Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 9687 of 2003
PETITIONER:
M/s Rapti Commission Agency
RESPONDENT:
State of U.P. & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/08/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASASYAT & S.H. KAPADIA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Challenge in this Appeal is to the judgment rendered by a
Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court repelling the
challenge to constitutional validity of Section 8-E of the Uttar
Pradesh Trade Tax Act, 1948 (in short the ’Act’). By the
impugned judgment several writ petitions involving identical
challenge were disposed of. Aforesaid Section 8-E of the Act
was inserted by Section 7 of the U.P. Act No. 11 of 2001.
A brief reference to the factual aspects would suffice.
Appellant filed the writ petition, inter alia, with following
stands:-
Appellant is an agent of principals situated outside the
State of Uttar Pradesh, who for the sake of convenience are
described as ’Ex-U.P. Principals’. Appellant purchased Mentha
Oil for and on behalf of Ex-U.P. Principals and dispatched
them to the said principals on the basis of agreements entered
into. One consignment of Mentha Oil was detained by the
Trade Tax officer, Mobile Squad, Jhansi and the driver was
informed by a notice that the detention was made because the
appellant had not deducted the tax from the
sellers/agriculturists and had not deposited the same in terms
of Section 8-E of the Act. Appellant sent a reply on 11.7.2001
stating that the purchase of Mentha Oil was for and on behalf
of Ex-U.P. Principals from the agriculturists and all the
documents accompanying the consignment clearly established
this fact. When the authority insisted on deposit of the tax in
terms of Section 8-E of the Act the Writ Petition was filed.
Because similar detentions were made in case of others, writ
petitions were filed challenging constitutional validity of
Section 8-E of the Act. The primary challenge was that the
seller was not a "dealer" as defined in the Act i.e. Section 2(c).
Reference was made to proviso to the provision in this regard.
Further the transactions in question being inter-state in
character the State Government did not have legislative
competence to provide for deduction of tax in respect of such
transactions. The respondents-State and its functionaries who
were respondents in the writ petition supported the
constitutional validity of the impugned provision.
The High Court basically came to the conclusion that the
language of a statutory provision can be narrowed down if that
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is necessary to sustain the constitutional validity. Accordingly
it was held that the language of Section 8-E of the Act shall be
narrowed down so as to make it applicable only the intra-State
sales/purchases and held the provision to be valid. It was
further held that even though the agriculturists/farmers who
sell their produces to the appellant cannot be treated as
"dealer" in view of proviso to Section 2(c), yet appellant had a
liability to pay purchase tax on the purchases made in view of
Section 3(1) of the Act. Though the High Court held that the
trade tax authority concerned may decide in respect of each
transaction on the facts of each case whether it is an intra-
State sale or purchase or not, that according to the High Court
did not affect validity of Section 8-E.
Questioning correctness of the judgment of the High
Court learned counsel for the appellant submitted the High
Court clearly missed to notice the basic issues involved. The
transactions being undisputedly inter-State transactions, the
State legislature had no competence to provide for deduction
of tax at the time of making purchase. Strong reliance was
placed on the decisions of this Court in Steel Authority of
India Ltd. v. State of Orissa and others [2000 (3) SCC 200]
and Nathpa Jhakri Joint Venture v. State of H.P. and Others
[2000 (3) SCC 319] with reference to the decisions of this
Court in M/s Bhawani Cotton Mills Ltd. v. State of Punjab and
Anr. (AIR 1967 SC 1616). It was submitted that when a
person has ultimately no liability to pay tax, he cannot be
compelled to go through the procedure provided under the
statute for the purpose of assessment and determination of tax
liability, if any. It was pointed out that the notice issued itself
accepted the position that the transaction was an inter-State
one.
In response, learned counsel for the respondent-State
submitted that the High Court has rightly upheld the
constitutional validity of Section 8-E of the Act. According to
him, the High Court should have dismissed the writ petition
on the preliminary ground that alternative remedy was
available.
Coming to the plea of alternative remedy, we find that
such a plea does not appear to have been raised by the
respondent as there is no discussion in the High Court’s
judgment in this regard. Further, the constitutional validity of
Section 8-E issue could not have been decided by the
statutory authorities. Be that as it may, we find that the High
Court has thoroughly confused the issues. The decisions of
this Court in Steel Authority of India’s case (supra) and M/s
Nathpa Jhakri’s case (supra) related to legislative competence
in the matter of deduction of tax under a state statute in
respect of an inter-state transaction. The High Court
commented upon the correctness of the judgments observing
that several larger Benches decisions were not considered. To
say the least the High Court’s approach is inappropriate. The
decisions in Steel Authority’s case (supra) and M/s Nathpa
Jhakri’s case (supra) related to issues on which there appears
to be no contrary view taken by any larger Bench. The High
Court could not have sat in judgment over the correctness of
the judgments of this Court. The High Court appears to have
proceeded on the basis that this Court should have read down
the provisions under consideration to uphold them. What is
the basic fallacy in this approach is illuminatingly analysed in
Minerva Mills Ltd. and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors. (1980
(3) SCC 625). In paragraphs 64 and 65, the concept of reading
down was succinctly stated as follows:
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"64. xxx xxx xxx
The principle of reading down the provisions of
a law for the purpose of saving it from a
constitutional challenge is well-known. But we
find it impossible to accept the contention of
the learned Counsel in this behalf because, to
do so will involve a gross distortion of the
principle of reading down, depriving that
doctrine of its only or true rationale when
words of width are used inadvertently. The
device of reading down is not to be resorted to
in order to save the susceptibilities of the law
makers, nor indeed to imagine a law of one’s
liking to have been passed. One must at least
take the Parliament at its word when,
especially, it undertakes a constitutional
amendment.
65. xxx xxx xxx
If the Parliament has manifested a clear
intention to exercise an unlimited power, it is
impermissible to read down the amplitude of
that power so as to make it limited. The
principle of reading clown cannot be invoked
or applied in opposition to the clear intention
of the legislature. We suppose that in the
history of the constitutional law, no
constitutional amendment has ever been read
down to mean the exact opposite of what it
says and intends. In fact, to accept the
argument that we should read down Article
31C, so as to make it conform to the ratio of
the majority decision in Kesavananda Bharati
is to destroy the avowed purpose of Article 31C
as indicated by the very heading "Saving of
certain laws" under which Articles 31A, 31B
and 31C are grouped. Since the amendment to’
Article 31C was unquestionably made with a
view to empowering the legislatures to pass
laws of a particular description even if those
laws violate the discipline of Articles 14 and
19, it seems to us Impossible to hold that we
should still save Article 31C from the challenge
of unconstitutionality by reading into that
Article words which destroy the rationale-of
that Article and an intendment which is
plainly contrary to its proclaimed purpose."
There is no, and can be none, quarrel to the proposition
that if on one construction a given statute will become ultra
vires the powers of the Legislature whereas on another
construction, which may be open, the statute remains effective
and operative, the Court will prefer the latter, on the ground
that the Legislature is presumed not to have intended an
excess of its jurisdiction. But as observed by Holmes J. in
Northern Securities Company v. United States 193 US 197,
the rule requires that "the statute must be construed in such
a way as not merely to save its constitutionality but so far as it
is consistent with fair interpretation, not to raise grave doubts
on that score".
The rule does not apply when the offending words have
only one meaning e.g. when the restricted meaning makes
them useless or redundant (See M.P. Cement Manufacturers’
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Association v. State of M.P. and Ors. (2004 (2) SCC 249).
In other words, the rule applies only where two views are
possible as to the meaning of the statutory language. In
neither Steel Authority’s case (supra) nor M/s Nathpa Jhakri’s
case (supra) that was the position. The basic issue related to
power to provide for any deduction of tax in respect of inter-
state transactions. There was no issue relating to intra-state
transactions. Therefore, the question of any reading down was
of no relevance.
In Steel Authority of India’s case (supra) it was inter alia
observed as follows:
8. By virtue of Entry 54 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule read with Article 246 of the
Constitution of India, the States are
empowered to levy taxes on the sale or
purchase of goods, other than newspapers.
The Forty-sixth Amendment to the
Constitution introduced, inter alia, Clause
(29A) (b) in Article 366 of the Constitution; as a
result, tax on the purchase or sale of goods
included a tax "on the transfer of property in
goods (whether as goods or in some other form)
involved in the execution of a works contract".
Article 286(1) of the Constitution states that no
law of a State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of a tax on the sale or purchase of
goods where such sale or purchase takes place
outside the State or in the course of the import
of goods into, or export of goods out of the
territory of India. Article 286(2) authorises
Parliament by law to formulate principles for
determining when a sale or purchase of goods
takes place in any of the ways mentioned in
sub-Article (1). Acting upon this power,
Parliament has set out in Sections 3, 4 and 5
of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 principles
for determining when a sale or purchase of
goods can be said to take place in the course of
inter-State, trade or commerce, when a sale or
purchase of goods can be said to take place
outside the State and when a sale or purchase
of goods can be said to take place in the course
of import or export. In Gannon Dunkerley and
Co. and Ors. v. State of Rajasthan and Ors.,
1993 (1) SCC 364, this Court has held that it
is necessary to exclude from the value of a
works contract the value of goods which are
not taxable by a State in view of Sections 3, 4
and 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. The
value of goods involved in the execution of a
works contract has to be determined after
making these exclusions from the value of the
works contract.
13. There can be no doubt, upon a plain
interpretation of Section 13AA, that it is
enacted for the purposes of deduction at
source of the State sales tax that is payable by
a contractor on the value of a works contract.
For the purposes of the deduction neither the
owner nor the Commissioner who issues to the
contractor a certificate under Section 13AA(5)
is entitled to take into account the fact that the
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works contract involves transfer of property in
goods consequent upon of an inter-State sale,
an outside sale or a sale in the course of
import. The owner is required by Section
13AA(1) to deposit towards the contractor’s
liability to State sales tax four per cent of such
amount as he credits or pays to the contractor,
regardless of the fact that the value of the
works contract includes the value of inter-
State sales, outside sales or sales in the course
of import. There is, in our view, therefore, no
doubt that the provisions of Section 13AA are
beyond the powers of the State legislature for
the State legislature may make no law levying
sales tax on inter-State sales, outside sales or
sales in the course of import."
In M/s Nathpa Jhakri’s case (supra) the view expressed
in Steel Authority of India’s case (supra) was reiterated.
The High Court also observed that it was reading down
and narrowing down the language of the provision to sustain
the constitutional validity of the same. It was observed that
the language of Section 8-E can be narrowed down so as to
make it applicable only to intra-state sales/purchases. The
appellant in fact raised the dispute on the factual aspects
contending that the transaction was one of inter-state
character. Its emphasis was on the validity of the provision
vis-‘-vis inter-state transactions. There was no necessity of
any reading down as there was no dispute in the case at hand
relating to intra-state sales. The question of appellant having
liability to pay purchase tax was also not a relevant factor for
determination of the basic question regarding validity of
Section 8-E. The nature of a transaction cannot be decided on
the basis of the provisions of a taxation statute. It has to be
factually examined. The High Court instead of focussing on
the factual aspects dealt with issues not relevant, and that too
giving clearly indefensible interpretations. The factual aspects
should have been asked to be dealt with by the authorities.
By directing the authorities to do it after laying down the law,
which as noted down was not the correct position in law,
would really serve no purpose. On the facts of the case, there
is no need to decide the question relating to validity of Section
8-E of the Act except stating that the provision is subject to
what has been stated in Steel Authority’s case (supra) and
M/s Nathpa Jhakri’s case (supra), for which the factual
determination has to be done by the authorities. Therefore, we
allow the appeal subject to the following directions:
(1) The reply filed by the appellant on 11.7.2001 shall be
dealt with by the respondent no. 3 in accordance with law.
The said authority shall decide as to the nature of the
transaction i.e. whether it is of intra- state or inter-state
character. If it is of inter-State character, the decisions in
Steel Authority’s case (supra) and Nathpa Jhakri case (supra)
shall apply. Section 8-E, therefore, cannot be held applicable
to inter-State transactions.
(2) The question whether the appellant has any liability to
pay purchase tax shall not be dealt with in the proceedings
relating to which the notice was issued on 8.7.2001 and the
reply was filed on 11.7.2001.
(3) It will be for the appellant to establish that the
transaction in question was of inter-State character.
(4) The appellants shall be given opportunity to file further
reply and place such materials as according to it are relevant
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before the concerned authority within four weeks from today.
(5) Considering the reply and further reply and materials to
be placed for consideration by the appellant, the concerned
trade tax authority shall decide the issue in accordance with
law.
Before we part with the case, it would be appropriate to
remind the legislatures of what was stated in Bhawani Cotton
Mill’s case (supra) that if a person is not liable for payment of
tax at all, at any time, the collection of a tax from him, with a
possible contingency of refund at a later stage, will not make
the original levy valid, because if sales or purchases are
exempt from taxation altogether, they can never be taken into
account, at any stage, for the purpose of calculating or
arriving at the taxable turnover and for levying tax. The view
was reiterated in Steel Authority’s case (supra) and Nathpa
Jhakri case (supra). In the latter case, it was noted, echoing
the view in Bhawani Cotton Mill’s case (supra) that it is no
solace to say that such a person can get refund after
completion of assessment. If the principles indicated in these
cases are followed, large number of unnecessary litigations
can be avoided.
The appeal is allowed to the aforesaid extent without any
order as to costs.