Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
A.B. ISMAIL ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/04/1986
BENCH:
KHALID, V. (J)
BENCH:
KHALID, V. (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
OZA, G.L. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1885 1986 SCR (2) 522
1986 SCC Supl. 218 JT 1986 427
1986 SCALE (1)789
CITATOR INFO :
D 1988 SC 992 (9)
ACT:
Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 : s. 5-A(1)(a)
Mutton produced after slaughtering goats and sheeps -
Whether ’other goods’ assessable to tax.
Words and Phrases : "Goat and Sheep" and "Mutton"
Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
Section 5-A(1)(a) of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act,
1963 provides for levy of purchase tax on the purchase
turnover of a dealer who in the course of his business
purchases goods, the sale or purchase of which is liable to
tax under that Act, in circumstances in which no tax is
payable under s.5 and then consumes such goods in the
manufacture of other goods for sale or otherwise.
The respondents purchase goats and sheep for
slaughtering them and then sell the meat they get after such
slaughter. They were assessed by the assessing officer to
sales tax on their purchase turnover of goats and sheep
under s. 5-A (1)(a) on the assumption that they converted
the animals into meat by the manufacturing process of
slaughtering. The Appellate Officer and the Tribunal agreed
with the assessing officer. The High Court, however, quashed
the assessment orders holding that the meat got after
slaughtering the animals was not ’other goods’ within the
meaning of the section.
In these appeals by certificate by the Department it
was contended for the respondents that they were only
processing live goat and sheep into mutton by killing them
and cutting them into pieces and that in this process there
was neither consumption nor a manufacture, nor production of
’other goods’.
Allowing the appeals, the Court,
523
^
HELD : 1. The three ingredients of s. 5-A(1)(a) of the
Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 are : (i) consumption of
the goods; (ii) process of manufacture involved, and (iii)
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production of other goods distinct from the original goods.
[525 B]
2. When goats and sheep are converted into meat, "other
goods" within the meaning of s. 5-A(1)(a) of the Act came
into being, in as much as the slaughter of the animals and
their conversion into meat is the consequence of consumption
of goats and sheeps, wherein a process of manufacture can
also be inferred. [525 F-G]
3. Both in commercial circles and in common parlance
"goats and sheep" and "mutton" are two different things
having a distinct individuality of their own, one different
from the other, for when goats and sheep undergo the process
of slaughtering, meat, hides and skins - something entirely
different from the original goods, are produced by consuming
the animals in the said process. [525 E; 527 F]
In the instant case the High Court was in error in
holding that "goods" and "meat" were the same and that no
consumption was involved in converting goats into meat. [529
E-F]
K. Cheyyabba v. State of Karnataka, [1980] 45 S.T.C. 1,
approved.
Anwar Khan Mahboob v. State of Bombay, [1960] 1 S.T.C.
698, referred to.
Deputy Commissioner, Sales-tax (Law) Board of Revenue
(Taxes) Ernakulam v. Pio Food Packers, [1980] 3 S.C.R. 1271
and Chiranjit Lal Anand v. State of Assam and Anr., [1985]
A.I.R. S.C. 1387, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1161 of
1979 etc.
From the Judgment and Order dated 13.6.1978 of the
Kerala High Court in T.R.C. 130 of 1977.
K.M.K. Nair for the Appellants.
524
N. Veerappa, V.J. Francis and S. Balakrishnan for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHALID, J. The short question that falls to be decided
in these appeals, by certificate, against the Judgment of a
Division Bench of the Kerala High Court, is whether goat and
sheep and the meat got after slaughtering them are the same
for the purpose of sales-tax in the State. The High Court,
disagreeing with the Sales-tax Appellate Tribunal held them
to be the same goods.
2. It is the admitted case in these appeals that the
respondents purchase goat and sheep for slaughtering them
and then sell the meat they get after such slaughter. It is
also admitted that live stock will be goods within the
meaning of the Kerala General Sales-tax Act (the Act for
short). The respondents submitted nil returns claiming
exemption on the sales turnover of meat and skin.
Assessments were completed accepting these nil returns.
Subsequently the assessees were informed that the purchase
turnover of goats and sheep had escaped levy of tax under
Section 5-A of the Act. After necessary hearing, assessment
orders were passed, holding that the assessees converted the
animals into meat by a manufacturing process, within the
meaning of Section 5-A of the Act. The Appellate Officer and
the Tribunal agreed with this finding of the assessing
officer. The assessee took the matter before the High Court
and challenged the assessment orders. The High Court quashed
the assessment orders and held that the meat got after
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slaughtering the animals will not be ’other goods’ within
the meaning of Section 5-A. Hence these appeals by the
State.
3. For a proper understanding of the dispute raised in
these cases it is ncessary to read Section 5-A(1)(a) of the
Act which alone is relevant for our purpose.
"5. 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-
525
(a) consumes such goods in the manufacture of
other goods for sale or otherwise;"
The Section speaks of three ingredients, the existence of
which alone, will attract levy of tax. They are : (i)
consumption of the goods (ii) process of manufacture
involved and (iii) production of other goods. The question
before us is whether these ingredients are present when
goats and sheep are slaughtered and converted into meat for
sale. The assessee’s contention is that he is only
processing live goat or sheep into mutton by killing them
and cutting them into pieces and that in this process there
was neither consumption nor a manufacture nor production of
other goods . C
4. Before dealing with the authorities, cited at the
Bar, it would be useful to consider, unaided by authorities,
the i question whether ’goats and sheep’ and ’mutton’ are
the same goods known to commercial circles and in common
parlance. We will see how a common man understands these
expressions. If a person goes to a butcher’s shop and asks
for mutton he will not be given goats not will he be
satisfied with goats. Equally so when he intends to purchase
goats he will not be satisfied if mutton is supplied to him.
This is because the two, both in commercial circles and in
common parlance, are two different things having a distinct
individuality of their own, one different from the other. It
would therefore be wrong to assume, as the High Court has
done, that these two goods are the same. What happens is
that when goats and sheep converted into meat, "other goods"
within the meaning of the Section come into being. It is
true that to attract Section 5-A, two other ingredients are
also to be satisfied, namely consumption and manufacture.
Consumption is a word of wide import. It denotes the taking
in of something, to convert that something into another.
Here the slaughter of the animals and their conversion into
meat is the consequence of consumption of goats in a legal
sense. In such conversion, a process of manufacture can also
be inferred. The important ingredients of this Section, of
course, is the bringing into existence of other goods, after
consumption and manufacture, which are distinct from the
original goods. Lifeless mutton is, by any standard, "other
goods" different from "goat and sheep".
5. The High Court rested its conclusion on a decision
of
526
the same High Court reported in 41 S.T.C. 364. Without a
detailed discussion, the High Court, relying upon the above
decision held as follows :
"..... We have given the matter our careful
attention; and we have again given careful
consideration to the elaborate arguments in regard
to the processes involved in the transaction and
their effect in the light of the provisions of the
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section, especially as one of us was not a party
to the earlier Division Bench ruling. We are
clearly of the view that the Tribunal was not
correct in the view that it took, and that it
cannot be said that there was a "consumption"
resulting in the "manufacture" of "other goods"
within the meaning of the section......... "
The High Court then referred to a decision of the
American Supreme Court reported in 207 US 556, and the
decisions reported in 20 S.T.C. 261 and 40 S.T.C. 350, and
observed as follows :
"...... In the commercial sense, viz. in the sense
known to the commercial world, we do not think it
can be said that the meat exposed for sale in the
market after cutting or slaughtering goats or
sheep can be said to have been ’manufactured’
after ’consuming’ the goat or sheep. The meat
exposed for sale is still of goat or sheep, in the
same way as dressed chicken is still chicken, or
the sliced, canned and packed pineapple is still
pineapple prepared from the raw fruit after the
minimal process for making it marketable...... "
We are constrained to hold that the approach of the
High Court to the facts of the case was incorrect and
reliance on the decisions referred to above was wrong. In
the American case the question was whether chicken killed
and dressed after plucking its feathers and throwing out its
entrails and kept in cold storage was a manufactured
product, different from chicken. The Court there held that a
chicken killed and dressed is still a chicken. We
respectfully agree with this conclusion. A chicken killed
and a dressed chicken are both
527
chicken and both are known to the ordinary man as well as
commercial world as chicken. By removal of the feathers and
entrails the dressed chicken is made ready for the table.
There is no process of manufacture and bringing into being
an item different from the original goods, In 20 S.T.C. 261
the Court had to deal with prawn pulp made out of raw
prawns. The Court held that there was neither consumption
nor manufacture involved in making the prawn pulp and that
in the process of conversion, goods distinct from raw prawn
was not produced when prawn pulp came into being. In 41
S.T.C. 364, the goods involved were pineapple and sliced
pieces of pineapple. They are clearly the same goods. This
Court approved this finding when the State took the matter
in appeal before this Court. C
6. This Court held in Anwar Khan Mahboob v. State of
Bombay, [1960] 11 S.T.C. 698 that conversion of raw tobacco
into beedis by removing stem and dust which in turn is
required for the manufacture of beedis amounted to
consumption of raw tobacco attracting tax liability. More or
less similar is the case before us. There is clearly a
process of consumption in converting goats into mutton by
which goods different from the original goods are produced.
7. The Karnataka High Court had to consider an
identical question as the one now raised before us in K.
Cheyyabba v. State of Karnataka, [1980] 45 S.T.C. 1 with
reference to Section 6 of the Karnataka Sales-tax Act, 1957.
The Court held that dealers in that case who purchased sheep
and goat in the course of their business under circumstances
in which no tax was leviable under Section 5 of that Act,
were liable to pay tax on the purchase price under Section 6
of the Act, as they consumed the goats and sheep by way of
slaughtering them to produce mutton, hides and skins, as
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part of their business activities. We approve the conclusion
in this case.
8. The respondents relied upon the decision of this
Court in the case of Deputy Commissioner, Sales tax (Law)
Board of Revenue (Taxes) Ernakulam v. Pio Food Packers,
[1980] 3 S.C.R. 1271. In that case this Court upheld the
assessee’s plea that raw pineapple, when converted into
slices, did not change its identity so as to attract
liability to tax on the plea that raw pineapple was consumed
in manufacturing sliced pineapple. While upholding the plea
of the assessee, this Court laid down the tests In such
cases as follows :
528
"The generally prevalent test is whether the
article produced is regarded in the trade, by
those who deal in it, as distinct in indentity
from the commodity involved in its manufacture.
Commonly, manufacture is the end result of one or
more processes through which the original
commodity is made to pass. The nature and extent
of processing may vary from one case to another
and indeed there may be several stages of
processing and perhaps a different kind of
processing at each stage. With each process
suffered, the original commodity experiences a
change. But it is only when the change, or a
series of changes, take the commodity to the print
where commercially it can no longer be regarded as
the original commodity but instead is recognised
as a new and distinct article that fl manufacture
can be said to take place. Where there is no
essential difference in identity between the n
original commodity and the processed article it is
not possible to say that one commodity has been
consumed in the manufacture of another. Although
it has undergone of a degree of processing, it
must be regarded as still retaining its original
identity.
A large number of cases has been placed before us
by the parties, and in each of them the same
principle has been applied: Does the processing
of, the original commodity bring into existence a
commercially different and distinct article? Some
of the cases where it was held by this Court that
a different commercial article had come into
existence include Anwarkhan Mehboob Co. v.
The State of Bombay and others (where raw tobacco
was manufactured into bidi patti). A Hajee Abdul
Shukoor and Co. v. The State of Madras (raw hides
and skin constituted a different commodity from
dressed hides and skins with different physical
properties). The State of Madras v. Swastik
Tobacco Factory (raw tobacco manufactured
into chewing tobacco) and Ganesh Trading Cb.
Karnal v. State of Haryana and Anr., (paddy
dehusked into rice)..... "
It cannot be doubted that pineapple f Nit when
converted into slices does not lose its identity or becomes
a new
529
product. Both of them are known as pineapple in the
commercial circle as also in common parlance. That is not
the case here.
9. Considerable support was sought by the respondents
from a decision of this Court in Chiranjit Lal Anand v.
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State of Assam & Anr., 1985 A.I.R. S.C. 1387. That case
related to an item called ’meat on hoof’. In that case the
dealer had submitted a tender to supply among others ’meat
on hoof’ to the Central Reserve Police Units within the
State of Assam. In that case, the dealer was assessed for
the purchase of meat on hoof which is a name used mainly by
the military for a ’live goat’. The contention of the dealer
was that since meet was exempted from sales tax by the Assam
Act, ’meet on hoof’ should also be exempted from assessment.
This court after considering the contention in the peculiar
facts of that case, held that meet on hoof would also come
within the exemption and set aside the assessment,
disagreeing with the High Court. In our view, the principle
enunciated in that decision has to be applied only to the
fact of that case because the goods involve in that case was
’meet on hoof’ and meet was exempt from assessment under the
Act. It would not, therefore, be proper to rely upon the
said decision decided purely on the facts of that case in
deciding the present cases. Here goats and sheep undergo a
process viz., slaughtering, and then comes into existence
meat, hides and skin by consuming the goat in the said
process, the end product being something entirely different
from the original goods. The High Court was, therefore, in
error in holding that goat and meat are the same and that no
consumption was involved in converting goats into meat. The
High Court confused the issue when it said that "the meat
exposed for sale is still of the goat and sheep". Nobody
disputes that the meat is of the goat and of the sheep. What
is to be seen is whether meat and goat are the same. The
High Court fell in an error when it used the expression
"meat of the goat" while discussing the facts of the case.
lO. In the result, we set aside the judgment of the
High Court, allow these appeals, restore the order of the
Tribunal, but in the circumstances of the case with no order
as to costs.
P.S.S. Appeals allowed.
530