Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ALWAYE AGENCIES
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DY. COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURAL INCOME-TAX AND SALES TAX,ER
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1988
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1313 1988 SCR (3) 879
1988 SCC (3) 68 JT 1988 (2) 534
1988 SCALE (1)1165
ACT:
Kerala General Sales Tax Act-Whether the assessee
appointed as distributor by a manufacturing company under an
agreement to effect sale of its product is an agent under
the agreement or a purchaser from the company and liable to
tax-Under.
HEADNOTE:
This appeal arose out of a case under the Kerala
General Sales Tax Act. The assessee firm (assessee) had been
appointed as distributor by the Travancore Cochin Chemicals
Ltd. (the "said company") to effect sale of their product
under an agreement. In the assessment of the assessee firm
for the period 1967-68 under the Kerala General Sales Tax
Act, final assessment was completed and the turnover as
reported by the assessee was accepted and tax, levied on
that basis. Later, the assessing authority alleged that
certain transactions in the aforesaid period had been
wrongly excluded from the turnover reported by the assessee
in the return and the turnover had escaped assessment. The
contention of the assessee that the transactions did not
constitute sales by the said company to the assessee was
rejected by the Assessing Officer and it was held that the
said turnover was liable to be included in the taxable
turnover as escaped turnover. An appeal by the assessee to
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was dismissed. In
second appeal to the Tribunal, the Tribunal held that the
transactions in question had taken place directly between
the said company and the consumers and the assessee was
merely an agent of the company, and allowed the appeal. The
High Court on revision held that the Tribunal was wrong in
concluding that the assessee was acting only as an agent in
respect of the said transactions between the said company
and the consumers, and allowed the Revision Application. The
assessee-firm appealed to this Court by special leave
against the decision of the High Court.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: Both the parties proceeded on the footing that
the transactions in question were effected pursuant to the
agreement, sub-clause (a) of clause 2 whereof provided that
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the distributor had the right of sale
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of the product within the stipulated area. Bulk supplies
were effected in waggon-load or lorry-load by the said
company direct to the consumer pursuant to orders booked by
the assessee firm. The distributor arranged the payment as
per the agreement and also took the responsibility to bear
entirely the resultant effects and risk from the said direct
dispatches. It was true that the price at which the goods
were to be sold to the customers was fixed by the company
but that did not lead to the conclusion that the assessee
acted merely as an agent of the said company. The mere fact
that the manufacturer fixes the sale price by itself cannot
lead to the conclusion that the distributor is merely an
agent. Under the agreement, what the distributor got was
described as a "rebate" and not "Commission", as is normally
expected in an agreement of agency. This is a factor, by no
means conclusive, but to a certain extent indicative of the
relationship between the said company and the assessee. More
important, the supplies were made to the distributor against
payment-immediate or deferred-as provided in the agreement,
and even when the goods were destined directly to the
customer, the distributor had to guarantee to arrange the
payment, as per clause 8. Where there was some time-lag
between the sending of the goods and the payment, the goods
were to be insured at the cost of the assessee. This
circumstance clearly showed that in respect of the goods
dispatched under orders placed by the distributors, the
distributors really acted as purchasers of the goods which
they in turn sold to the customers and did not merely act as
agents of the said company. In respect of the goods in
question, despatched through public carriers, although the
invoices were prepared in the names of the customers of the
goods and the goods were consigned to the destination
through public carrier booked to self, the bills were
endorsed and delivered to the assessee. In the light of the
agreement, these circumstances clearly showed that in
respect of these transactions the property in the goods
dispatched passed to the distributors on the bills being
endorsed and handed over to the distributors. [884D-H;885A-
D]
Although the Court had referred to the assessee being
described in the agreement as "distributor" and not as
"agent" and to the fact that what they got was described as
"rebate" and not "commission", the Court had not treated
these circumstances as decisive. But these descriptions
considered in the light of the general tenor of the
agreement and the circumstances surrounding the transactions
between the parties showed that the assessee was not an
agent but really a purchaser from the company in respect of
the goods in question, and the transactions were liable to
be included in the turnover of the assessee. [885G-H;886A]
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The Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd. v. Sales Tax Officer,
Bhopal, [1977] 3 S.C.C. 147;and Pollack & Mulla’s Commentary
on the Sale of Goods & Partnership Acts, 4th Edition, p.
114, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 523 (NT)
of 1975.
From the Judgment and Order dated 31.1.1974 of the High
Court of Kerala in Tax Reference Case No. 52 of 1971.
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T.S. Krishnamurthy Iyer and P.K. Pillai for the
Appellant.
G. Vishwanath Iyer and N. Sudakaran for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal against a judgment of a
Division Bench of the High Court of Kerala under the
provisions of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 and Tax
Reference Case No. 52 of 1971 filed pursuant to special
leave granted by this Court. The Appellant before us is the
M/s Alwaye Agencies and the respondent is the Dy.
Commissioner of Agricultural Income-tax and Sales Tax,
Ernakulam.
The assessee firm was appointed as Distributor by the
Travancore Cochin Chemicals Ltd. (referred to hereinafter as
the "said company") to effect the sale of Sodium
Hydrosulphite manufactured by the said company in the area
covered by the Kerala State under an agreement entered into
on 11th February, 1967. The dispute pertains to the
transactions which took place between 1st September, 1967
and 20th December, 1968 since it is an undisputed that the
transactions upto the former date are not taxable. It is
common ground that the relations between the parties were
governed throughout by the said agreement and that the
parties adhered to the terms of the said agreement. In view
of this it would be desirable to examine that agreement at
this stage. As aforesaid, the agreement is dated 11th
February, 1967. Under the agreement, the assessee firm was
appointed as Distributor for the aforesaid product
manufactured by the company for the area covered by the
Kerala State. Clause 2 of the agreement provides that the
distributorship was on an exclusive basis giving the
distributor the right of sale of the product within the
aforementioned area and that supplies would be made only
direct to the distributor, Sub clause (a) of clause 2
further provides:
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"However, when on the advice of the distributor
bulk supplies are effected in waggon-load or
lorry-load lots the Company may effect supplies
direct to the consumer, provided that the
distributor arranges the payment as per the clause
hereinafter mentioned and also takes the
responsibility to bear entirely the resultant
effects and risks from effecting such direct
despatches."
Sub-clause (b) of the said clause provides that the
company reserves the right to effect the sale of Sodium
Hydrosulphite to anybody and anywhere in India direct.
Under Clause 4, the price which the distributor would
be entitled to charge to the consumer was fixed by the
company and it was provided that the distributor will sell
the materials to the clients or consumers at the said price
plus certain costs incurred by the distributor. Cluase 6
provides that the said company would grant the distributor a
rebate of 3% on the ex-factory selling price, which the
company was entitled to determine as aforesaid. This rebate
was liable to be paid to the distributor only at the end of
the month when the statement of the account would be
settled. Under Clause 7, the distributor was liable to
guarantee the minimum off take of the said product. Clause 8
of the agreement provides for mode of payment by the
assessee (distributor) to the said company, and very briefly
stated, it provides that the assessee would arrange for
effecting payment either in cash or by Demand draft payable
at par, or, alternatively, would open an irrevocable letter
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of credit in favour of the said company negotiable against
R/R or other documents of despatch of goods. It is provided
that the letter of credit would cover the value of goods as
well as charges of transport for booking the goods to
destination station, Sales tax and other expenses including
cost of insurance, if any, effected at the distributor’s
request. An alternative mode of the payment is provided to
the effect that the assessee as distributor must remit 10%
of the full value by Demand Draft and retire the documents
of despatch of goods sent to the assessee through bank for
collection from the bank. Clause 8 further provides if the
documents sent by the said company are not retired within
the stipulated time, interest would be payable by the
distributor on the amount due at the rate of 12% per annum.
The clause also makes it clear that if the second mode of
payment is adopted by the assessee, consignments would be
insured by the said company against transit risk and the
insurance charges would have to be borne by the assessee. It
may be noted at this stage that the Tribunal has found as a
fact that in respect of the said transactions
883
from 1st September, 1967 to 20th December, 1968, the
invoices were prepared by the said company in the names of
the consumers of goods and the goods were consigned to the
destinations through public carriers booked "self". The
transport bills were endorsed and handed over by the said
company to the assessee. From 20th December, 1968, goods
were consigned to the destination showing the assessee as
consignor. But we are not concerned with the period from
20th December, 1968. In the assessment of the assessee for
the period 1967-68 under the Kerala General Sales Tax Act,
1963, the final assessment was initially completed on 27th
September, 1968 and a turnover of Rs.70,952.61 as reported
by the assessee was accepted and tax levied on that basis.
Thereafter, it was alleged by the Assessing Authority that
the transactions in the aforesaid period, which had taken
place in the manner set out earlier, had been wrongly
excluded from the turnover reported by the assessee in the
return and hence that turnover has escaped assessment. The
contention of the assessee that these transactions did not
constitute sales by the said company to the assessee was not
accepted and hence it was held by the Assessing Officer that
the said turnover was liable to be included in the taxable
turnover of the assessee, as escaped turnover. An appeal
preferred by the assessee to the Appellant Assistant
Commissioner was dismissed. In a Second Appeal to the
Tribunal, the Tribunal took the view, by majority, that the
aforesaid transactions had taken place directly between the
said company and the consumers and the assessee was merely
an agent of the company in respect thereof. The Tribunal
allowed the appeal and directed the aforesaid transactions
to be excluded from the taxable turnover of the assessee. On
a revision to the High Court under Section 41 of the said
Act, the Division Bench of the High Court took the view that
the Tribunal was wrong in coming to the conclusion that the
assessee was acting only as an Agent in respect of the
aforesaid transactions between the said company and the
consumers and allowed the Revision Application.
The Division Bench of the High Court considered several
cases which were cited before the Division Bench and held
that the test to determine whether there is a sale or not is
to find out whether there is transfer of property. It
further pointed out that the question whether there has been
transfer of property must necessarily depend upon an
appreciation of the rights and obligations of the parties
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under the contract. If the property is transferred, unless
there is a specific stipulation to the contrary, any risk of
loss or injury to the goods would, thereafter, be not in the
seller but in the buyer. They further pointed out that the
delivery may be either to the distributor himself or to his
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nominee; the nominee could be the person whose orders are
booked by the distributor. They pointed out that in the
present case even when the goods were despatched by the said
company to the address of the customers, whose orders were
booked by the distributor, namely, the assessee, the
documents of title were not delivered to the customers, but
handed over to the distributor on receipt of price, or the
documents of title were endorsed in favour of the
distributor and sent through the banks to be honoured by the
distributor by payment. In such cases, where there was some
time-lag between the despatch of goods and the entrustment
of documents of title on receiving payment through the bank,
care was taken to stipulate that the risk would be covered
by insurance which would be at the cost of the distributor.
The Division Bench further pointed out that in the said
agreement, the distributor had not been referred to as
"Agent" but as "Distributor" and that this was also
significant although not conclusive. It was on the basis of
these conclusions that the High Court reversed the decision
of the Tribunal and allowed the Revision Application.
In our opinion, since both the parties have proceeded
on the footing that the transactions in question were
effected pursuant to the said agreement, the primary task to
which we must address ourselves is to examine whether under
the agreement the assessee firm was an agent of the said
company, or whether the assessee firm was really a purchaser
of the goods which were booked by it. In this connections,
it must be noticed that under sub-clause (a) of Clause 2
provides that the distributor has the right of the sale of
the product within the stipulated area. Bulk supplies were
effected in waggon-load or lorry-load by the said company
direct to the consumer, but only provided that the
distributor arranged the payment as per the agreement and
also took the responsibility to bear entirely the resultant
effects and risk from said direct despatches. It is true
that the price at which the goods were to be sold to the
customers was fixed by the company but that itself does not
necessarily lead to the conclusion that the assessee acted
merely as an agent of the said company. In fact, it is well
settled that the mere fact that the manufacturer fixes the
sale price, by itself, cannot lead to the conclusion that
the distributor is merely an agent. It is significant that
under the agreement what the distributor got is described as
a "rebate" and not as "commission", as one would normally
expect in an agreement of agency. This is a factor which is
by no means conclusive, but to a certain extent indicative
of the relationship between the said company and the
assessee. What is most important is, however, that the
supplies were made to the distributor against payment either
immediate or deferred as provided in the agreement, and even
when
885
the goods were destined directly to the customer, it was the
distributor who had to guarantee to arrange the payment.
Clause 8 makes it quite clear that the arrangement for
effecting payment had to be made by the distributor either
in case of by demand draft or by irrevocable letter of
credit in the company’s favour negotiable against R/R or
other documents of despatch of goods. It is also significant
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that where there was some time lag between the sending of
the goods and the payment, the goods were to be insured at
the cost of the assessee. This circumstance, in our opinion,
clearly shows that in respect of the goods dispatched under
orders placed by the distributors, the distributors really
acted as purchasers of the goods which they in turn sold to
the customers and did not merely act as agents of the said
company. In respect of the goods in question which were
despatched through public carriers, although the invoices
were prepared in the names of the consumers of the goods,
and the goods were consigned to the destination through
public carrier booked to self, as pointed by the Tribunal
and the bills were endorsed and handed over to the assessee.
When considered in the light of the agreement, these
circumstances clearly shows that in respect of these
transactions the property in the goods dispatched passed to
the distributor on the bills being endorsed and handed over
to the distributors.
Our attention was drawn by Shri Krishnamurthy Iyer,
learned counsel for the assessee (appellant) to the decision
of this Court in The Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd. v. Sales
Tax Officer, Bhopal, [1977] 3 S.C.C. p. 147 where the
question was whether the contract was one of agency or sale.
This Court held that the question will have to be determined
having regard to the terms and recitals of the agreement,
the intention of the parties as may be spelt out from the
terms of the document and the surrounding circumstances and
having regard to the course of dealings between the parties.
While interpreting the terms of the agreement, the Court has
to look to the substance rather than the form of it. The
mere fact that the word ’agent’ or ’agency’ is used or the
words ’buyer’ and seller’ are used to describe the status of
the parties concerned is not sufficient to lead to the
irresistible inference that the parties did in fact intend
that the said status would be conferred. We are in complete
agreement with the principles laid down in this decision. We
may point out that although we have referred to the assessee
being described in the agreement as "distributor" and not as
"agent" and to the fact that what they got was described as
"rebate" and not "commission", we have not treated these
circumstances as in any manner decisive. In our view,
however, these descriptions considered in the light of the
general tenor of the agreement and the
886
circumstances surrounding the transactions between the
parties show that the assessee was not agent, but really a
purchaser from the company in respect of the goods in
question.
Learned counsel for the appellant also drew our
attention to a passage in Pollack & Mulla’s Commentary on
the Sale of Goods and Partnership Acts, (4th Edition at page
114) where the learned authors have cited with approval the
statement of Lord Justice Cotton to the effect that when the
vendor on shipment takes the bill of lading to his own
order, he has the power of absolutely disposing of the
cargo, and may prevent the purchaser from ever asserting any
right of property therein. Lord Justice Cotton observed that
in such cases the purchaser had no property in the goods,
though he had offered to accept bills or had paid the price.
These observations, however, in our view, have no
application to the case before us, because in the case
before us, although the goods were consigned to the self,
the documents relating to the despatch of goods, namely R/R
or other documents of title were endorsed in favour of the
assessees and handed over to them on payment or were sent to
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the assessees through the bank for collection.
We may mention that it was urged by learned counsel for
the respondent,in the alternative, that, although sub-
section 21 of Section 2 of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act
defines sale in a manner similar to the definition of the
said term under the Sale of Goods Act, Explanation 5 to sub-
section 21 of Section 2 provides that two independent sales
or purchases shall, for the purposes of that Act, be deemed
to have taken place in the circumstances set out in that
explanation. A perusal of the said explanation shows that
such independent sales or purchases take place, inter-alia,
where the goods are transferred from a principal to his
selling agent and from the selling agent to the purchaser.
It was submitted by him that in view of this explanation,
even ifthe appellant firm was merely the agent of the said
company in respect of the transactions in question, there
were two sales which must be deemed to have taken place in
respect of each of the transactions for the purposes of the
said Act; one from the said company to the appellant and the
other from the appellant to the respective consumer; and
that the sale from the said company to the appellant was
liable to be included in the taxable turnover of the
assessce.In ourview, it is not necessary to consider this
submission, because, according to us, in view of the said
agreement, considered in the light of the surrounding
circumstances, the assesseeas distributor was not an agent
of the said company in respect of the transaction in
question, but was the pur-
887
chaser and hence the transactions were liable to be included
in the turnover of the assessee.
In the result, we find that there is no merit in the
appeal and the appeal must stand dismissed with costs. There
will be an order accordingly.
S.L. Appeal dismissed.
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