Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ASSOCIATED TANNERS VIZIANAGRAM, A.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMERCIAL TAX OFFICER, VIZIANAGRAM, ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/03/1986
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1922 1986 SCR (1) 969
1986 SCC (2) 479
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1990 SC 820 (37)
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 Item 9(b) of
Third Schedule whether unconstitutional and void and offends
Articles 14 and 304(a) of the Constitution of India -
Whether Central Sales Tax Act could be levied or leviable
under the Central Sales Tax Act on the inter-State Sales of
tanned hides which have already suffered tax at the untanned
stage.
HEADNOTE:
Under item 9(b) of the third Schedule to the Andhra
Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 tanned hides and skins,
(which were not subjected to tax as untanned hides and
skins), when purchased by a manufacturer in the State at the
point of purchase e by the manufacturer and in all other
cases at the point of purchase by the last dealer who buys
them in the State, sales tax on the turnover calculated at
the rate of 2 paise in the rupee was payable. In respect of
the interstate sales Sales Tax under the Central Sales Tax
was also leviable under the Central Sales Tax Act.
The appellant purchases raw hides and skins in the
State of A.P., tan the same and mostly used to sell such
tanned hides in the course of inter-State trade. The first
Respondent by his order dated 30th January, 1969 had
assessed the appellants’ inter-State sales turnover at Rs.
16,23,194.29 and levied a tax of Rs. 48,695.82 under the
Central Act. The local purchase turnover of raw hides was
assessed at Rs. 7,92,585 and a tax of Rs. 23,777.66 was also
levied. The appellant, therefore, filed a Writ Petition No.
3464/71 in the A.P. High Court for declaring (i) that no tax
could be levied or was leviable under the Central Sales Tax
Act on the inter-State sales of tanned hides which have
already suffered tax at the untanned stage. The High Court
having dismissed the Writ Petition, the appellant has come
in appeal by Special Leave.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
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^
HELD : 1.1 When a taxing statute was not imposing rates
of tax on imported goods different from rates of tax on
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goods manufactured or produced, article 304 h d no
application. So long as the rate was the same, article 304
was satisfied. When the rate is applied the resulting tax
might be somewhat higher but that did not contravene the
equality clause contemplated by article 304 of the
Constitution. In the instant case, the tax being at the same
rate, article 304(a) is not offended.[975 G-H]
Rattam Lal & Co. and Anr. v. The Assessing Authority &
Anr.,[1969] 2 S.C.R. 544 discussed and applied.
1.2 The levy by the State Act is in consonance with the
scheme of Central Act. By sub-section (2) of section 8 of
the Central Act, the tax payable by any dealer on high
turnover in so far as the turnover of any part thereof
relates to the sale of goods in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce not falling under sub-section (1), shall
be at the rate specified in subsection (2) of section 8.
These goods do not fall in subsection (1) of section 8. [976
C-D]
The effect of an imposition of tax might work
differently upon different dealers namely, those who use
imported tanned goods and those who purchase these locally
and tan these locally and then sell in the course of inter-
State sales. Put that effect cannot be said to be arising
directly, or as an immediate effect of the imposition of the
tax. Therefore there cannot be any question of violation of
article 304(a) of the Constitution.[1977 C-E]
1.3 The imposition, in this case, was in implementation
of the central Act. There is no prohibition under Article
304 of the Constitution of the Parliament for imposition of
any tax. The embargo that was placed by Article 304 of the
Constitution was on the Legislature of a state. [977 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No, 1345
(NT) of 1974.
From the Judgement and Order dated 14th December, 1972
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition No. 3464
of 1971.
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D.P. Mukharjee and G.S. Chatterjee for the Appellant.
K. Ram Kumar for Respondent Nos. 1 and 2.
Anil Dev Singh, Ms Halida Khatun and C.V. Subba Rao for
Respondent No. 3. B
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASCHI MUKHARJI, J. This appeal by special leave
arises from the judgment and order dated 14th December, 1972
of a Bench decision of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in
Writ Petition No. 3464 of 1971. C
The Division Bench dismissed the application under
article 226 of the Constitution filed by the appellant. m e
appellant was a tanner who had his tannery at Vizianagram
and was at the material time a dealer under Andhra Pradesh
General Sales Tax Act, 1957 as well as the Central Sales
Tax, 1956, hereinafter called the ’State Act’ and the
’Central Act’ respectively. The appellant purchases raw
hides and skins in the State of Andhra Pradesh and tan the
same. m e appellant used mostly to sell such tanned hides in
the course of interstate trade.
The first respondent i.e. the Commercial Tax Officer,
Vizianagram, by his order dated 30th January, 1969 had
assesed the appellant’s inter-State sales turnover at
Rs.16,23,194.29 and levied a tax of Rs.48,695.82 under the
Central Act. The local purchase turnover of raw hides was
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assessed at Rs.7,92,585 and a tax of Rs.23,777.66 was also
levied.
The appellant had filed previously writ petition
No.3436 of 1969 challenging the validity of the Central
Sales Tax Amendment Act, 1969. That petition, however, was
withdrawn in view of the judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court in January, 1971. The appellant thereafter filed the
present petition out of which this appeal arises for
declaring item 9(b) of Schedule III of the State Act as
unconstitutional and void and further declaring that no tax
could be levied or was leviable under the Central Sales Tax
Act on the inter-State sales of tanned hides which have
already suffered tax at the
972
untanned stage. Further declaration was sought prohibiting
the respondents who are the sales tax authorities from
enforcing the order dated 30th January, 1969 and directing
the respondents to refund the amount already collected.
In order to appreciate the contention it is necessary
to refer to item 9(b) of Schedule III of the State Act as it
stood at the relevant time which read as follows :
"THIRD SCHEDULE
(Declared goods in respect of which a single point
tax only is leviable under section 6).
-------------------------------------------------------
Description of goods Point of levy Rate of tax
(1) (2) (3)
-------------------------------------------------------
xxx xxx xxx
9.(b) Tanned hides and When purchased
skins (which were by a manufacturer
not subjected to in the State at tax
as untanned the point of hides and
skins) purchase by the 2 paise
manufacturer and in the
in all other case rupee".
at the point of
purchase by the
last dealer who
buys them in
the State.
-------------------------------------------------------
The submission urged on behalf of the dealer/appellant
was that item 9(b) of Schedule III of the State Act
discriminated between hides and skins imported from outside
the State and those manufactured or produced in the State.
me contention was that item 9(b) provides for levy of tax on
the sale of hides and skins brought from outside the State
and tanned inside the State whereas if raw hides and skins
were locally purchased and tanned, there was no tax leviable
on the
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tanned hides and skins as the untanned hides and skins in
such cases alone were taxed. It was urged that the result of
the taxation scheme was that a dealer who brought raw hides
and skins from outside the State and tanned these locally
was taxed on the amount of the sale of such tanned hides and
skins, whereas the locally purchased raw hides and skins and
tanned were taxed on the amount of the purchase of the raw
hides and skins and tanned were taxed on the amount of the
purchase of the raw hides and skins the price of which
compared to the price of tanned hides and skins would be
very insignificant. It was submitted that such taxation
scheme, therefore, descriminated against the import of raw
hides and skins for bringing them inside the State. It was
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submitted that this offended Article 304(a) of the
Constitution inasmuch as the goods manufactured or produced
locally got a more favorable treatment than the goods
imported from other States.
After considering the decisions of this Court in Firm
A.T.B. Mehtap Majid & Co. v. State of Madras & Anr.. [1963]
2 Suppl. S.C.R. 435 = 14 S.T.C. 355; A Hajee Abdul Shakoor
and Company v. State of Madras, [1964] 8 S.C.R. 217; State
of Madras v. N.K. Natraja Mudaliar, [1968] 3 S.C.R. 829 and
Rattan Lal & Co. Anr. v. The Assessing Authority & Anr.,
[1969] 2 S.C.R. 544; the High Court was of the view that
every tax did not interfere with the freedom of trade
guaranteed under Article 301 of the Constitution. There was
interference only in case the legislation directly and
immediately restricted or hampered the free flow of trade,
commerce or intercourse. It was highlighted that the
discrimination must be direct and arise out of the taxing
provisions themselves. Any discrimination arising out of any
indirect effect was not within the purview of article 304(a)
of the Constitution. It was emphasised that a State law with
respect to taxation could not be said to infringe the
Constitution merely because it operated unequally in the
different States not from anything done by the law making
authority but on account of the inequality of conditions
obtaining in the respective States. Thus, if a general rule
levying the rate of tax was made applicable to the imported
as well as local goods alike but which operated or might
operate unequally and with different results in several
States it did not offend the provisions against
discriminating taxation.
974
The High Court was of the view that if the rate of tax
was the same, article 304 would be satisfied. The High Court
was of the view that it was to the rate of tax to which we
must look and not the operation of the tax in practice in
any particular State.
In the instant case, the rate of tax was the same both
for the goods brought from outside as well as local goods
and lt cannot be said that taxation did directly and
immediately restrict or hamper the free flow of trade,
commerce or inter course ant it offended article 304(a). The
effect or the result of the operation of such tax cannot
make out a cause for discrimination. It was pointed out that
the last two decisions of this Court displaced the earlier
two decisions of this Court and item 9(b) of Schedule III of
the said State Act tit not offend article 304(a) of the
Constitution. Being aggrieved by the said decision, the
dealer/appellant has come up in appeal before this Court.
The point involved in this case, it appears, is no
longer res-integra. The effect of the Central Act, and the
different rates of tax in different States under section 8
of the Act was considered exhaustively by a decision of a
bench of five learned judges of this Court in State of
Madras v. e N.R. Nataraja Mudaliar (supra) where the
respondent had claim ed before the Commercial Tax Officer,
Madras that some of his goods had been sent from Madras to
his depot in Andhra Pradesh and that the sale of those goods
were intra-State sales in Andhra Pradesh where they had been
taxed as such. The commercial Tax Officer, however, held
that the goods had been moved from the State of Madras under
contracts of sale and were therefore taxable as inter-State
sales under the Central Act.
The respondent thereupon filed a petition under article
226 of the Constitution. The High Court held that sub-
section(2), (2A) and (5) of section 8 of the Central Act as
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these stood at the relevant time, imposed or authorised the
imposition of varying rates of tax in different States on
similar inter-State transactions and the resultant
inequality in the burden of tax affected and impeded inter-
State trade, commerce and intercourse and thereby offended
article 301 and 303(1) of the Constitution. The application
of section 9(3) of the Act was also considered. Against the
said decision there was an appeal to this Court. This Court
noted that the view taken by
975
the High Court was influenced by two decisions of this Court
on the interpretation of article 304(a); namely in Firm
A.T.B. Mehtab Majid and Co. v. State of Madras and Another
(supra) and A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor and Company v. State of
Madras (supra). This Court was of the view that in the above
two mentioned cases, the differential treatment was held to
have violated article 304(a) of the Constitution, which
authorised the Legislative of a State notwithstanding
anything in articles 301 and 303 by law to impose on goods
imported from other States or the Union Territories any tax
to which similar goods manufactured or produced in that
State were subject, so, however, as not to discriminate
between goods so imported and goods so manufactured or
produced. This Court was of the view that imposition of
differential rates of tax by the same State on goods
manufactured or produced in the State and similar goods
imported in the State was prohibited by that clause. But
where the taxing State was not imposing rates of tax on
imported goods different from rates of tax on goods
manufactured or produced, article 304(a) has no application.
Article 303 prohibited the making of law which gave, or
authorised the giving of, any preference to one State over
another, or made, or authorised the making of, and
discrimination between one State and another. Prevalence of
different rates of sales tax in the State which have been
adopted by the Central Sales Tax Act for the purpose of levy
of tax under that Act was, not determinative of the giving
of preference or making a discrimination.. The view of the
High Court was therefore not upheld. Bachawat, J. was of the
view that on principle there was no distinction between a
tax on inter-State and a tax on inter-State sales. The
learned judge was further of the view that the provision of
the Central Sales Tax Act were intra-vires.
In Rattan Lal & Co. Anr. v. The Assessing Authority &
Anr. (supra), a bench of five learned judges of this Court
observed dealing with the Punjab General Sales Tax Act that
when a taxing State was not imposing rates of tax on
imported goods different from rates of tax on goods
manufactured or produced, article 304 had no application. So
long as the rate was the same, article 304 was satisfied. In
the instant appeal before us the tax was at the same rate.
It cannot be said to be higher in respect of imported goods.
When the rate is applied the resulting tax might be somewhat
higher but that H
976
did not contravence the equality clause contemplated by
article 304 of the Constitution.
In that view of the matter and as these cases have been
specifically dealt with, it is no longer necessary for us to
discuss in detail the decision in the cases of firm A.T.B.
Mehtab Majid and Co. v. State of Madras and Another (supra)
and A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor and Company v. State of Madras,
upon which reliance was placed on before of the appellant
before us. On a plain reading of article 304 along with the
provisions of the Central Act, we are in respectful
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agreement with the view expressed by this Court in Rattan
Lal & Co. & Anr. v. The Assessing Authority & Anr. (supra).
It further appears to us that there is another aspect.
The lvy by the State Act is in consonance with the scheme of
Central Act. By sub-section (2) of section 8 of the Central
Act, the tax payable by any dealer on his turnover in so far
as the turnover or any part thereof relates to the sale of
goods in the course of inter-State trade or commerce not
falling under sub-section (1), shall be at the rate
specified in sub-section (2) of section 8. It is common
ground that these goods do not fall in sub-section (1) of
section 8.
Section 8(2), in so far as it was material at the
relevant time was as follows :
(2) The tax payable by any dealer on his turnover
in so far as the turnover or any part thereof
relates to the sale of goods in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce not falling within
sub-section (1) -
(a) in the case of declared goods, shall be
calculated at the rate applicable to the sale or
purchase of such goods inside the appropriate
State; and
(b) in the case of goods other than declared
goods, shall be calculated at the rate of seven
per cent, or at the rate applicable to the sale or
purchase of such goods inside the appropriate
State, whichever is higher; and for the purpose of
making
977
any such calculation any such dealer shall be
deemed to be a dealer liable to pay tax under the
sales tax law of the appropriate State,
notwithstanding that he, in fact, may not be so
liable under that law."
Section 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act deals with what
are the goods considered as goods of special importance in
the course of inter-State sales. It is also common case that
by clause (iii) of section 14 hides and skins, whether in a
raw or dressed state are goods of special importance in
inter-State trade or commerce. Section 15 of the Central Act
imposes certain restrictions on the State as to the amount
of tax to be imposed. This is also not material for our
present purpose because it is common case that embargo has
not been violated by the imposition itself.
The effect of an imposition of tax might work
differently upon different dealers namely, those who use
imported tanned goods and those who purchase these locally
and tan these locally and then sell in the course of inter-
State sales. But that effect cannot be said to be arising
directly, or as an immediate effect of the imposition of the
tax. Therefore there cannot be any question of violation of
article 304(a) of the Constitution.
There is another aspect of the matter. The imposition
in this case was in implementation of the Central Act and it
was submitted on behalf of the respondent that there was no
prohibition under article 304 of the Constitution on the
Parliament for imposition of any tax. me embargo that was
placed by article 304 of the Constitution was on the
Legislature of a State.
Sub-article (a) of article 304 of the Constitution
reads as follows :-
"304. Restrictions on trade, commerce and
intercourse among States. - notwithstanding
anything in Article 301 or Article 303, the
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Legislature of a State may by law -
(a) impose on goods imported from other States or
978
the Union Territories any tax to which similar
goods manufactured or produced in that State are
subject, so however, as not to discriminate
between goods so imported and goods so
manufactured or Produced. "
Therefore the prohibition was not on the Parliament. But in
the view we have taken on the first aspect of the matter and
in view of the decisions of this Court in the case of State
of Madras v. N.K. Nataraja Mudaliar (supra) and Rattan Lal &
Co. & Anr. v. The Assessing Authority & Anr. (supra), it is
not necessary for us to discuss this aspect any further.
The High Court was therefore right in dismissing the
writ petition. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed
with costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
979