Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. SWASTIK TOBACCO FACTORY, VEDARANYAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/12/1965
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1000 1966 SCR (3) 79
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC 879 (27)
R 1980 SC 169 (12)
R 1980 SC1227 (6)
RF 1987 SC1885 (8)
ACT:
Madras General Sales Tax (Turnover and Assessment) Rules
1939, r. 5 (1) (i) Excise duty paid on raw tobacco-Raw
tobacco processed and sold as chewing tobacco-Excise duty
whether to be deducted from turnover of chewing tobacco
under r. 5(1)(i).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent factory used to purchase raw tobacco and
after processing it, sell it as chewing tobacco. Excise
duty was paid by the factory in respect of raw tobacco
purchased by it. In sales tax proceedings the factory
contended that the excise duty so paid to the Central
Government must be deducted to arrive at the net turnover
under r. 5(1)i) of the Madras General Sales Tax (Turnover
and Assessment) Rules, 1939. The assessing officer as well
as the Appellate Assistant Commissioner rejected the
contention but it was accepted by the Tribunal. The
revision filed by the. State in the High Court was
dismissed, whereupon the State appealed to this Court by
special leave.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the raw
tobacco was converted by a manufacturing process into
chewing tobacco, a different commodity and that, therefore,
under r. 5(1)(i) of the Rules, as excise duty was paid only
in respect of raw tobacco and not chewing tobacco the said
duty was not deductible from the turnover of the assesses.
HELD : ’Me object of the concession in r. 5(1)(i) is
presumably to avoid payment of tax on tax in respect of the
same goods. This concession would have no relevance if the
goods subjected to excise duty were different from the goods
sold. Tobacco when converted by a process of manufacture
into chewing tobacco becomes a different marketable product.
Duty on raw tobacco cannot therefore be said to be paid in
respect of the manufactured product. [82 B-D]
The expression "in respect of the goods" in r. 5(1)(i) means
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only on the goods", and cannot take in the raw material out
of which the goods were made. [83 E]
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Court & Co. [1963] 2 All.
E.R. 722 and Asher v. Seaford Court Estates Ltd., L.R.
[1950] A.C. 508, considered.
The excise duty paid by the respondent was only on the raw
tobacco and not on the goods sold by it, and therefore, the
said duty could not be deducted from its turnover under r.
5(1) (i). [83 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 90 andand
91 of 1965.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 4, 1963 of the Madras High Court in Tax Cases Nos.
120 and 121 of 1963.
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A. Ranganandhan Chetty and A. V. Rangam, for the appel-
lant.
T. A. Ramachandran and O. C. Mathur for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. These appeals, by special leave, raise the
question of the true construction of the provisions of r.
5(1) (i) of the Madras General Sales Tax (Turnover and
Assessment) Rules, 1939, hereinafter referred to as the
Rules.
The facts are not in dispute and they may be briefly stated.
The respondent, Messrs Swastik Tobacco Factory, is a dealer
in tobacco. It purchased raw tobacco; by processing it in a
prescribed manner, converted it into chewing tobacco and
sold it as such in small paper packets. The said process
has been described by a Division Bench of the Madras High
Court in Bell Mark Tobacco Co. v. Government of Madras(1)
thus :
"Taking, however, the cumulative effect of the
various processes to which the assessee
subjected the tobacco before he sold it is
clear that what was eventually sold by the
assessee was a manufactured product,
manufactured from the tobacco that the
assesses had purchased. Soaking in jaggery
water is not the only process to be
considered. The addition of flavouring
essences and shredding of the tobacco should
establish that what the assesses sold was a
product substantially different from what he
had purchased."
for the purpose of these appeals, it was not disputed that
the respondent purchased raw tobacco, converted it by a
manufacturing process into chewing tobacco and sold it in
small paper packets. The respondent paid excise duty in
respect of the raw tobacco purchased by it. For the
assessment years 1955-56 and 1956-57, the Assistant-cum-
Deputy Commercial Tax Officer assessed the respondent to
sales tax on the turnover of Rs. 10,67,923-10-9 and Rs.
7,71,661-11-0 respectively. The respondent, claimed that
the excise duty paid by it to the Central’ Government in
respect of the raw tobacco should be deducted from the
turnover ascertained by the said Officer. But his conten-
tion was rejected. On appeal, the order of the said Officer
was confirmed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of
Commercial Taxes. On a further appeal to the Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal, the assessee, in addition to the
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question of deduction, raised
(1) (1961) 12 S.T.C. 126,132.
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an additional ground that the entire turnover of the sales
on chewing tobacco was not liable to be assessed. The
Tribunal set aside the order of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. The State carried the matter in two revisions
to the High Court of Madras. A Division Bench of the said
High Court agreed with the view expressed by the Tribunal
and dismissed the revisions. Hence the present appeals.
Mr. A. V. Rangam, learned counsel for the State, argued that
the raw tobacco was converted by a manufacturing process
into, chewing tobacco, a different commodity and that,
therefore, under r. 5(1) of the Rules, as excise duty was
paid only in respect of the raw tobacco and not chewing
tobacco, the said duty was not deductible from the turnover
of the assessee. He did not contest the correctness of the
decision of the High Court on the question of the taxability
of the chewing tobacco under S. 5(vii) of the Act.
Mr. T. A. Ramachandran, learned counsel for the respondent,
contended that the said rule was couched in a comprehensive
language so as to take in excise duty paid on raw tobacco
converted by a manufacturing process into chewing tobacco.
The relevant rule reads thus :
"Rule 5. (1) The tax or taxes under section 3
or 5 or 5A or the notification or
notifications under section 6(1) shall be
levied on the net turnover of the dealers.
In determining the net turnover the amounts
specified in the following clauses shall,
subject to the condition specified therein, be
deducted from the gross turnover of a dealer :
(i) the excise duty, if any, paid by the
dealer to the Central Government in respect of
the goods sold by him;
Both the advocates argued, on the basis of the factual
position,. that packets of chewing tobacco were goods
different from tobacco from which the said goods were
manufactured. While the learned counsel for the State laid
emphasis on the words "goods sold by him", the learned
counsel for the respondent relied upon the expression "in
respect of" preceding the said words. If, instead of the
expression "in respect of’, the word "on" were there, the
intention of the rule would be manifest and the answer to
the question raised would be obvious. The excise duty paid
by the respondent was only on the raw tobacco and not on the
goods’ sold by it and, therefore, the said duty was not
deductible thereunder. So far there is no dispute. But it
was said that the
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expression "in respect of" made all the difference. The
words "in respect of", it was said, meant "attributable"
and, therefore, the argument proceeded, the excise duty paid
on the tobacco, though it was not paid on the goods sold by
the respondent, was attributable to the said goods sold.
The object of the concession is presumably to avoid payment
of tax on tax in respect of the same goods. If excise duty
was paid by a dealer on certain goods, it would be deducted
from the gross turnover of the dealer in regard to the said
goods, as otherwise, in effect, sales-tax would have to be
paid on the amount paid towards excise duty. This
concession could have no relevance if the goods subjected to
excise duty were different from the goods sold. Raw
tobacco, when converted by a process of manufacture into
chewing tobacco, be comes a different marketable product.
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There will be no comparison between the raw tobacco and the
chewing tobacco in the matter of demand or even price. Duty
on raw tobacco may have some effect on the cost of the manu-
factured product, but it cannot possibly be said that the
said duty is paid in respect of the manufactured product.
Rule 5(1)(i) of the Rules, therefore, permits deduction from
the gross turnover of the dealer only the excise duty paid
by him in respect of the same goods sold by him.
Learned counsel for the :respondent cited some English deci-
sions in support of his contention that the expression "in
respect of the goods" was very wide and that it took in the
raw-material out of which the goods were made.
The House of Lords in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Courts
& Co.(1), in the context of payment of estate duty, con-
strued the words "in respect of" in S. 5(2) of the Finance
Act, 1894 (57 & 58 Vict. c. 30) and observed that the phrase
denoted some imprecise kind of nexus between the property
and the estate duty. The House of Lords in Asher v. Seaford
Court Estates Ltd. (2) in construing the provisions of S.
2, sub-s. (3) of Increase of Rent and Mortgage Interest
(Restrictions) Act, 1920 (10 & 11 Geo. 5, c. 17), held
that the expression "in respect of’ must be read as
equivalent to "attributable". The Privy Council in Bicber,
Ltd. v. Commissioners of Income-tax(1) observed that the
said words could mean more than "consisting of" or "namely".
It is not necessary to refer to other decisions. It may be
accepted that the said expression received a wide
interpretation,
(1) [1963] 2 All. E.R. 722, 732.
(3) [1962] 3 All. E.R. 294.
(2) L.R. [1950] A.C. 508.
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having regard to the object of the provisions and the
setting in which the said words appeared. On the other
hand, Indian tax laws use the expression "in respect of" as
synonymous with the expression "on" : see Art. 288 of the
Constitution of India; s. 3 of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922; ss. 3(2) and 3(5), Second Proviso, of the Madras
General Sales Tax Act, 1939; s. 3(1A) of the Central Excise
and Salt Act, 1944; and ss. 9 of the Kerala Sales Tax Act.
We should not be understood to have construed the said
provisions, but only have referred to their to state the
legislative practice. Consistent with the said practice, r.
5(1)(i) of the Rules uses the same expression. When the
said rule says "excise duty paid in respect of the goods",
the excise duty referred to is the excise duty paid under s.
3(1), read with the Schedule, of the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944 (1 of 1944). Under the, said section, read
with the Schedule, excise duty is levied on the goods
described in the Schedule. Therefore, when r. 5(1)(i) of
the Rules refers to the duty paid in respect of the goods to
the Central Government, it necessarily refers to the duty
paid on the goods mentioned in the Schedule. As the duty
exempted from the gross turnover is the duty so paid under
the Central Act, read with the Schedule, the expression "in
respect of" in the context can only mean excise duty paid on
goods. In our view, the expression "in respect of the
goods" in r. 5(1)(i) of the Rules means only "on the goods".
Even if the word "attributable" is substituted for the words
"in respect of", the result win not be different, for the
duty paid shall be attributable to the goods. If it was
paid on the raw material it can be attributable only to the
raw material and not to the goods. We, therefore, hold that
only excise duty paid on the goods sold by the assessee is
deductible from the gross turnover under r. 5(1)(i) of the
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Rules.
We cannot, therefore, agree with the construction of r.
5(1)(i) of the Rules accepted by the High Court.
No other question was raised before us. In the result, we
modify the order of the High Court accordingly. In the
circumstances, we direct the parties to bear their
respective costs.
Order modified.
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