Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DHARANGADHARA TRADING CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1988
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 SCR (3) 805 1988 SCC (3) 462
JT 1988 (2) 270 1988 SCALE (1)852
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956: Section 3-Assessee-
Manufacturer-Booked goods to destinations as required by out
of State buyers-Only documents of title handed over to
Trading Company-Nature of sales by Manufacturer to Trading
Company-Whether interstate or intra-state.
HEADNOTE:
An agreement was entered into by Dharangadhara Chemical
Works Ltd. (Chemical Company) for the sale of all its
products to the respondent (Trading Company). The agreement
contained general terms; and the actual quantity sold, the
sale price, the booking station and the destination stations
were to be determined in the actual contracts for sale in
respect of definite or specified quantities. The mode in
which sales were effected was that the respondent Trading
Company used to obtain orders from out of State buyers, and
enter into agreements of purchase with the Chemical Company
for these specified quantities. All the goods sold under
these contracts of sale were booked at a particular railway
station in the State to the various places outside the
State, where buyers from the respondent Trading Company
required the goods and then the railway receipts and
invoices concerned were endorsed and handed over to the
respondent Trading Company.
In the assessment order for the assessment year 1980-81
the assessing authority treated the sales effected by the
Chemical Company to the respondent Trading Company as intra-
State sales and those by the respondent Trading Company to
the out of State buyers as inter-State sales falling under
s. 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. The assessees,
namely, the Chemical Company and the respondent Trading
Company filed appeals before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner contending that sales by the Chemical Company
to the respondent Trading Company were also inter-State
sales as these sales were completed by the delivery of
railway receipts and invoices only after the inter-State
journey of the goods had commenced. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner dismissed the appeals.
Both the assessees filed appeals to the Tribunal. After
considering
806
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the manner in which the sales were effected and despatches
made by the Chemical Company and examining some specimen
orders placed by respondent Trading Company with the
Chemical Company, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that
delivery was effected by the Chemical Company to the
respondent Trading Company by delivery of documents of
title, namely, the receipts of invoices and the railway
receipts and allowed the appeals.
The High Court upheld the views of the Tribunal and
dismissed the revision petitions filed by the State.
In the appeals by the State it was contended that the
first set of sales by the Chemical Company to the respondent
Company were local or intra-State sales, because under the
agreement the delivery was to be effected at the booking
stations.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: The orders were placed for booking specified
goods to out of State buyers and the Chemical Company never
gave physical delivery of the goods to the respondent
Trading Company but booked the goods to the destinations as
required by the out of State buyers and merely handed over
documents of title to the respondent Trading Company. The
movement of the goods from the State to the outside State
was occasioned by the terms of the contract themselves and
the sales were inter-State sales falling under-sub-s. (a) of
s. 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. Alternatively,
since the deliveries of goods sold were effected by the
transfer of documents after the movement of the goods from
the State to the other States had commenced, the sales could
be regarded as covered under sub-s. (b) of s. 3 of the Act.
[809GH; 810A-B]
The agreement entered into by the Chemical Company with
the respondent Trading Company is merely a general
agreement. The actual terms of the contracts of sales as
well as the instructions of the out of State buyers have to
be taken into account in determining the nature of the sales
in question. [810E-F]
The conclusion arrived at by the Tribunal as well as
the High Court that the sales by the Chemical Company to the
respondent Trading Company were inter-State sales cannot
therefore be faulted. [810F]
Union of India & Anr. v. K.G. Khosla & Co. (P) Ltd. &
Ors., [1979] 3 S.C.R. 453 at p. 460, relied on.
807
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 619 (NT)
of 1975.
From the Judgment and Order dated 11.7.1973 of the High
Court of Madras in Tax Case No. 2 of 1970.
R. Mohan for the Appellant.
K. Rajendra Choudhary for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal against the common judgment
of a Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature at
Madras in Tax Cases Nos. 2 & 3 of 1970. The appeal has been
preferred pursuant to special leave granted by this Court
under Article 136 of the Constitution of India.
The facts giving rise to the appeal are as follows:
The Dharangadhara Chemical Works Ltd. is a manufacturer
of Caustic Soda and certain other chemicals. Dharangadhara
Chemicals Works Ltd. (referred to hereinafter as "the
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Chemical Company") entered into an agreement dated 9th
August, 1957 under which it agreed to sell all its products
to Dharangadhara Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. (referred hereinafter
as "the Trading Company"). Under clause 1 of the said
agreement, the Chemical Company agreed to confine the sale
of all the products manufactured by it at all its works to
the Trading Co. for a period of 5 years from the 1st day of
March, 1958. Clause 2 of the agreement provided, the
Chemical Co. would make the sales directly to the Trading
Co. on a principal to principal basis against offers or
indents. Clause 3 provided that the selling price would be
determined by the Board of Directors of the Chemical Co. on
the basis of ex-factory or F.O.R. at booking or F.O.R.
destination stations as decided upon by the Directors. The
delivery of the goods would, however, be given F.O.R. at
booking stations. The Trading Co. would make payments to the
Chemical Co. within one month from the date of supply or
sale of goods by the Chemical Co. Pursuant to this
agreement, sales were effected by the Chemical Co. to the
Trading Co. Although the aforesaid agreement contained the
general terms as set out earlier, neither the booking
stations, nor the destination stations nor the sale price
were given in the said agree-
808
ment. The Trading Co. used to given directions to the
Chemical Co. for despatching specified quantities of goods
to the stations named by the Trading Co. and as per these
directions, the Chemical Co. booked the goods at the booking
station which was invariably Arunuganeri Railway Station in
the State of Tamil Nadu, showing themselves as the
consignors and the Trading Co. as the consignees of the
goods specified in that contract of sale. After booking the
goods, the invoices were handed over to the Trading Co. by
the Chemical Co. It may be mentioned that the actual
quantities sold, the sale price, the booking station and the
destination stations were not determined under the aforesaid
agreement of 9th August, 1957, but in the actual contracts
of sale in respect of definite or specified quantities. The
mode in which sales were made was that the Trading Co.
obtained orders from out of State buyers and entered into
agreement of purchase with the Chemical Co. for these
specified quanities. All the goods sold under these
contracts of sale were booked at the aforesaid railway
station in Tamil Nadu to the various places outside the
State of Tamil Nadu where buyers from the Trading Co.
required the goods and after the goods were booked as
aforesaid on the railway, the railway receipts and the
invoices concerned were endorsed and handed over to the
Trading Co.
Admittedly, as pointed out by the Tribunal, there were
two sets of sales, one by the Chemical Co. to the Trading
Co. and the second by the Trading Co. to the various out of
State buyers. In the original assessment order for the
assessment year 1961-62 made by the Sales Tax Officer, both
the sales by the Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. and the
sales by the Trading Co. to the out State buyers were
treated as inter-State sales. Consequently, Central Sales-
tax was levied on the first sale, but not on the second
sale. This assessment order was revised and under the
revised assessment order the assessing authority treated the
sales effected by the Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. as
intra-State sales and the sales effected by the Trading Co.
to the out of State buyers as inter-state sales falling
under Section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. The
assessees, namely, the Chemical Co. as well as the Trading
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Co. filed appeals before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner contending that both the said sales were inter-
state sales. It was contended by the assessee that the sales
by the Trading Co. to the out of State purchasers were
admittedly inter-state sales and as far as sales by the
Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. were concerned, these were
also inter-state sales as the sales were completed by the
delivery
809
of railway receipts and invoices only after the inter-state
journey of the goods had commenced. These contentions were
rejected by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, who
dismissed the appeals. Both the assessees filed appeals
against the decisions of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner to the Tribunal. The Tribunal allowed both the
appeals.
The Tribunal pointed out that there were two sets of
sales, the second set of sales by the Trading Co. to out of
State buyers was admittedly inter-state in character. The
Trading Co. had filed necessary ‘E-1’ forms and ’C’ forms in
these cases and the transactions, therefore, fell within the
scope of Section 6(2)(B) of the Central Sales Tax Act and
were exempt from tax under local Sales Tax Act as well as
the Central Sales Tax Act. As far as first set of sales,
namely, by the Chemical Co. to Trading Co. were concerned,
it was pointed out that although under the agreement dated
9th August, 1957 the sales were agreed to be ’F.O.R. Booking
Stations’ and the booking station was in Tamil Nadu, the
delivery of goods could be either by physical delivery or by
handing over documents of title. The delivery contemplated
in the agreement was not actual physical delivery, as the
place of delivery was neither seller’s place of business,
nor the buyers’ place of business. Considering the manner in
which the sales were effected and despatches made by the
Chemical Co., and after examining some specimen orders
placed by the Trading Co. with the Chemical Co., the
Tribunal came to conclusion that the delivery was effected
by the Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. by delivery of
documents of title, namely, the respective invoices and the
railway receipts. The nature of sales by the Chemical Co. to
the Trading Co. and the question whether they were inter-
state sales had to be decided after further taking into
account the further instructions given by the buyers. The
actual terms of the sales have to be determined not merely
under the agreement dated 9th August, 1957 as that agreement
was a general agreement which did not specify the quantities
to be sold, the sale price, booking stations, the
destination stations, and so on, but these actual terms
could be determined only by taking into account the terms on
which and the manner in which the actual sales were made by
the Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. For ascertaining these
terms, the Tribunal examined some of the subsequent orders
placed by that Trading Co. on the Chemical Co. Taking into
account all these, the Tribunal found that as the orders
were placed for booking, specified goods to out of station
buyers, and the Chemical Co. never give physical delivery of
the goods to the Trading Co., but booked the goods to the
destinations as required by the out of state buyers and
merely handed over documents of title to the Trading Co. It
was clear that the movement of the goods
810
from the State of Tamil Nadu to the outside States was
occasioned by the terms of the contract themselves and the
sales were inter-state sales falling within Section 3, Sub-
section (a) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.
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Alternatively, if a view were taken that the sales did not
fall under Sub-section (a) of Section 3, the deliveries of
goods sold were effected by the transfer of documents after
the movement of the goods from Tamil Nadu to the other
States had commenced and the sales could be regarded as
covered under Sub-section (b) of Section 3 of the Central
Sales Tax Act. From this decision of the Tribunal, Revision
Petitions under Section 38 of the Tamil Nadu General Sales
Tax Act were preferred by the State of Tamil Nadu to the
Madras High Court. The High Court upheld the views of the
Tribunal and dismissed both the Revision Petitions which
were numbered as Tax Cases Nos. 2 and 3 respectively. An
appeal was preferred by the State in the case of the Trading
Co., namely, the case pertaining to the assessment of the
sales from Chemical Co. to the Trading Co.
The only submission advanced by Mr. Mohan, learned,
counsel for the appellant, was that there were two sets of
sales, namely, by the Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. and by
the Trading Co. to the out of State buyers. It was submitted
by him that the first set of sales, namely, by the Chemical
Co. to the Trading Co. were local or intrastate sales
because under the agreement dated 9th August, 1957 the
delivery was to be effected at the booking station. In our
view, as the Tribunal has rightly pointed out, the agreement
dated 9th August, 1957 is merely a general agreement and the
actual terms of the contracts of sales as well as the
instructions of the out of state buyers have to be taken
into account in determining the nature of the sales in
question. In view of this, the conclusions arrived at by the
Tribunal as well as the High Court that the sales by the
Chemical Co. to the Trading Co. were inter-state sales
cannot be faulted and the learned counsel for the appellant
has not advanced a single reason showing how that conclusion
is incorrect. In fact, this conclusion finds some support
from the observations of this Court in Union of India & Anr.
v. K. G. Khosla & Co. (P) Ltd. & Ors., [1979] 3 S.C.R. 453
at p. 460.
In the result, we find that there is no merit in the
appeal and it must fail. The appeal is dismissed with costs.
N.P.V. Appeal dismissed.
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