Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MEMBER BOARD OF REVENUE, WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. SWAIKA OIL MILLS
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/08/1977
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION:
1977 AIR 2008 1978 SCR (1) 270
1977 SCC (4) 286
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 286(1)((b)-Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956, Section 5(1)-’In the course of export’,
applicability-F.O.B. contract-Goods delivered on foreign
bound ship- Use of export-licence lent to exporter-Whether
Sale exigible to sales tax.
HEADNOTE:
The Netherlands Selling Organisation Ltd. bought linseed oil
"F.O.B. Calcutta price", from the respondent oil mills. The
terms of the sale-contract provided that the oil mills would
deliver the goods on a ship bound for Indonesia, and lend
the use of its export-licence to facilitate the export of
the goods by the Netherlands Organisation to a foreign
buyer. The respondent claimed exemption from the payment of
sales-tax on the ground that the sale was effected in the
course of the export of goods out of the Indian territory.
The claim was rejected by the Revenue Authorities but was
allowed by the High Court, in a reference by the Board of
Revenue.
Allowing the appeal and holding that the sale was exigible
to sales-tax, the Court.
HELD : (1) There is no privity of contract between the
respondents and the foreign buyer. The export was
occasioned by the contract of sale between the Netherlands
Organisation and their own buyer, and not by the contract of
sale between the respondents and the Netherlands
Organisation. The two sales are not part of one integral
transaction. [272C, D]
(2)The circumstance that the contract between the
respondents and the Netherlands Organisation was in the
F.O.B. form and that the payment of price was to be made
only after the goods were put on board the ship by the
respondents, do not affect the. fundamental position that
there were two independent and unconnected sales. In
loading the goods on the ship, the respondents were acting
as mere carriers. The fact that the place of delivery is a
foreign-bound ship cannot, by itself, make a sale one in the
course of export. [272H, 273A-B]
Mohd. Serajuddin etc. v. State of Orissa [1975] Supp. SCR
169, applied.
(3)The bill of lading was made out in the name of the
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Netherlands Organisation which. obtained a complete and
indefeasible title to the goods purchased by them from the
respondents in India. The fact that the respondents were to
lend them the use of their export licence or that the
respondents paid the customs duty and the Port
Commissioner’s charges, does not mean that the goods were
exported, by, or at the instance of the respondents. [272 E-
F, 273C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION.: Civil Appeal No. 14-77 of
1972.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
25-11-1970 of the Calcutta High Court in gales Tax Reference
No. 499 of 1967.
D. N. Mukherjee and G. S. Chatterjee for the Appellant.
Shankar Ghosh and D. P. Mukherjee for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, J.-Article 286(1) (b) of the Constitution pro-
vides that no law of State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of a tax on the sale or purchase of goods, where
such sale or purchase
271
takes place in the course of the import of the goods into,
or export of the goods out of, the territory of India. By
the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution which came into
force on September 11, 1956, an amendment was made to clause
(2) of Article 286, by which Parliament was given the power
by law to formulate principles for determining when a sale
or purchase of goods takes place in any of the ways
mentioned in clause (1). Acting in pursuance of this power,
the Parliament enacted Section 5(1) of the Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956, providing that a sale or purchase of goods shall
be deemed to take place in the course of the export of the
goods out of the territory of India only if the sale or
purchase either occasions such export is effected by a
transfer of documents of title to the goods after the
goods, have crossed the customs frontiers of India.
The, question which arises for out consideration in
thisappeal is whether a sale effected by the
respondents-M/s Swaika Oil Mills is a sale in the course of
the export of goods out of the territory of India. This
question was answered against the respondents by the Revenue
Authorities which held that the sale was exigible to sales
tax. But, on a reference made to the Calcutta High Court by
the Board of Revenue under section 21 (1) of the Bengal
Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, the High Court set aside the
assessment on the ground that the sale took place in the
course of export of the goods.
By a letter dated September 10, 1952, the Netherlands
Selling Organisation Ltd. confirmed having bought from the
respondents a certain quantity of linseed oil, "F.O.B.
Calcutta price." The main terms of the contract of sale,
which was made and concluded in Calcutta, are these :
The price of the goods was to be paid F.O.B. Calcutta
against the first presentation of ’Clean on board’ Mate’s
receipt along with the relative G.R.I. forms in triplicate;
(b) The insurance charges were to be paid by the
purchasers;
(c) The purchasers were to send to the respondents their
shipping broker for arranging booking of the shipping space
for the goods to put on board the ship by the respondents;
(d)The, respondents were to mark the goods with the
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shipment marks specified by the purchasers in the letter;
(e) Due to import restrictions in Indonesia, the
respondents were
to shipnot more than 500 imperial gallons of linseed oil;
and finally,
(f) The "Export" was "to be made" under the export-licence
of the respondents.
Mr. Shankar Ghose, who appears on behalf of the
respondents, has raised a variety of interesting points,
which, in our opinion, have lost their validity and
relevance in view of a Constitution Bench decision of this
Court in Mohd. Serajuddin etc. v. State of Orissa(1).
(1) [1975] Suppl. S.C.R. 169.
272
A catena of decisions bearing on the question as to when a
sale can be deemed to. be in the course of export was
examined elaborately in that case. Applying the ratio of
Serajuddin’s case to the facts before us, we are of the
opinion that the, High Court of Calcutta, which did not have
the benefit of that judgment, is wrong in holding that the
sidle effected by the. respondents in favour of the
Netherlands Selling Organisation is a sale in the. course of
export. Our reasons for saying so are these :
(1)There was a direct, distinct and independent contract
of sale between the respondents on one hand and their buyers
in India, the Netherlands Selling Organisation.
(2)The sale effected in pursuance of that contract is
wholly unconnected with the sale by the Netherlands
Organization to their foreign buyer. The two sales are not
a part of one integral transaction.
(3) There is no privity of contract between the respondents
and the foreign buyer. They sold the goods in India, which
the buyer on his own accountexported to Indonesia.
The foreign buyer was undisclosed to therespondents
and, indeed, there is nothing on the record to show the
’terms of the contract between the Netherlands Organisation
and their foreign buyer. Respondents knew nothing of these
terms and their contract with the Netherlands Organization
did not stand or fall by the terms of that sale.
(4) The immediate cause of the movement of goods and the
export was the contract between the Netherlands Organisation
and their foreign buyer and not the sale between the
respondents and the Netherlands Organisation. The export
was occasioned by the contract of sale between the
Netherlands Organisation and their own buyer and not by the
contract of sale between the respondents and the Netherlands
Organisation.
(5) The bill of lading was indisputably made out in the
name of the Netherlands Organisation which obtained a
complete and indefeasible title to the goods purchased by
them from the respondents in India.
(6)There was no obligation either on the respondents or on
the Netherlands Organisation to export the goods out of
India.
(7)Respondents put the goods sold by them to the
Netherlands Organisation on board the ship merely to
facilitate the intended export of goods by the Netherlands
Organisation. In loading the goods on the ship, respondents
were acting as mere carriers, since they were under an
obligation to do, so under their contract with the
Netherlands Organisation.
(8)Neither of the two transactions created any mutual
rights and obligations as between the respondents and the
person or persons whose benefit the export was made or
intended.
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(9) The circumstances that the contract between the
respondents and the Netherlands Organisation was in the
F.O.B. form and that the payment of price was to be made
only after the goods were put on
273
board the ship by the respondents, do not affect the
fundamental position that there were two distinct,
independent and unconnected sales. The payment of price was
made to depend on the fact of shipment for the reason that
under the terms of the contract, which the respondents en-
tered into with the Netherlands Organisation, a duty was
imposed upon the former to put the goods on board the ship.
The Netherlands Organisation, instead of accepting the
delivery of goods in a factory or godown of the respondents,
stipulated that the goods, on their behalf, be put by the
respondents on board the ship. The fact that the place of
delivery is a foreign-bound ship cannot, by itself, make a
sale one in the course of export.
(10)The very agreement, which is the basis of the
respondents’ claim for exemption from sales tax, begins with
the assertion : "We herewith confirm having bought from you"
the, goods mentioned in the letter. The sale transaction
was thus concluded between the respondents and the
Netherlands Organization in India. Lastly,
(11)The fact that the, respondents were to lend to the
Nether lends Organisation the use, of their export licence
or that the respondents paid the customs duty and the Port,
Commissioner’s charges, does not mean that the goods were
exported by or at the instance of the respondents or that
the sale effected by them in favour of the Netherlands
Organisation occasioned the export. If the respondents’
name was shown as the exporters, it was because they had
obligingly lent the use of their export licence to
facilitate the export of the goods by the Netherlands
Organization.
For these reasons, we set aside the judgment of the High,
Court and hold that the, sale in respect of which the
respondents claimed exemption, is not a sale in the course
of export and is, therefore, exigible to sales tax.
The appeal is accordingly allowed with costs.
M.R.
Appeal allowed.
274