disposed of within the
State, no tax is payable on such disposition; similarly,
where manufactured goods are despatched out of State as a
result of an inter-State sale or export sale, no tax is
payable on such sale. Similarly again where such
manufactured goods are taken out of State to manufacturers
own depots or to the depots of his agents, no tax is payable
on such removal. Goodyear takes only the last eventuality
and holds that the taxable event is the removal of goods
from the State and since such removal is to dealers own
depots/agents outside the State, it is consignment, which
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cannot be taxed by the State legislature. With the greatest
respect at our command, we beg to disagree. The levy created
by the said provision is a levy on the purchase of raw
material purchased within the State which is consumed in the
manufacture of other goods within the State. If, however,
the manufactured goods are sold within the State, no
purchase tax is collected on the raw material, evidently
because the State gets larger revenue by taxing the sale of
such goods. (The value of manufactured goods is hound to be
higher than the value of the raw material). The State
legislature does not wish to - in the interest of trade and
general public - tax both the raw material and the finished
(manufactured) product. This is a well-known policy in the
field of taxation. But where the manufactured goods are not
sold within the State but are yet disposed of or where the
manufactured goods are sent outside the State (otherwise
than by way of inter-State sale or export sale) the tax has
to be paid on the purchase value of the raw material. The
reason is simple: if the manufactured goods are disposed of
otherwise than by sale within the State or are sent out of
State (i.e., consigned to dealers own depots or agents), the
State does not get any revenue because no sale of
manufactured goods has taken place within Haryana. In such a
situation, the State says, it would retain the levy and
collect it since there is no reason for waiving the purchase
tax in these two situations. Now coming to inter-State sale
and export sale, it may be noticed that in the case of
inter-State sale, the State of Haryana does get the tax-
revenue may not be to the full extent. Though the Central
Sales Tax is levied and collected by the Government of
India, Article 269 of the Constitution provides for making
over the tax collected to the States in accordance with
certain principles. Where, of course, the sale is an export
sale within the meaning of Section 5(1) of the Central Sales
Tax Act (export sales) the State may not get any revenue but
larger national interest is served thereby. It is for these
reasons that tax on the purchase of raw material is waived
in these two situations. Thus, there is a very sound and
consistent policy underlying the provision. The object is to
tax the purchase of goods by a manufacturer whose existence
as such goods is put an end to by him by using them in the
manufacture of different goods in certain circumstances. The
tax is levied upon the purchase price of raw material, not
upon the sale price - or consignment value - of manufactured
goods. Would it be right to say that the levy is upon
consignment of manufactured goods in such a case? True it is
that the levy materialises only when the purchased goods
(raw material) is consumed in the manufacture of different
goods and those goods are disposed of within the State
otherwise than by way act sale or are consigned to the
manufacturing-dealer’s dopots/agents outside the State of
Haryana. But does that change the nature and character of
the levy? Does such postponement - if one can call it as
such - convert what is avowedly a purchase tax what is on
raw material (levied on the purchase price of such raw
material) to a consignment tax on the manufactured goods? We
think not. Saying otherwise would defeat the very object and
purpose of Section 9 and amount to its nullification in
effect. The most that can perhaps be said is that it is
plausible (as pointed out by Ranganathan, J. in his separate
opinion) to characterise the said tax both as purchase tax
as well as consignment tax. But where two interpretations
are possible, one which sustains the constitutionality
and/or effectuates its purpose and intendment and the other
which effectively nullifies the provision, the former must
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be preferred, according to all known canons of
interpretation. This is also the view expressly approved by
Mukharji, J. in his opinion, as pointed out hereinbefore. In
para 71 of his opinion, the learned Judge states: ‘it is
well settled that reasonable construction should be followed
and literal construction may be avoided if that defeats the
manifest object and purpose of the Act. Commissioner of
Wealth Tax, Bihar and Orissa v. Kirpa Shankar Daya Shankar
Vorah (1971) 81 ITR 763 at page 768 and Income Tax
Commissioners for City of London v. Gibbs’ (1942) 10 ITR
Suppl. 121 at page 132 (H.L.)".
(emphasis supplied)
However, we would presently show that merely because
the levy attaches on the happening or non-happening of a
subsequent event, the nature and character of the levy does
not change. In several enactments. for instance, tax is
levied at the last sale point or last purchase point, as the
case may be. How does one determine the last purchase point
in the State’? Only when one knows that no purchase took
place within the State thereafter. But that can only be
known later. If there is a subsequent purchase within the
State, the purchase in question ceases to be the last
purchase. As pointed out pertinently by P.S.Poti, J. (as he
then was) in Malabar Fruit Products Company and Ors. v. The
Sales Tax Officer and Ors, (1972) 30 S.T.C. 537, applying
the logic of the dealers, it would not be possible to tax
any goods at the last purchase point in the State, inasmuch
as the last purchase point in regard to any goods could be
determined only when the goods are sold later and not when
the goods are purchased. In the said decision. the learned
Judge was dealing with the validity and construction of
Section 5-A of Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963, sub-
section (l) whereof read as follows:
"5A. Levy of purchase tax (1) Every
dealer who in the course of his
business purchases from a
registered dealer or from any other
person any goods. the sale or
purchase of which is liable to tax
under this Act, in circumstances in
which no tax is payable under
Section 5, and either-
(a) consumes such goods in the
manufacture of other goods for sale
or otherwise; or
(b) disposes of such goods in any
manner other than by way of sale in
the State; or
(c) despatches them to any place
outside the State except as a
direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce, shall whatever be the
quantum of the turnover relating to
such purchase for that year at the
rates mentioned in Section 5."
One of the arguments urged against the validity of the
said provision was that inasmuch as the tax is levied
depending upon the mode in which the goods purchased are
consumed, disposed of or despatched, the tax is really one
in the nature of consumption tax or use tax, but not sales
tax. This argument was answered by the learned Judge in the
following words:
According to me, this contention is
based on a misconception of the
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scope of taxation on the sale of
goods. It is true that sales tax is
a tax imposed on the occasion of
the sale of goods. But it has no
reference to the point of time at
which the sale or purchase takes
place. It refers to the connection
with the event of purchase or sale
and not the point of time at which
such purchase or sale takes place.
To read it otherwise would render
any retrospective in position of
sales tax invalid as in every such
case the tax would not be one which
arises on the occasion of sale. By
the same logic, it would not he
possible to tax any goods at the
last purchase point in the State,
for the last purchase point in
regard to any goods could be
determined only when the goods arc
sold later and not when the goods
are purchased. On the same
reasoning as urged by counsel, one
should say in such a case that
since the goods are taxed only when
the goods are sold outside the
State or are despatched for such
sale outside the State and so the
last purchases are taxed not on the
"occasion" of the purchases and,
consequently, it is beyond the
competence of the Legislature. That
certainly cannot be and the Supreme
Court has held in the decision in
State of Madras v. Narayanaswami
Naidu, (1968) 21 S.T.C.1 (S.C.),
that the goods are taxable in such
cases in the financial year when
they become the last purchases." C:
The decision of Poti, J. was affirmed by a Division
Bench of Kerala High Court in Yusuf Shabeer and Ors. v.
State of Kerala and Ors., (1973) 32 S.T.C. 359. Both these
decisions were expressly referred to and approved by a
three-Judge Bench of this Court in State of Tamil Nadu v.
Kandaswami and Ors., (1975) 36 S.T.C. page 191. Kandaswami
was concerned with the construction of Section 7-A of the
Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act which too a levied purchase
tax and is couched in language similar to Section 5-A of the
Kerala Act. While dealing with the scheme of Section 7-A,
this court quoted with approval certain passages from the
judgment of Poti, J. including the following sentence:
"If the goods are not available in
the State for subsequent taxation
by reason of one or other of the
circumstances mentioned in clauses
(a), (b) and (c) of Section 5-A(1)
ofthe Act then the purchaser is
sought to be made liable under
Section 5-A.
This statement accords with our understanding of the
scheme of Section 9 of Haryana Act as set out hereinabove.
To repeat, the scheme of Section 9 of Haryana Act is to levy
the tax on purchase of raw material and not to forego it
where the goods manufactured out of them are disposed of (or
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despatched, as the case may be) in a manner not yielding any
revenue to the State nor serving the interests of nation and
its economy, as explained hereinbefore. The purchased goods
are put an end to by their consumption in manufacture of
other goods and yet the manufactured goods are dealt with in
a manner as to deprive the State of any revenue; in such
cases, there is no reason why the State should forego its
tax revenue on purchase of raw material.
Another observation in Kandaswami relevant for the
present purpose may also be noticed:
"It may be remembered that Section
7-A is at once a charging as well
as a remedial provision. Its main
object is to plug leakage and
prevent evasion of tax. In
interpreting such a provision, a
construction which would defeat its
purpose and, in effect, obliterate
it from the statute book, should he
eschewed. If more than one
construction is possible that which
preserves its workability and
efficacy is to be preferred to the
one which would render it otiose or
sterile. The view taken by the High
Court is repugnant to this cardinal
canon of interpretation."
In the light of the above scheme of Section 9, it would
not be right, in our respectful opinion, to say that the tax
is not upon the purchase of raw material but on the
consignment of the manufactured goods. It is well-settled
that taxing power can be utilised to encourage commerce and
industry. It can also be used to serve the interests of
economy and promote social and economic planning. Section 9
of Haryana Act and Section 13AA of Bombay Act are intended
to encourage the industry and at the same time derive
revenue. It is also not right to concentrate only on one
situation viz., consignment of goods to manufacturer’s own
depots (or to the depots of his agents) outside the Side.
Disposal of goods within the State without effecting a sale
also stands on the same footing, an instance of which may be
captive consumption of manufactured products in the
manufacture of yet other products. Once the scheme and
policy of the provision is appreciated, there is no room, in
our respectful opinion, for saying that the tax is on the
consignment of manufactured goods.
We may in this connection refer to the decision of a
Constitution Bench of this Court in Andhra Sugars v. State
of Andhra Pradesh, 21 S.T.C, 212, relating to the validity
of Section 21 of the A.P. Sugarcane Regulation of Supply and
Purchase Act, 1961. Sub-section (1) of Section 21 read as
follows:
"21. (1) The Government may, by
notification, levy a tax at such
rate not exceeding five rupees per
metric tonne as may be prescribed
on the purchase of cane required
for use, consumption or sale in a
factory."
One of the arguments urged against the validity of the
levy was that since the levy is not on every purchase of
sugarcane but only "on the purchase of cane required for
use, consumption or sale in a factory" the tax is not really
a purchase tax referable to Entry 54 of List II of the VIIth
Schedule to the Constitution but a use tax, a tax of a
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different character altogether not falling under Entry 54.
It was also argued that since the tax is levied at the stage
of entry of cane into the factory for being used and
consumed in the manufacture of sugar, it is in the nature of
an entry tax but since the factory was not a "local area"
within the meaning of Entry 52 of List II, the levy was
incompetent. Both the arguments were rejected in the
following words:
"Under that entry, the State
Legislature is not bound to levy a
tax on all purchase of cane. It may
levy a tax on purchases of cane
required for "use, consumption or
sale in a factory. The Legislature
is competent to tax and also to
exempt from payment of tax sales or
purchases of goods required for
specific purposes. Other instances
of special treatment of goods
required for particular purpose may
he given. Section 6 and Schedule I,
item 23 of the Bombay Sales Tax
Act, 1946, levy tax on fabrics and
articles for personal wear. Section
2(j)(a)(ii) of the C.P. and Berar
Sales Tax Act, 1947, exempts sales
of goods intended for use by a
registered dealer as raw materials
tor the manufacture of goods.
Mr. Chatterjee submitted that the
tax levied under Section 21 was a
use tax and referred to Mcleod v.
Dilworth and Co. 322 U.S. 327; 88
L.Ed. 1305, and C.G. Naidu and Co.
v. The State of Madras, A.I.R. 1953
Mad. 116, 127-128; 3 STC 405. He
argued that the State Legislature
could not levy a use tax which was
essentially different from a
purchase tax. The assumption of
counsel that Section 21 levies a
use tax is not well-founded. The
taxable event under Section 21 is
the purchase of goods and not the
use or enjoyment of what is
purchased. The constitutional
implication of a use tax in
American law is entirely
irrelevent.".......
"To appreciate another argument of
Mr. Chatterjee, it is necessary to
refer to a few Acts. It appears
that paragraph 21 of the Bill
published in the Gazette on March
3, 1960 preliminary to the passing
of Act No. 43 of 1961 provided for
a levy of a cess on the entry of
cane into the premises of a factory
for use, consumption or sale
therein. On December 13, 1960, this
court in Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd.,
and Another v. The State of Uttar
Pardesh and Another, [1961] 3
S.C.R. 242, struck down a similar
provision in the U.P. Sugarcane
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Cess Act, 1956, on the ground that
the State Legislature was not
competent to enact it under Entry
52, List II, as the premises of a
factory was not a local area within
the meaning of the entry. Having
regard to this decision, paragraph
21 of the Bill was amended and
Section 21 in its present form was
passed by the State Legislature.
The Act was published in the
Gazette on December 30, 1961. Mr.
Chatterjee submitted that in this
context the levy under Section 21
was really a levy on the entry of
goods into a factory for
consumption, use or said therein.
We are unable to accept this
contention. As the proposed tax on
the entry of goods into a factory
was unconstitutional, paragraph 21
of the original Bill was amended
and Section 21 in its present form
was enacted. The tax under Section
21 is essentially a tax on purchase
of goods The taxable event is the
purchase of cane for use,
consumption or sale in a factory
and not the entry of cane into a
factory. As the tax is not on the
entry of the cane into a factory,
it is not payable on cane
cultivated by the factory and
entering the factory premises."
For the above reasons, we find it difficult to agree
with the reasoning of Mukharji, J, in Goodyear. It is also
not possible to agree with the learned Judge when he says
that "the two conditions specified, before the event of
despatch outside the State as mentioned in Section 9(1)(b),
namely (i) purchase of goods in the State and (ii) using
them for the manufacture of any other goods in the State are
only descriptive of the goods liable to tax under Section
9(1)(h) in the event to despatch outside the State". When
the tax is levied on the purchase of raw material on the
purchase price and not on the manufacture of goods or on the
consignment value (such a concept is unknown to Haryana Act)
or sale price of the manufactured goods - the above
construction, in our respectful opinion, runs against the
very grain of the provision and has the effect of nullifying
the very provision. By placing the said interpretation,
Section 9 has been rendered nugatory; except for the two
minor areas pointed out in Murli Manohar and Company v.
State of Haryana, [1991] 1 S.C.C. 377, the Section - which
has its parallels in all the State enactments - has
practically become redundant. This was the main reason we
undertook to reconsider the said decision which course we
would not have ordinarily agreed to adopt. In our respectful
opinion, the tax purports to be and is in truth a purchase
tax levied on the purchase price of raw material purchased
by a manufacturer. In certain situations (the three
situations mentioned above viz, sale of manufactured goods
within the State, inter-State sale and export sale of
manufactured goods) it is waived. In other cases, it is not.
It is argued for the assessees that apart from Goodyear
a Bench of three Judges of this Court has independently
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approved and affirmed the correctness of the ratio and
reasoning in Goodyear. Reference is to Mukerian Papers Ltd.
v. State of Punjab, [1991] 2 S.C.C. 580. The case arose
under the Punjab General Sales Tax Act and the provision
which fell for interpretation was Section 4B. It levied
purchase tax on the raw material used in the manufacture of
goods which in turn are sold outside the State otherwise
than by way of sale in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce or in the course of export out of the territory of
India. The argument for the assessee/appellant was "that the
main question of law involved in this case is concluded by
the decision of this court in Goodyear India Ltd. v. State
of Haryana which was an appeal arising from the High Court’s
decision in the case of the same assessee.... ". It was this
contention which was examined by the Bench. Section 4B of
the Punjab Act was analysed and it was found that it is in
material particulars, similar to Section 9 of the Haryana
Act even though the language was not identical. Ahmadi, J.
speaking for the Bench observed: "therefore, even though the
language of Section 4B of the Act is not identical with the
relevant part of Section 9(1) of the Haryana Act, it is in
substance similar in certain respects, particularly in
respect of the point of time when the liability to pay tax
arises. Under that provision, as here, the liability to pay
purchase tax on the raw material purchased in the State
which was consumed in the manufacture of any other taxable
goods arose only on the despatch of the goods outside the
State. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the ratio of
the said decision of this Court in Goodyear India Ltd.
applies on all fours to the main question at issue in this
case." When the counsel for the revenue sought to argue
that the decision of this court in Kandaswami takes a
different view the Bench did not permit the same to be urged
in the view of the fact that the correctness of the judgment
in Goodyear was not canvassed before them. The Bench said
"the decision in Kandaswami though in the context of an
analogous provision was distinguished by this court in
Goodyear India Ltd. on the ground that it did not touch the
core of the question at issue in the latter case. This
aspect of the matter is elaborately dealt with in paragraphs
31 to 34 at page 796 of the report. We need not dilate on
this any more since the correctness of the judgment in
Goodyear India Ltd. is not canvassed before us."
It is, thus, clear that the main argument for the Bench
was that the ratio of Goodyear governs the said case and it
was so found. It is equally clear that the correctness of
the decision in Goodyear was not questioned before the Bench
and that is why the Bench took care to specifically advert
to and record the said circumstance.
So far as the decision in Murli Manohar & Co. v. State
of Haryana [1991] 1 S.C.C. 377 is concerned, it arose under
Haryana Sales Tax Act and explains the meaning of export
sale referred to in Section 9(1)(h) of the Act. There is no
discussion in this decision about the point at issue before
us.
The same is the position under Section 13AA of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act. The said provision, properly analysed,
yields the following ingredients: (i) where a dealer who is
liable to pay tax under this Act purchases any goods
specified in Part I of Schedule (C) either directly or
through commission agent, from a person who is or is not a
registered dealer and (ii) uses such goods in the
manufacture of taxable goods and (iii) despatches the goods
so manufactured to his own place of business or to his
agent’s place or business situated outside the State within
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India. (iv) such dealer shall pay, in addition to the sales
tax/purchase tax paid or payable or levied or leviable, as
the case may be, a purchase tax at the rate of two paise in
the rupee on the purchase price of the goods so used in the
manufacture. Here again it may be noticed that the tax
levied is a purchase tax on the purchase of raw material and
not upon the consignment of the manufactured goods The
object of this provision too is the same as of the Haryana
provision The levy is waived where the manufactured goods
are sold within the State, or sold in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce or sold in the course of export. It
is retained and collected where the goods are taken out of
Maharashtra State by way of consignment, in which event the
State sees no reason not to retain and collect the levy on
purchase of raw material The provisions is substantially
similar to Section 9 of Haryana Act. Whatever we have said
with respect to the Haryana provision applies equally to
this provision. It is not necessary to repeat the same here.
Before parting with this matter, it is necessary to
clarify: it was brought to our notice that both the Haryana
and Bombay provisions have since been substituted with
retrospective effect. We have not referred to those
provisions in this part for the reason that we are concerned
only with the reasoning in Goodyear.
For the reasons mentioned above, we uphold the
constitutional validity of the impugned provisions.
The appeals, writ petitions, S.L.Ps and T.C.
accordingly fail and are dismissed No order as to costs
G.N. Petitions dismissed.