Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3467 of 2007
PETITIONER:
M/s Trutuf Safety Glass Industries
RESPONDENT:
Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/08/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & D.K. JAIN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 3467 OF 2007
(Arising out of SLP (C) No. 2674 of 2006)
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Challenge in this appeal is to the judgment of a learned
Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court allowing the revision
filed under the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 (in short the ’Act’). It
was held by the impugned order that the articles
manufactured by the appellant i.e. toughened safety glass
including wind screen, door screen, side screen and back
screens were taxable as these articles did not constitute
"glass" or "glassware" within the meaning of the Notification
under Section 4-B of the Act. Accordingly, the order passed by
the Sales Tax Tribunal, Ghaziabad (in short the ’Tribunal’) was
set aside.
3. Background facts in a nutshell are as follows:
Appellant (hereinafter referred to as the ’assessee’) filed
an application for grant of recognition certificate under Section
4-B of the Act in respect of notified goods mentioned in
Annexure-III of the Notification No.7551 dated 31st December,
1976. By order dated 22.12.1987 the Assessing Authority
granted recognition certificate in regard to "Automobile Safety
Toughened Glass" whereby the assessee was authorized to
purchase raw materials and packing materials at the
concessional rate of tax. Being aggrieved by the denial of total
exemption of sales tax on the purchase of raw materials and
packing materials, an appeal under Section 9 of the Act was
filed which was allowed by the Assistant Commissioner
(Judicial) by order dated 11.1.1989. Consequentially, the
recognition certificate was directed to be amended to the effect
that the assessee would be entitled to purchase raw materials
and packing materials without payment of any sales tax on
such purchases. This order was confirmed in Second appeal
by the Tribunal, as Revenue’s appeal before the Tribunal was
dismissed. An application for revision was filed before the High
Court which, by the impugned order, confirmed the view of the
Assessing Officer. It was held that the expression "glass" or
"glass ware" does not include the articles manufactured by the
assessee. While coming to this conclusion reliance was placed
on a decision of this Court in Atul Glass Industries (Pvt.) Ltd.
v. Collector of Central Excise (1986 (3) SCC 480).
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4. Revenue’s stand before the High Court was that the entry
"glass and glass wares in all forms" cannot include the articles
manufactured by the assessee. Reference was made to para 17
of the judgment in Atul Glass’s case (supra). The stand of the
revenue was accepted as noted by the High Court.
5. In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the
appellant submitted that the crucial expressions in the entry
i.e. "in all forms" had not been considered by the High Court
in proper perspective. When the meaning of the expression is
clear, there was no need to find out any technical meaning.
6. At this juncture, the relevant entries in the various
Notifications need to be noted.
7. Notification No.ST-II-7551/X-9(1)-76 dated 31.12.1976
issued under Section 4-B of the Act is of considerable
significance. Clause 2 of the said Notification provides that no
tax shall be payable on the sale to or, as the case may be,
purchase by any units in respect of raw materials required by
it for use in the manufacture of the goods mentioned in
Annexure III or for the packing materials for the said goods
manufactured by it. Entry 2 of Annexure III is the pivotal entry
so far as the present dispute is concerned. Same reads as
follows:
"2. Glass and glass wares including optical
glass in all forms."
(underlined for emphasis)
8. The crucial expression in the entry is "in all forms". By
subsequent Notification the State Government superseded all
the previous notifications under Section 4-B of the Act. In
Notification No.ST-II-4519/X-7(19)/87 dated 29.8.1987 Entry
II of Annexure I to the said Notification reads as follows:
"2. Glass and glassware including optical
glass in all its forms but excluding ornamented
or cut glass bangles."
(Underlined for emphasis)
9. A comparison of the previous and subsequent entry
shows that ornamented or cut glass bangles were specifically
excluded.
10. In view of Clause 2(b) of the said Notification no tax shall
be payable in respect of sale to or as the case may be purchase
by a dealer holding a recognition certificate under Sub-section
(2) of Section 4-B of the Act of any raw materials accessories
and component parts required for use in manufacture by him
of the notified goods mentioned in column 2 of Annexure I or
of any goods required for use in the packing of such notified
goods manufactured by him.
11. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that para 17
of the judgment in Atul glass’s case (supra) has no relevance.
In that case the effect of a special entry and item was under
consideration. Therefore, this Court had held that the special
must include the general. Such is not the position here. What
was required to be considered was the effect of the expression
"in all forms".
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12. Learned counsel for the revenue on the other hand
submitted that in Atul Glass’s case (supra) this Court
observed that for determining as to whether a new commodity
is substantially different from the original has to be found out
by analyzing as to how the product identified by the class or
sections of people dealing or using the product treat the
product. That is a test which is so attracted whenever the
Statute does not contain any definition. It is generally by its
functional character that the product is so identified.
13. The expression used is "in all forms". The Entry contains
an expansive description i.e. "glass" and "glasswares" in all
forms". There is no dispute that the articles manufactured by
the assessee are articles made of glass. The word ’form’
connotes a visible aspect such as shape or mode in which a
thing exists or manifests itself, species, kind or variety. The
use of the word ’in all forms’ is different from the expression
’all kinds’. The conceptual difference between the words "all
kinds’ and ’in all forms’ is that the former multiplies items of
the same kind while the latter multiplies the same commodity
in different forms. The use of the word ’in all forms’ widens the
scope of the Entry.
14. It is settled position in law that while interpreting the
entry for the purpose of taxation recourse should not be made
to the scientific meaning of the terms or expressions used but
to their popular meaning, that is to say, the meaning attached
to them by those dealing in them. This is what is known as
"common parlance test". The dictionary meaning of ’glassware’
means an article made of glass. The High Court proceeded on
the basis that while interpreting the words ’glass and glass
wares’ in the entry, it should be interpreted as it is understood
by the persons dealing in them. It held that the articles
manufactured by the assessee cannot be described as glass or
glass wares. The view of the High Court would have been
correct had the expression "in all forms" not succeeded the
expression "glass and glass wares".
15. It is to be noted that the entry which was under
consideration in Atul Glass’s case (supra) was "glass and glass
wares" and not the entry to which this case relates. In the
amendment made by Notification dated 1.9.1987 certain
specified articles which otherwise fall within the definition of
glass and glass wares were excluded i.e. ornamented or cut
glass bangles. But no such exclusion was made in respect of
articles manufactured by the assessee.
16. It is well settled principle in law that the Court cannot
read anything into a statutory provision which is plain and
unambiguous. A statute is an edict of the Legislature. The
language employed in a statute is the determinative factor of
legislative intent.
17. Words and phrases are symbols that stimulate mental
references to referents. The object of interpreting a statute is
to ascertain the intention of the Legislature enacting it. [(See
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India v. M/s Price
Waterhouse and Anr. (AIR 1998 SC 74)]. The intention of the
Legislature is primarily to be gathered from the language used,
which means that attention should be paid to what has been
said as also to what has not been said. As a consequence, a
construction which requires for its support, addition or
substitution of words or which results in rejection of words as
meaningless has to be avoided. As observed in Crawford v.
Spooner (1846 (6) Moore PC 1), Courts, cannot aid the
Legislatures’ defective phrasing of an Act, we cannot add or
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mend, and by construction make up deficiencies which are left
there. [(See The State of Gujarat and Ors. v. Dilipbhai
Nathjibhai Patel and Anr. (JT 1998 (2) SC 253)]. It is contrary
to all rules of construction to read words into an Act unless it
is absolutely necessary to do so. [(See Stock v. Frank Jones
(Tiptan) Ltd. (1978 1 All ER 948 (HL)]. Rules of interpretation
do not permit Courts to do so, unless the provision as it
stands is meaningless or of doubtful meaning. Courts are not
entitled to read words into an Act of Parliament unless clear
reason for it is to be found within the four corners of the Act
itself. (Per Lord Loreburn L.C. in Vickers Sons and Maxim Ltd.
v. Evans (1910) AC 445 (HL), quoted in Jamma Masjid,
Mercara v. Kodimaniandra Deviah and Ors.(AIR 1962 SC 847).
18. The question is not what may be supposed and has been
intended but what has been said. "Statutes should be
construed not as theorems of Euclid". Judge Learned Hand
said, "but words must be construed with some imagination of
the purposes which lie behind them". (See Lenigh Valley Coal
Co. v. Yensavage 218 FR 547). The view was re-iterated in
Union of India and Ors. v. Filip Tiago De Gama of Vedem
Vasco De Gama (AIR 1990 SC 981).
19. In Dr. R. Venkatchalam and Ors. etc. v. Dy. Transport
Commissioner and Ors. etc. (AIR 1977 SC 842), it was
observed that Courts must avoid the danger of a priori
determination of the meaning of a provision based on their
own pre-conceived notions of ideological structure or scheme
into which the provision to be interpreted is somewhat fitted.
They are not entitled to usurp legislative function under the
disguise of interpretation.
20. While interpreting a provision the Court only interprets
the law and cannot legislate it. If a provision of law is misused
and subjected to the abuse of process of law, it is for the
legislature to amend, modify or repeal it, if deemed necessary.
(See Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P. v. Popular Trading
Company, Ujjain (2000 (5) SCC 515). The legislative casus
omissus cannot be supplied by judicial interpretative process.
21. Two principles of construction \026 one relating to casus
omissus and the other in regard to reading the statute as a
whole \026 appear to be well settled. Under the first principle a
casus omissus cannot be supplied by the Court except in the
case of clear necessity and when reason for it is found in the
four corners of the statute itself but at the same time a casus
omissus should not be readily inferred and for that purpose all
the parts of a statute or section must be construed together
and every clause of a section should be construed with
reference to the context and other clauses thereof so that the
construction to be put on a particular provision makes a
consistent enactment of the whole statute. This would be more
so if literal construction of a particular clause leads to
manifestly absurd or anomalous results which could not have
been intended by the Legislature. "An intention to produce an
unreasonable result", said Danackwerts, L.J. in Artemiou v.
Procopiou (1966 1 QB 878), "is not to be imputed to a statute
if there is some other construction available". Where to apply
words literally would "defeat the obvious intention of the
legislature and produce a wholly unreasonable result" we
must "do some violence to the words" and so achieve that
obvious intention and produce a rational construction. (Per
Lord Reid in Luke v. IRC (1966 AC 557) where at p. 577 he
also observed: "this is not a new problem, though our
standard of drafting is such that it rarely emerges".
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22. It is then true that, "when the words of a law extend not
to an inconvenience rarely happening, but due to those which
often happen, it is good reason not to strain the words further
than they reach, by saying it is casus omissus, and that the
law intended quae frequentius accidunt." "But," on the other
hand, "it is no reason, when the words of a law do enough
extend to an inconvenience seldom happening, that they
should not extend to it as well as if it happened more
frequently, because it happens but seldom" (See Fenton v.
Hampton 11 Moore, P.C. 345). A casus omissus ought not to
be created by interpretation, save in some case of strong
necessity. Where, however, a casus omissus does really occur,
either through the inadvertence of the legislature, or on the
principle quod semel aut bis existit proetereunt legislators, the
rule is that the particular case, thus left unprovided for, must
be disposed of according to the law as it existed before such
statute - Casus omissus et oblivioni datus dispositioni
communis juris relinquitur; "a casus omissus," observed
Buller, J. in Jones v. Smart (1 T.R. 52), "can in no case be
supplied by a court of law, for that would be to make laws."
23. The golden rule for construing wills, statutes, and, in
fact, all written instruments has been thus stated: "The
grammatical and ordinary sense of the words is to be adhered
to unless that would lead to some absurdity or some
repugnance or inconsistency with the rest of the instrument,
in which case the grammatical and ordinary sense of the
words may be modified, so as to avoid that absurdity and
inconsistency, but no further" (See Grey v. Pearson 6 H.L. Cas.
61). The latter part of this "golden rule" must, however, be
applied with much caution. "if," remarked Jervis, C.J., "the
precise words used are plain and unambiguous in our
judgment, we are bound to construe them in their ordinary
sense, even though it lead, in our view of the case, to an
absurdity or manifest injustice. Words may be modified or
varied where their import is doubtful or obscure. But we
assume the functions of legislators when we depart from the
ordinary meaning of the precise words used, merely because
we see, or fancy we see, an absurdity or manifest injustice
from an adherence to their literal meaning" (See Abley v. Dale
11, C.B. 378).
24. Above being the position, the High Court was not justified
in interfering with the order of the Tribunal. We set aside the
order of the High Court and restore that of the Tribunal. The
appeal is allowed with no order as to costs.