Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
RAM SINGH & SONS ENG. WORKS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX, U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/12/1978
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 545 1979 SCR (2) 621
1979 SCC (1) 487
CITATOR INFO :
F 1984 SC 774 (25)
ACT:
Contract of sale and contract for work and labour,
distinction and test of-Whether a contract for fabrication
and erection of 3-motion electrical overhead (travelling
cranes) is a contract of sale or contract for work and
labour.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant assessee was a partnership firm carrying
on business inter alia of manufacture and erection of
cranes. During the assessment year 1965-66, the assessee
entered into two contracts for supply and erection of 3-
motion electrical overhead travelling cranes. The assessee
carried out both the contracts and fabricated and erected 3-
motion electrical overhead travelling cranes according to
the contract specifications. A question arose in the
assessment of the assessee to sales tax for the assessment
year 1965-66 whether the amount of Rs. 1,34,500/- received
by the assessee under the contract with M/s. Kamlapati
Motilal Sugar Mills and the amount of Rs. 2,38,000/-
received under the contract with M/s. Upper Doab Sugar Mills
Ltd., formed part of the turnover of the assessee and was
liable to sales tax. The Sales Tax Officer took the view
that the contracts were essentially contracts of sale of
ready made cranes and the erection of the cranes at the
factory site was merely incidental to the sales and the
amounts of Rs. 1,34,500/- and Rs. 2,38,000/- received under
the contracts were, therefore taxable. This view was upheld
by the Assistant Commissioner in appeal, but in revision the
Additional Judge (Revisions) held that each of the two
contracts was a works contract not involving any sale of
goods and hence the amounts were not exigible to sales tax.
On a reference to the High Court at the instance of the
Commissioner of Sales Tax, the High Court took the view that
each of the two contracts was for supply of 3-motion
electrical overhead travelling cranes as a complete unit and
"the predominant object was supply of crane as complete
unit" and "the bestowing of labour and skill in the
execution of the contract" appeared to have been incidental
to the supply of the machine." The High Court observed that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
in its view parties "intended the property to pass in the
subject matter of the contract, namely, the completed crane
as movable property" and concluded that it was a contract of
sale of goods and not a contract for work and labour. The
High Court accordingly answered both the questions referred
to it against the assessee and in favour of the Revenue.
Allowing the appeal by special leave the Court,
^
HELD: 1. The primary test to find out whether a
contract is a contract of sale or a contract for work and
labour is whether the contract is one whose main object is
transfer of property in a chattel as a chattel to the buyer,
though some work may be required to be done under the
contract as ancillary or incidental to the sale or it is
carrying out of work by bestowal of labour and service and
materials are used in execution of such work. The Court’s
have evolved some subsidiary tests to resolve the difficulty
arising in the application of this primary test as there are
a large number of cases which are on the
622
border line and fall within what may be called "grey area".
One such test formulated by the Supreme Court in
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh v. Purshottam
Premji, 26 STC 38 is:
"The primary difference between a contract for work or
service and a contract for sale of goods is that in the
former there is in the person performing work or rendering
service no property in the thing produced as a
whole.......In the case of a contract for sale, the thing
produced as a whole has individual existence as the sole
property of the party who produced it (at some time before
delivery, and the property therein passes only under the
contract relating thereto to the other party for price."
[628 C-G]
Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P. v. Purshottam Premji,
26 STC 38; State of Rajasthan v. Man Industrial Corporation
24 STC 349; Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering Co. (P)
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Maharashtra, [1979] 1 SCR
644; applied.
2. Each of the two contracts for fabrication and
erection of a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling crane
is not a contract for sale but a contract for work and
labour, (a) It is essentially a transaction for fabricating
component parts and putting them together and erecting them
at the site so as to constitute a 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane. The transaction is no different
than one for fabrication and erection of an open godown or
shed with asbestos or tin sheets fixed on columns, (b) It is
not as if a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling crane is
fabricated by the manufacturer and then sold and delivered
to the customer as a chattel, (c) The fabrication and
erection of a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling crane
is a highly skilled and specialised job and the component
parts have to be taken to the site and they are assembled
and erected there and it is only when this process is
complete, then a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling
crane comes into being. The process of assembling and
erection requires a high degree of skill and it is not
possible to say that the erection of a 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane at the site is merely incidental
to its manufacture and supply. The fabrication and erection
is one single indivisible process and a 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane comes into existence only when the
erection is complete. The erection is thus a fundamental and
integral part of the contract, because without it the 3-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
motion electrical overhead travelling crane does not come
into being. The manufacturer would undoubtedly be the owner
of the component parts when he fabricated them but at no
stage does he become the owner of 3-motion, electrical
overhead travelling crane as a unit so as to transfer the
property in it to the customer. The 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane comes into existence only when the
component parts are fixed in position and erected at the
site, but at that stage it becomes the property of the
customer because it is permanently embedded in the land
belonging to the customer. The result is that as soon as 3-
motion electrical overhead travelling crane comes into
being, it is the property of the customer and there is,
therefore, no transfer of property in it by the manufacturer
to the customer as a chattel. [630C-D, 631E-H-632 A]
Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering Co. (P) Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Maharashtra, [1979] 1 SCR page
644: followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1314 of
1975.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 29-1-1975 of the Allahabad High Court in S.T.R. No.
771 of 1972.
623
S.C. Manchanda, Mrs. Urmila Kapoor and Miss Kamlesh
Bansal for the Appellant.
G.N. Dikshit and O.P. Rana for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. The short question that arises for
determination in this appeal by special leave is whether a
contract for fabrication and erection of a 3-motion
electrical overhead travelling crane is a contract of sale
or a contract for work and labour. The question is
fortunately not beset with much difficulty since there is a
recent decision of this Court in Sentinel Rolling Shutters &
Engineering Co. (P) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Maharashtra which affords considerable guidance and almost
concludes the determination of the question in favour of the
assessee.
The assessee, who is the appellant before us, is a
partnership firm carrying on the business inter alia of
manufacturing and erection of cranes. During the assessment
year 1965-66, the assessee entered into two contracts for
supply and erection of 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling cranes, one with M/s Kamlapat Moti Lal Sugar
Mills and the other with M/s Upper Doab Sugar Mills Ltd. The
contract with M/s Kamlapat Moti Lal Sugar Mills provided for
supply and erection of one 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling crane at the price of Rs. 1,34,500/- and on the
terms and conditions set out in a letter addressed by M/s
Kamlapat Moti Lal Sugar Mills to be assessee:
"We confirm all the specifications given in your
above referred quotation with the following changes:
1. Structural capacity will be suitable for
safeload of two unloading crabs, i.e. 10
tons.
2. Span of the long gantry which is given 50’
will be confirmed shortly.
3. Your supply will also include gantry of 35’ x
50’ to make the crane three-motions.
4. We shall not be required to give any material
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
except electric line up to the crane.
5. You will be supplying crane-drivers cabin
with automatic control panel free provided
its trial is successful.
624
6. The minimum number of operations will be 30
per hour approx.
7. You will give us working trial of the
equipment at least by 30th September, 1965.
8. The price of the above equipment will be
Rs.1,34,500/-f.o.r. Khatauli, sales tax,
excise duty will be extra, if payable. This
price includes erection charges.
9. Terms of payment
40% advance with the order
10% after one month from the date of the order
25% after the erection of bridge and columns
15% after trial.
10% after one month’s satisfactory performance.
A penalty of 1/2% will be payable per week by you
in case of delay per week after 30th September, 1965,
and to a maximum of 5% of the total value. You will
send your staff for erecting the unloader and we shall
be providing you necessary tools and tackles and
welding set when required. Available accommodation will
also be provided."
The contract between Upper Doab Sugar Mills Ltd. was for
supply and erection of two 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling cranes with two crabs each at the price of Rs.
1,19,000/- for each crane and it was on the following terms
and conditions:
"That the contractor will supply the company two
cranes with two crabs each as under:-
(i) Crane bridge: The structural design of the
crane bridge will be in accordance with the
structural specifications of B.S.S. 466 for
electric overhead travelling crane. The
structural parts will be fabricated from good
quality Tata tested steel sections. The
girders for the main bridge will be of
lattice construction type heavy duty.
(ii) Drivers cabin: The driver’s cabin will be of
weather proof outdoor construction. It will
be with material in a position that the
operator’s view is not obstructed
625
during the load handling and will travel
along with the crane crab.
(iii)Electrical equipment for driver’s cabin: The
driver’s cabin will be provided with the
following electrical equipment and other
necessary fittings:-
1. One protective paner for electrical equipment.
2. Drum controllers for all the motors.
3. Plug and sockets for hand lamp.
4. One electric light point.
5. One alarm bell and all other necessary fittings.
Steps ladders will be provided from the crane bridge
for easy access to the cabins.
(iv) Wiring: Wiring with V.I.R. Wrain steel
conduit pipes will be provided between
individual motors and controllers, current
collectors and resistances in the cabin. For
connection of current to the trolley, a set
of bars copper conductors complete with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
insulators and strainers mounted on the
bridge will be provided. A set of current
collectors will be mounted on the trolley,
containing renewable graphitic carbon
collectors.
PRICE: That for two complete cranes of the above
mentioned specifications with two crabs each including
erection, the company will pay to the contractor at the rate
of Rs.1,19,000/- per crane with two crabs each including
erection complete in all respects with necessary equipment.
Mode of Payment:
1. 30% with the order
2. 20% after two months of the actual commencement of
work
3. 25% after the completion of erection of columns
and bridge.
4. 15% after completion and giving satisfactory
trials.
5. 10% after one month’s satisfactory work.
That the contractor will execute the entire work i.e.
fabrication, erection and construction latest by 30th day of
September, 1964 so that the trials can begin on the 1st
October, 1964. The defects will be
626
rectified by the 10th October, 1964. If the work is not
completed by the 30th September, 1964, a penalty of Rs.
400/- per day from the 1st October, 1964 will be paid by the
contractor to the company till the date of completion and
satisfactory operation of the cranes.
That all such items which are considered defective by
the company will be replaced at the contractor’s cost within
the above specified date to the company’s entire
satisfaction so that regular working of the cranes is
ensured.
That all materials will be provided by the contractor
and electricity will be charged at cost if consumed by the
contractor. Only such tools which are available in the
stores of the Co., will be given to the contractor on loan
on returnable basis and the contractor will pay to the
company the cost of such material which are not returned to
the company. The final payment of the bills of the
contractor will be made on his getting NOTHING DUE clearance
certificate from the Stores Department of the Company.
That there will be no liability and responsibility of
the company whatsoever besides payment of price of the
cranes.
That sales tax or excise duty and other government
duty, if any, will be extra. Packing and forwarding charges
will also be extra."
The assessee carried out both these contracts and
fabricated and erected one 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling crane at the factory of M/s Kamlapati Moti Lal
Sugar Mills and two 3-motion electrical overhead travelling
cranes at the factory of M/s Upper Doab Sugar Mills Ltd.
according to the contracts specifications.
The question arose in the assessment of the assessee to
sales tax for the assessment year 1965-66 whether the amount
of Rs. 1,34,500/-received by the assessee under the contract
with M/s Kamlapati Moti Lal Sugar Mills and the amount of
Rs. 2,38,000/- received under the contract with M/s Upper
Doab Sugar Mills Ltd. formed part of the turnover of the
assessee and liable to sales tax. The answer to this
question depended upon whether the contracts with M/s
Kamlapati Moti Lal Sugar Mills and M/s Upper Doab Sugar
Mills Ltd. were contracts of sale or contracts for work and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
labour. If they were contracts of sale, the amounts of
Rs.1,34,500/- and Rs. 2,38,000/-would be taxable as sale
price forming part of the turnover, but not so, if they were
contracts for work and labour. The Sales Tax Officer
627
took the view that the contracts were essentially contracts
of sale of ready made cranes and the erection of the cranes
at the factory site was merely incidental to the sale and
the amounts of Rs.1,34,500/-and Rs. 2,38,000/- received
under the contracts were, therefore, taxable. This view was
upheld by the Assistant Commissioner in appeal, but on an
application for revision being filed by the assessee, the
Additional Judge (Revisions) held that each of the two
contracts was a works contract not involving any sale of
goods and hence the amounts of Rs. 1,34,500/- and Rs.
2,38,000/- were not exigible to sales tax. The Commissioner
of Sales Tax thereupon applied for a reference and on his
application, the following two questions of law were
referred for the opinion of the High Court:
1. Whether in the facts and circumstances of the case
the turnover of Rs. 1,34,500/- made by the
assessee in respect of Kamlapati Motilal Sugar
Mills amounts to a works contract or sale of
goods? If so, to what extent?
2. Whether in the facts and circumstances of the case
the turnover of Rs. 2,38,000 made by the assessee
in respect of the Upper Doab Sugar Mills amount to
a works contract or sale of goods? If so, to what
extent?
The High Court took the view that each of the two
contracts was for supply of 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling crane as a complete unit and "the predominent
object was supply of crane as a complete unit" and "the
bestowing of labour and skill in the execution of the
contract" appeared "to have been incidental to the supply of
the machine". The High Court observed that in its view the
parties "intended the property to pass in the subject matter
of the contract,namely, the completed crane as movable
property" and concluded that it was a contract of sale of
goods and not a contract for work and labour. The High Court
accordingly answered both the questions referred to it in
favour of the Revenue and against the assessee. The assessee
thereupon brought the present appeal with special leave
obtained from this Court.
Now, the distinction between a contract of sale and a
contract for work and labour has been pointed out in
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3 ed., volume 34, para 3 at page
6 in the following words:
"A contract of sale is a contract whose main
object is the transfer of the property in, and the
delivery of the possession of, a chattel as a chattel
to the buyer. Where the main
628
object of work undertaken by the payee of the price is
not the transfer of a chattel qua chattel, the contract
is one for work and labour. The test is whether or not
the work and labour bestowed and in anything that can
properly become the subject of sale; neither the
ownership of the materials, nor the value of the skill
and labour as compared with the value of the materials,
is conclusive, although such matters may be taken into
consideration in determinating, in the circumstances of
a particular case, whether the contract is in substance
one for work and labour or one for the sale of a
chattel."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
The primary test is whether the contract is one whose
main object is transfer of property in a chattel as a
chattel to the buyer, though some work may be required to be
done under the contract as ancillary or incidental to the
sale or it is carrying out of work by bestowal of labour and
service and materials are used in execution of such work.
This test has been recognised and approved in a number of
decisions of this Court and it may now be regarded as beyond
controversy, but the real difficulty arises in its
application as there are a large number of cases which are
on the border line and fall within what may be called grey
area. To resolve this difficulty, the courts have evolved
some subsidiary tests and one of such tests is that
formulated by this Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Madhya Pradesh v. Purshottam Premji where it has been said:
The primary difference between a contract for work
or service and a contract for sale of goods is that in
the former there is in the person performing work or
rendering service no property in the thing produced as
a whole. . . In the case of a contract for sale, the
thing produced as a whole has individual existence as
the sole property of the party who produced it, at some
time before delivery, and the property therein passes
only under the contract relating thereto to the other
party for price."
This was the test applied by this Court in the State of
Rajasthan v. Man Industrial Corporation for holding that a
contract for providing and fixing four different types of
windows of certain sizes according to "specifications,
designs, drawings and instructions" set out in the contract
was a contract for work and labour and not a contract for
sale Shah, J., speaking on behalf of the Court, analysed the
nature
629
of the contract and pointed out that "The window-leaves did
not pass to the Union of India under the terms of the
contract as window-leaves. Only on the fixing of the windows
as stipulated, the contract could be fully executed and the
property in the windows passed on the completion of the work
and not before". The contract was not for transfer of
property in the window leaves as window leaves. It was a
contract for providing and fixing windows and windows could
come into existence only when the window-leaves were fixed
to the building by bestowing labour and skill and it was for
this reason that it was held to be a works contract.
The same test reasoning was applied by this Court in
Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering Co. (P) Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Maharashtra (supra). There the
question was whether a contract for fabrication, supply and
erection of certain types of rolling shutters was a contract
of sale or a contract for work and labour. This Court
analysed the nature of the contract and pointed out that
"not only are the Rolling Shutters to be manufactured
according to the specifications, designs, drawings and
instructions provided in the contract, but they are also to
be erected and installed at the premises of the company. The
price stipulated in the contract is inclusive of erection
and installation charges and the contract does not recognise
any dichotomy between fabrication and supply of the Rolling
Shutters and their erection and installation so far as the
price is concerned. The erection and installation of the
Rolling Shutters is as much an essential part of the
contract as the fabrication and supply and it is only on the
erection and installation of the Rolling Shutters that the
contract would be fully executed." This Court then proceeded
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
to examine what is a rolling shutter and how it is erected
and installed in the premises and observed that a rolling
shutter consists of several component parts and ’the
component parts do not constitute a rolling shutter until
they are fixed and erected on the premises. It is only when
the component parts are fixed on the premises and fitted
into one another that they constitute a rolling shutter as a
commercial article and till then they are merely component
parts and cannot be said to consitute a rolling shutter. The
erection and installation of the rolling shutter cannot,
therefore, be said to be incidental to its manufacture and
supply. It is a fundamental and integral part of the
contract, because without it the rolling shutter does not
come into being. The manufacturer would undoubtedly be the
owner of the component parts when he fabricates them, but at
no stage does he become the owner of the rolling shutter as
a unit so as to transfer the property in it to the customer.
The rolling shutter comes into existence as a unit when the
components
630
parts are fixed in position on the premises and it,
therefore, becomes the property of the customer as soon as
it comes into being. There is no transfer of property in the
rolling shutter by the manufacturer to the customer as a
chattel. It is essentially a transaction for fabricating
component parts and fixing them on the premises so as to
constitute a rolling shutter." The contract for fabrication,
supply and erection of the rolling shutters was, on this
reasoning, held by the Court to be a contract for work and
labour and not a contract for sale.
If we consider what is a 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling crane and how it is fabricated, erected and
installed, it will become immediately clear that the analogy
of the decision in Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering
Co. (P) Ltd.’s case (supra) to the present case is striking
and it must lead us to the conclusion that each of the two
contracts with which we are concerned here is not a contract
for sale but a contract for work and labour. The publication
of the Indian Standards Institution which lays down the Code
of Practice for Design of Overhead Travelling Cranes and
Gantry Cranes clearly shows that a 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane consists of 44 main component
parts and it is only when they are put together and
assembled at the site that they assume the shape of a crane.
It is not as if a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling
crane is fabricated by the manufacturer and then sold and
delivered to the customer as a chattel. One single 3-motion
electrical overhead travelling crane covers an area of
10,549 Square Feat at the site. When an order for
fabrication and erection of 3-month electrical overhead
travelling crane is received by the manufacturer from the
customer alongwith the specifications of the size and the
materials, the manufacturer designis the machine according
to the specifications and prepares the necessary drawings
for its fabrication and manufacture and two copies of the
drawings are sent to the customer for preparing the
foundation at the site for erection of the columns which are
ten in number along with four supporting columns. Each
column has to be placed on a grouted foundation which is 7
feet deep and is securely bolted with foundation bolts, 5 on
each side. which are grouted so as to be able to support the
weight of the columns. The columns thus become permanent
fixtures on the land of the customer and they constitute a
permanent foundation for the 3-motion electrical overhead
travelling crane. The detailed specifications of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
foundation bolts and the columns are given in the
publication of the Indian Standards Institution. It may be
noted that even so far as the columns are concerned, they
are not fabricatetd by the manufacturer in his factory and
then taken to the site. Each column has a height of about 40
feet and it is made in three or four pieces and these pieces
631
are joined together with bolts and welded at the time of
erection at the site. Thereafter a 120 feet long gantry is
assembled by the manufacturer in eight pieces and each piece
is placed on two columns and the erection of the gantry on
both sides is completed after bolting and svelaing the
gantry with the columns. Then about 60 pieces are fixed on
to the gantry on both sides to form a platform to facilitate
the operation and maintenance of the crane and the component
parts of the railings are assembled at the site with bolts
and welded to the gantry. Two distance pieces assembled out
of diverse component parts are then fixed between both ends
of the gantry to ensure stability. The manufacturer has to
examine and ensure the levelling and alignment of the gantry
and then the component parts of the rails are assembled and
fixed on both sides of the gantry by means of M.S. cleats
and bolts. The bridge which is fabricated out of numerous
component parts at the site, is then put on the rails so
that it can run on the gantry and travel about 180 feet from
one end Or the gantry to another. Then rails are fixed on
the bridge and the trolley is put on the rails. The trolley
consists of several component parts which are brought and
assembled at the site. There is also a platform erected on
the bridge for maintenance of the bridge and trolley and
lastly, there is a lifting grab which is made of 36 pieces
assembled at the site and this grab is fitted on to the
trolley. It would thus be seen that the fabrication and
erection of a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling crane
is a highly skilled and specialised job and the component
parts have to be taken to the site and they are assembled
and erected there and it is only when this process is
complete then a 3-motion electrical overhead travelling
crane comes into being. The process of assembling and
erection, requires a high degree of skill and it is not
possible to say that the erection of a 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane at the site is merely incidental
to its manufacture and supply. The fabrication and erection
is one single indivisible process and a 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane comes into existence only when the
erection is complete. The erection is thus a fundamental and
integral part of the contract, because without it the 3-
motion electrical overhead travelling crane does not come
into being. The manufacturer would undoubtedly be the owner
of the components parts when he fabricated them but at no
stage does he become the owner of the 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane as a unit so as to transfer the
property in it to the customer. The 3-motion electrical
overhead travelling crane comes into existence as a unit
only when the component parts are fixed in position and
erected at the site, but at that stage it becomes the
property of the customer because it is permanently embedded
in the land belonging to the customer. The result is that as
632
soon as 3-motion electrical overhead travelling crane comes
into being it is the property of the customer and there is,
therefore, no transfer of property in it by the manufacturer
to the customer as a chattel. It is essentially a
transaction for fabricating component parts and putting them
together and erecting them at the site so as to constitute a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
3 motion electrical overhead travelling crane. The
transaction is no different than one for fabrication and
erection of an open godown or shed with asbestos or tin
sheets fixed on columns. There can, therefore, be no doubt
that the contract in the present case was a contract for
work and labour and not a contract for sale. This view which
we are taking is completely supported by the decision of
this Court in the Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering
Co. (P) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Maharashtra
(supra).
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the judgment
of the High Court and hold that the contract in the present
case was a con tract for work and labour and not a contract
for sale and comformably with this view we answer the
question referred by the Sales Tax Tribunal in favour of the
assessee and against the Revenue. The State will pay the
costs of the assessee throughout.
V.D.K. Appeal allowed.
633