Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ORIENT PAPER MILLS LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/11/1976
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1977 AIR 687 1977 SCR (2) 149
1977 SCC (2) 77
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1985 SC1293 (108,116,117,118,119,120,122,1
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1958--Lease of
forest area-Timber extracted from leased area--If liable to
sales-tax.
HEADNOTE:
Under s. 2(g) of the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax
Act the term ’goods’ means all kinds of movable property and
includes all growing crops, trees, plants and things at-
tached to. or forming part of the land which are agreed to
be severed before sale or under the contract of sale. Under
el. (n) ’Sale’ means any transfer of property in goods for
cash or deferred payment. Clause (0) defines ’sale price’ as
the amount payable by a dealer as valuable consideration for
the sale of goods and under cl. (t) ’turnover’ means the
aggregate of the amount of sale price received and receiva-
ble by a dealer.
The respondent Mills entered into a lease with the
Forest Department of the State for the cutting of bamboo and
salai wood from the leased forest area in the State. The
lease deed provided that the lessee shall pay a minimum
royalty every year whether there was cutting of timber or
not, the lessee could construct roads, railways etc. for the
purposes of business; should pay the price fixed for the
wood removed from the leased area; should keep a,n account
of all wood cut and removed and that the rights and privi-
leges of the lessees shall extend only to bamboos and salai
wood within the leased area.
The appellant (Forest Department) which was a registered
dealer under Sates Tax Act demanded front the respondent,
(also a registered dealer) sales tax in respect Of timber
extracted from the leased area. When the respondent repudi-
ated the Department’s claim it paid the tax and proceeded to
recover the tax under the revenue recovery proceedings
under s. 82 of the Indian Forests Act.
Allowing the respondent’s writ petition under Art. 226 of
the Constitution the High Court held that the State Govern-
ment and its Forest Departments were not a ’dealer’ within
the meaning of the sales tax law and as such were not enti-
tled to recover the amount from the respondent. Thereupon
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the definition of the dealer under the Act was altered to
undo the effect of the High Court’s decision.
In appeal to this Court the appellant contended that
though apparently the transaction was a lease, in reality
the lease was no more than a simple sale of standing timber,
coupled with a licence to enter and do certain things on
another’s land and the transaction in essence was a sale of
goods within the meaning of the Act.
Allowing the appeal to this Court.
HELD: Going by the definition of ’sale of goods’ under
s.2(7) of the Sale of Goods Act and s. 2(g) of the Sales Tax
Act standing timber is ’movable property’ if under the
contract it is to be severed. But the severence must take
place when the timber still vests in the contracting party.
[158D]
In the instant case there was sale of bamboo and salai
wood under the contract and, in the contemplation of the
parties they were to be cut and severed pursuant to the
contract itself.
Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh (1943) 11 I.T.R.
513; Badri Prasad [1969] 2 S-C-R. 380 held inapplicable.
150
1. (a) Despite its description, the deed conferred in
truth and substance a right to cut and carry timber of
specified species. Till the tress were cut, they remained
the property of the appellant. Once the trees were severed,
the property passed. Royalty is a euphemism for the price
of the timber. [157D]
(b) From the terms of the lease it was clear that for a
price fixed, bamboo and salai wood were permitted to be
removed by the respondent from the forest of the appellant.
Possession of the land qua land was not given and there was
a provision that the rights of the lessess shall extend only
to bamboos and wood within the leased area and nothing
therein shall in any way be deemed to authorise the lessees
to interfere with the working of the forest area of other
contractors of the forest lands. [157A-B]
(2) The amending bill, whereby the liability was being de
novo fastened, was enacted into law’ after the judgment of
the High Court. Read with s. 82 of the Indian Forests Act,
the amount was being recovered as if it were land revenue.
This process deprived the respondent of his right to chal-
lenge the qualification of the tax. The respondent should
be enabled to prove his case that the sum claimed was much
higher than could be legitimately recovered.
[159B]
[The case was remanded for consideration of the quantum
of tax that the Forest Department was legally liable to pay
as a dealer, to the Sales Tax Department. Once the tax is
settled the payment by the respondent will follow.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 49 of 1972.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated 24th December,
1970 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Mic. Petition No.
474/68.
Ram. Panjwani, H.S. Parihar and 1. N. Shroff for the Appel-
lants.
B. Sen, (Mrs.) Leila Seth, T.M. Sen, Praveen Kumar and
O.P Khanan for Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by--
KRISHNA IYER, J. The State of Madhya Pradesh, blessed
with abundant forest wealth, whose exploitation, for reasons
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best known to that government, was left in part to the
private sector, viz., the respondent, Orient Paper Mills,
which is the appellant in this appeal by certificate. The
subject matter of this litigation, however, is the competen-
cy to collect sales tax from the respondent for the bamboo
and salai wood extracted by it, under a transaction relating
to some government forests in Vindhya Pradesh which, on
’states reorganisation’ in 1956, became part of Madhya
Pradesh. The transaction itself was dressed up as a lease-
deed executed by the then State of Vindhya Pradesh on August
4, 1956 in favour of Orient Paper Mills, the respondent
herein. At that time no sales tax could be levied under the
law from the forest department of the appellant State or the
respondent mills. However, on April 1, 1959 the M.P. Gener-
al Sales Tax Act, 1958, (hereinafter referred to acronymi-
cally as M.P.G.S.T. Act) came into force. On the footing
that the Forest Department was a dealer it got itself regis-
tered as such, under the sales tax law, on November 3, 1962.
The respondent, of course, is a registered dealer under
the same law. Subsequently, the Chief Conservator of For-
ests, representing the appellant, demanded of the respondent
that it pay sales-tax on the timber extracted under the
’lease deed’, whereupon the claim was repudiated by the
respondent. In consequence,
151
the appellant proceeded to. levy the sum representing the
sales-tax on the value of the timber cut and removed as per
the terms of the contract, resorting to revenue recovery
proceedings authorised by Sec. 82 of the Indian Forest Act.
Thereupon the respondent moved the High Court for the issu-
ance of a writ under Art. 226 of the Constitution of
India against the State. to forbear from collecting sales
tax illegally. Holding that the State Government and its
Forest Department were not dealers w;thin the sense of the
sales tax law, the writ petition was allowed, notwithstand-
ing the adverse findings against the petition-respondent on
some other vital points.
The State has challenged this finding in the appeal
before us. The validity of the attempted exaction is the
gut issue in these proceedings, although the centre of
gravity on this forensic stage has shifted from the question
of the forest department being a dealer to whether the
transaction styled ’lease’ does at all involve sale of
goods. From ’no dealer, no sales tax’ to ’no sale no sales
tax’ is the shift in the epicentre of the argument caused by
an amendment to the sales tax statute legislated after and
on account of the very judgment under appeal. Suffice it to
say for the present, no sale, no sales tax is a legal tru-
ism.
It may be mentioned right here that the respondent
before us is not directly liable to pay sales tax, even
assuming that the ’lease deed’ involves sale of goods. The
forest department of government is admittedly a registered
dealer for the relevant period, and it is claimed by the
appellant State that it was liable qua dealer to pay tax on
sales of timber, and by virtue of s. 64-A of the Sale of
Goods Act such sums, which became leviable only after the
agreement was entered into in 1956, could be recovered from
the purchaser-respondent. It is virtually admitted in this
appeal, as stated earlier, that both parties are registered
dealers under the relevant sales tax Act. Nor is it in
dispute that if the appellant forest department were liable
to pay sales tax for the sales of timber which were alleged
to have taken place, the respondent, in turn, would be
liable to make good that sum in view of the plain provision
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in s. 64A of the Sale of Goods Act. But to attract that
provision there has to be sale of goods. Was there any sale
of wood under the lease deed ? That is the core of the
legal quarrel agitated before us.
We may straight proceed to consider the questions
canvassed before the High Court since both sides have had to
challenge one or other of the findings. We may borrow the
formulation of the four points set out in the judgment of
the High Court.
"(i) The transaction is not a sale of goods
and no sales tax is payable in respect of
bamboos and salai wood extracted thereunder by
the petitioner.
(ii) No sales tax is payable under the terms
of the lease deed dated August 4, 1956 and,
therefore, such tax cannot be recovered.
(iii) Neither the State Government nor the
Forest Department of that Government is or
could be a dealer and for this reason also no
sales tax is payable or recoverable.
152
(iv) The sales tax, even if payable, is not
recoverable as arrears of land revenue,
particularly when the revenue recovery
certificate was issued by the Divisional
Forest Officer."
The time is set true for stating the decisive statutory
changes which occurred after the High Court ruled against
the State, calculated to undo the disability discovered by
that pronouncement. This development deserves attention as
the sole point on which the State lost in the High Court,
viz. that the Forest Department is not doing business,
ceases to have relevance today on account of the amendment
to the Madhya Pradesh. General Sales Tax Act by the MPGST
(Amendment and Validation) Act 13 of 1971. The definition
of ’dealer’ and other related provisions were touched up and
redefined in such manner that the finding on point No. 3
formulated by the High Court was effectively nullified.
Indeed, the legislation is a sequel to the decision and has
squarely undone the impediment in the way of the State
collecting sales tax from the respondent. So long as that
law holds good the State’s claim cannot be bowled out. Of
course, Sri B. Sen, for the respondent, desired to challenge
the vires of the Amending Act but the Presidential Proclama-
tion during the Emergency, suspending the operation of
Art. 14, handcuffs the respondent from seeking to strike
down this legislation. When the Presidential Proclamation,
sterilising Art. 14, lapses then it may be time enough to
assail’ this law. So far as this appeal is concerned, Art.
14 is under eclipse and the ground of challenge unavailable.
The amendatory provisions must therefore be held impregna-
ble, on this score, and we proceed on that footing. Its
post-Emergency validity will be decided, if attacked, at
that time, since we leave that aspect untouched. To abbre-
viate the discussion, thanks to Act 13 of 1971, the Forest
Department of the State shall be deemed to be dealer. If it
is a dealer, the levy of sales-tax from it is legal and the
controversy on this score is silenced.
The meat of the matter is the judicial determination of
the true character of the transaction of ’lease’ from the
angle of the MPGST Act and the Sale of Goods Act whose
combined operation is pressed into service for making the
tax exigible from the Forest Department and, in turn, from
the respondent mills. It is the part of judicial prudence
to decide an issue arising under a specific statute by
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confining the focus to that’ statutory compass as far as
possible. Diffusion into wider jurisprudential areas is-
fraught with unwitting conflict or confusion. We, there-
fore, warn ourselves against venturing into the general law
of real property except for minimal illumination thrown by
rulings cited. In a large sense, there are no absolutes in
legal propositions and human problems and so, in the jural
cosmos of relativity, our observations here may not be good
currency beyond the factual-legal boundaries of sales-tax
situations under a specific statute.
The major plea to bomb the tax demand having been shot
down by retroactive legislative missiles, the respondent has
sought a manouvre to victory by reliance on the contention
covered by formulation no. 1 set out at the beginning.
Point 2 hinges on the result of point no. 1 and deserves no
separate discussion.
153
The High Court’s holding on these twin points is in
favour of the respondent on the basic submission of non-
exigibility of tax on the score that the transactions in
question are not sales at all and the payments not price of
goods at all but mere royalty under a lease.
A short legal survey will take us to an easy solution of
this issue. Section 64A of the Sale of Goods Act enables the
seller, under certain circumstances, to recover, as sale
price, any sales tax which the vendor has had to pay. So,
if in the present case, the Forest Department of the State
is liable to pay sales tax on the bamboo. and salai wood cut
and removed by the respondent, the claim to recover it from
the buyer is good under the said s.64A. The next logical
series of questions are whether the Forest Department is
liable to sales tax on the timber covered by demise ? Can
the timber s0 extracted and the royalty paid at the rates
stipulated be called goods and sale price respectively
under Sec. 2(0) of the MPGST Act ? Can the levies made by
the Forest Department become its turnover of sales under
Sec. 2(t) ? Does removal of timber by the lessee constitute
sale of goods under s. 2(n) of the MPGST Act or s. 64A of
the Sale of Goods Act ?
The ignition point which sets in motion the chain reac-
tion is the character of the transaction whereby bamboo
etc. are cut and removed and money paid, measured by the
weight of the timber extracted. If it is a sale the tax is
leviable from the Forest Department and the amount, in
turn, recoverable from the lessee--and vice versa.
We must set out parts of the ’lease deed’ so that its
basic structure and essential nature may be decoded. Is it
really a lease of forest or is it a sale of certain timber
with ancilliary licences ? No. doubt, the deed styles
itself a lease. But it is argued that a soi disant lease
may well be a mere contract of sale of goods. Theoretical-
ly, this is perfectly possible in law, as in literature:
’What’s in a name ? that which we call a rose/By any other
name would smell as sweet’!
But what is there in the document to detract from the
prima facie validity of the label ? Here the clarity of the
reasoning lies in the correct approach t0 the
question--which is not so much whether the contract is one
of lease but whether it works out a sale of goods under the
two concerned statutes.
Sales tax is payable by a dealer. The Forest Department,
by force of the statutory amendment, is admittedly a dealer.
Such tax is computed on the turnover as defined in s. 2(t)
of the MPGST Act, which reads:
"2. In this Act, unless there is
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anything repugnant in the subject or
context,--
X X X
X
(t) ’turnover’ used in relation to any
period means the aggregate of the amount of
sale prices received and receivable by a
dealer in respect of any sale or supply or
distribu-
154
tion of goods made during that period, whether
or not the whole or any portion of such
turnover is liable to tax but after deducting
the amount, if any refunded by the dealer to a
purchaser, in respect of any goods purchased
and returned by the purchaser within the
prescribed period."
The essential ingredients of turnover are thus ’sale of
goods’ and ’sale prices’. The latter concept has received
definitional expression in s.2(0) and the former in s.2(n).
They may be read here:
"(o) ’sale price’ means the amount
payable to a dealer as valuable consideration
for the sale of any goods, less any sum
allowed as cash discount according to’
ordinary trade practice but including any sum
charged for anything done by the dealer in
respect of the goods at the time or before
delivery thereof other than the cost of
freight or delivery or the cost of
installation when such cost is Separately
charged and the expression ’purchase price’
shall be construed accordingly.
(n) ’Sale’ with all its grammatical
variations and cognate expressions means any
transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or for other valuable
consideration and includes a transfer of
property in goods involved in the supply or
distribution of goods by a society or club or
any association to its members, but does not
include a mortgage, hypothecation charge or
pledge, and the word ’purchase’ shall be
construed accordingly;"
For all these words to apply, the pivotal factor is ’goods’
which is defined in substantially similar manner in both
the Sale of Goods Act and in s. 2(g) of the MPGST Act which
latter reads:
"2 (g) "goods" means all kinds of
movable property other than actionable claims,
newspapers, stocks, shares, securities or
Government stamps and includes all materials,
articles and commodities whether or not to be
used in the construction, fitting out,
improvement or repair of movable or immovable
property; and also includes all growing crops,
grass, trees, plants and things attached to,
or forming part of the land which are agreed
to be severed before sale or under the’
contract or sale;"
The key expressions which unlock the mystique of turn-
over-curesale of goods are the last inclusive limb of the
clause ’also includes .... trees which are agreed to be
severed under the contract of sale’. The crunch issue thus
is whether the self-styled lease deed is in substance a
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contract of sale of timber.
The true import of the document may be gathered from its
terms, not from rulings on other documents. There is a
serious limitation on the service of case law in this area.
It depends firstly on the actual issue in each case and the
angle of vision adopted and secondly on the clauses, pur-
poses and surrounding circumstances of each tran-
155
saction. While, therefore, we may cite some rulings later
we bear in mind the limits of their use.
Shri Sen rightly stressed the importance of the deliber-
ate description of the deed as a lease. He drew our atten-
tion, with emphasis, to annual payments of royalty, not
price. Royalty has a slight fedual flavour with a tell-
tale demise relish, if we may say so, while price is a
mercantile concept smacking of commercial relations.
By the deed, the forest lands of the lessor are ’hereby
demised’. There are frequent references to the ’leased
area’. The period of the lease is stated to be a long 20
years, later substituted by 30 years. There is also refer-
ence to discharge of lease, royalties, compensation and
other monies, suggestive of a demise rather than of a sale.
The provision for payment of a minimum royalty runs in these
terms:
lm15
"Provided that the minimum royalty payable by the
lessees to the State Government during the first year of
this lease shall not be less than 1.5 lakhs of rupees and
for the next and subsequent years, shall, during the term of
this demise, be not less than two lakhs of rupees per
annum."
Whether there is cutting of timber or not, Shri Sen argues,
the minimum royalty has to be paid, thus showing that the
provision for payment is sometimes de-linked from the ex-
ploitation of the forest or the value of the timber cut.
Considerable reliance was placed for taking the document
out of the category of mere sale of goods, on clause 5 of
the Deed, which reads:
"The lessees shall with the previous
permission in writing of the State Government
be at liberty to make dams, cross streams, cut
canals, make water-course irrigation works,
construct roads, railways and tramways and do
any other works useful or necessary for the
purposes of the business connected with these
presents in or upon the leased area provided
that they are in accordance with the plan
approved by the State Government and also with
the like approval to widen or deepen any
existing creeks or channels of waterways for
the purposes of the said business and all
timbers required for the above purposes shall
be allowed half royalty rates in the case of
timbers of reserved species and free in case
of timbers of unreserved species by the State
Government."
There is also provision for renewal of the lease deed which
savours, again, of a transaction of real property since
renewals cannot obtain for sales.
The face value of these features tends to fix the trans-
action as a lease but, lift the veil and feel the reality
behind, Shri Shroff urged us, only to discover that the
lease is no more than a simple sale of goods, viz., of
bamboo and salai wood. He dismissed tags and labels as of
the least consequence when the heart of the matter turned on
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the crucial terms of the document which were, in his submis-
sion, loudly
156
obtrusive of the ’sale-of-goods’ character of the transac-
tion. Of course, if in essence there is a sale of goods
covered by the deed, we have to locate the taxing event
which occurs when the title to the goods is transferred.
The description of the document as a lease ’deed’, the
reference to royalty, the right to construction of buildings
etc., cannot hamper a contrary conclusion if there are
luminous characterstics of a ’sale of goods’, in what is but
a lease deed in name. From this angle Shri Shroff has high-
lighted certain principal provisions in the deed. There is
no doubt, he says, that if one scans the document closely,
one finds that possession of the land is not given; which
means that parties have slurred over the demise part of it
notwithstanding the dubious expressions used. What is
authorised under the deed is the ’exclusive liberty’ to
enter upon the leased area to fell, cut or extract bamboos
and salai wood and to remove, store and utilise the same for
meeting the full requirements of the Paper Mill. This reads
more like a sale of standing timber coupled with a licence
to enter and do certain things on another’s land.
Counsel also emphasised that an insightful understanding
of cl. 2(g) of the deed would bring out the price fixed for
the goods sold viz., ’a fiat rate of Rs. 6/- per ton on air
dry bamboo and Rs. 2/- per ton on air dry salai-wood ....
actually extracted and removed from the leased area on the
weighment at the weighbridge of the said Paper Mill and in
case of export at the weighbridge or weighbridges to be
installed at suitable places by the lessees, in which case
the royalty shall be Rs. 7/8/0 (rupees seven and eight
annas) and Rs. 2/8/0 (rupees two and annas eight) per ton of
air dry bamboo and salai wood respectively. In this context
supportive strength was sought to be drawn from cl. 2(h)
which reads:
"(h) The lessees shall keep an account
of all bamboos and salai wood cut and removed
in the manner as may mutually be settled and
such account shah be open to inspection by the
Forest Officer authorised in this behalf by
the Divisional Officer concerned."
Shri Shroff went to the extent of saying
that the real nature of the transaction was
disclosed in the deed itself in clause 2(k):
"(k) The lessees in conducting their
operation on the leased area shall not in any
way interfere with the surface of land save
and in so far as may be necessary in
connection with and for the purposes of this
licence."
Clause 4 bears on its bosom, in his
submission, the imprint of a contract for
sale of goods and it may be read:
"4. "Without prejudice to the provisions
of this lease, the rights, liberties and
privileges of the lessees hereinbefore
mentioned shall extend only to bamboos and
salai wood within the leased area and nothing
herein shall in any way be deemed to authorise
the lessees to interfere with the working of
the forest areas within the leased area or the
rights, liberties, privileges of other
contractors of the said forest lands."
157
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We are considerably impressed with this analysis. The
upshot of the whole transaction is that, for a price fixed,
bamboos and salai wood are permitted to be removed from the
forest of the appellant by the respondent. For the exercise
of the right under this contract, certain necessary licences
are conceded. It is made perfectly plain that the posses-
sion of the land qua land is not given, and there is a
fool-proof provision that the rights of the ’lessees’ shall
extend only to bamboos and salai woods within the leased
area and nothing herein shall in any way be deemed to autho-
rise the lessees to interfere with the working of the forest
area .... of other contractors of the said forest lands.
Can there be a lease without exclusive, possession of the
lands ? Can there be a lease to A of lands when the only
right is to cut certain species of timber above a certain
height and according to. stipulated conditions ? Can there
be a lease of lands where similar right to cut timber from
the same land co-exist in other contractors ? There are
mere circumstances than these, but we need not be exhaus-
tive, especially when we agree with the conclusion reached
by the High Court.
We are satisfied that despite its description, the deed
confers in truth and substance a right to cut and carry
timber of specified species. Till the trees are cut, they
remain the property of the owner, namely the appellant.
Once the trees are severed, the property passes. The
’Royalty’ is a feudalistic euphemism for the ’price’ of the
timber. We may also observe that the question before us is
not so much as to what nomenclature would aptly describe the
deed but as to whether the deed results in sale of trees
after they are cut. The answer to that question, as
would .appear from the above, has to be in the affirmative.
Now to a brief reference to two out of several cases
cited at the Bar.
Sri Sen relied heavily upon Raja Bahadur Kamakshya
Narain Singh(1). That was a case under the Income-Tax law.
The assessee there received large payments by way of royal-
ty under various mining leases. The leases purported to be
for 999 years and related to the coal-mining rights set Out
in the Schedule to the lease. The lessees were to pay a
sum by way of salami or premium and an annual sum as royalty
computed at a certain rate per ton on the amount of coal
raised and coke manufactured. It was contended on behalf of
the assessee that the sums received as salami and royalty
did not constitute ’income’ but were capital receipts,
representing the price of the minerals removed. There was
also a provision for minimum royalty which was pressed into
service by the party. The Judicial Committee held that the
royalty payable under the lease was not the price of the
actual coal extracted but represented compensation which
the lessees paid to the lessor for that species of occupa-
tion which the contract allowed and it was therefore ’in-
come’ from other sources’ within the meaning of the relevant
Income-tax Act. We must point that the legal setting in
which a question is considered colours the ratio of the
case. The Judicial Committee was considering an issue
arising under the Income Tax Act and, interpreting the
clauses of a deed with particular terms, to ascertain wheth-
er the payments made thereunder fell within the meaning of
’income’ understood in its broadest connotation
[1943] 11 .T.R. 513.
158
in England and in India. Construing, as we do, a special
statute and a differently worded deed and the signification
of the words used therein we are unable to draw any legiti-
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mate instructional inferences from a decision contextually
different, concerned with a different branch of law; and
dealing with different issues although with seeming resem-
blances in superficial respects.
Another decision which, perhaps, has some helpful
reasoning, is by this Court in Badri Prasad(1). We need not
discuss the details of that case except to point out that
it has been recognised, in that ruling, that trees which are
to be severed before sale or under the contract of sale are
’goods’ for the purposes of the Sales of Goods Act. On the
facts of that case, property in the cut timber could pass to
the plaintiff under the contract at the earliest when the
trees were felled but before that happened the trees had
vested in the state under an agrarian reform measure. The
crutches of case law are not always necessary in Court.
While direct light on the legal situation present
before us is not available from Badri Prasad, or ’Kamakshya
Narain Singh, (supra) there is not the slightest doubt that
going by the definition of ’sale of goods’ under 8. 2(7) of
the Sale of Goods Act and of s.2(g) of the MPGST Act, stand-
ing timber is ’movable property’ if under the contract of
sale they are to be severed. But the severance must take
place when the timber still vests in the contracting party.
Ultimately, the case before us has to. be decided on
the facts and the law which form the backdrop to the deci-
sion. We have already held that the crucial fact to be
found before we can designate the transaction as ’sale of
goods’ is to scan and see whether the ’lease deed’ really
deals with sale of timber. We are clear that there is sale
of bamboo and salai wood under the contract and, in the
contemplation of the parties they are to be cut and severed,
pursuant to the contract itself. It follows that the find-
ing of the High Court on this point is correct.
The appeal deserves to be allowed on account of the
statutory amendment. The Madhya Pradesh Legislature had
taken great care and responded with prompt attention to deal
with a situation where considerable revenue would be lost to
it on account of inadequate expression of its intendment in
the MPGST Act. A diligent and considered amendment has
fulfilled the legislative purpose. Had the State lost the
appeal before Us on another point, that is as to whether
royalty was ’price for sale of goods’,--the whole amendatory
effort would have been an exercise in futility or a legisla-
tive brutum fulmen. In view of our finding that there is a
’sale of goods’ under the contract, the State is entitled to
succeed.
Counsel for the respondent, when we briefly indicated
our mind, and even otherwise by way of abundant caution,.
rightly urged that his client had a good case for reduction
of the quantum of tax even if sales tax was payable by the
Forest Department which could be shift-
(1) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 380.
159
ed to the respondent by virtue of s.64A of the Sale of Goods
Act. He prayed for an opportunity to establish that he was
being called upon to foot a larger bill than was legally
tenable. We regard this a reasonable request and, indeed,
Shri Shroff, for the State, has very rightly agreed with
this prayer of the respondent. For one thing, the amending
Bill whereby the liability was being de novo fastened was
enacted into law after the judgment of the High Court. Read
with s.82 of the Indian Forests Act, the amount was being
recovered as if it were land revenue. This process deprived
the respondent of his right to challenge the quantification
of the tax. It is fair--and the State agrees to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
fair--that the respondent should be enabled to prove his
case that the sum claimed was much higher than could be
legitimately recovered. Shri B. Sen brought to our notice
that the rate of tax on sales to a registered dealer, if the
commodity was to be consumed within the State, in view of
Section 8 of Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act for manu-
facturing purposes was less than the general rates. The
appellant, on the other hand was seeking to recover at
the higher rate. Moreover, even the lesser rate varied over
the years from 1% to 2% and on to 3 %. Thus the arithmetics
of the case had also to be gone into before the actual sum
due from the Forest Department to the Sales Tax Department
was fixed. More could not be exacted from the respondent.
These reasons persuade us to allow the appeal and remand
the case for consideration of the quantum of tax that the
State, in the Forest Department, was legally liable to pay
as a dealer, to the Sales Tax Department.
Shri Shroff took up a point that when the Forest Depart-
ment made a demand on the respondent and required him to
furnish a declaration necessary to reduce the rate of tax,
the latter ignored the request. This, according to him, had
an impact on the eventual liability. We do not propose to
investigate this aspect at the present stage but leave it
to be raised by the State before the High Court.
In this view, we allow the appeal and remand the case
for disposal after recording a finding on the limited
issue/issues above indicated. We may mention that although
the High Court has not properly adjudicated upon the recov-
erability of the Sales Tax as and by way of arrears of land
revenue, it is not necessary to go into the matter afresh
especially because once the tax amount is settled, the
payment by the respondent will follow. However, we are not
upsetting the finding of the High Court in this behalf in
the present case.
The appeal is allowed and remanded, to be disposed of in
the light of the directions given above. Parties will bear
their costs throughout.
P.B.R. Appeal
allowed.
160