Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HIRALAL THAKORLAL DALAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BROACH MUNICIPALITY & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/04/1976
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
SINGH, JASWANT
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1446 1976 SCR 82
1976 SCC (3) 398
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC 645 (4,11)
ACT:
Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act 1925 S. 73(i)(iv)-Scope
of-Octroi duty-If could be levied on "through consignments".
HEADNOTE:
Section 73(i)(iv) of the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act
1925 empowers a municipal borough to impose octroi on
animals or goods or both brought within the octroi limits
for consumption, use of sale therein. The appellant imported
certain consignments of goods within the octroi limits of
the municipality and exported them, the consignments being
termed as "through consignments" or "goods in transit" or
"goods for export". Octroi duty was imposed on the goods and
the appellant filed a petition before the High Court
challenging the levy. The High Court held that the
expression ’sale’ used in the definition of "through
consignments" in the rules had the same connotation as in
the Sale of Goods Act and, therefore, if a consignment was
brought within the octroi limits and if the municipal
authorities were satisfied that the consignment had been
brought in for the purpose of sale, then the consignment did
not become a through consignment.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
^
HELD: The law on the subject has been clearly laid down
in Burmah Shell Oil Storage and Distributing Company (India)
Ltd. v. The Belgaum Borough Municipality and the present
case is governed by that decision. It was held in that case
that the company was liable to pay octroi on goods brought
into the local area, if the goods are:
(a) to be consumed by the Company itself or sold by it
to consumers direct and (b) for sale to dealers who in their
turn sold the goods to consumers within the municipal area
and irrespective of whether such consumer bought them for
use in the area or outside it; but it was not liable to
octroi in respect of goods which were brought into the local
area and were re-exported. [86 C-D]
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Buimah Shell Oil Storage and Distributing Co. India
Ltd. v. The Belgaum Borough Municipality [1963] Suppl. 2
S.C.R. 216, explained and applied
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1823 of
1969.
Apeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 27th/28th/30th January, 1967 of the Gujarat High
Court in Special Civil Application No. 163 of 1962.
B. R. Agarwala for the Appellant.
I. N. Shroff for the Respondents.
Dr. L. M. Singhvi, Advocate General, Rajasthan, V. S.
Dave and S. M. Jain for Intervener, Municipal Council,
Jodhpur.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHINGHAL, J.-This appeal by special leave arises from
the judgment of the Gujarat High Court dated January 27, 28
and 30,
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1967. The two petitioners before the High Court were firms
trading in certain commodities within the limits of the
Municipal Borough of Broach. The grievance in one of the
petitions was that the Municipality had collected certain
amounts wrongfully, and the grievance in the other petition
was that the Municipality had refused some amounts even
though they were refundable under its byelaws. Both the
petitions concerned goods which were "imported" within the
octroi limits of the Municipality but came to be "exported"
therefrom. The first petition was in respect of a
consignment which was designated as a through consignment,
and the second petition concerned goods in transit and goods
for export other than those which could be called goods in
transit. The amounts in dispute related to the levy of
octroi under section 73(i) of the Bombay Municipal Boroughs
Act, 1923, hereinafter called the Act, which provides as
follows:
"73 (i) Subject to any general or special orders
which the State Government may make in
this behalf and to the provisions of
sections 75 and 76, a Municipality may
impose for the purposes of this Act any
of the following taxes, namely:-
*
(iv) an octroi on animals or goods or both,
brought, within the octroi limits for
consumption, use or sale therein;."
The word "sale" was included within the ambit of octroi when
the Act was amended in 1954. The High Court took note of the
rules and the bye-laws and held that it was not possible to
take the view that the rules contemplated that no refund was
payable in case the goods had undergone a sale during the
course of their stay in octroi limits. It accordingly came
to the conclusion that in regard to goods meant for export
in the sense defined in the rules, refund was claimable even
if a sale transaction in the larger sense (i.e. in a sense
other than a sale to a consumer or with the intention that
the goods must pass into hands of the ultimate consumer)
took place in regard thereto, provided that the other
conditions were satisfied. The High Court then examined the
correct interpretation of the word "sale" in clause (iv) of
section 73(i) of the Act and after considering this Court’s
judgment in Burmah Shell Oil Storage and Distributing Co.
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India Ld. v. The Belgaum Borough Municipality,(1) it held
that the word "sale" could not be given the narrow meaning
of a sale for consumption to the ultimate consumer because,
in that sense, the Legislature would be guilty of having
introduced a word which it was not necessary for it to
introduce. The High Court made a reference to the definition
of "sale" in section 4 of the Sale of
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Goods Act and held that the expression "sale" as used in the
definition of ’through consignments" in the rules had the
same connotation as in the Sale of Goods Act and therefore
"if a consignment is brought within the octroi limits and if
the municipal authorities are satisfied that the consignment
has been brought in for the purpose of effecting a sale in
the aforesaid sense, then the consignment does not become a
through consignment." According to the High Court, it was
not enough merely to prove that the consignment left the
octroi limits within six hours after the goods were imported
and that it was necessary to show that the goods were
intended only to pass through in the sense that they were
not meant for consumption, use or sale, and that in regard
to such goods there was no intention of changing hands by
way of sale or that there was no intention of breaking their
bulk or detaining them beyond six hours or unloading them.
In the view it took, the High Court issued some directions
for compliance by the authorities concerned. The writ
petitioners felt dissatisfied with the view taken by the
High Court and applied for a certificate under articles
132(1) and 133(1) (c) of the Constitution. The High Court
held that no question arose under article 132, and no
certificate could be granted under article 133 as there was
no final order. The petitioners however applied to this
Court for special leave on the ground, inter alia, that the
High Court put a wrong interpretation on the expression
"sale" in section 73(i)(iv) of the Act inspite of the
decision of this Court in Burmah Shell’s case (supra). As
has been stated, they succeeded in obtaining special leave
from this Court. When the case came up for hearing before a
Division Bench, it noticed the decision in Burmah Shell’s
case (supra) and felt that there were "burred areas" of sale
within the territory which may attract a tax under entry 52
(List II of Seventh Schedule) left uncertain by the
aforesaid decision of this Court so that the matter deserved
consideration by a larger Bench. This is how the case has
come up before us for hearing. We have allowed Municipal
Council, Jodhpur, to intervene in the hearing at its
request.
The short question before us is whether this Court’s
decision in the Burmah Shell’s case (supra) squarely covers
the present controversy or whether that decision requires
reconsideration. The learned counsel have in fact confined
their arguments to this narrow field.
In order to appreciate the controversy, it will be
desirable to refer to the basic facts of the Burmah Shell’s
case (supra). The Burmah Shell Oil Storage and Distribution
Co. India Ltd., hereinafter referred to as the Company, was
a dealer in petrol and other petroleum products which it
manufactured in its refineries situated out-side the octroi
limits of Belgaum Municipality. It brought these products
inside that area either for use or consumption by itself or
for sale generally to its dealers and licensees who in their
turn sold them to others. According to the Company the goods
brought by
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it within the octroi limits could be divided into four
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categories as follows:
1. Goods consumed by the Company;
2. Goods sold by the Company through its dealers
or by itself and consumed within the octroi
limits by persons other than the Company;
3. Goods sold by the Company through its dealers
or by itself inside the octroi limits to
other persons but consumed by them outside
the octroi limits; and
4. Goods sent by the Company from its Depot
inside the octroi limits to extra-municipal
points where they are bought and consumed by
persons other than the company.
This Court examined the scheme of taxation under the Act and
the rules and the bye-laws made by the Municipality for the
levy of octroi. It also took note of the fact that the words
"use or sale" were substituted for the words "or use" by
Bombay Act 35 of 1954, which are the subject matter of a
fresh controversy before us, and made a reference to the
Legislative Lists in the Government of India Act, 1935 and
the Constitution. After examining the history of octrois and
terminal taxes, this Court held that "octrois were taxes on
goods brought into the local area for consumption, use or
sale", and that "they were leviable in respect of goods put
to some use or other in the area but only if they were meant
for such user." It was specifically clarified that the word
"sale" was included only in 1954 in order to bring the
description of octroi in the Act in line with the
Constitution, and that the expression "consumption" and
"use" together "connote the bringing in of goods and animals
not with a view to taking them out again but with a view to
their retention either for use without using them up or for
consumption in a manner which destroys, wastes or uses them
up."
Looking to the trade of the Company, this Court held
that sale by it directly to consumers or to dealers was
"merely the means for putting the goods in the way of use or
consumption" and that the word "therein" does not mean that
all the act of consumption must take place in the area of
the municipality. The Court therefore went to hold as
follows.-
"In other words, a sale of the goods brought
inside, even though not expressly mentioned in the
description of octroi as it stood formerly, was
implicit, provided the goods were not re-exported out
of the area but were brought inside for use or
consumption by buyers inside the area. In this sense
the amplification of the description both in the
Government of India Act, 1935 and the Constitution did
not make any addition to the true concept of ’octroi’
as explained above. That concept included the bringing
in of goods in a local area so that the goods come to a
repose there. When the Government of India Act, 1935
was enacted, the word
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’octroi’ was deliberately avoided and a
description added to forestall any dispute of the
nature which has been raised in this case. In other
words, even without the description the tax was on
goods brought for ’consumption, use or sale’. The word
’octroi’ was also avoided because terminal taxes are
also a kind of octroi and the two were to be allocated
to different legislatures.
In our opinion, even without the word ’sale’ in
the Boroughs Act the position was the same provided the
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goods were sold in the local area to a consumer who
bought them for the purpose of use or consumption or
even for resale to others for the purpose of use or
consumption by them in the area. It was only when the
goods were re-exported out of the area that the tax
could not legitimately be levied......"
This Court categorically held that the Company was liable to
pay octroi on goods brought into the local area (a) to be
consumed by itself or sold by it to consumers direct, and
(b) for sale to dealers who in their turn sold the goods to
consumers within the municipal area irrespective of whether
such consumers bought them for use in the area or outside
it, but it was "not liable to octroi in respect of goods
which it brought into the local area and which were re-
exported."
The law on the subject matter of the present
controversy has thus been laid down quite clearly in the
Burmah Shell’s case (supra) and the present case squarely
falls to be governed by it. We are also in agreement with
that interpretation of the law. It may be mentioned that the
learned counsel have not been able to advance any new
argument justifying a reconsideration of the decision.
The appeal is allowed, the impugned judgment of the
High Court is set aside and the respondents are directed to
examine and determine the claims of the appellant in
accordance with the above decision. The appellant will be
entitled to costs from the respondents.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
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