1
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8486 OF 2011
M/S TRIMURTHI FRAGRANCES (P) LTD.
THROUGH ITS DIRECTOR
SHRI PRADEEP KUMAR AGRAWAL …APPELLANT(S)
Versus
GOVT.OF N.C.T OF DELHI THROUGH
ITS PRINCIPAL SECRETARY
(FINANCE) & ORS. …RESPONDENT(S)
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8485 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8487 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8488 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8491-8494 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8495 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8496-8501 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8502 OF 2011
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 8617 OF 2014
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
NEETA SAPRA
Date: 2023.05.04
18:00:33 IST
Reason:
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 10374-10379 OF 2014
CIVIL APPEAL NO(S). 289 OF 2023
2
J U D G M E N T
S. RAVINDRA BHAT, J.
1. This judgment will dispose of appeals arising from judgments of three
1
High Courts, on the question of taxability of pan masala or gutka/gutkha , under
state enactments. The appellants unsuccessfully argued that state legislatures
were not empowered to levy sales tax on those articles, in view of the provision
in the Constitution enabling the Union to levy additional duties of excise, and
further that in any case, the rate of state tax cannot exceed the limit prescribed
by the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.
Brief Facts
2. The relevant central enactments are the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956
(hereafter “CST Act”), the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (hereafter “CET
Act”), and the Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance) Act,
1957 (hereafter “ADE Act”). The state enactments in question are the Delhi
Sales Tax Act, 1975 (hereafter “DST Act”); Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act,
1959 (hereafter “TNGST Act”) and the Uttar Pradesh Trade Tax Act, 1948
(hereafter “UPTT Act”).
3. Section 14 of the CST Act declares certain goods to be of special
importance; and Section 15 restricts the power of taxation on the said goods.
Originally Section 14(ix) of the CST Act read as follows:
1
Which is spelt differently in regional contexts as ‘ gutka ’ or ‘ gutkha’ or ‘ guhtka ’, For convenience, this is
hereafter referred to uniformly as ‘ gutkha’ .
3
“(ix) tobacco, as defined in Item No. 4 of the First Schedule to the Central
Excises and Sale Act, 1944 (1 of 1944)”
Entry 4 of the CET Act, which defines 'tobacco’, reads as follows:
“4. Tobacco
“Tobacco" means any form of Tobacco, whether cured or uncured and
whether manufactured or not and includes the leaf, stalks and stems of the
tobacco plant, but does not include any part of a tobacco plant while still
attached to the earth.
...
II. Manufactured Tobacco
...
(5) Chewing tobacco, including preparations commonly known as "Khara
Masala", "Kimam", "Dokta", "Zarda", "Sukha" and "Surti"."
4. The Finance Act, 1988 (Central Act No. 26/1988) substituted the
expressions in Section 14(ix) of the CST Act, with the following words, w.e.f.
13.05.1988:
“14(ix). Unmanufactured tobacco and tobacco refuse covered under sub-
Heading No. 2401.00, cigars and cheroots of tobacco covered under
Heading No. 24.02, cigarettes and cigarillos of tobacco covered under the
sub-Heading Nos. 2403.11 and 2403.21, and other manufactured tobacco
covered under sub-heading Nos. 2404.41, 2404.50 and 2404.60 of the
Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of 1986).”
5. The 1988 amendment to Section 14 of the CST Act was with a view to
align the description of goods in that law, with the description in the CET Act, as
is clear from the Finance Bill, 1988. Heading 24.04 of the CET Act originally
read to include “Gudaku with brand name and without brand name” (Entries
2404.11 and 2404.12); cut tobacco (Entry 2404.13); hookah tobacco, chewing
tobacco (including preparations known as khara masala, khiman, dokta, zarda
and surti (Entry 2404.39); snuff (Entry 2404.49); and snuff of tobacco (Entry
2404.50). The entry in relation to chewing tobacco was amended w.e.f. 1993-94.
4
6. By Finance Act, 1995, 'Pan Masala' was brought under the Heading 21.06.
In the year 1995, the Fourth Schedule was amended, and the relevant Clause (8)
in Chapter 21 read as follows:
“(8) in Chapter 21, -
(i) for NOTE 3, the following NOTE shall be substituted, namely:
'3. In this Chapter, 'Pan Masala' means any preparation containing betel
nuts and any one or more of the following ingredients, namely lime, katha
(catechu) and tobacco, whether or not containing any other ingredients,
such as cardamom, copra and menthol'.
Clause (10) in Chapter XXIV reads as follows:
(i) for NOTE 2, for the figures and word '24.02, 24.03 and 24.04', the figures
and word '24.01, 24.02, 24.03 and 24.04' shall be substituted."
Clause (9) in Chapter XXI reads as follows:
"(i) for Heading Nos. 21.06 and 21.07 and the entries relating thereto, the
following shall be inserted, namely:
21.06 2106.00 'Pan Masala' 50%”
Finance (No. 2) Act, 1996, again changed the entry, in the following
manner:
"(7) in Chapter 24, after NOTE 4, the following NOTE shall be inserted,
namely:
5. In this Chapter, 'smoking mixtures for pipes and cigarettes' of sub-heading
No. 2404.10 does not cover 'Gudaku'."
.....
"(iii) For Heading No. 24.03 and the entries relating thereto, the following
shall be substituted, namely
5
The relevant extracts from the Finance Act, 2001, which again carried out
changes, read as follows:
" THE FOURTH SCHEDULE
[See Section 134 (a)]
PART - I
In the First Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, -
(1) in Chapter 21, for NOTE 3, the following NOTE shall be substituted,
namely:
3. In this Chapter, 'Pan Masala' means any preparation containing betel-
nuts and any one or more of the following ingredients, namely:
(i) lime; and
(ii) kattha (catechu),
but not tobacco, whether or not containing any other ingredients such as
cardamom, copra and menthol";
(2) in Chapter 24, after NOTE 5, the following NOTE shall be inserted,
namely:
'6. In this Chapter, 'Pan Masala' containing tobacco", commonly known as
'Gutkha' or by any other name, means any preparation containing betel-nuts
and tobacco and any one or more of the following ingredients, namely:
(i) lime; and
(ii) kattha (catechu),
Whether or not containing any other ingredients such as cardamom, copra
and menthol.”
On the above products, a special excise duty of 16% was also levied in the V
Schedule, apart from additional duties of excise in Part-II of the VI Schedule as
indicated below:
6
2 3
The Delhi batch of appeals: Shanti Fragrances , Trimurti Fragrances , Kuber
4 5 6
Tobacco , Sunrise Food Products , and Dharam Pal Satyapal
7. In this batch of appeals, the grievance is in respect of five judgments of
the Delhi High Court, on the interpretation of the DST Act. The earliest
judgment was delivered in relation to the appeal by M/s Shanti Fragrances; the
subsequent judgments have reiterated the ruling in that case.
8. Section 3 of the DST Act imposes local sales tax on every dealer whose
turnover exceeds the limit specified in a notification, and who is registered or is
liable to pay tax under the CST Act, on all sales effected on or after the
commencement of the DST Act. Section 3(6) reads as follows:
“no dealer who deals exclusively on one or more classes of goods specified
in the Third Schedule shall be liable to pay any tax under this Act.”
Section 7 of the DST reads as follows:
“7. Tax Free Goods
| (1) No tax shall be payable under this Act on the sale of goods specified in | |
| the Third Schedule subject to the conditions and exceptions, if any, set out | |
| therein. | |
| (2) The | 7 | [Lieutenant Governor may] by notification in the Official Gazette, | |
|---|
| add to, or omit from, or otherwise amend, the Third Schedule either | | | |
| retrospectively or prospectively, and thereupon the Third Schedule shall be | | | |
| deemed to be amended accordingly: | | | |
| Provided that no such amendment shall be made retrospectively if it would | |
| have the effect of prejudicially affecting the interests of any dealer.” | |
Entry 22 of the Third Schedule reads as follows:
2
CA No. 8485/2011, against impugned judgment dated 05.11.2004 in WP (C) No. 11251/2004 (DHC).
3
CA No. 8486/2011, against impugned judgment dated 05.04.2006 in WP (C) No. 2925/2005 (DHC)
4
CA No. 8491-94/2011, against impugned judgment dated 01.12.2006 in WP (C) No. 17886/2006 (DHC); and
CA No. 8487/2011, against impugned judgment dated 05.04.2006 in WP (C) No. 23698/2005 (DHC).
5
CA No. 8488/2011, against impugned judgment dated 05.04.2006 in WP (C) No. 9837/2005 (DHC).
6
CA No. 8495/2011, against impugned judgment dated 14.11.2007 in WP (C) 7883/2007 (DHC)
7
Substituted for “ The Administrator may, with the previous approval of the Central Government and ” by
Notification No. F4(120)/94 -Fin.(G)/2137 to 2145 dated 02.03.1998.
7
“22. Tobacco as defined under the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of
1944).”
9. The effect, prima facie, of an overall reading of provisions of the DST Act
therefore, is that all dealers whose turnover exceeds the quantified amount
which is termed “as taxable quantum” during the relevant period, are liable to
pay state or local sales tax. Section 3(6) of the Act states that the dealer who
exclusively deals in goods specified in the Third Schedule shall not be liable to
pay tax.
10. By a notification dated 31.03.2000 issued by the competent authority i.e.
the Lt. Governor of the National Capital Territory of Delhi (hereafter “NCTD”),
Entry 46 was inserted in the First Schedule to the DST Act. That Entry reads as
follows:
“46. Pan Masala and Gutkha”
11. The First Schedule is dealt with under Section 4 of the DST Act ( “rate of
tax” ) it broadly enacts [by Section 4(1)(a)] that the taxable turnover “in respect
of the cases specified in the First Schedule” would be at the rate of 12 paise to a
rupee. Thus, goods enumerated in the First Schedule are per se subjected to be
local or state sales tax levy under the DST Act @ 12%. Similarly, goods referred
to in the Third Schedule are tax-free. It is also clear that the Lt. Governor is
authorised to change the entries, as indicated in Section 7, that is to say, from
tax-free goods to taxed goods and vice versa .
8
12. The appellants had argued before the Delhi High Court, that tobacco is
mentioned in the Third Schedule at Sl. No. 22 and that the expression (tobacco)
refers to what is defined as such under the Central Excise Act, 1944 (hereafter
“CEA”). Consequently, to ascertain "tobacco", one has to refer to the CEA read
with Chapter 24 of the Schedule to the CET Act. Chapter Note 3 thereof reads as
under:
"In this Chapter, 'tobacco' means any form of tobacco, whether cured or
uncured and whether manufactured or not, and includes the leaf, stalks and
stems of the tobacco plant, but does not include any part of a tobacco plant
while still attached to the earth."
13. Chapter Note 6 reads as follows:
"In this Chapter, "Pan Masala containing tobacco", commonly known as
'Gutka' or by any other name, means any preparation containing betel nuts
and tobacco and any one or more of the following ingredients, namely:
(i) lime; and
(ii) kattha (catechu),
whether or not containing any other ingredients, such as cardamom, copra
and menthol."
Chapter 24 includes Heading No. 2404.49, which reads as under:
"Pan Masala containing tobacco"
14. The appellants had urged before the High Court that "gutkha" is
8
"tobacco" and relied on Kothari Products Ltd. v. Government of A.P and State
9
of Orissa v. Radheshyam Gudakhu Factory . This court in Radheshyam
Gudakhu Factory (supra), noted that "tobacco" in Section 2(c) of the ADE Act
8
(2000) 9 SCC 263 [hereafter ‘ Kothari Products Ltd.’ ]
9
1988 (68) STC 92 (SC); (2018) 11 SCC 505 [hereafter ‘ Radheshyam Gudakhu Factory ’]
9
means goods in Entry 9 of the First Schedule to the CET Act which is as
follows:
"'Tobacco' means any form of tobacco, whether cured or uncured and
whether manufactured or not, and includes the leaf, stalks and stems of the
tobacco plant, but does not include any part of a tobacco plant while still
attached to the earth."
15. In Radheshyam Gudakhu Factory (supra) the issue was whether ' Gudaku '
was covered by the expression, 'tobacco' defined in ADE Act. The court held
that “gudaku” is a form of smoking tobacco and is a product of tobacco, in
common parlance. Before the Court there was no dispute that " gutkha " is not
included in "tobacco". Thus, it is clear that " Gutkha " and " Gudaku " are both
covered by the expression "tobacco" as understood in Chapter Note 3 of the
CET Act. The appellants argued that when 'Gudaku' and 'Gutkha' are tobacco
and fell within Entry No. 22 of the Third Schedule of the Act, local sales tax
cannot be levied by introducing Entry No. 46 through a notification and by
including it in the First Schedule. Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) was relied on;
the dealer was dealing in 'Gutkha' (under the brand "Pan Parag"). The
introduction of Entry 194 (which taxed “pan masala including gutkha” ) in the
First Schedule to the A.P. General Sales Tax Act (APGST Act) was in issue.
10
APGST Act had a provision like Section 7 of the DST Act which exempted
goods in the Fourth Schedule. The Fourth Schedule referred to tobacco (Entry 7)
and its explanation stated that it shall be
"shall be goods included in the relevant heads and sub-heads of the First
Schedule to the Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance
10
See Section 8.
10
Act, 1957, but does not include goods where no additional duties of excise
are levied under that Schedule."
16. This court held that ‘ gutkha’ is tobacco covered by an Entry in the First
Schedule to the said ADE Act and that the branded gutka in question was
“gutkha” , and therefore, “goods” covered by Explanation to the Fourth
Schedule to the APGST Act. It was hence exempted by Section 8. It was held
that the Schedule to the APGST Act could not be amended by including gutkha
as a kind of pan masala in Entry 194 of the First Schedule. Its inclusion was held
to be invalid in law.
17. The revenue’s stand before the High Court, was that tobacco in Entry No.
22 of the Third Schedule of the DST Act, is a general entry. Chapter 24 of the
Schedule to the CET Act referred to various items under six heads. It was open
for the state to levy tax in accordance with the Sales Tax Act; what was needed
was to test the legislative competence of the state in levying the tax. It was urged
that Entry No. 22 in Third Schedule is a general entry, and Entry No. 46, in the
First Schedule is a specific entry. The revenue relied on this court’s ruling in
11
Commissioner, Sales Tax, U.P. v. Agra Belting Works , where the Court pointed
12
out that if a notification under a provision grants exemption from tax, and later,
a subsequent notification (under another provision) prescribes the rate of tax, the
intention is to withdraw the exemption and impose the levy at the rate prescribed
in the later notification. The court held that since the power to grant exemption
| 11 [ | 1987] 3 SCR 93: (1987) 3 SCC 140 [hereafter ‘ | Agra Belting Works’ | ] |
|---|
11
and variation of the rate of tax is with the State, there is no compulsion in the
statute that a separate notification recalling exemption is a pre-condition for
imposing tax at any rate. The revenue also relied on two cases that followed the
ratio in Agra Belting Works (supra) - Sale Tax Officer, Sector IX, Kanpur v.
13 14
Dealing Dairy Products & Anr. and State of Bihar v. Krishna Kuthar Kabra. .
In the latter case, this court followed the two previous decisions and held that a
notification introducing an entry and subjecting it to levy, when previously, it
was exempt in another part of the taxing statute the “intention was to withdraw
the exemption and make the sale leviable to tax at the rate prescribed in the
later notification” . The court also held it to be unnecessary that “ a specific or
separate notification withdrawing or revoking the notification should be
issued”.
18. The Delhi High Court, after examination of the judgments cited held that
it was difficult to depart from the reasoning indicated by the various judgments
of this court indicated in Agra Belting Works (supra). It therefore, rejected the
appellants’ writ petition.
19. It was further held in the impugned judgments that State Legislatures
were competent to levy taxes on the sale or purchase of the commodities
subjected to additional excise duty. The levy of any sales taxes only meant that
additional excise duty levied on such commodities by the Central Government
would not be distributed among the states which had chosen to levy a tax on the
13
(1994) 94 STC 93 (SC): 1994 Supp (2) SCC 639 [hereafter ‘ Dealing Dairy Products ’]
14
(1997) 9 SCC 763 [hereafter ‘ Krishna Kumar Kabra’ ]
12
sale of such article. The court relied on Mahalakshmi Oil Mills v. State of
15
Andhra Pradesh . The High Court ruled that pan masala containing tobacco is,
under Chapter 24, shown at sub-heading No.2404.49, attracting a duty of 16%
and an additional duty of 18% on the same. Pan masala containing tobacco
manufactured by the appellants did not constitute a declared commodity under
Section 14(ix) of the CST Act read with the CET Act because sub-heading
2404.49 under Chapter 24 of the CET Act are not sub-headings included in
section 14(ix) of the CST Act. It was also held that pan masala was not a
declared item nor was it a declar ed item on the date that Section 14(ix) of the
CST Act was introduced in the form in which it existed in the statute.
16
The Tamil Nadu case: Dharampal Satyapal and Kothari Products
20. In the appeals by Dharampal Satyapal and Kothari Products, a common
judgment of the Madras High Court has been challenged. The appellants had
urged that gutkha , was a preparation containing not only tobacco, but also betel
nut, katechu , lime, flavours, permitted spices, saffron, and that tobacco is its
essential character in relation to the dominant object of the user. The percentage
of tobacco varies from 7% to 15%. The appellants were aggrieved by the
inclusion of the goods as 'Pan Masala' (by whatever name called) - containing
betel nuts, that is to say, nut of areca, katechu broken and perfumed, and lime or
menthol or sandal oils or cardamom or tobacco or any one or more of these
ingredients at Sl. No. 2 of Part-J of the First Schedule read with Section 3(2) of
| 15 [ | 1988] Suppl 2 SCR 1088: (1989) 1 SCC 164 [hereafter ‘ | Mahalakshmi Oil Mills | ’] |
|---|
13
the TNGST Act. The period of dispute is from October, 2000 - February, 2001.
The appellants urged – much like in the Delhi cases, that if the goods fell within
the description of Sl. No. 1(iv)(d) of the Third Schedule of the TNGST Act, they
are exempt from tax by virtue of Section 8. Once the goods are exempted by
enumeration under the Third Schedule, Section 8 of the State Act operates, to
exempt the goods from levy under the State Act. The subsequent specification of
the goods in the First Schedule will have no effect in view of the exemption. The
exemption under Section 8 of the TNGST Act is not subject to any restriction or
condition as far as Sl. No. 1(iv)(d) of the Third Schedule is concerned. The
definition under Sl. No. 1(iv)(d) of the Third Schedule is not restricted to
chewing tobacco, but includes preparations containing chewing tobacco and the
word 'including' should be construed to enlarge the Entry to comprehend all
preparations of chewing tobacco and not restricted to just chewing tobacco.
21. Section 3 of the TNGST Act is the charging section; Section 3(2) enacts
as follows:
“(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (1), in the case of goods
mentioned in the First Schedule, the tax under this Act shall be payable by a
dealer, at the rate and at the point specified therein on the turnover in each
year relating to such goods.”
22. Much like Section 7 of the DST Act, Section 8 of the TNGST Act reads as
follows:
“Subject to such restrictions and conditions as may be prescribed, a dealer
who deals in the goods specified in the Third Schedule, shall not be liable to
pay any tax under this Act in respect of such goods.”
14
23. Serial No. 1 (iv)(d) of the Third Schedule to the TNGST Act (which
enumerated exempted articles) read as follows:
“1. (iv) Other manufactured tobacco as described against the heading
'24.04", including-
(a) smoking mixtures for pipes and cigarettes.
(b) cut tobacco
(c) Bins
(d) Chewing tobacco and preparations containing chewing tobacco.
(e) Snuff of tobacco and preparations containing snuff of tobacco in any
proportion”
24. The High Court’s judgement considered all previous decisions of the
courts, including the judgement in Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) as well as
judgments of various High Courts as to whether Pan masala is tobacco. The
court adopted the test indicated as the ‘common parlance test’ i.e., whether a
common man understands “ pan masala” as tobacco or a product containing
tobacco. It held that if the common man is asked to buy chewing tobacco, he
may buy an article that is mainly chewing tobacco and in fact falls within the
same class of the CET Act classification, but one would not buy pan masala. It
was, therefore, held that pan masala is different from chewing tobacco or even
tobacco. The court also ruled - that applying the General Rules for Interpretation
under the CET Act, it was discernible that “pan masala containing tobacco"
provides the most specific description for the goods in question, even if tobacco
is one of the ingredients in the goods, since the description of pan masala in
Heading 21.06 describes the goods more specifically, it had to be preferred,
without going into Rule 3(b). What therefore, was held was that the amendment,
brought into force from 2001, to the effect that chewing tobacco did not include
15
and never included pan masala containing tobacco, and but for the inclusion of
‘pan masala containing tobacco’ in Chapter 24 (Heading 2404.49) with effect
from 2001, they were goods separately covered under another class altogether,
i.e. Heading number 21.06.
17 18
The Allahabad judgments: P.J. Aromatics , Sarin & Sarin and Raj Pan
19
Products
25. In these cases, the assesses manufacture gutkha and disputed imposition
of tax on sale of the same. The authorities, under the UPTT Act ruled that 10%
tax was leviable on sale of gutkha which was treated as an ‘unclassified item’.
Section 3 under the UPTT Act, imposes the levy of trade tax on the sale by
registered dealers, of various articles. Section 4 of the Act empowers the state to
exempt articles from the levy; the relevant part of that provision, reads as
follows:
“ Section 4 – Exemption from tax shall be payable on (a) the sale or
purchase of water, milk, salt excluding processed and branded salt,
newspapers, or any other goods which the State Government may, by
notification, exempt.”
26. The State Government issued a notification dated 31.01.1985 exempting
certain goods from tax under the UPTT Act, with effect from 01.02.1985. That
20
notification , contained the Serial No. 14, which reads as under:
“14. Cigars, cigarettes, biris (both machine made and hand-made) and
tobacco in any form whether cured and uncured and whether manufactured
or not, including the leaf, stalk and stems of the tobacco plant and all
17
CA No. 10374-10379/2014, against impugned judgments dated 12.03.2014 in STR No. 1281-82/2004, and
11.04.2014 in STR No. 789-792/2004 (Allahabad HC).
18
CA No. 8617/2014, against impugned judgment dated 25.04.2014 in TTR No. 91/2005 (Allahabad HC).
19
CA No. 289/2023, against impugned judgment dated 08.11.2017 in TTR No. 1830/2004 (Allahabad HC).
20
dated January 31.01.1985
16
products of tobacco, but including any part of the tobacco plant while still
attached to the earth.”
27. By Notification dated 26.06.1997, published in Gazette on 01.07.1997,
Entry 14 was amended to exclude, specifically "pan masala containing
21
tobacco" , by whatever name called. Another amendment by Notification dated
06.04.1999 published in Gazette dated 10.04.1999 resulted in Entry 14 reading
as follows:
“14. Cigars, cigarettes, biris (both machine made and hand-made) and
tobacco in any form whether cured and uncured and whether manufactured
or not, including the leaf, stalk and stems of the tobacco plant and all
products of tobacco, excluding pan masala containing tobacco but
including any part of the tobacco plant while still attached to the earth.”
28. The exemption specifically withdrawn in respect to " pan masala
containing tobacco ", by whatever name called, by notification dated 26.06.1997,
continued after issuance of notification dated 06.04.1999 as well. The Allahabad
High Court noted the previous High Court decisions, as well as the judgment of
this court, in Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) and held that in view of the specific
provision in the APGST Act, the High Court held that gutkha ( gudaku ), an entry
under the First Schedule to the ADE Act, was exempted from tax under the
APGST Act. The High Court further held that there was no provision
corresponding to the APGST Act in the UPTT Act and that the earlier
notification (of 1985), was much wider and included tobacco products like
gutkha , and pan masala containing tobacco which were exempted by virtue of
Section 4(1) and by not with reference to any statute like the CET Act, etc.
21
No. T.I.F.-2-595/XI-9(4)/99-U.P. Act-15-48-Order-98
17
Therefore, it was ruled that the contention that something was included in the
CET Act, would stand exempted from tax was not correct, unless the State Act
contained a specific provision to that effect.
Appellants’ contentions
29. Mr. Dhruv Agarwal, learned senior counsel appearing in the Delhi cases
urged that the heading of Section 7(1) of the DST Act is “Tax free goods” and it
uses the phrase “no tax shall be payable” . In view of Entry 22 of Schedule III
read with Section 7(1), gutkha was “tax free goods” and as per specific mandate
of Section 7(1) “no tax shall be payable under the Act” (i.e. the DST Act) on
sale of goods listed under Schedule III. The clear effect of Section 7(1) read
with Entry 22 of Schedule III was that gutkha fell outside the charge or purview
of the levy.
30. It was argued Section 7(2) inter alia provides that the Lt. Governor could
by notification add to, or omit from, or otherwise amend Schedule III and
“thereupon” it was deemed to be amended. In spite of this power, Entry 22 of
Schedule III was not amended and gutkha continued to be tax-free goods.
Gutkha thus, being tax-free goods continued to fall outside the DST levy and
was not liable to be included in “taxable turnover” under Section 4(2)(a)(ii) of
the DST Act. Section 4(1), provides for applying the rate of tax “ in the case of
taxable turnover ”. When the goods were exempt there was no question of their
inclusion in the taxable turnover. Learned senior counsel relied on Tata Sky Ltd.
22
v. State of Madhya Pradesh . Learned senior counsel submitted that the High
22
[2013] 2 SCR 849: (2013) 2 SCC 849
18
Court’s reasoning that Entry 22 in Schedule III was general and that Entry 46 of
Schedule I was specific, had no application; he cited Reliance Trading Company
23
v. State of Kerala .
31. It was urged that Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) is a three-judge bench
ruling which held "gutkha is a tobacco" and that gutkha, being covered by
Explanation to Fourth Schedule to the State Sales Tax Act (i.e., APGST Act) and
the exemption contained in Section 8 of the Schedule to the State Act could not
have been amended by including gutkha in the First Schedule. This court in
Radheshyam Gudakhu Factory (supra) held that gutkha is a product of tobacco
and that its essential and effective ingredient remains tobacco; it is also known
as a product of tobacco in common parlance. Its essential character is that of
tobacco; "tobacco" falls under Entry 35 of the Schedule to the Orissa Sales Tax
Act. The decision in Reliance Trading Company (supra) is a three-judge ruling
rejecting the revenue's submissions based on general and specific entries. It also
held that the exemption operating in favour of goods in question in the Third
Schedule of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 continued as it was not
amended even after amendment of the First Schedule. The result consequently
was that irrespective of any presumed intention of the Legislature in amending
the First Schedule, as long as the Entry in the Third Schedule remained un-
amended, there was not subject to levy.
32. It was urged that so far as the other line of judgments mentioned are
concerned, Agra Belting Works (supra) was a majority judgment of two judges
23
(2011) 15 SCC 762 [hereafter ‘ Reliance Trading Company’ ]
19
and one judge expressed a dissenting opinion. In that case there were no ‘tax
free goods’ under the statute as in the present case. Instead, that was a case of an
Exemption Notification where there was another Notification providing the rate.
In the judgment, the combined effect of two Notifications was considered. This
court relied on Agra Belting Works (supra) in Dealing Dairy Products (supra),
and relied on both these cases, when deciding Krishna Kumar Kabra (supra). In
all the three cases, there was no issue relating to ‘tax free goods’ as in the
present case.
33. It was next submitted that Entry 22 of the Third Schedule of the DST Act
amounts to a 'Legislation by way of Incorporation' so far as it includes a
specific provision from the CEA defining 'tobacco' for the purposes of
formulating provisions under the DST Act. The Lt. Governor is entrusted with
the power to amend the Third Schedule of the DST Act which incorporates the
definition of 'tobacco'. It was submitted that when the definition is so
incorporated, subsequent changes in law, have no impact on the earlier,
24
incorporated provisions. Counsel cited some decisions of this court, on this
aspect.
34. Mr. Pawan Shree Agarwal, learned counsel appearing for P.J Aromatics,
relied on Pappu Sweets and Biscuits v. Commissioner of Trade Tax, U.P,
25
Lucknow , to argue that subsequent legislation can be looked at in order to see
the correct interpretation of an earlier legislation, especially when the earlier
24
Narottamdas v. State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors [1964] 7 SCR 820; Nagpur Improvement Trust v. Vasantrao &
Ors (2002) 7 SCC 657; and Girnar Traders (3) v. State of Maharashtra & Ors. [2011] 3 SCR 1
25
[1998] 2 Suppl. SCR 119: (1998) 7 SCC 228
20
one is obscure or ambiguous or capable of more than one interpretation. Counsel
relied on the amendment to the ADE Act, by Finance Act, 2001, which inserted
Entry 8404.49 as the species of the genus “Chewing Tobacco" to read as under:
“ Chewing Tobacco and preparations containing Chewing Tobacco;
Pan Masala Containing Tobacco
8404.41….
8404.49 Pan Masala Containing Tobacco”
35. A comparison of the above and the parent Entry 4 to the First Schedule to
the CEA, 1944 shows that " Chewing Tobacco " was the genus and "Pan Masala
Containing Tobacco" commonly known as "gutkha" was a species of chewing
tobacco. Therefore, it was always covered under the original definition and
formed part of Entry 14 of the Schedule to the UPTT Act (as well as Sl. No. 22
of the Third Schedule to the DST Act).
36. Mr. Agarwal argued that the levy of tax is under Section 3 of the UPTT
Act while the rate of tax is provided in Section 3A. Section 4 of the Act
empowers the State government to grant exemption. From a reading of Sections
3A and 3D it is manifest that the rate of tax on declared goods cannot be more
than the rate which is provided in Section 15 of the CST Act. Legislatively,
therefore, restrictions enacted under Section 15 of the CST Act have been
recognized in Sections 3A and 3D of the UPTT Act. It is important to note that
the State has not relied on any notification prescribing rate of tax on "Pan
masala containing tobacco" in these cases. "Pan masala containing tobacco"
has been taxed as an ‘ unclassified item ’ or what can be termed as a ‘residuary
21
entry’ . Thus, the question posed was whether the pan masala containing tobacco
i.e., “ gutkha ” is taxable as declared goods under Entry 14(ix) of the CST Act or
as an unclassified item or in the residuary entry .
37. It was submitted that "Pan masala containing tobacco" is a chewing
tobacco for several reasons. One, the entry has to be read as widely as possible
and any form of "chewing tobacco" including any of its preparations will form
part of that entry. Two, g utkha is essentially a preparation of chewing tobacco
and what makes it distinct from plain Pan masala are its essential
characteristics i.e., tobacco (which is in gutkha ). Three, it is a settled principle
of classification that it is not a percentage of a particular item in the commodity
which will determine the nature of product. Four, undisputedly "gutkha" is sold
by the appellant PJ Aromatics under a brand name "Jeet" . Therefore, it was
urged that it will fall in entry 2404.41 which is specifically covered under
Section 14(ix).
38. It was further argued that Entry 21.06 of the CET Act has no relevance for
the present purpose when notifications under the Act are being considered.
Firstly, there is no entry as "pan masala containing tobacco", and secondly, there
is no entry like 21.06 of the CET Act in the notification which provides the rate
of tax and therefore the classification is under the residuary clause according to
the revenue.
The revenue’s contentions
22
39. Mr. N. Venkatraman, the Additional Solicitor General (ASG) appeared on
behalf of the Govt. of NCT of Delhi; Mr. Raizada, learned Additional Advocate
General (AAG) appeared on behalf of the State of UP, and Mr. Radhakrishna,
learned senior counsel appeared on behalf of the State of Tamil Nadu.
40. The revenue submitted that in Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) what was
| dealt with was | Gudaku | , a tobacco product falling under sub-heading 2404.11 of |
|---|
the CET Act as well as the ADE Act and that is not the case of the petitioners
herein; and that it was a decision rendered on an issue of fact which may not
bind this court.
| 41. | | It was next argued that the use of |
|---|
in sub-heading 2404.41 in the present case, is followed by the words
“ preparations commonly known as ” and therefore, the said word has to be
understood and read as “and” in the conjunctive sense. As a result, the
preparations mentioned therein should be treated as exhaustive and cannot be
expanded beyond that.
42. It was argued that pan masala and gutkha in these cases are separate and
distinct entries from tobacco and therefore the State Legislatures are competent
to tax pan masala and gutkha . There is no dispute regarding distinction between
the independent existence of entries, i.e., tobacco and pan masala gutkha ,
respectively. It was argued that the State Legislatures are competent to levy taxes
on sale or purchase of the commodities subjected to ADE Act. All that the levy of any
such sales tax would mean is that the additional excise duty levied and collected on
such commodities by the Central government will not be distributed among the states
23
which had chosen to levy a tax on the sale thereof. This issue has been well settled by
this court in Mahalakshmi Oil Mills (supra) .
43. It was further submitted that the argument with respect to definition of
“tobacco” remaining unchanged, as was incorporated at the time of enactment of
the state laws, without reflecting later changes, is incorrect. Counsel submitted
that the definition had to be in terms of the changing definitions of tobacco
under the Central enactments; reliance was placed on decisions reported as State
26
of Madhya Pradesh v. M.V. Narsimhan ; Nagpur Improvement Trust v.
27 28
Vasantrao , and U.P. Avas Evam Vikas Parishad v. Jainul Islam & Anr. for
the proposition that in the present case, the definition of tobacco cannot be said
to be an instance of legislation by incorporation, but rather, that it is a case of
| legislation by reference | . Therefore, changes in the statute will automatically be |
|---|
reflected in the previous law.
44. It was urged that "Pan Masala containing tobacco" and "chewing
tobacco" are not identical. They undoubtedly were included under the same
heading. However, they were not one commodity. It was argued that the
amendment with effect from 2001 that " chewing tobacco " does not include, and
never included " Pan Masala containing tobacco " and but for the inclusion of
" Pan Masala containing tobacco " in Chapter 24 and sub-heading 2404.49 with
effect from 2001, it would have been goods covered by Heading 21.06. The
General Rules for Interpretation (in the CEA) was relied on, to say that “Pan
26
[1976] 1 SCR 6: (1975) 2 SCC 377
27
[2002] Supp (2) SCR 636: (2002) 7 SCC 657
28
[1998] 1 SCR 254: (1998) 2 SCC 467
24
Masala containing tobacco” is a specific description of the goods. Further, that
tobacco is an ingredient in the article, is not relevant, because the description (of
'Pan Masala' in Heading 21.06) describes the goods specifically. That
classification would prevail. It is, argued that Rule 3(b) is irrelevant. By its
description, the goods are 'Pan Masala' containing tobacco.
Analysis and reasoning
45. As is evident, in all the three cases, emanating from judgments of the
Delhi, Madras and Allahabad High Courts, the local enactments contain a
similar scheme or pattern, which is (a) a provision that imposes levy of sales or
trade tax; (b) a provision which empowers fixation of different rates for different
goods, or classes of goods and (c) a provision or provisions which exempt
goods, enumerated in a Schedule, for that purpose (like in the case of Delhi - in
the Third Schedule, read with Section 7 of the DST Act) or through a general
notification. In all cases, the arguments by the dealers were more or less
identical, which is reliance on Kothari Products Ltd. (supra); that when specific
goods are exempted, they cannot be taxed by inclusion in the notification
relating to rate of taxation, notwithstanding that the authority to exempt, and the
authority to tax or increase rates, resides with the state or the same authority.
The dealer/appellants also relied on the provisions of the CET Act, especially
Chapter 24, to contend that pan masala or gutkha, were tobacco, and therefore,
exempt. All these arguments were rejected by the High Courts. The Delhi High
25
Court judgment in the case of Shanti Fragrances, was noticed by the later
judgments of the same High Court, as well as other High Courts.
46. At the relevant time, 'Pan Masala' was described as a preparation
containing betel nuts and any one or more other ingredients such as lime, katha,
katechu, cardamom, copra, menthol and tobacco. This is the definition of Pan
Masala under the CET Act which continued till 1995. Heading 21.06 covered
'Pan Masala' containing “lime, katha, katechu, cardamom, copra, menthol and
tobacco” or any one or more of these ingredients. Chapter 24 dealt with tobacco
and manufactured tobacco substitutes and the relevant sub-heading at that time
was 2404.41 which deals with chewing tobacco, including preparations
commonly known as khara masala, kimam, dokta, zarda, sukha and surti .
47. Parliament Act 22 of 1995, substituted Note-3 to Chapter 21 of the CET
Act. “Pan Masala” was described as “any preparation containing betel nuts
and any one or more of the following ingredients, viz., lime, katha, katechu or
tobacco, whether or not containing any other ingredients such as cardamom,
copra and menthol” . The primary ingredient of pan masala therefore, is betel
nut, which could be mixed with other ingredients in combination or in isolation.
This position prevailed as on 01.03.1988. In 1995, the definition underwent a
change. Betel nuts remained the essential ingredient along with “lime, katha or
tobacco” together, or separately. Whether the product contained cardamom,
copra, and menthol or not was irrelevant: yet one of the three ingredients (lime,
katha and tobacco), had to be found in the preparation known as 'pan masala' .
26
By Parliament Act 33 of 1996, the description to Chapter Heading 24.04 and
sub-headings under it were re-numbered. The description of goods was re-
classified. There was no change in Chapter 21; Heading 21.06 continued to be
only 'pan masala' . That changed with effect from 01.03.2001, through Note-3
which reads as follows:
… “3. In this Chapter, 'Pan Masala' means any preparation containing betel
nuts and any one or more of the following ingredients, namely:
i) lime; and
ii) kattha (catechu)
but not tobacco, whether or not containing any other ingredients, such as
cardamom, copra and menthol."
Note-6 in Chapter 24 read as follows:
“6. In this Chapter, ''Pan Masala' containing tobacco', commonly known as
'Gutkha' or by any other name, means any preparation containing betel nuts
and tobacco and any one or more of the following ingredients, namely:
i) lime; and
ii) kattha (catechu),
whether or not containing any other ingredients, such as cardamom, copra
and menthol.”
48. In Chapter 24, for sub-heading 2404.40 and the related entries, the
following was substituted, namely:
| “Chewing tobacco and preparations containing chewing tobacco; 'Pan<br>Masala' containing tobacco.<br>2404.41 - Chewing tobacco and preparations containing chewing tobacco<br>2404.49.1 - 'Pan Masala' containing tobacco” | | “Chewing tobacco and preparations containing chewing tobacco; 'Pan<br>Masala' containing tobacco. | |
|---|
| | 2404.41 - Chewing tobacco and preparations containing chewing tobacco | |
| | 2404.49.1 - 'Pan Masala' containing tobacco” | |
| | | |
| 49. Entry No. 2 of Part-J in the First Schedule to the ADE Act is similar to<br>sub-heading 2404.49 - as amended from 01.03.2001. As a result, additional<br>excise duty could be imposed on ''Pan Masala containing tobacco”. As far as<br>Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) is concerned, a Full Bench of the (undivided)<br>Andhra Pradesh High Court had examined the interface between the APGST<br>Act, and the provisions of the CET Act, in the context of whether gudaku was | | | |
27
| subjected to sales tax levy, as the dealers had contended that it was tobacco, and<br>therefore, exempt under the local law.29 The Full Bench ruling considered the<br>local enactments, and sub-headings in Chapters 21 and 24 of the CET Act, and<br>held that although gutkha falls within the term ‘pan masala’, since no additional<br>duty of excise is levied on it, yet it could not be held that gutkha was exempt<br>from state sales tax. | | | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| 50. The Full Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court had to consider, if<br>Entry 7 of the Fourth Schedule to the APGST Act, which excluded tobacco, also<br>resulted in exemption as long as it was not subjected to tax under the ADE Act.<br>The High Court held, interpreting the CET Act that each chapter contained a | | | | | | | | | | |
| table, specifying against the description of “goods” in each sub-heading and the | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| rates at which both basic duty as well as additional duty are levied. Chapter 21 | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| deals with “Miscellaneous Edible Preparations”. Note 3 to that chapter states | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| that in that chapter “pan masala” meant any preparations containing betel nuts | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| and any one or more of ingredients, namely, lime, katha ( | | | | | | | catechu | ) and tobacco, | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| whether or not containing any other ingredients, such as cardamom, copra and | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| menthol. It was held that “ | | | | chewing tobacco and preparations containing | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| chewing tobacco | | ” is comprehensive enough to take in its fold | | | | | | gutkha | | which |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| contains 7% chewing tobacco. The court then ruled that having regard to the | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| ingredients of | gutkha | | , it fell within the meaning of “ | | | pan masala | | | ” and was | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| covered by heading 21.60 and subjected to basic duty of Central Excise, but no | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
| additional duty. Chapter 24 deals with “ | | | | | tobacco and manufactured tobacco | | | | | |
29
Kothari Products Limited v. Government of Andhra Pradesh , 1997 (107) S.T.C. 618
28
| substitutes, etc | | | | | .”. The court held that there was no reference to “ | | | | | | | | | | | | gutkha | | ” as such |
|---|
| in any one of the headings and sub-headings of that chapter. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| in any one of the headings and sub-headings of that chapter. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| 51. | | | It was held by the Full Bench that provisions of explanation of the Fourth | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| Schedule to the APGST Act, with reference to the heads and sub-heads in the | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| CET Act, what was relevant in ascertaining the real import of the expression | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| “ | chewing tobacco and preparations containing chewing tobacco | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ” was the | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| breadth of the terms used in the entry, sub-heading or a notification, or statute. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| From that aspect, the court concluded that | | | | | | | | | | | | | gutkha | fell within the wide language | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| of the said expression. However sub-heading 2404.40 “ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Chewing tobacco and | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| preparations containing chewing tobacco | | | | | | | | | | | | ” was a general sub-head. The court | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| concluded that it is a settled rule of interpretation that a specific reference | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| prevails over a general entry. Since the court held that “ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | gutkha | | ” fell within the | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| meaning of “ | | | | pan masala | | | | ” in the sub-heading 21.06, there could be no doubt that | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| “ | pan masala | | | ” was a specific sub-head even assuming that it falls within the | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| meaning of “chewing tobacco”. Therefore, the court concluded that in view of | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| the specific head “ | | | | | | | pan masala | | | ” in Chapter 21, that item was excluded from the | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| general sub-head 2404.40 | | | | | | | | | “Chewing tobacco and preparations containing | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| chewing tobacco” | | | | | | . The court also concluded that though “ | | | | | | | | | | gutkha | ” fell within the | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| term “ | | | pan masala | | | ” in Chapter 21 under sub-head 21.06 yet as it is not subjected | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| to additional duty, an essential condition envisaged by the explanation for | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| claiming exemption, is lacking. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| claiming exemption, is lacking. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
29
52. This court, in Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) reversed the Full Bench
decision stating that:
“3. The contention on behalf of the appellants is that it is not open to the
State of Andhra Pradesh to tax gutka. Section 8 of the State Sales Tax Act
provides that a dealer who deals in the goods specified in the Fourth
Schedule thereto shall be exempt from tax thereunder in respect of such
goods. Entry 7 of the Fourth Schedule of the State Sales Tax Act refers to
tobacco and the explanation in this behalf is that the goods mentioned in
Entry 7
“shall be goods included in the relevant heads and sub-heads of
the First Schedule to the Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of
Special Importance) Act, 1957, but does not include goods
where no additional duties of excise are levied under that
Schedule.”
The said Additional Duties of Excise Act, in Entry 2404, refers to "Gudaku"
under the sub-Heading "Other manufactured tobacco". Gudaku which bears
a brand name is taxable under Entry 2404.11 at the rate of 5% and Gudaku
not bearing a brand name is subject to tax at nil rate under Entry 2404.12.
The Schedule to the Central Excise Act also makes the same distinction
between Gudaku bearing a brand name and Gudaku not bearing a brand
name under the sub-Heading, "Other manufactured tobacco and
manufactured tobacco substitutes; homogenised or 'reconstituted' tobacco;
tobacco extracts and essences".
4. Clearly, therefore, gutka is a tobacco that is covered by an entry in the
First Schedule to the said Additional Duties of Excise Act and the branded
gutka that the appellants manufacture is liable to tax thereunder. Gutka,
therefore, is 'goods' covered by the Explanation to the Fourth Schedule to
the State Sales Tax Act and, therefore, covered by the exemption contained
in Section 8 thereof. The Schedule to the State Act could, therefore, not have
been amended by including gutka as a kind of pan masala in entry 194 of its
First Schedule. It must, therefore, be held that the inclusion of gutka in the
said entry 194 in the manner in which it is done is bad in law and is struck
down. The appellants will be entitled to all consequential benefits.”
53. As far as the first point argued by the appellants are concerned, which is,
whether in a state law which contains two provisions: one which taxes entries,
and another which exempts articles from levy (the latter being listed separately,
in a notification, or a schedule to the enactment itself), the inclusion, or insertion
into the list or schedule of articles that can be taxed (like Section 4 of the DST
30
Act) without amending the subsisting notification that excludes levy (as under
Section 7 DST) would the levy fail?
54. There was apparent conflict between two lines of judgments of this court
i.e., Radheshyam Gudakhu Factory and Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) on the one
hand, and Dealing Dairy Products (supra) , Krishna Kuthar Kabra (supra) and
Agra Belting Works (supra) on the other hand. This court, in the latter three
judgments held that notification introducing an entry and subjecting it to levy,
when previously, it was exempt in another part of the taxing statute, the
intention was to withdraw the exemption and make the sale leviable to tax at the
rate prescribed in the later notification. The court held it to be unnecessary that
“ a specific or separate notification withdrawing or revoking the notification
should be issued”. This conflict was referred to a larger bench of five judges, in
30
Trimurti Fragrances (P) Ltd v. Govt of NCT of Delhi (a case, which is part of
the present batch). The court held that the judgment in Agra Belting Works
(supra) does not in any manner conflict with the ruling in Kothari Products Ltd.
(supra) or Radheshyam Gudakhu Factory (supra):
| “In our considered opinion there is no conflict between the | | | | | | | | Kothari |
|---|
| Products | | (supra) line of cases and the | | | Agra Belting | | line of cases. | |
| The | Kothari Products | | (supra) line of cases was on the question of whether | | | | | |
| “tobacco” or other goods specified in the First Schedule to the ADE Act | | | | | | | | |
| and hence exempted from Sales Tax under State sales tax enactments, can be | | | | | | | | |
| made exigible to tax under the State enactments by amending the Schedule | | | | | | | | |
| thereto. On the other hand, | | | | Agra Belting Works | | (supra) line of cases was on | | |
| the question of interplay between general exemption of specified goods from | | | | | | | | |
| sales tax under Section 4 of the U.P. Sales Tax Act and specification of rates | | | | | | | | |
| of sales tax under Section 3-A of the said Act. This Court held that goods | | | | | | | | |
| exempted from sales tax under Section 4 would be exigible to tax by virtue | | | | | | | | |
| of subsequent notification under Section 3-A specifying the rate of sales tax | | | | | | | | |
| 30 [2022] 15 SCR 516: | 2022 SCC OnLine SC 1247 |
|---|
31
| for any specific item of the class of goods earlier exempted under Section 4. | |
|---|
| There being no conflict, the reference to Constitution Bench is | |
| incompetent.” | |
55. The above holding, that there is no conflict between the Agra Belting
Works (supra) line of cases, and the Kothari Products Ltd. (supra) line of cases,
therefore, concludes the question urged with respect to efficacy or validity of
notifications introducing as entries in a schedule(s) and subjecting them to tax,
when those articles are part of the statute or are exempted from taxation. The
assessees’ contentions therefore, fail on this point.
56. Turning next to the question of whether pan masala was an exempted
item, being “tobacco”, it is noticeable that pan masala was expressly mentioned
in Chapter 21 for the first time, in 1995 in the CET Act. Note 3 defined 'Pan
Masala' as “any preparation containing betel nuts and any one or more of the
following ingredients, namely lime, katha (catechu) and tobacco, whether or not
containing any other ingredients”. However, at the same time, Chapter 24
contained a specific entry “tobacco” which enumerated tobacco, manufactured
tobacco, substitutes etc. The relevant sub-heading at that time was 2404.41
which enumerated chewing tobacco, including preparations commonly known
as khara masala, kimam, dokta, zarda, sukha and surti . Thus, the CET Act itself
made a distinction between pan masala - whether it contained tobacco, or not,
and all forms of tobacco. Right from 1995, the distinction in the CET Act
between pan masala (Chapter 21) and tobacco (Chapter 24), had been made.
32
| The definition of pan masala also clarified that despite one of its ingredients<br>being tobacco, it would nevertheless be a separate article. | | | | |
|---|
| 57. This court had to consider the effect of the term “includes” in relation to<br>the definition of tobacco in Mahalakshmi Oil Mills (supra). The controversy was<br>whether the term “tobacco” and the inclusive clause was wide enough to cover<br>tobacco seeds. This court, observed that: | | | | |
| “14. Can then the words “tobacco” and “any form of tobacco” in the first | | | |
| | “14. Can then the words “tobacco” and “any form of tobacco” in the first | | |
| part of the definition be given a wider meaning and read as including the | | | |
| seeds also, particularly as it talks of “tobacco in any form, cured or | | | |
| uncured, manufactured or unmanufactured”? We do not think they can be | | | |
| for several reasons. In the first place, tobacco seeds hardly answer to the | | | |
| description of either the expression “manufactured tobacco” or the | | | |
| expression “unmanufactured tobacco” in their ordinary connotation; and | | | |
| the expression “cured or uncured” cannot also be associated with tobacco | | | |
| seeds. The expression used in the first part of the definition, though every | | | |
| wide, is, therefore, singularly inappropriate to take within its purview | | | |
| tobacco seeds as well. Secondly, the definition occurs in a statute levying | | | |
| excise duty which is concerned not with the parts of a plant grown on the | | | |
| field but with the use to which those parts are put or can be put after | | | |
| severance. The legislature could not but have been aware that if the leaves, | | | |
| stalks and stems of the tobacco plant are used for manufacturing cured | | | |
| tobacco, biris, cigarettes and so on, the seed is also used to produce oil and | | | |
| cake. It takes care to mention the first three items which are used in the | | | |
| manufacture of some forms of tobacco consumption which are also | | | |
| enumerated but refrains from referring to seeds which it would have done | | | |
| had it been intended to include the oil and cake also for purposes of the levy. | | | |
| The categories of unmanufactured tobacco enumerated in the entry in the | | | |
| Schedule include “stalks” but not “seeds”. This also indicates that seeds | | | |
| are not intended to be included. In other words, the omission of the word | | | |
| “seeds” from the second part of the definition casts its shadow on the first | | | |
| part as well. Indeed it rather looks as if the second part of the definition is | | | |
| intended to restrict rather than expand the scope of the first part. Thirdly, it | | | |
| is to be noticed that the first part of definition is somewhat restrictively | | | |
| worded…" | | | |
| | | | |
| 58. In P. Kasilingam v. PSG College of Technology31 this court followed the<br>same principle, i.e., that “includes” used in conjunction with some words,<br>expands the natural import of the term, to the extent it incorporates those words: | | | | |
31
[1995] 2 SCR 1061
33
| “The word "includes", when used, enlarges the meaning of the expression<br>defined so as to comprehend not only such things as they signify according<br>to their natural import but also those things which the clause declares that<br>they shall include. The words "means and includes", on the other hand,<br>indicate "an exhaustive explanation of the meaning which, for the purposes<br>of the Act, most invariably be attached to these words or expressions" [See:<br>Dilworth v. Commissioner of Stamps, [1899] AC 99 at pp. 105-106 (Lord<br>Watson); Mahalakshmi Oil Mills v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1989] 1 SCC<br>164, at p. 169)." | | “The word "includes", when used, enlarges the meaning of the expression | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| | defined so as to comprehend not only such things as they signify according | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | to their natural import but also those things which the clause declares that | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | they shall include. The words "means and includes", on the other hand, | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | indicate "an exhaustive explanation of the meaning which, for the purposes | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | of the Act, most invariably be attached to these words or expressions" | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| 59. These decisions have been followed in later judgments as well; one of<br>them is Pioneer Land & Urban Infrastructure v. Union of India32. For these<br>reasons, throughout (till 2001), “Pan masala” and chewing tobacco have | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| received different treatment. They are not interchangeable or synonymous | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| expressions. Entry 2404 refers to chewing tobacco | | | | | | | | | | | | “including preparations | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| commonly known as "Khara Masala", "Kimam", "Dokta", "Zarda", "Sukha" and | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| "Surti"” | | | . | Gudaku | | and snuff are dealt with under a separate heading. The effect | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| of inclusion of pan masala | | | | | | | | with tobacco | in Chapter 24 and | | | | simultaneously | | | that |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| product’s | | | | exclusion | | | from Chapter 21, as well as imposition of ADE with effect | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| from 2001, on ‘ | | | | | pan masala containing tobacco’ | | | | | meant that the product (i.e. pan | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| masala without tobacco) went out, for the first time, of the reach of state sales | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| tax. All along, goods and products described as | | | | | | | | | | | pan masala and gutkha, | | | | were | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| included in Chapter 21. The conclusion therefore, is that till 2001, and the | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| introduction of ADE, these two products were covered by local or sales tax | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| levies. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| levies. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| 60. The General Rules of Interpretation (of the CET Act) which guide the<br>appropriate classification of products, inter alia, provide that: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| throughout (till 2001), | “Pan masala” | and chewing tobacco have |
|---|
32
[2019] 10 SCR 381: (2019) 8 SCC 416
34
| “THE FIRST SCHEDULE—IMPORT TARIFF (See Section 2) GENERAL<br>RULES FOR THE INTERPRETATION OF THIS SCHEDULE | |
|---|
| Classification of goods in this Schedule shall be governed by the following<br>principles: | |
| 1. The titles of Sections, Chapters and Sub-Chapters are provided for ease<br>of reference only; for legal purposes, classification shall be determined<br>according to the terms of the headings and any relative Section or Chapter<br>Notes and, provided such headings or Notes do not otherwise require,<br>according to the following provisions. | |
| 2. (a) Any reference in a heading to an article shall be taken to include a<br>reference to that article incomplete or unfinished, provided that, as<br>presented, the incomplete or unfinished article has the essential character of<br>the complete or finished article. It shall also be taken to include a reference<br>to that article complete or finished (or falling to be classified as complete<br>or, finished by virtue of this rule), presented unassembled or disassembled. | |
| (b) Any reference in a heading to a material or substance shall be<br>taken to include a reference to mixtures or combinations of that material or<br>substance with other materials or substances. Any reference to goods of a<br>given material or substance shall be taken to include a reference to goods<br>consisting wholly or partly of such material or substance. The classification<br>of goods consisting of more than one material or substance shall be<br>according to the principles of rule 3. | |
| 3. When by application of rule 2(b) or for any other reason, goods are,<br>prima facie, classifiable under two or more headings, classification shall be<br>effected as follows: - | |
| (a) the heading which provides the most specific description shall be<br>preferred to headings providing a more general description. However, when<br>two or more headings each refer to part only of the materials or substances<br>contained in mixed or composite goods or to part only of the items in a set<br>put up for retail sale, those headings are to be regarded as equally specific<br>in relation to those goods, even if one of them gives a more complete or<br>precise description of the goods. | |
| (b) mixtures, composite goods consisting of different materials or made up<br>of different components, and goods put up in sets for retail sale, which<br>cannot be classified by reference to (a), shall be classified as if they<br>consisted of the material or component which gives them their essential<br>character, insofar as this criterion is applicable. | |
| (c) when goods cannot be classified by reference to (a) or (b), they shall be<br>classified under the heading which occurs last in numerical order among<br>those which equally merit consideration.” | |
| 61. In Collector of Central Excise Nagpur v. Simplex Mills Co. Ltd33 this<br>court outlined the role of the interpretive rules: | | |
33
[2005] 2 SCR 441: (2005) 3 SCC 51
35
| “ […] for legal purposes, classification “shall be determined according to<br>the terms of the headings and any relevant section or chapter notes”. If<br>neither the heading nor the notes suffice to clarify the scope of a heading,<br>then it must be construed according to the other following provisions<br>contained in the Rules. Rule 1 gives primacy to the section and chapter<br>notes along with terms of the headings. They should be first applied. If no<br>clear picture emerges then only can one resort to the subsequent rules. The<br>appellants have relied upon Rule 3. Rule 3 must be understood only in the<br>context of sub- rule (b) of Rule 2 which says inter alia that the classification<br>of goods consisting of more than one material or substance shall be<br>according to the principles contained in Rule 3. Therefore when goods are<br>prima facie, classifiable under two or more headings, classification shall be<br>effected according to sub- rules (a), (b) and (c) of Rule 3 and in that order.” | | | “ […] for legal purposes, classification “shall be determined according to | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| | | the terms of the headings and any relevant section or chapter notes”. If | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | neither the heading nor the notes suffice to clarify the scope of a heading, | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | then it must be construed according to the other following provisions | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | contained in the Rules. Rule | | | | | | 1 gives primacy to the section and chapter | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | notes along with terms of the headings. They should be first applied. If no | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | clear picture emerges then only can one resort to the subsequent | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | rules. The | |
| | | appellants have relied upon | | | | | Rule | | 3. | Rule | | 3 must be understood only in the | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | context of sub- rule | | | (b) of | Rule | | 2 which says inter alia that the classification | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | of goods consisting of more than one material or substance shall be | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | according to the principles contained in | | | | | | | | | | Rule | | | 3. Therefore when goods are | | | | | | | |
| | | prima facie, classifiable under two or more headings, classification shall be | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | effected according to sub- rules | | | | | | (a), (b) and (c) of | | | | | | | | | Rule | 3 and in that order.” | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| 62. On a plain application of the interpretive rules, especially Rule 3(a) it is<br>clear that the heading which provides the most accurate description has to be<br>followed. In the present case, there is no doubt, that before 2001, pan masala<br>and gutkha fell within Chapter 21, as pan masala, regardless of whether they<br>contained tobacco. Goods classifiable under Chapter 24, i.e. tobacco items were<br>more general; also they did not include pan masala. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| 63. As regards the question of the rate of tax, in view of the restrictions under<br>Section 15 CST Act, neither gutkha nor pan masala were “declared goods” | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| under | | Section 14 | | | of the CST Act. The amendment to the | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | CET Act | | did not |
| become part of Section 14(ix). The goods under the relevant sub-headings of the<br>CET Act were absent in the list of declared goods of the CST Act; they were | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| not part of the provisions introduced to the | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Finance Act | | | | | , 1988. Therefore, the | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| subsequent changes made introducing 2404.40 in the | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | CET Act | | | do not affect or | |
| change the CST Act. Consequently gutkha and pan masala are not covered | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| under sub-heading 2404.40 so far a | | | | | | | | | | | s | CST Act | | | | | | is concerned. Resultantly the | | | | | |
| neither | gutkha | nor | pan masala | were “declared goods” |
|---|
| become part of | | Section 14(ix) |
|---|
| were absent in the list of declared goods of the CST Act; they were |
|---|
| gutkha | and | pan masala | are not covered |
|---|
36
arguments of the assessees that the rate of local tax, cannot exceed the limit
under the CST Act, are rejected as unmerited.
64. For the foregoing reasons, the appeals by the assessees have to fail. The
revenue’s appeals are consequently allowed. There shall be no order on costs.
.............................................J.
[S. RAVINDRA BHAT]
.............................................J.
[DIPANKAR DATTA]
NEW DELHI;
MAY 04, 2023