Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2274 of 2007
PETITIONER:
M/s Sree Durga Distributors
RESPONDENT:
State of Karnataka
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/04/2007
BENCH:
S. H. Kapadia & B. Sudershan Reddy
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL No. 2274 OF 2007
(arising out of Special Leave Petition (C) No. 3190/07)
KAPADIA, J.
Leave granted.
A short question which arises for determination in this
civil appeal is whether ’dog feed’ and ’cat feed’ sold by the
appellant-assessee attracts Nil rate of duty under Entry 5 of
First Schedule of the Karnataka Value Added Tax Act, 2003
(hereinafter referred to as "the Act"). The said entry was
inserted vide Karnataka Act No. 27/05 with effect from
7.6.2005.
We quote hereinbelow Entry 5 of First Schedule of the
Act:
"5. Animal feed and feed supplements,
namely, processed commodity sold as poultry
feed, cattle feed, pig feed, fish feed, fish meal,
prawn feed, shrimp feed and feed supplements
and mineral mixture concentrates, intended
for use as feed supplements including de-oiled
cake and wheat bran."
According to the appellant, dog feed and cat feed are the
products which would fall in the category of animal feed under
Entry 5. According to the appellant, Entry 5 deals with animal
feed, feed supplements, namely, processed commodity sold as
poultry feed, cattle feed, pig feed, fish feed, fish feed, fish meal,
prawn feed, shrimp feed, feed supplements and mineral
mixtures. According to the appellant, the words; poultry feed,
cattle feed, and pig feed etc. are the specific instances of food
supplements. According to the appellant, the word ’namely’
after the words ’feed supplements’ in Entry 5 shows that the
Legislature intended the words ’feed supplements’ to be
confined to poultry feed, cattle feed, pig feed, fish feed, fish
meal, prawn feed and shrimp feed. In other words, according
to the appellant, animal feed and feed supplements are two
expressions in Entry 5 which should be read disjunctively and
not conjunctively. It is submitted that each of the aforesaid
three categories of goods covered by Entry 5 is quite complete
and independent in itself. That, meaning of the expression
"and" appearing between first category and second category
and between second category and third category is that in
addition to first category, goods of second category and third
category are also covered by the said entry. The aforesaid three
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categories of goods are all for feeding the animals and these
have all been put under the said entry. Since the entry covered
three categories of goods, in between each category the
expression "and" was used to make it clear that in addition to
first category, second category is also covered and in addition
to second category, third category is also covered. The word
"and" has been used in the sense of "also" or "as well as". It is
further submitted that each of the three parts of Entry 5
mentioned above are quite independent of each other. Each
part is complete by itself and is capable of operating
independently. Thus, for instance, the first part covering
animal feed is a complete and stand alone item capable of
operating independently. Similar is the position in respect of
second part and third part of the entry. None of these three
parts depend upon each other in any way. It is further
submitted that the punctuation mark "comma" (,) has been
used in the said Entry 5 in-between different items covered by
each individual category. Thus, the second category covers
"feed supplements, namely, processed commodity sold as
poultry feed, cattle feed, pig feed, fish feed, fish meal, prawn
feed, shrimp feed and there is a comma preceding and after
the word "namely" which qualifies the expression "feed
supplements". With reference to use of expression "namely" in
Entry 5 and its effect, the submissions is: that the said
expression "namely" has been used in the second category of
goods covered by the entry. It has been used after "feed
supplements" and its effect is that feed supplements covered
by the entry are processed commodity sold as poultry feed,
cattle feed, pig feed, fish feed, fish meal, prawn feed and
shrimp feed; that the said word "namely" does not in any way
qualify or relate to the goods of first category and third
category. Animal feed is covered by first category and it is a
stand alone item and this category is quite independent and
capable of operating by itself and independently. That, if the
expression "namely" is held to qualify even "animal feed"
covered by first category, then all conditions and restrictions
mentioned in the entry for the goods of second category will
also become applicable to animal feed. In that event, the scope
of the expression "animal feed" will also be curtailed
substantially to confine it to processed commodity alone and
that too for some named animals only. Animal feed may be of
different types and varieties. Frozen variety of animal feed is
often limited to raw meat or sea food where little or no
preparation is needed. It is further submitted that there is no
warrant or justification for reading the entry in such a way so
as to limit or restrict the scope and ambit of the first category
which is a stand alone category covering "animal feed". The
said expression "animal feed" as used in the entry is totally
unqualified and unrestricted and it covers all types and
varieties of animal feed.
We do not find any merit in the arguments. The above
quoted Entry 5 shows that animal feed and feed supplements
is one category. It is after the expression "animal feed and feed
supplements" that the Legislature has inserted the comma,
therefore, animal feed and feed supplements constitute one
class of products, they do not constitute two separate classes.
Further, the expression "animal feed and feed supplements" is
not only followed by the comma, it is followed by the word
’namely’, which indicates that the items mentioned after the
word ’namely’ like poultry feed, cattle feed, pig feed, fish feed
etc. are specific instances of animal feed and feed
supplements, which would fall in Entry 5. That list is
exhaustive. In that list, the Legislature has not included dog
feed/cat feed, therefore, the products of the appellant do not
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fall under Entry 5 of the First Schedule of the Act. In our view,
the basic premise on which the arguments of the assessee
proceeds is that Entry 5 covers three categories of goods,
namely, animal feed, feed supplements and feed supplements
and mineral mixtures. This premise is wrong. A bare reading
of the said entry indicates ’animal feed and feed supplements’
as constituting one category. They are not two separate
categories. The punctuation mark "comma" has been used
expressly after the words "animal feed and feed supplements",
which indicates that the Legislature intended to classify these
two items as one class/category. Further, the Legislature
intended to restrict that category by confining that category to
processed commodity alone and that too for certain named
animals. In the present case, we are concerned with cat feed
and dog feed. Cat feed carries a fishy smell on account of
processing. However, cat feed though processed is not put in
Entry 5. Similarly, dog feed is also excluded from Entry 5. In
the circumstances, we do not find any merit in the arguments
advanced on behalf of the assessee.
Before concluding, we may refer to the judgment of this
Court in the case of Vidyacharan Shukla v. Khubchand
Baghel and Ors. reported in AIR 1964 SC 1099 on which
reliance has been placed by the assessee. In that case Section
29(2) of the Limitation Act, 1908 came for interpretation. One
of the questions which arose for determination in that case
was whether Section 29(2) would apply to a case where there
was a difference in the period of limitation prescribed by the
Representation of the People Act, 1951 ("RP Act") and the
Limitation Act, 1908. We quote hereinbelow Section 29(2) of
the Limitation Act, 1908:
"Where any special or local law prescribes
for any suit, appeal or application a period of
limitation different from the period prescribed
therefor by the first schedule, the provisions of
section 3 shall apply, as if such period were
prescribed therefor in that schedule, and for
the purpose of determining any period of
limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or
application by any special or local law \026"
(emphasis supplied)
It was held that RP Act, 1951 was a special law. It was held
that the period of limitation prescribed under the RP Act, 1951
was different from the period prescribed under the Limitation
Act. The question before this Court was whether for the
purposes of computing the period of thirty days prescribed
under Section 116-A(3) of the RP Act, 1951, the provisions of
Section 12 of the Limitation Act, 1908 could be invoked. It was
held that Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act, 1908 would apply
even to a case where the period prescribed under the special
law differed from the period prescribed under the Limitation
Act (see para 23). Alternatively, even on construction of
Section 29(2) it was held that there was no rule of grammatical
construction which required an interpretation that if
sentences complete by themselves are connected by a
conjunction, namely, the word ’and’, the second sentence
must be held to limit the first sentence. In our view, the said
judgment has no application. In the present case, the word
’and’ in Entry 5 is placed between the words "animal feed" and
"feed supplements" followed by a punctuation mark "comma".
Therefore, we are not concerned with a case where two
sentences are sought to be connected. We are concerned with
specific category of goods. The word ’and’ is placed by the
Legislature between two types of goods, namely, animal feed
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and feed supplements. The punctuation mark, after
categorizing "animal feed and feed supplements", as one class,
is very important. The Legislature intended, therefore, to put
"animal feed and feed supplements" in one category. The
Legislature intended to provide for Nil rate of duty to specified
items mentioned in Entry 5. Dog and Cat feed are not
mentioned in those items. Therefore, the above judgment of
this Court has no application to the present case.
For the above reasons, we do not find any infirmity in the
impugned judgment of the High Court and accordingly, we
dismiss this civil appeal with no order as to costs.