Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TATA ENGINEERING AND LOCOMOTIVE COMPANYLTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF COMMERCIAL TAXES& ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/02/1967
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHELAT, J.M.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1401 1967 SCR (2) 751
CITATOR INFO :
F 1977 SC 854 (13)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 226-Principles for exercise of
High Court’s power under-Existence of alternative remedies
when not a bar.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company manufactured trucks, bus chasis etc.
in Bihar State. Some of the goods so manufactured were sent
to the stockyards maintained by the company in various
States outside Bihar. The goods in the said stockyards,
according to the company, had not been appropriated to any
contract and remained the property of the company.
Therefore. in proceedings for the assessment of Sales Tax
before the Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes,
Jamshedpur the company contended that the sales effected
from these stockyards were taxable neither under the Bihar
Sales Tax Act,, nor under the Central Sales Tax Act. The
contention was rejected by the Assistant Commissioner who
demanded Rs. 1,73,84,273 as tax. The company thereupon
filed a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution
questioning the jurisdiction of the Taxing Authority. The
High Court refused to give relief because ,adequate
alternative remedies under the taxing statute were available
and had not been exhausted and dismissed the petition in
limine. By special leave the company appealed.
HELD : The jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 of
the Constitution cannot be a substitute for the ordinary
remedies at law. Nor is its exercise desirable if facts
have to be found on evidence. But there are exceptions.
One such exception is when action is being taken under an
invalid law or arbitrarily without the sanction of law. In
such a case the High Court may interfere to avoid hardship
to a party. which will be unavoidable if the quick and more
efficacious remedy envisaged by the article were not allowed
to be invoked. As the appeals required payment of tax at
least in part the High Court ought to have taken
jurisdiction in this case at least to issue a rule nisi to
see what the Assistant Commissioner had to say. [755 E-G,
756 C-D]
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Thansingh v. Supdt. of Taxes [1964] 6 S.C.R. 654 and
Himmatlal V. State of M.P. [1954] S.C.R. 1122, referred
to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1604 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 20, 1966 of the Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 252
of 1966.
N. A. Palkhiwala, S. P. Mehta, Ravinder Narain and O. C.
Mathur, for the appellant.
Niren De, Addl. Solicitor-General and U. P. Singh, for the
respondents.
75
752
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. The appellant is a public limited Company
which manufactures the well-known Tata Mercedes-Benz trucks,
bus chassis, their spare parts and other accessories at
Jamshedpur in the State of Bihar and they are sold to the
Government of India, the State Governments, State Transport
Corporations and others. In the course of its business the
appellant Company sells its products, particularly the
trucks and bus chassis, to dealers in various parts of India
and the dealers resell them to consumers, all over INdia.
According to the appellant Company, its sales in the Indian
market are of three kinds
(a) Sales inside Bihar State;
(b) Sales in the course of inter-State trade and commerce;
and
(c) Sales effected from their stockyards located in States
other than Bihar.
The present appeal concerns sales in the last category and
the question arises in the following circumstances.
The appellant Company filed returns for the quarter ending
on June 30, 1965, under the Bihar Sales Tax Act and the
Central Sales Tax Act respectively, including in the former
sales to consumers in Bihar State and in the latter sales in
the course of interState trade or commerce, and paid full
tax due on such sales. The appellant Company did not
include sales from the stockyards, in any of its returns.
On November 12, 1965 the Assistant Commissioner of Com-
mercial Taxes, Jamshedpur sent a notice (No. 11284)
informing the appellant Company that the returns appeared to
be incorrect as all sales were not included and directed the
appellant Company to include all its sales in revised
returns and all returns to be filed in future. The
appellant Company demurred that sales from their stockyards
in other States were neither sales in the State of Bihar,
nor sales in the course of inter-State trade or commerce and
were thus not taxable in Bihar. This plea was not accepted
and revised returns for the quarters ending on June 30 and
September 30, 1965 were ordered to be filed. The appellant
Company filed amended returns under protest and without
prejudice to its contentions. At the same time the
appellant Company disclosed, the entire procedure of sales
ex-stockyards and relied upon s. 4(2) of the Central Sales
Tax Act to exclude such sales. The appellant Company also
inquired whether these sales were to be treated as sales in
Bihar for the purposes of the Bihar Sales Tax Act or as
sales in the course of inter-State trade and commerce for
purposes of the Central
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753.
Sales Tax Act, but no reply was given. The appellant
Company further asked for an opportunity to produce
declarations from its customers, who are also registered
dealers, with a view to claiming a rebate, but this
opportunity was denied. The appellant Company objected to
the assessment for a period of six months under a tax
legislation, which it claimed, was intended to operated
yearly but to no effect. According to the revised returns
filed under compulsion, the break-up of the sales was as
follows : The total gross turnover was Rs. 33,99,23,595.
The appellant Company claimed to deduct (a) sales from
stockyards at extra State points (Rs. 15,09,24,204); (b)
sales. in the course of export- out of India (Rs.
34,83,671); and (c) sales effected in Bihar on which Bihar
Sales Tax was payable (Rs. 3,64,79,209). The balance Rs.
14,90,36,510, according to the appellant Company, consisted
of sales (Rs. 14,33,02,855) to registered dealers taxable at
2% and sales of the balance to unregistered dealers taxable
at 10%. The tax for the period April 1, 1965 to September
30, 1965 was computed at Rs. 34,05,028. The appellant
Company stated to have paid against it Rs. 34,45,699 as tax
in the Government Treasury and denied any further liability.
The Assistant Commissioner after turning down the requests
for adjournments proceeded to assess the appellant Company.
The gross turnover for the two quarters was taken to be Rs.
35,13,60,725. The difference (Rs. 1,14,37,129) arose
because tax in other States was also added to the sale
prices. Deducting the sales, made in Bihar
State(Rs.3,64,79,209) and the sales in the course of export
(Rs. 34,83,671) the balance (Rs. 31,13,97,844) was held
taxable at different rates. Rs. 12,94,81,387 for which C
and D forms were produced from, registered dealers were
taxed at 2% and the balance (Rs. 16,23,61,334 plus local
taxes Rs. 1,14,37,129 above mentioned) at 10%. The total
tax was computed to be Rs 2,07,81,273 from which deducting
the tax already paid, a demand for the sum of Rs.
1,73,84,273 was made. The order of assessment was passed on
March 1, 1966 and the amount of’ arrears of tax was made
payable on or before March 15, 1966. The appellant Company
asked for time to make the payment and it was extended to
March 21, 1966.
The appellant Company filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution of India in the Patna High Court for directions
or orders or writs, including a writ in nature of certiorari
calling for the records and quashing the order of the
Assistant Commissioner. By the petition the jurisdiction of
the Assistant Commissioner to make the assessment and the
demand of, tax in respect of stockyard sales were
questioned. of the grounds. urged, the following were
questions of jurisdiction
754
" (a) The assessment on the Petitioner for two
quarters is illegal as the Central Sales Tax
is a yearly tax.
(b) Respondent No. 1 erred in assuming
jurisdiction to tax the outside sales by wrong
interpretation of evidence,, contrary to the
overwhelming evidence on record.
(c)
(d)
(e) Respondent No. 1 failed to appreciate
that in law sale took place only at
the stockyard where the vehicle was
appropriated to a particular contract and that
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the sale did not occasion inter-State movement
of the vehicle.
(f) Respondent No. 1 has relied on section
84 of the Contract Act even though the same
was repealed in 1930 and thereby erred in
applying a wrong provision of law.
(g)
The petition came up for hearing before
Narasimham C.J. and Ahmad J. on April 20, 1966
and was dismissed at the threshhold. The
order of the High Court was :
"The petitioner has not exhausted the internal
remedies provided in the Sales Tax Act by way
of appeal, revision or reference and statement
of a case to this Court.
We are not satisfied that this is a fit case
for this Court to exercise its extraordinary
jurisdiction at this stage. The petition is
dismissed summarily.
Sd/- R. L. Narasimham Sd/- Anwar Ahmed".
A request for certificate to appeal to this Court was then
made. The High Court pointed out that an appeal against the
order of assessment was _possible on payment of 20% of the
assessed tax. As this came to Rs. 40,00,000 and odd only
and Rs. 33,97,000 had already been paid, the High Court held
that the Company ought to appeal first since the payment of
the balance (Rs. 6,00,000) was well within the capacity of
the appellant Company and was not so onerous as to merit
interference by way of extraordinary powers of the High
Court. The application for certificate was accordingly
dismissed. The appellant Company,
755
however, obtained special leave from this Court and this
appeal was filed.
The learned Additional Solicitor General, who appeared for
the Assistant Commissioner, raised a preliminary objection
that the appellant Company could not be heard as it had not
exhausted the remedies available under the taxing statutes
which gave right of appeal and revision and finally for
invoking the advisory jurisdiction of the High Court. He
also relied upon Thansingh v. Supdt. of Taxes(1) in support
of the order of the High Court.
The preliminary objection really does no more than try to
check in advance the points which the appellant Company is
seeking to raise in this appeal. Whether one looks at the
matter from the point of view of the appeal proper or from
the point of view of the preliminary objection raised before
us, the question is the same, namely, whether the High Court
ought in this case to have exercised jurisdiction and if it
took jurisdiction whether any settled principle governing
Art. 226 would have been departed from.
The power and jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226
of the Cnstitution has been the subject of exposition from
this Court. That it is extraordinary and to be used
sparingly goes without saying. In spite of the very wide
terms in which this jurisdiction is conferred, the, High
Courts have rightly recognised certain limitations on this
power. The jurisdiction is not appellate and it is obvious
that it cannot be a substitute for the ordinary remedies at
law. Nor is its exercise desirable if facts have to be
found on evidence. The High Court, therefore, leaves the
party aggrieved to take recourse to the remedies available
under the ordinary law if they are equally efficacious and
declines to assume jurisdiction to enable such remedies to
be by-passed. To these there are certain exceptions. One
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such exception is where action is being taken under an
invalid law or arbitrarily without the sanction of law. In
such a case, the High Court may interfere to avoid hardship
to a party which will be unavoidable if the quick and more
efficacious remedy envisaged by article 226 were not allowed
to be invoked. In our judgment the present is example of
the exceptional situation above contemplated just as
Himmatlal v. State of M.P.(1) was another instance which
came before this Court.
The power and jurisdiction of the Assistant Commissioner,
Jamshedpur, were exercisable in respect of sales to
consumers in Bihar State and to transactions of sales in the
course of interState trade and commerce. They could not be
utilised to tax sales outside the State of Bihar. The
appellant Company claimed
(1) [1964] S. C. R. 654.
(2) (1954) S. C. R. 11.22
7 56
exemption in respect of sales effected from their stock-
yards in the various States, no doubt fed from Bihar but run
by the Company locally. The Company asserted that the goods
in the stockyards were. still those of the appellant Company
and neither the property in them had passed to any one nor
had they been appropriated to a contract of sale. The
question was whether in law such sales could be regarded as
in the course of inter-state trade or commerce or outside
sales, subject of course to the claim of the Company being
found on record to be good. There is nothing to show that
any further evidence beyond documents produced to illustrate
sample sales was necessary. Nor did the learned Additional
Solicitor General suggest that this was going to be an issue
of fact rather than of law. It would certainly have avoided
circuity of action and proved altogether more satisfactory,
if the High Court had considered whether the sample transac-
tion as illustrated by the documents, disclosed a
transaction of sale outside the State of Bihar and not in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce. On that
depended the payment of tax of the order of Rs. 1,73,00,000
and odd for two quarters alone. We are clearly of opinion
that the High Court ought to have taken jurisdiction in this
case at least to issue a rule nisi to see what the Assistant
Commissioner had to say. The High Court could always
decline to decide the case if disputed questions of fact
requiring finding.thereon arose, but so far as we can see,
no such question was likely to arise.
We accordingly set aside the order of the High Court and
remit the case for further consideration after issuing a
rule nisi so that the Assistant Commissioner may file a
return to the claim put forward by the appellant Company.
The appeal will be allowed but we make no order about costs.
G.C. Appeal allowed
757