Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHALAKSHMI OIL MILLS ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/09/1988
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 335 1988 SCR Supl. (2)1088
1989 SCC (1) 164 JT 1988 (4) 161
1988 SCALE (2)838
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957: Section 8
and Fourth Schedule Entry 7--‘Tobacco or any form of
tobacco’--Whether includes ‘tobacco seeds’--Whether exempted
from tax.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-assessee had claimed before the Andhra
Pradesh High Court that tobacco seed oil and tobacco seed
cake, being forms of tobacco, were entitled to exemption
under section 8, read with entry 7 of the Fourth Schedule,
of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957, which
confers exemption from sales tax in respect of certain goods
including ‘tobacco’. The petitioners in the writ petitions
have claimed the same relief directly in this Court.
The High Court held that "tobacco seed" was not tobacco
and that only leaf, stalks and stems of the tobacco plant
could he said to be "tobacco" within the meaning of its
definition.
Before this Court it is urged on behalf of the
Assessees that: (i) the word ‘tobacco’, in its ordinary
connotation. takes in the tobacco plant and every part of
it, including the seed (ii) the definition of ‘tobacco’
makes it clear that it takes in every form of tobacco,
manufactured or unmanufactured; and (iii) tobacco seeds, not
only when they are in their raw unmanufactured state but
also when. on manufacture, they manifest themselves in the
form of tobacco seed oil or tobacco seed cake will fall
within the definition. On the other hand, on behalf of the
state it is submitted that the definition, which covers both
what the expression means as well as what it includes, is
exhaustive, and tobacco seed does not come within either the
first part or the second part of the definition.
Dismissing the appeals and the petitions, it was,
HELD: (1) The definition consists of two separate parts
which specify what the expression means and also what it
includes. The joint use of the words "mean and include"
makes the definition exhaustive. [lO94C]
PG NO 1089
Dilworth v. Commissioner of Stamps, [1899] AC 99
referred to.
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(2) Tobacco seed does not come within the first part of
the definition, for the expression "tobacco cured or
uncured, manufactured or unmanfactured" has to be read as a
whole and will not take in tobacco seed. It will not come
under the second part because it specifically mentions
leaves, stalks and stems but leaves out seeds. [1094A-B]
(3) The definition, when it says that tobacco means any
form of tobacco, lays emphasis that the item under
consideration should be tobacco in form. [1096A]
(4) Tobacco seed, once it is separated from the plant,
is an item entirely different from tobacco and does not fall
within the expression ‘tobacco or any form of tobacco’.
[1096C]
(5) Since tobacco seed does not fall within the
definition, the oil and cake produced by the crushing of the
seeds will not also be covered by the definition or eligible
for the consequent exemption. [1094B]
(6) The effect of accepting the assessee’s claim for
exemption would be to automatically catapult them into the
levy of excise and additional excise duties, but the fact
that tobacco oil and cake have not been considered to be
excisable commodities for the past several years is as
indication as to how the legislature and administration
understood and applied these provisions all along. [1096H;
1097B]
C.I.T. v. Taj Mahal Hotel, [1971] 82 I.T.R. 44 S.C.
Amara Purushotham Mamidi Obaiah v. State of A.P., [1962] 29
S.T.C. 654; and 1977 40 S.T.C. referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 259 to
261 (NT)/77 etc.
From the Judgment and Order dated 21.10.76 and 24.12.76
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in W.P. Nos. 439 and 287 of
1975 and 4144 of 1976 and W. P. No.8905 of 1987
A.S. Nambiar, B. Parthasarthi and B. Kanta Rao for the
Appellants.
P.A. Choudhary, T.V.S.N. Chari, Badridas and Ms. V.
Grover for the Respondents.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. A common question is involved in all
these matters which are, therefore, being disposed of by
this common judgment. The question is whether tobacco seed
oil and tobacco seed cake are entitled to exemption under
the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 (hereinafter
referred to as the ‘Act’). The question arises in the
following circumstances.
2. Section 8 of the Act confers an exemption from sales
tax in respect of certain goods. It provides that:
‘Subject to such restrictions and conditions as may be
prescribed including conditions as to licence fees, a dealer
who deals in the goods specified in the fourth schedule
shall be exempt from tax under this Act in respect of such
goods.’
Entry 7 in the Fourth Schedule was ‘tobacco and all its
products.’
3. The Andhra Pradesh High Court in Amara Purushotham
Mamidi Obaiah & Co. v. State of A.P., [1962] 29 STC 654, was
called upon to consider whether tobacco seed, tobacco seed
oil and tobacco seed cake were exempt from sales-tax under
the above provision. The Bench held that tobacco seeds could
be said to be tobacco only so long as they remain attached
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to the plant. They, however, ceased to be tobacco the moment
they are removed from the plant. Thereafter, they may be
considered to be a product of tobacco. But they constitute a
separate and a distinct class of goods with independent
properties and potentialities not the same as those of the
parent plant. Products manufactured out of tobacco seed
could not be said to be products of tobacco. The Court, in
this context, referred to the analogy of cotton seeds, which
have been considered to be distinct from cotton. The above
Bench decision was rendered in spite of the wide words of
the exemption, which covered not only tobacco in its
comprehensive sense but also all products of tobacco.
4. The Act was amended by Amendment Act 9 of 1970. There
was a slight amendment, which is not material for our
present purpose, in section 8 which substituted the words
"licences and licence fees" in place of words "licence fees"
alone which had been mentioned in the section previously.
Tobacco continued to be the item in entry 7 of the
Fourth Schedule but this entry now referred only to
"tobacco". The words "and all its products", which had been
used earlier, were omitted. An explanation was added to the
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Fourth Schedule to the following effect:
"Explanation--Expressions in items 5, 6 and 7 have the same
meanings assigned to them in Additional Duties of Excise
(Goods of Special Importance) Act of 1957 (Central Act 58 of
1957.)"
5. The new explanation to Schedule IV makes it necessary
for us to consider the provisions of Central Act 58 of 1957.
This is an Act which provides for the levy and collection of
additional duties of excise in respect of certain goods,
over and above the duties of excise levied and collected in
respect of such goods under the Central Excise and Salt Act,
1944 (hereinafter referred to as the ‘1944 Act’). The
statement of objects and reasons of Act 58 of 1957 has been
referred to before us and its short contents may be
extracted here:
"The object of the bill is to impose additional duties of
excise in replacement of the sales taxes levied by the Union
and States on sugar, tobacco and millmade textiles and to
distribute the net proceeds of these taxes, except the
proceeds attributable to Union Territories, to the States.
The distribution of proceeds of the additional duties
broadly follows the pattern recommended by the Second
Finance Commission. Provision has been made that the States
which levy a tax on the sale or purchase of these
commodities after the 1st April, 1958 do not participate in
the distribution of the net proceeds. Provision is also
being made in the Bill for including these three goods in
the category of goods declared to be of special importance
in inter-State trade or commerce so that, following the
imposition of uniform duties of excise on them, the rates of
sales tax, if levied by any State are subject from 1st
April, 1958 to the restrictions in section 15 of the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956."
In short, the object of the Act was to substitute additional
duties of excise in place of sales tax so far as these goods
were concerned. Since the State Legislature were at liberty,
if they wished, to levy taxes on the sale or purchase of
these commodities, the Act provided that the additional
excise duties will be distributed only among such States as
did not levy a tax on the sale or purchase of these
commodities. Also, by including these goods in the category
of goods declared to be of special importance in inter-State
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trade or commerce, the legislation ensured that, if any
State levied sales tax in respect of these commodities, such
levy was subject to the restrictions contained in the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.
6. Apparently, the intention of the Andhra State
Legislature when the Amendment Act of 1970 was introduced
was to exempt certain goods from the purview of sales tax
because they also came within the purview of the levy of
additional duties of excise under Act 58 of 1957. This is
the reason why the Explanation to the entries in the Fourth
Schedule to the Act incorporated the definition of these
goods as contained in Act 58 of 1957.
7. Turning then to Act 58 of 1957, section 2(c) of that
Act provided that the words and expressions "sugar",
"tobacco", "cotton fabrics" and "woollen fabrics"--to
mention only four of the items referred to in the definition
section--shall have the same meanings respectively as have
been assigned to them in Item Nos. 1, 4, 19 and 21 of the
First Schedule to the 1944 Act.
8. The above definition takes us to the 1944 Act. There
the definition of the word ‘tobacco’ is contained in item
No. 4 of the First Schedule. The definition reads:
"Tobacco means any form of tobacco, whether cured or uncured
and whether manufactured or not and includes the leaf,
stalks and stems of the tobacco plant, but does not include
any part of a tobacco plant while still attached to the
earth."
The Schedule thereafter proceeds to set out two broad
categories, namely, unmanufactured tobacco and manufactured
tobacco. The former is divided into eight sub-categories in
respect of each of which a separate duty of excise is
prescribed. Three of the entries mentioned are:
(3) if flue-cured and not otherwise specified.
(6) if other than flue-cured and not otherwise
specified.
(8) Stalks
The second category of manufactured tobacco is classified
into various items like cigars and cheroots, cigarettes,
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biris, smoking mixtures for pipes and cigarettes and chewing
tobacco of various kinds, snuff and hookah tobacco.
9. The question whether tobacco seed oil and tobacco
cake fall within entry 7 of Schedule IV to the Act, as
amended, came up for consideration before a Division Bench
of the same High Court (1977--40 S.T.C. 572). This Bench
agreed with the conclusion of the earlier Division Bench,
though not with its line of reasoning. It was of the view
that the definition clause, properly interpreted in the
light of the decision of the House of Lords in Dilworth v.
Commissioners of Stamps, [1899] A.C. 99 and C.I. T. v. Taj
Mahal Hotel, [1971] 82 ITR 44 (S.C.), justified the
inference that "tobacco seed" was not "tobacco" and that
only leaf, stalks and stems of the tobacco plant could be
said to be "tobacco" within the meaning of the definition in
item 4 of the Schedule to the 1944 Act. The Bench concluded:
"Under these circumstances, it is obvious that the
definition of the word "tobacco" according to item 4 of
Schedule I to the Central Excises and Salt Act of 1944 does
not bring "tobacco seed" within its purview, and therefore,
tobacco seed is not exempted from the levy of sales tax
under the A.P. General Sales Tax Act, since tobacco seed
does not fall within the meaning of the word "tobacco" as
defined in the Fourth Schedule to the A.P. General Sales Tax
Act.
It is clear in view of this conclusion of ours that since
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tobacco seed is not "tobacco" for purposes of exemption
under section 8 of the Act, much less can tobacco seed oil
or tobacco seed oil-cake or tobacco seed cake can be said to
be tobacco for the purposes of this exemption."
The Bench, therefore, denied the exemption to the
appellants/petitioners before us and hence these
petitions/appeals.
10. Before us, it is urged on behalf of the asessees
that the word "tobacco", in its ordinary connotation, takes
in the tobacco plant and every part of it, including the
seed. The definition also make it clear that it takes in
every form of tobacco, manufactured or unmanufactured. Thus
tobacco seeds, not only when they are in their raw
unmanufactured state but also when, on manufacture, they
manifest themselves in the form of tobacco seed oil or
tobacco seed cake will fall within the definition. On the
other hand. on behalf of the State it is submitted that the
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definition, which covers both what the expression means as
well as what it includes, is exhaustive. Tobacco seed does
not come within the first part of the definition, for the
expression "tobacco, cured or uncured, manufactured or
unmanufactured" has to be read as a whole and will not take
in tobacco seed. It will not come under the second part
because it specifically mentions leaves, stalks and stems
but leaves out seeds. Since tobacco seeds do not fall within
the definition, the oil and cake produced by the crushing of
the seeds will not also be covered by the definition or
eligible for the consequent exemption.
11. We are inclined to accept the contention urged on
behalf of the State that the definition under consideration
which consists of two separate parts which specify what the
expression means and also what it includes is obviously
meant to be exhaustive. As Lord Watson observed in Dilworth
v. Commissioner of Stamps, [1899] AC 99 the joint use of the
words "mean and include" can have this effect. He said, in a
passage quoted with approval in earlier decisions of this
Court:
Sect. 2 is, beyond all question, an interpretation clauses,
and must have been intended by the Legislature to be taken
into account in construing the expression "charitable device
or bequest," as it occurs in s. 3. It is not said in terms
that "charitable bequest" shall mean one or other of the
things which are enumerated, but that it shall "include"
them. The word "include" is very generally used in
interpretation clauses in order to enlarge the meaning of
words or phrases occurring in the body of the statute; and
when it is so used these words or phrases must be construed
as comprehending, not only such things as they signify
according to their natural import, but also those things
which the interpretation clause declares that they shall
include. But the word "include" is susceptible of another
construction, which may become imperative, if the context of
the Act is sufficient to show that it was not merely
employed for the purpose of adding to the natural
significance of the words or expressions defined. It may be
equivalent to "mean and include" and in that case it may
afford an exhaustive explanation of the meaning which, for
the purposes of the Act, must invariably be attached to
these words or expressions."
(Underlining ours)
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13. Looking, therefore, at the terms of the definition
more closely, it is quite clear that tobacco seeds do not
fall within the second or inclusive part of the definition.
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This part of the definition is important. It specifically
excludes from the definition any part of the tobacco plant
so long as it is still attached to the earth. It makes
mention only of parts of the plant after it is severed from
the earth. It is common knowledge that when a plant is
severed from the earth, its parts will comprise of not only
the leaves, stalks and stems but also the seeds. Yet the
inclusive part of the definition enumerates only the leaves,
stalks and stems and, deliberately one should think, avoids
mention of seeds.
14. Can then the words ‘tobacco’ and ‘any form of
tobacco’ in the first part of the definition be given a
wider meaning and read as including the seeds also,
particularly as it talks of tobacco in any form, cured or
uncured, manufactured or unmanufactured? We do not think
they can be for several reasons. In the first place, tobacco
seeds hardly answer to the description of either the
expression ‘manufactured tobacco’ or the expression
‘unmanufactured tobacco’ in their ordinary connotation; and
the expression ‘cured or uncured’ cannot also be associated
with tobacco seeds. The expression used in the first part of
the definition, though very wide, is, therefore, singularly
inappropriate to take within its purview tobacco seeds as
well. Secondly, the definition occurs in a statute levying
excise duty which is concerned not with the parts of a plant
grown on the field but with the use to which those parts are
put or can be put after severance. The legislature could not
but have been aware that if the leaves, stalk and stem of
the tobacco plant are used for manufacturing cured tobacco,
biris, cigarettes and so on, the seed is also used to
produce oil and cake. It takes care to mention the first
three items which are used in the manufacture of some forms
of tobacco consumption which are also enumerated but
refrains from referring to seeds which it would have done
had it been intended to include the oil and cake also for
purposes of the levy. The categories of unmanufactured
tobacco enumerated in the entry in the Schedule include
‘stalks’ but not ‘seeds’. This also indicates that seeds are
not intended to be included. In other words, the omission of
the word ‘seeds’ from the second part of the definition
casts its shadow on the first part as well. Indeed it rather
looks as if the second part of the definition is intended to
restrict rather than expand the scope of the first part.
Thirdly, it is to be noticed that the first part of
definition is somewhat restrictively worded. It could have
said, for instance, that ‘tobacco’ means any part of the
tobacco plant and includes its leaves, and stems after the
plant is severed from the earth. What it does say is,
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however, different. The present definition, when it says
that tobacco means any form of tobacco lays emphasis that
the item under consideration should be tobacco inform. The
leaves, stalks and stems, even after drying, curing and
other processes and even ‘manufacture’ retain the form of
tobacco, as understood in common parlance. But it is
otherwise with the seeds. They are not tobacco in form. They
do not have the properties of tobacco. They are not used to
exploit the narcotic qualities of tobacco. Apart from their
use for seeding purposes, the seeds are only used for the
manufacture of oil and cake. We are told that the oil is
used as an ingredient in the manufacture of scents and the
cake as manure. Having regard to all this, we agree with the
High Court that tobacco seed once it is separated from the
plant, is an item entirely different from tobacco and does
not fall within the expression ‘tobacco or any form of
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tobacco’.
15. We would like to add that, even if by stretching the
language somewhat, tobacco seeds can be brought within the
first part of the definition, the oil and cake we are
concerned with here cannot. This again, we say, for two
reasons. In the first place, as discussed earlier, tobacco
seed oil or cake can hardly be said to be a form of the
tobacco seed. It is true that one can say that it is the
contents of the seed that have manifested themselves, on
being crushed, into two forms--the oil and the cake. But
this is not enough. The definition requires that the item in
question should be a form of the tobacco seeds that is
manufactured. While, as already pointed out, the leaves,
stalks and stems even after manufacture retain the form of
tobacco, the complete metamorphosis of the seed on its
manufacture renders it impossible to describe the oil and
cake as a form of the tobacco seed. Secondly, in our view,
we should take note of the circumstance that earlier the
item in Schedule IV covered not only tobacco but all its
products. Never-theless. it was held not to include the oil
and cake. The legislature has subsequently amended the
provision by deleting the reference to "all products of
tobacco". In this context of an abridgement of the
definition, it will not be correct, in our view, to construe
the item so as to bring tobacco seed oil and cake within the
scope of the exemption.
16. Sri Choudhary points out that, if the contention of
the assessees were accepted, they would be only jumping, as
it were, from the frying pan into the fire. Since the item
of exemption under the Act is worded identically with the
item of the levy under the 1944 and 1957 Acts, the effect of
accepting the assessees’ claim for exemption would be to
automatically catapult them into the levy of excise and
additional excise duties as well as into the rigours of the
restrictions and regulations prescribed under those
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enactments. True, the consideration that if the oil and cake
fall under item 7, such consequences as have been mentioned
will follow cannot really guide or deter us in construing
the definition. However the fact that the oil and cake have
not been considered to be excisable commodities for the past
several years is an indication as to how the legislature and
the administration have understood and applied these
provisions all along.
17. Certain other judicial decisions were cited by both
parties but we are not discussing them. They neither
directly deal with the point before us nor do they deal with
definitions or situations which furnish a useful analogy for
comparison.
18. For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the view
taken by the High Court and dismiss these appeals and
petitions. We, however, make no orders as to costs.
R. S. S. Appeals dismissed.