Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SOUTH INDIA VISCOSE LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/07/1981
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1604 1982 SCR (1) 44
1981 SCC (3) 457 1981 SCALE (3)1049
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956-Section 3 (a)-Scope of-
Goods manufactured in Tamil Nadu sold to buyers in other
neighbouring States through an agent in Bombay-Firm
contract, under the system of distribution. completed after
the supply of goods to buyers-Situs of sale-Sale if attracts
Central Sales Tax under section 3 (a).
HEADNOTE:
To regulate the allotment of indigenous art silk yarn,
the Government of India constituted the Art Silk Yarn
Distribution Committee which issued allotment cards to
individual weavers. Under the terms of the card without
waiting for the allottee to approach the manufacturer the
manufacturer had to offer the allottee art silk yarn within
seven days of the date of allocation of the card and within
a period of 21 days from the date of allocation of the card,
a firm contract for the supply of yarn was to be completed.
The appellant, a manufacturer of art silk yarn with its
factory in the State of Tamil Nadu, supplied yarn to
cardholders in the States of Maharshtra and Gujarat by
delivering the goods at Bombay through its selling agent at
that place.
On the question of exigibility of the goods to Central
Sales tax the appellant claimed that since the goods were
despatched to Bombay at the request of the agent and not as
a result of any sale in favour of the purchaser the sale had
taken place at Bombay, and secondly since the movement of
goods from the State of Tamil Nadu to Bombay was not
connected with the sales the sales were not inter-State
sales within the meaning of section 3 (a) of the Central
Sales Tax Act.
This claim was rejected by the Joint Commercial Tax
Officer and his order was upheld at the different stages of
appeal. The High Court dismissed the appellant’s revision
petitions.
On the question whether the sales were inter-State
sales, the Court
^
HELD: The goods having been despatched from one State
to another pursuant to a contract of sale that came into
existence directly between the buyer and seller within a few
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days after the date of the allocation card, the sale was an
inter-State sale.
To constitute an inter-State sale within the meaning of
section 3(a) of the Central Sales Tax Act there must co-
exist a sale of the goods and movement of
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goods from one State to another under the contract of sale.
Where there is a link between a contract of sale and
movement of goods from one State to another pursuant to the
contract of sale, interposition of an agent ought not to
alter the inter-State character of the sale. [49-F]
In the instant case the card contemplated a contract of
sale to be completed within 21 days of the date of its
issue. The agent requested the appellant to despatch certain
number of cases to a purchaser and that was done. These
facts cumulatively suggest that the goods had been
’transported from the factory in Tamil Nadu to Bombay for
being delivered to the purchaser as a result of contract of
sale established in accordance with the terms of the
allocation card.
[49-G-50-B;E]
The fact that actual sale pursuant to the said contract
had taken place subsequently does not militate against the
transaction being treated as an inter-State sale under
section 3(a) because the movement of goods delivered to the
buyer was occasioned by the contract of sale brought into
existence under the terms of the allocation card. [51-E]
The authorities below have found, on the basis of the
terms of the allocation card and other material on record,
that there was a contract of sale within the stipulated time
between the parties. [51-G]
English Electric Company of India Ltd. v. The Deputy
Commercial Tax Officer & Ors., (1976) 38 S.T.C. 475,
followed.
Tata Engineering and Locomotive Co. Ltd. v. Assistant
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes. Jamshedpur & Anr. (1970)
26 S.T.C. 354 and Kelvinator of India Ltd. v. State of
Haryana (1973) 32 S.T.C. 629, held inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1192-94
of 1971.
From the judgment and order dated the 20th October,
1976 of the High Court of Madras in Tax Cases Nos. 205 to
207 of 1971.
S.T. Desai, A.K. Verma and J.B. Dadachanji for the
Appellant.
A.K. Sen and A.V. Rangam for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH J. The appellant in these three appeals
by special leave is a company engaged in the business of
manufacture and sale of art silk yarn. It has its factory at
Sirumughai in the District of Coimbatore in the State of
Tamil Nadu. The appellant is registered as a dealer carrying
on business at Coimbatore. In the course of its business, it
sold during the relevant period large quanti-
46
ties of art silk yarn to various purchasers some of whom
were weavers residing in the States of Maharashtra and
Gujarat who had been issued cards under a scheme called
’Export Promotion Scheme’ entitling them to buy specified
quantities of art silk yarn from specified manufacturers.
The question involved in these appeals relates to the
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exigibility of the sales effected in favour of Export
Promotion Scheme card holders belonging to the States of
Maharashtra and Gujarat to tax under the Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’).
The assessment years are 1962-63, 1963-64 and 1964-65.
The details of the Export Promotion Scheme for
distribution of art silk yarn referred to above were these:
There were certain weavers in India who were entitled to an
incentive in the form of import licences to import art silk
yarn from abroad. The said import entitlement was cut to a
certain extent and indigenous art silk yarn at concessional
price was allotted to them. To regulate the scheme of
allotment, a committee called the ’Art Silk Yarn
Distribution Committee’ was constituted by the Government of
India. The Committee made allotments to different weavers by
issuing allotment cards. These allotment cards contained
details of the quantity of allotment and the rayon yarn
manufacturer from whom the allotted quantity of yarn could
be drawn. As per the terms of the card, the yarn
manufacturer should offer to the allottee rayon yarn within
seven days of the date of the card without waiting for the
allottee to approach him. A firm contract for the supply of
yarn should be completed within a period of twenty-one days
from the date of allocation of the card. If a firm
commitment was not entered into by the allottee with the
yarn manufacturer within twenty-one days from the date of
allocation of the card, the yarn manufacturer should return
the allocation card to the Distribution Committee with
suitable remarks on the card and a covering letter
explaining the reasons for the return of the card. Even in
the case of actual fulfilment of the quota covered by the
allocation card, the said card should be returned to the
Distribution Committee after the delivery of the yarn was
completed. This in brief was the Scheme.
In the instant case, the appellant had supplied art
silk yarn to certain card holders who were residing, as
stated earlier, outside the State of Tamil Nadu. It is
stated that the appellant had a selling agent and
distributor by the name M/s. Rayonyarns Import Company Ltd.
at Bombay and the case of the appellant was that it had
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supplied art silk yarn to the card holders in the States of
Maharashtra and Gujarat through the said agent and the
delivery of the goods was effected at Bombay. In the
assessment proceedings before the Joint Commercial Tax
Officer, Coimbatore for the year 1964-65, the appellant
claimed that the sales of art silk yarn through its agent at
Bombay were not inter-State sales as defined by section 3(a)
of the Act as the movement of the goods in question from the
State of Tamil Nadu to the State of Maharashtra or the State
of Gujarat was not occasioned by the sales in question and
that they were in fact sales which had taken place outside
the State of Tamil Nadu. The Joint Commercial Tax Officer
rejected the contention of the appellant and treated the
sales effected in favour of the Export Promotion Scheme card
holders through the appellant’s agent at Bombay as inter-
State sales and levied tax under the Act accordingly. He
also revised the orders of assessment for the years 1962-63
and 1963-64 bringing to tax the turnover relating to
transactions of similar nature during those years. In the
appeals filed by the appellant against the order of
assessment for the year 1964-65 and of revised assessment
for the years 1962-63 and 1963-64 before the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, (Commercial Taxes), Coimbatore, the
orders passed by the Joint Commercial Tax Officer were
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affirmed. The appellant then filed three appeals before the
Tamil Nadu Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal (Additional Bench),
Coimbatore against the orders passed in appeal by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Tribunal also held
that the sales in favour of the Export Promotion Scheme card
holders outside the State of Tamil Nadu were inter-State
sales and were liable to be taxed under the Act. Aggrieved
by the orders of the Tribunal, the appellant preferred three
revision petitions before the High Court of Madras. These
petitions were dismissed. Thereafter the appellant has come
up in appeal to this Court by special leave.
Section 3(a) of the Act provides that a sale or
purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce if the sale or
purchase occasions the movement of goods from one State to
the other. In order to substantiate its case, the appellant
has placed before us the documents relating to one
transaction stating that the decision on the true nature of
the said transaction would govern all other transactions of
sale in dispute as they were all of a similar kind. Those
documents relate to the supply of art silk yarn to a firm
known as M/s. Ramesh Silk Fabrics at Surat in the State of
Gujarat made in June, 1964. The purchaser was issued an
allocation card on November 7, 1963 bearing No.
48
3124. Under the card, M/s. Ramesh Silk Fabrics was entitled
to purchase 273 Kgs. of indigenous art silk yarn from the
appellant. The following were the relevant terms of the
card:
"1. The rayon manufacturers and/or our approved
dealers shall ensure that the quantity sold is not
more than the quantity allocated as indicated in
column No. 4(b) on the reverse of the card.
2. The rayon manufacturer shall offer yarn to the
allottee within seven days from the date of
allocation card without waiting for the allottee
to approach him. Contract for the supply of yarn
shall be concluded within 21 days from the date of
the allocation card.
3. Particulars of the quantity of yarn sold by the
rayon yarn manufacturer his approved dealer with
the date of or sale shall be entered and signed by
the seller in column (5) on the card.
4. No supply shall be made on allotment card on which
corrections have not been attested by the
Secretary or the Manager.
5. If firm commitment is not entered into by the
allottee with the yarn manufacturer, the yarn
manufacturer shall return the allocation card to
the Distribution Committee, with suitable remarks
on the card and a covering letter explaining the
reasons for returning the card.
6. Allocation cards shall be returned to the
Distribution Committee after the delivery of yarn
has been completed."
At the back of his allocation card, in column 4(a) the
appellant is shown as the manufacturer and in column 4(b)
the quantity allotted is shown as 273 Kgs. Column (5) of the
allocation card shows that quantity of 268 Kgs. had been
supplied as per Invoice No. BC/132. Then we have the Invoice
No. BC/132 prepared in the name of the appellant by its
agent, Rayon-yarn Import Co. Pvt. Ltd. and signed by the
agent for and on behalf of the appellant. The cases
containing goods sold had been marked as 5829, 8479 and
8505. The Invoice contains a note which reads as follows:
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"We have charged you 2% Central Sales Tax for
which purpose you are required to send us immediately
your regular ’C’ form correct in all respects as
required by the law in force for the time being in the
absence of which you are required to remit us balance
sum of Rs .. being the difference between the rate
charged and the revised rate at 10% applicable in such
case."
But actually 2% tax was added and it was shown in the
invoice as local sales tax of Maharashtra at 2% of the
price. A delivery order dated June 3, 1964 prepared by the
agent at Bombay on behalf of the appellant also refers to
the numbers of the cases containing goods as 5829, 8479 and
8505. What is of significance is a letter dated May 23, 1964
written by the agent at Bombay to the appellant. By that
letter, the agent requested the appellant to send from the
factory 69 cases of yarn bearing specific numbers including
case No. 5829, 8479 and 8505. The said letter further stated
that the invoices of sale would be sent after the goods were
sold by the agent. What is attempted to be made out by the
appellant is that the appellant was informing its agent at
Bombay from time to time as and when goods were manufactured
the number of the cases in which the goods had been packed
and at the request of its agent it had despatched the goods
to Bombay but not as a result of any sale of the said goods
in favour of a purchaser. According to the appellant, the
sale had taken place at Bombay and the movement of goods to
Bombay from the State of Tamil Nadu was not connected with
the sale in question.
In order to constitute an inter-State sale as defined
in section 3(a) of the Act, two factors should co-exist (i)
a sale of goods and (ii) movement of goods from one State to
another under the contract of sale. If there is a
conceivable link between a contract of sale and the movement
of goods from one State to the other in order to discharge
the obligation under the contract of sale, the inter
position of an agent of the seller who may temporarily
intercept the movement ought not to alter the inter-State
character of the sale. The facts which are glaring in this
case are:
(1) the allotment of a certain quantity of art silk
yarn produced by the appellant in favour of the
allocation card holder;
(2) the requirement that the appellant should offer to
sell the quantity of goods allotted to the card
holder within seven days;
50
(3) the requirement that contract of sale should be
completed within twenty-one days of the date of
the allocation card;
(4) the requirement that the card should be returned
to the Committee if no contract of sale was
concluded as stated above; and
(5) the fact that the goods have been supplied
expressly against the quota allotted under the
allocation card.
Admittedly the allocation card bearing No. 3124 was
issued on November 7, 1963 and it required the appellant to
offer to sell the quantity of art silk yarn mentioned in it
to the purchaser within seven days without even waiting for
the purchaser approaching the appellant with a request to
supply the goods in question. The card contemplated a
contract of sale to be completed within twenty-one days of
the date of its issue. The invoice in question contained the
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number of the allocation card. In the letter dated May 23,
1964 the agent requested the appellant to send the cases
bearing Nos. 5829, 8479 and 8505 by lorry from Sirumughai
and the said boxes were later on admittedly delivered to the
purchaser on June 3, 1964. These facts cumulatively suggest
that the goods in question had been transported from the
factory site of the appellant to Bombay for delivery to the
purchaser as a result of the contract of sale established in
accordance with the terms of the allocation card.
It is, however, argued on behalf of the appellant
relying upon the decision of this Court in Tata Engineering
and Locomotive Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes,
Jamshedpur and Anr. that the sale effected by the
appellant’s agent at Bombay could not be treated as the
immediate case of movement of goods from the State of Tamil
Nadu to the State of Maharashtra or the State of Gujarat, as
the case be may. The facts in the aforesaid case are
distinguishable from the facts in the present case since it
was held in that case that the procedure followed by the
manufacturer, the appellant in that case together with the
absence of any firm orders placed by the purchasers
indicated that there were no transactions of sale within the
meaning of section 2(g) of the Act and assuming that any
firm orders had been received by the appellant therein, they
could not be regarded as anything but mere offers. This
Court further held in that case that the appropriation of
goods was done
51
at the appellant’s stockyard situated in the State where the
vehicles were delivered to purchasers and it was open to the
appellant till then to allot any vehicle to any purchaser or
to transfer a vehicle from one stockyard to another. One
strong circumstance which existed in that case was the
absence of the firm orders which occasioned the movement of
goods from the State of Bihar to other States as can be seen
from the following passage in that decision:
"As regards the so called firm orders it has
already been pointed out that none have been shown to
have existed in respect of the relevant periods of
assessment. Even on the assumption that any such orders
had been received by the appellant they could not be
regarded as anything but mere offers in view of the
specific terms in Exhibit 1 (the dealership agreement)
according to which it was open to the appellant to
supply or not to supply the dealer with any vehicle in
response to such order."
In the instant case there is clear evidence of the
existence of a prior contract of sale as per terms of the
allocation card. The fact that actual sale pursuant to the
said contract of sale had taken place subsequently does not
militate against the transaction being treated an inter-
State sale under Section 3 (a) of the Act, since the
movement of the goods delivered to the buyer was occasioned
by the contract of sale brought into existence under the
terms of the allocation card. It was, however, faintly
suggested that the evidence of what took place between the
appellant and the allottee within twenty-one days of the
issue of the allocation card was lacking in this case.
Evidence about these facts was within the knowledge of the
appellant and the appellant had not placed it before the
assessing authority. It is likely that if such evidence had
been produced it would have gone against the appellant. Even
apart from that the finding recorded by the assessing
authority the appellate authority, the Tribunal and the High
Court on the basis of the terms of the allocation card and
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other material on record that there was a contract of sale
within the stipulated time between the appellant and the
allottee of art silk yarn is unassailable. In the
circumstances no assistance can be derived by the appellant
from the case of Tata Engineering and Locomotive Co. Ltd.
(supra).
The decision of this Court in Kelvinator of India Ltd.
v. The
52
State of Haryana relied on by the appellant has also no
bearing on this case. The assessee in that case had its
factory where it manufactured refrigerators at Faridabad in
the State of Haryana and it moved the goods manufactured by
it to its godown at Delhi. The excise pass utilised for such
movement was always in favour of self. During the transport
of goods, the assessee paid octroi payable for bringing
goods into Delhi. At Delhi, the assessee sold the goods to
its distributors. The Court on a consideration of the
material before it held that even though there were prior
distribution agreements entered into between the assessee
and its distributors, the goods in question had not been
moved pursuant to the said agreements from Faridabad to
Delhi, and hence there was no inter-state sale.
The facts of this case are, however, close to the facts
in English Electric Company of India Ltd. v. The Deputy
Commercial Tax officer & Ors. Here also the assessee had its
factory in the State of Tamil Nadu. Its registered office
was at Calcutta but it had branch offices at Madras, Bombay
and other places. A Bombay buyer wrote to the Bombay branch
of the appellant in that case asking for lowest quotation in
respect of the goods which were being manufactured in the
factory in Tamil Nadu. After some correspondence between the
Bombay branch and the Madras branch, the Bombay branch,
wrote to the Bombay buyer giving all the required
particulars. The Bombay buyer thereafter placed an order
with the Bombay branch for certain goods. The Bombay branch
informed the Madras branch about the order placed by the
Bombay buyer. On receipt of the invoice from the Madras
branch the Bombay branch wrote to the Bombay buyer that some
of the goods indented by him were ready for despatch and
asked for despatch instructions. On receipt of such
instructions, the Bombay branch asked the Madras Branch to
send goods to Bombay. The railway receipts were sent through
the Bombay branch. The goods were delivered to the Bombay
buyer through clearing agents and the insurance charges were
collected from the Bombay buyer. The assessee claimed in the
assessment proceedings that the sale was not an inter-State
sale but one which had taken place at Bombay between the
Bombay branch and the Bombay buyer, The said contention was
rejected by this Court with the following observations:-
"The appellant in the present case sent the goods
direct from the Madras branch factory to the Bombay
buyer
53
at Bhandup, Bombay. The railway receipt was in the name
of the Bombay branch to secure payment against
delivery. There was no question of diverting the goods
which were sent to the Bombay buyer. When the movement
of goods from one State to another is an incident of
the contract it is a sale in the course of inter-State
sale. It does not matter in which State the property in
the goods passes. What is decisive is whether the sale
is one which occasions the movement of goods from one
State to another. The inter-State movement must be the
result of a covenant, express or implied, in the
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contract of sale or an incident of the contract. It is
not necessary that the sale must precede the inter-
State movement in order that the sale may be deemed to
have occasioned such movement. It is also not necessary
for a sale to be deemed to have taken place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce, that the
covenant regarding inter-State movement must be
specified in the contract itself. It will be enough if
the movement is in pursuance of and incidental to the
contract of sale.
When a branch of a company forwards a buyer’s
order to the principal factory of the company and
instructs them to despatch the goods direct to the
buyer and the goods are sent to the buyer under those
instructions it would not be a sale between the factory
and its branch. If there is a conceivable link between
the movement of the goods and the buyer’s contract, and
if in the course of inter-state movement the goods move
only to reach the buyer in satisfaction of his contract
of purchase and such a nexus is otherwise inexplicable,
then the sale or purchase of the specific or
ascertained goods ought to be deemed to have taken
place in the course of inter-State or commerce as such
a sale or purchase occasioned the movement of the goods
from one State to another, The presence of all
intermediary such as the seller’s own representative or
branch office, who initiated the contract may not make
the matter different. Such an interception by a known
person on behalf of the seller in the delivery State
and such person’s activities prior to or after the
implementation of the contract may not alter the
position."
In the instant case, the allocation card was first sent in
November, 1963 asking the appellant directly to make an
offer of the
54
goods to the allottee. The allottee was expected to
communicate his desire to purchase the goods within twenty-
one days of the date of the allocation card. Such
communication brought into existence a contract sale
directly between the appellant and the buyer. The goods were
admittedly sent pursuant to the said contract of sale. The
interposition at a later stage of the selling agent who
acted on behalf of the appellant in the preparation of the
invoice and the delivery of the goods would not alter the
true character of the sale as the selling agent was just a
conduit pipe. The goods having been despatched from one
State to another State pursuant to a contract of sale which
came into existence directly between the appellant and the
buyer within a few days after the date of the allocation
card, the sale was an inter-State sale. The Tribunal and the
High Court were, therefore, right in upholding the orders of
the assessing authority levying tax under the Act on all
sales which had taken place in favour of the Export
Promotion Scheme card holders in Gujarat and Maharashtra
even though the selling agent of the appellant at Bombay had
on behalf of the appellant also dealt with such card holders
at Bombay, as the transactions in question satisfied the
tests laid down in the case of English Electric Company of
India Ltd. (supra).
In the result the appeals fail and are dismissed with
costs.
P.B.R. Appeals dismissed.
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