Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MYSORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GUDUTHUR THIMMAPPA & SON, & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/09/1966
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1131 1967 SCR (1) 627
CITATOR INFO :
D 1974 SC 175 (11)
ACT:
Madras General Sales-tax (Turnover & Assessment) Rules,
1939, r. 4-A (iv)(b)-Sale to non-resident-Delivery to common
carrier within State and insurance by buyer-Property if
passes within State-Last dealer, who is-Location of dealer
if material.
HEADNOTE:
Rule 4A(iv)(b) of the Madras General Sales-tax (Turnover and
Assessment) Rules, 1939 lays down that tax has to be levied
from the dealer who buy-, cotton in the State and is the
last dealer not exempt from taxation. Sale-&-tax was sought
to be recovered from the respondents on cotton purchased by
them within the State and sold to persons who were non-
resident within the area to which the Madras Sales-tax Act,
1939 applied. The non-resident buyers never entered the
State either for entering into contracts for the sale or for
taking delivery. The delivery was given within the State to
the common carrier, and the non-resident buyers insured the
goods as owners thereof and transmitted them to destination.
The respondents’ plea that since the goods were sold by them
within the State to non-residents, they were not the last
dealers not exempt from taxation, was accepted by the
Sales-tax Appellate Tribunal and the High Court. In
appeal to this Court the appellant-State contended that (i)
on the facts the respondents were the last dealers not
exempt from taxation and (ii) a buyer who was not
resident within the area to which the Act applied could not
be held to be the last dealer for the purpose of the Rule.
HELD : (i) The contention had no force. The common carrier
took delivery as agent of the buyer and the delivery was
within the State. There was the further circumstance that,
during transit, the goods were insured by the buyers at
their own cost, and not by the respondents. The buyers thus
recognised that they were already the owners of the goods as
soon as they were given for transmission to the common
carrier. [630 E]
The movement of the goods outside the State was by the
buyers themselves after property in them bad passed to them;
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so, the sales in question were not sales in the course of
inter-State trade. [631 C]
Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd., Bombay v. S. R. Sarkar & Ors.
[1961] 1 S.C.R, 379, referred to.
(ii) Under the Rule the location of the dealer buying it was
immaterial. Therefore the non-resident buyers were the
last-dealers who bought it in the State and tax had to be
levied from them. [631 G-H]
State of Andhra Pradesh v. M/s. Abdul Bakhi & Bros. A.I.R.
1965 S.C. 531, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 714-724 of
1965.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 29, 1962 of the Mysore High Court in-Civil Revision
628
Petitions Nos. 1169 to 1176 of 1958 and 841, 842 and 865 of
1959 respectively.
R. Ganapathy Iyer and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant
(in .all the appeals).
R. Gopalakrishan, for the respondents (in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. These appeals arise out of proceedings for
assessment of sales-tax under the Madras General Sales Tax
Act No. IX of 1939 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") in
respect of certain sales of cotton. The respondents were
registered dealers in cotton, including kappas, groundnuts
and cotton seeds with their Head Office at Bellary and
Branch Offices at a number of places. They were also
licensees under s. 8 of the Act in respect of cotton. They
made various purchases of cotton at their places of business
and subsequently sold them to different parties. Amongst
these were a number of persons who were not resident within
the area to which the Act applied. The question arose as to
who was liable to pay the sales-tax in respect of those
transactions of sale of cotton in which the cotton had been
sold by the respondents to non-residents. When the case
came up before the Mysore Sales ’Tax Appellate Tribunal, the
Tribunal determined the course of transactions and held as
follows :
"The examination of the contracts, the invoices, the railway
receipts, insurance policies and other documents relating to
the disputed turnovers shows that the nonresident foreigners
place orders for the required number of bales of cotton
specifying the quality and the rate some times on phone
which would be confirmed subsequently by Telegrams or
letters and finally by written agreements. Thereupon, the
appellants consign the cotton bales in their own name, the
consignee being the nonresident foreign buyers (except in
respect of a total turnover of Rs. 2,93,567-2-0 which would
cover the items 1, 3, 5, 7, 31, 32, 33 and 44 of the typed
statement of the account for the year 1954-55 and a total
turnover of Rs. 3,71,880-13-0 which would cover the items 6,
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30, 31, 35, 36
and 37 of the typed statement of account for the year 1955-
56) and send the railway receipts to their bankers at the
other end for the collection of the amount. It is seen that
notwithstanding the fact that there are specific provisions
in the contract that 90 per cent of the invoice amounts
should be paid to the bankers when the railway receipts
would be delivered to the purchasers, surprisingly the said
provision is rendered nugatory by reason of the fact that
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the
629
appellants despatch the cotton in such a way that the
consignee could get cotton bales at the other end even
though without any payment to the banker. The moment the
appellants consigned the goods, they will have lost complete
control and dominion over the cotton thus despatched.
Further, non-resident foreign buyers who obtained the
necessary transport permit under the Cotton Control Order,
1950, actually insure the cotton bales as the owners thereof
and transmit the same from Bellary to the destination. This
is so even in cases where the appellants themselves have
consigned the goods in their own name, the consignees being
themselves. All these facts clearly go to show that the
sales are completed at Bellary and the non-resident foreign
buyers in whose favour the property in the goods had been
transferred actually transported the cotton thus purchased.
The State Representative does not seriously dispute about
the correctness of the modus operandi of the appellants in
their dealings with their purchasers during five years of
assessments. Bearing these facts in mind, we shall now
proceed to examine each of the contentions raised by the
learned counsel."
On these facts, the question that fell for determination was
whether for purposes of s. 5(2) of the Act read with Rule 4-
A(iv) (b) of the Madras General Sales Tax (Turnover and
Assessment) Rules, 1939 (hereinafter referred to as "the
Rules"), the respondents were the dealers who bought the
cotton in the State and were the last dealers not exempt
from taxation under s. 3(3) of the Act on the amount for
which the cotton was bought by them. The contention on
behalf of the respondents was that the cotton was sold by
them within the State of Madras to parties who were residing
outside the State of Madras ; but the sales having been made
by them within the State of Madras, they could not be held
to be dealers who bought the cotton in the State and were
the last dealers for that purpose not exempt from taxation.
According to their contention, the parties, to whom they
sold the cotton within the State, were the persons liable to
be taxed in accordance with s. 5(2) of the Act and Rule 4-
A(iv)(b) of the Rules. The Tribunal accepted this plea of
the respondents, allowed the appeals, and set aside the
orders of the subordinate authorities directing payment of
sales-tax by the respondents. That order was upheld by the
High Court of Mysore when the revisions against the orders
of the Tribunal came up for decision before it. These
appeals before us coming up by special leave are directed
against the above order of the High Court. We may mention
that the revisions came up before the High Court of Mysore,
because the area, in respect of which the dispute arose, was
originally within the State of Madras, but, on
Reorganisation of States, came within the State of Mysore.
The law applicable to sales in the year
630
in question, however, continued to be the Madras Sales Tax
Act IX of 1939, and that area came to be designated as
Madras Area of the State of Mysore.
In these appeals, two points were canvassed before us by
learned counsel for the State of Mysore. At the initial
stage, learned counsel for the State indicated that he did
not intend to challenge the finding that the situs of the
sales in question were all within the Madras area ; but at a
later stage, he challenged this finding as the second
alternative point in support of these appeals. We may deal
with this point first.
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The course of transactions found by the Tribunal, reproduced
above, led the Tribunal and the High Court to the finding
that the situs of the sales by the respondents to the non-
resident parties was in Bellary where the sales were
completed and delivery also took place. The submission by
learned counsel for the appellant was that none of those
parties themselves came within the State to Bellary either
for the purpose of entering into contracts for sale, or for
purposes of taking delivery. Delivery was given to common
carrier, and consequently, it should be held that the sales
were completed not within the State, but outside at the
places to which the goods were consigned for delivery to the
various parties. We are unable to accept this submission.
It has been rightly held by the High Court that the common
carrier took delivery as agent of the buyer and that
delivery was within the State. There is the further
circumstance that, during transit, the goods were insured by
the buyers at their own cost, and not by the respondents.
The buyers thus recognised that they were already the owners
of the cotton bales as soon as they were given for
transmission to the common carrier.
In this connection, a question also arose whether the sales
by the respondents to those non-resident parties were sales
in the course of inter-State trade. What are the sales in
the course of inter-State trade was explained by this Court
in Tata Iron and Steel Co. Limited, Bombay v. S. R. Sarkar
and Others (1), where clauses (a) & (b) of s. 3 of the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 were interpreted as follows :
"In our view, therefore, within cl. (b) of s. 3 are included
sales in which property in the goods passes during the
movement of the goods from one State to another by transfer
of documents of title thereto ; cl. (a) of s. 3 covers
sales, other than those included in cl. (b), in which the
movement of goods from one State to another is the result of
a covenant or incident of the contract of sale, and property
in the goods passes in either State."
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 379.
631
The nature of transactions found by the Tribunal in the
cases before us shows that property in the cotton bales sold
by the respondents did not pass during the movement of goods
from one State to another by transfer of documents of title,
and, further, that the movement of goods from the Madras
area to places outside the State was not the result of any
covenant or incident of the contract of sale. The contract
of sale was completely carried through within the Madras
area itself, in which area the price was received by the
respondents and the cotton bales were delivered to the
buyers. The movement of the cotton bales outside the State
was by the buyers themselves after property in them had
passed to them, so that these sales were not sales in the
course of inter-State trade.
We now come to the second and the main point which was urged
before us by learned counsel for the appellant. The sub-
mission of learned counsel was that a buyer, who was not
resident within the area to which the Act applied, could not
be held to be the last dealer for purposes of Rule - 4-
A(iv)(b) of the Rules. According to him, it is the situs of
the seller and the buyer which determines the applicability
of this Rule, and not the situs of the sale of cotton
itself. We are unable to accept this submission. The
language of the Rule is clear that the tax is to be levied
from the dealer who buys it in the State and is the last
dealer not exempt from taxation. The test laid down thus is
as to who buys it in the State and not who is in the State
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for purposes of buying the cotton. The Mills outside the
State were no doubt carrying on their main business of
manufacture of yarn or cloth outside the State; but so far
as the act of purchase of these cotton bales was concerned,
it was carried out by them within the State. It is to be
noticed that in the Rule the expression used is "the dealer
who buys it in the State and is the last dealer not exempt
from taxation". If the intention had been that the location
of the buyer himself should be the criterion for imposing
tax on him, the language used in the Rule would have been
quite different. It could easily have been laid down that
the tax will be levied from the dealer in the State who buys
it as the last dealer not exempt from taxation. The
expression as used in the Rule makes it perfectly clear that
the location of the dealer himself is immaterial. The
liability to be taxed attaches if the purchase itself by the
dealer is within the State. In the case of the sales in
question, therefore, the buyers who purchased the cotton
bales from the respondents were the last dealers who bought
those cotton bales in the State and the single point tax
under S. 5(2) of the Act had to be levied from them and not
from the respondents.
In this connection, an alternative argument was also raised
for the first time by learned counsel for the appellant that
those
6Sup.C.I./66-12
632
outside buyers could not be held to be dealers carrying on
the business of purchase in the State, and if they were not
dealers, the purchases by them had to be ignored, so that
the last buyers in the State would be the respondents,
because their purchases would be the last purchases by
dealers made when they acquired these cotton bales
subsequently sold by them. This contention was not raised
at any earlier stage before the Tribunal or the High Court,
and it is, therefore, not open to the appellant to urge it
before this Court for the first time. In any case, it is
clear that the outside buyers were all mills which were
purchasing cotton bales for use in their manufacturing
process and such purchases by them would amount to purchases
of raw materials for their business. Purchases of this
nature have already been held by this Court to constitute
the business of purchase by the buyers in The State of
Andhra Pradesh v. M/s. H. Abdul Bakshi and Bros.(’).
Consequently, this ground raised has also no force. The
appeals fail and are dismissed with costs. ’One hearing fee
only.
Y. P. Appeals dismissed.
(1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 664: A.I.R. 1965 S.C. 531.