Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. GEORGE OAKES (P.) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/04/1961
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1037 1962 SCR (2) 570
CITATOR INFO :
F 1962 SC1352 (5,6)
R 1966 SC1738 (10)
RF 1967 SC1895 (24)
RF 1971 SC2216 (11)
RF 1975 SC 198 (13)
D 1975 SC1801 (2)
D 1977 SC1459 (17)
RF 1977 SC2279 (27)
R 1978 SC1496 (8)
RF 1981 SC 440 (13,14)
RF 1986 SC 649 (35,39)
F 1987 SC 611 (5,9)
ACT:
Sales Tax-Turnover-If includes tax collected by seller-
Deeming statute Constitutionality Constitution of India,
Entry 54, List II Seventh Schedule-Government of India Act,
1935 (26 Geo. 5 & 1 Ed. 8 Ch. 2), Entry 48, List 11, Sch.
VII-Madras General Sales Tax Act, (Mad. Act IX of 1939),
SS. 2(i), 2(h), 8BMadras General Sales (Definition of
Turnover and Validation of Assessments) Act, 1954 (Mad.
XVII Of 1954), SS. 2, 3-Turnover and Assessment Rules, rr.
4, 5, 6, 11.
HEADNOTE:
Certain amounts collected by the appellants as sales tax
were included in their turnover by the sales tax
authorities. They contested the constitutional validity of
the Madras General Sales (Definition of Turnover and
Validation of Assessments) Act, 1954, on the ground inter
alia that the Sate Legislature went beyond its legislative
competence under entry 54 of List If of the Constitution in
enacting by the impugned Act that the amounts collected by
the dealer by way of tax shall be deemed to have formed part
of his turnover.
Held, that entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule of
the Constitution is similar to entry 48 of List 11 of Sch.
Vil of the Government of India Act, 1935 sales under which
have been held to be transactions passing title to the Goods
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from the seller to the buyer and that a mere executory
agreement was not a sale within the meaning of that entry.
The same meaning must be given to entry 54.
571
State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerly & Co., Ltd., [1959]
S.C.R. 379 and Sales Tax Officer v. M/s. Budh Prakash jai
Prakash, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243, referred to.
Under ss. 2(i) and 2(h) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act,
1939, the expression "turnover" means the aggregate amount
for which goods are sold either for cash or deferred payment
or other Valuable consideration, and when a sale attracts
purchase tax which is passed on to the consumer what the
buyer has to pay includes the tax and the aggregate amount
to be paid would fall under the definition of turnover.
When the seller passes on the tax and the buyer agrees to
pay sales tax in addition to the price, the tax is really
part of the entitle considerations.
Papreka Ltd. v. Board of Trade, [1944] 1 All E.R. 372, Love
v. Norman Wright (Builders) Ltd., [1944] 1 All E. R. 618,
followed.
Asoka Marketing Co. Ltd. v. The State of Bihar, [1959] IO
S.T.C. 110 and Tata Iron and Steel Co. v. The State of
Bihar, [1958] S.C.R. 1355, referred to.
Although s. 8B of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 and
the Turnover and Assessment Rules separately mentioned the
amounts collected as tax for the purpose of paying such
amounts to the Government, no immutable distinction was
drawn between the sale price and the tax nor was any such
distinction maintained under S. 2 of the impugned Act.
Assuming that such a distinction did exist the Legislature
was competent to enact under entry 54 in List II of the
Constitution that the tax shall be deemed to have formed
part of the turnover and obliterate the distinction for the
limited period during which the impugned Act operated. The
impugned Act was therefore valid.
The Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes v. M. Kyishna-
swami Mudaliar, [1954] 5 S.T.C. 88, held not applicable.
Sri Sundararajan & Co. v. The State of Madras, [1956] 7
S.T.C. 105, approved.
The Government of Andhya v. East India Commercial Co., Ltd.,
[1957] 8 S.T.C. 114 and Bengal Immunity Co., Ltd. v. State
Of Bihar,[1955] 2 S.C.R. 603, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 280 and
281 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 20, 1956, of
the Madras High Court, in T. R. C. Nos. 101 and 102 of 1956.
B. Ganapathy Iyer and G. Gopalakrishnan, for the
appellant.
M. M. Ismail and T. M. Sen, for the respondent.
572
D. V. Sastri and T. M. Sen, for Intervener No. 1.
Naunit Lal, for Intervener No. 2.
S. M. Sikri, Advocate-General, Punjab and D. Gupta, for
Intervener No. 3.
S. M. Sikri, Advocate-General, Punjab, N. S. Bindra and D.
Gupta, for Intervener No. 4.
G. C. Kasliwal, Advocate-General, Rajasthan, S. K. Kapur
and D. Gupta, for Intervener No. 5.
1961. April 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. K. DAS, J.-These are two appeals on certificates
granted by the High Court of Madras and consolidated by its
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orders dated March 22, 1957. They are from the judgment and
orders of the said High Court dated April 20, 1956 and July
30, 1956 in two Tax Revision Cases, by which the High Court
dismissed two petitions filed by the appellants under s. 12-
B of the Madras General Sales Tax Act (Madras Act IX of
1939), hereinafter called the principal Act, in the fol-
lowing circumstances.
Messrs. George Oakes (Private) Limited, appellants herein,
are dealers in Ford motor cars, spare parts and accessories.
For the two years 1951-52 and 1952-53 the appellants
submitted their returns under the relevant provisions of the
principal Act and claimed exemption from tax with regard to
certain amount realised on transactions of sales which the
appellants contended were inter-State sales and hence exempt
from tax under Art. 286 of the Constitution as it stood at
the relevant time. The Deputy Commercial Tax Officer,
Madras, not only rejected the claim of exemption, but added
to the turnover certain amounts which the appellants had
collected by way of tax. The amounts so added for 1951-52
were -(a) Rs. 8,000 to the net turnover assessable at 3
pies per rupee, and (b) Rs. 4,30,000 to the turnover
assessable at 9 pies per rupee. For 1952-53 the amounts so
added were -(a) Rs. 30,132 odd and (b) Rs. 2,92,257 odd res-
pectively.
Aggrieved by the orders of the Deputy Commercial
573
Tax Officer, the appellants preferred two appeals to the
Special Commercial Tax Officer, Appeals, Madras City. These
appeals were dismissed. The matter was then taken to the
Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal by means of two appeals. By
this time the Madras Legislature had passed the Madras
General Sales (Definition of Turnover and Validation of
Assessments) Act, 1954, being Madras Act No. XVII of 1954.
This Act we shall refer to as the impugned Act in this
judgment, because its constitutional validity is now the
only question for decision in these appeals. The Tribunal
negatived the claim of the appellants arising out of the
contention that some of the sale transactions in the
relevant years were in effect interState sales and therefore
exempt from tax; the tribunal declined to go into the second
question of the constitutional validity of the impugned Act.
We may state here, though nothing now turns upon this, that
the Tribunal held that when sales tax was included in the
turnover, it was proper to tax the amounts so included at
the minimum rate only, viz., 3 pies in the rupee under s.
3(1) of the principal Act.
Thereafter the appellants filed two revision petitions to
the High Court under s. 12-B of the principal Act. These
were dismissed in limine. By the orders dated April 20,
1956 the High Court held that the contention as to some of
the transactions being inter-State sales was concluded by
one of its earlier decisions, which came before us in Ashok
Leyland Ltd. v. The State of Madras, Civil Appeal No. 446 of
1958. In that appeal we delivered judgment on March 28,
1961 and held that the Sales Tax Laws (Validation) Act, 1956
applied and it was unnecessary to consider the true nature
of the transactions which the appellants contended were
inter-State sales. Learned Counsel for the appellants has
conceded before us that decision governs the present
appeals, and the first question no longer survives.
As to the second question, the High Court by oversight did
not deal with it in its orders dated April 20, 1956. When
the matter was brought to the notice of
73
574
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the High Court, it said in its orders dated July 30, 1956
that the second question was also concluded by its decision
in Sri Sundararajan and Co., Ltd. v. The State of Madras(’)
where the validity of the impugned Act was upheld.
When we heard these appeals along with Ashok Leyland Ltd. v.
The State of Madras, Civil Appeal No. 446 of 1958, we
expressed the view that there was some divergence of opinion
in the High Courts on the second question and the
substantial point for consideration before us was whether
the impugned Act was validly made under entry 54 of the
State List in the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution: thus
the question raised was one of legislative competence and
affected all the States. The State of Madras was already a
party respondent to these appeals. Accordingly, we directed
the issue of notices to the Advocates-General of all other
States also. In pursuance of the said notices the
Advocates-General of Andhra Pradesh, Assam, West Bengal,
Gujarat, Maharashtra, Punjab and Rajasthan have appeared
before us. They have unanimously supported the State of
Madras in its submission that the impugned Act is valid;
some of them have added supplementary arguments in support
of that submission.
For convenience and brevity we shall refer in this judgment
to the main arguments as representing two differing points
of view; firstly, there is the argument on behalf of the
appellants that the several provisions of the principal Act
as also s. 2 of the impugned Act make a distinction between
the sale price of goods sold and the amount collected by way
of tax and in view of that distinction made, What the
impugned Act seeks to impose is a ’tax on Sales-tax’ a
subject which does not come within the ambit of entry 54 of
List II which at the relevant time read as "Taxes on the
sale or purchase of goods other than newspapers." On the
other side, the argument is that what the impugned Act seeks
to do is to enlarge the scope of the definition of
’turnover’ so as to include the amount collected by way of
tax in the turnover by a deeming
(1) (1956) 7 S.T.C. 105.
575
provision, and this the State Legislature was competent to
enact under entry 54 of the State List. These are the main
arguments on two sides; but there are several subsidiary
points in support of the main argument on each side, and it
would be an over simplification to ignore these altogether.
We shall, therefore, consider them also when dealing with
the main argument on each side.
We shall first refer to the relevant provisions of the
principal Act and of the impugned Act, in so far as they
bear on the points debated before us. Under s. 3 of the
principal Act which is the charging section, every dealer is
liable to pay, subject to the provisions of the Act, for
each year a tax on his total turnover for that year
calculated at a particular percentage of such turnover.
What is ’turnover’ is defined in s. 2(i). The definition
substantially states-"’turnover’ means the aggregate amount
for which goods are either bought or sold by a dealer
whether for cash or for deferred payment or other valuable
consideration....... ’Sale’ is defined in s. 2(h) and means
(we are reading so much of the definition only as is
material for our purpose) "every transfer of property in
goods by one person to another in the course of trade or
business for cash or deferred payment or other valuable
consideration." It is worthy of note here that the tax
imposed by the principal Act is a tax on total turnover, and
turnover means the aggregate amount for which goods are
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either bought or sold by a dealer. Therefore, one of the
questions which fall for consideration is whether the State
Legislature went beyond its legislative competence in
enacting by the impugned Act that the amounts collected by
the dealer by way of tax shall be deemed to have formed part
of his turnover. This brings us to s. 8B of the principal
Act, which provides in sub-s. (1) that no person who is not
a registered dealer shall collect any amount by way of tax;
nor shall a registered dealer make any such collection
except in accordance with such conditions and restrictions,
if any, as may be prescribed; sub-s. (2) provides inter alia
that every person who has collected or collects by way of
tax any amounts shall pay
576
over the same to the State Government. Section 15 provides
for penalties for a, contravention of some of the provisions
of the principal Act including the provisions of s. 8B.
In The Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Coimbatore
Division v. M. Krighnaswami Mudaliar & Sons (1) the Madras
High Court held that the amount collected by a registered
dealer from the consumer by way of sales tax and paid over
to -Government should not be included in the turnover of the
registered dealer as part of the sale price of the goods
sold and it was not liable to be taxed again. This decision
was given on January 7, 1954. In July 1954 was enacted the
impugned Act sections 2 and 3 whereof need only be set out
here.
"S. 2. Sales Tax Collections by dealers to be
deemed part of turnover.-In the case of sales
made by a dealer before the 1st April 1954,
amounts collected by him by way of tax under
the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939
(Madras Act IX of 1939) (hereinafter referred
to as the principal Act), shall be deemed to
have formed part of his turnover.
3. Validation of certain assessment and
collections.-
(1) All assessments, and collections made,
all orders passed, all actions taken by any
officer in the exercise or purported exercise
of jurisdiction or power conferred by the
principal Act, and all judgments, decrees or
orders pronounced by any Tribunal or Court in
the exercise of its jurisdiction or powers
with respect to matters in the principal Act,
on the basis that amounts collected by a
dealer by way of tax under the principal Act
before the 1st April 1954, formed part of the
turnover of the dealer are hereby declared to
have been validly made, passed, taken or
pronounced, as the case may be; and any
finding recorded by any officer, Tribunal or
Court to a contrary effect and any order,
judgment or decree in so far as such order,
judgment or decree embodied or is based on any
such finding and does not relate merely to the
costs of the proceeding which result in the
judgment, decree or order shall be void and of
no effect:
(2) [1954] 5 S.T.C. 88.
577
Provided that no act or omission on the part
of any person shall be punishable as an
offence which would not have been so
punishable if this Act had not been passed.
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(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall be
construed as authorising any officer, in
assessing any dealer in s the exercise or
purported exercise of jurisdiction or powers
conferred by the principal Act, to include in
the turnover of the dealer amounts collected
by him after the 1st April 1954 by way of tax
under the principal Act."
The validity of the impugned Act was then questioned in the
Madras High Court and in Sri Sundararajan and Co., Ltd. v.
The State of Madras (1) it was held that the impugned Act
was valid. The High Court pointed out that the earlier
decision in Krishnaswami Mudaliar’s case (2) was not that
the State Legislature could not make the amounts collected
by a registered dealer by way of tax under s. 8B part of the
assessable turnover, but that the principal Act as it stood
at the relevant time did not make such amounts part of the
assessable turnover. It held that in pith and substance the
impugned Act validated the assessments already made before
April 1, 1954 and that -even where the registered dealer
collected any amount by way of tax under the authority of s.
8B, the payment by the purchaser was on the occasion of the
sale by the dealer and vis-a-vis the latter it was in
reality part of the price the purchaser paid the seller for
purchasing the goods. The same view was also expressed -by
the Patna High Court in Ashoka Marketing Company Ltd. v. The
State of Bihar (3) with regard to the Bihar Sales Tax
(Definition of Turnover and Validation of Assessments) Act,
1958. The question before us is whether the aforesaid view
is correct.
The relevant legislative entry, as we have said earlier, is
entry 54 of List II-"Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods
other than newspapers." A similar entry (no. 48) in List 11
of Schedule VII to the Government of India Act, 1935 read as
"Taxes on the
(1) [1956] 7 S.T.C. 105. (2) [1954] 5 S.T.C. 88.
(3) [1959] 10 S.T.C. 110,
578
sale of goods." The true scope and effect of that entry was
considered by this Court in the State of Madras v. Gannon
Dunkerley and Co. (Madras) Ltd. (1) and on a review of
several decisions bearing on the subject it held that
the expression "sale of goods" was a term of well-recognised
legal import in the general law relating to sale of goods
and in the, legislative practice relating to that topic and
must be interpreted as having the same meaning as in the
Sale of Goods Act, 1930; in other words, it was held that
sales contemplated by entry 48 of the Government of India
Act, 1935 were transactions in which title to the goods
passed from the seller to the buyer, and in The Sales Tax
Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs. Budh Prakash Jai Prakash (2)
it was held that a mere executory agreement was not a sale
within the meaning of that entry. We think that the same
meaning must be given to entry 54 of List 11 of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. The question before us is
that giving that meaning to the entry, is the impugned Act a
valid piece of legislation by a competent Legislature?
Now, learned Counsel for the appellants has not raised
before us the extreme contention that in no case could the
State Legislature validly make a law which would include the
amount collected by way of tax as part of the turnover of
the dealer. He has submitted that it is unnecessary for him
in this case to press into service any such wide
proposition. His argument is that the principal Act by ss.
8B and 15 and the impugned Act by s. 2 thereof having made a
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distinction between what he calls the sale price and what is
collected by way of tax by the dealer, the question of the
validity of the impugned Act must be determined on the basis
of that distinction and so determined, what the impugned Act
does is to impose what learned Counsel calls "a tax on tax"
and therefore not covered by the relevant legislative entry.
His submission further is that what is collected by way of
tax being distinct from sale price and therefore from
turnover, it must be necessarily held that the amount
collected by way of tax is not essentially
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243.
579
connected with the transaction of sale and therefore the
imposition of "a tax on tax" has no necessary connexion
with the transaction of sale as understood in the general
law relating to sale of goods.
We are unable to accept this argument as correct. First of
all, we do not think that either the principal Act or the
impugned Act proceeds,on any immutable distinction between
sale price and tax such as learned Counsel for the
appellants has suggested. The principal Act does not
contain any separate definition of sale price. We have
already referred to the definitions of ’sale’ and
’turnover’; those definitions do not show any such
distinction. On the contrary, the expression ’turnover’
means the aggregate amount for which goods are bought or
sold, whether for cash or for deferred payment or other
valuable consideration, and when a sale attracts purchase
tax and the tax is passed on to the consumer, what the buyer
has to pay for the goods includes the tax as well and the
aggregate amount so paid would fall within the definition of
turnover. In Paprika Ltd. and Another v. Board of Trade (1)
Lawrence, J. said "Whenever a sale attracts purchase tax,
that tax presumably affects the price which the seller who
is liable to pay the tax demands but it does not cease to be
the price which the buyer has to pay even if the price is
expressed as x plus purchase tax." The same view was again
expressed in Love v. Norman Wright (Builders), Ltd. (2) when
Goddard, L. J. said:
"Where an article is taxed, whether by
purchase tax, customs duty, or excise duty,
the tax becomes part of the price which
ordinarily the buyer will have to pay. The
price of an ounce of tobacco is what it is
because of the rate of tax, but on a sale
there is only one consideration though made up
of cost plus profit plus tax. So, if a seller
offers goods for sale, it is for him to quote
a price which includes the tax if he desires
to pass it on to the buyer. If the buyer
agrees to the price, it is not for him to
consider how it is made up or whether the
seller has included tax or not."
(1) [1944] 1 All E.R. 372. (2) [1944] 1 All
E.R. 618.
580
We think that these observations are apposite even in
the context of the provisions of the Acts we are considering
now, and there is nothing in those provisions which would
indicate that when the dealer Collects any amount by
way of tax, that cannot be part of the sale price. So far
as the purchaser is concerned, he pays for the goods what
the seller demands, viz., price even though it may include
tax. That is the whole consideration for the sale and there
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is no reason why the whole amount paid to the seller by the
purchaser should not be treated as the consideration for the
sale and included in the turnover.
But, argues learned Counsel for the appellants, s. 8-B of
the principal Act and Turnover and Assessment Rules made
under s. 19 show that under the scheme of the principal Act
a distinction is drawn between the amount collected by way
of tax and the amount of purchase price. It is indeed true
that in s. 8-B the amount collected by way of tax is separa-
tely mentioned, and while sub-s. (1) thereof is merely
enabling in the sense that a registered dealer may pass on
the tax, sub-s. (2) imposes an obligation on the registered
dealer to pay over the amount of tax collected by him to
Government. The position under the Turnover and Assessment
Rules is correctly summarised in the following extract from
the judgment in Krishnaswamy Mudaliar’s case (1):
"Rule 4 provides that the gross turnover of a
dealer for the purposes of the rules is the
amount for which goods are sold by the dealer.
Provision is made in rule 5 for certain
deductions, and the mode or manner in which
the tax to be levied has to be arrived at.
The object of these rules is to assess., the
net turnover on which the tax is to be levied
under the charging section. It is therefore
clear that under the charging section, tax is
to be paid on the turnover which is assessed
according to the rules. Rule 11 requires that
every dealer should submit a return under rule
6 every year to the assessing authority in
Form A in which he has to show the actual
gross and net turnover for the preceding
(1) [1954] 5 S.T.C. 88.
581
year and the amounts by way of tax or taxes
actually collected during that year. In Form
A columns 1 to 10 relate to the gross turnover
and the deductions to be made from the gross
turnover; column 10 requires the net turnover
liable to tax to be shown. In column 11 the
amount actually collected by way of tax or
taxes under s. 8-B has to be shown."
The question however still remains-do the aforesaid
provisions show such a distinction under the scheme of the
two Acts that the amount collected by way of tax cannot be
part of the turnover of the dealer and if the impugned Act
makes it a part of the turnover by a deeming provision, it
must be struck down as being outside the legislative
competence of the State Legislature? It is necessary to
emphasise here that no question of legislative competence
arose in Krishnaswamy Mudaliar’s case(’) the decision being
based on a construction of s. 8-B and the Turnover and
Assessment Rules only.
We do not think that the distinction drawn in Krishnaswamy
Mudaliar’s case(’) whether right or wrong on a question of
construction only, is material to the question of
legislative competence. In The Tata Iron & Steel Co., Ltd.
v. The State of Bihar (2) this Court dealt with a provision
in the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 similar to s. 8-B of the
principal Act. Das, C. J., delivering the majority opinion
said:
"The circumstance that the 1947 Act, after the
amendment, permitted the seller who was a
registered dealer to collect the sales tax as
a tax from the purchaser does not do away with
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the primary liability of the seller to pay the
sales tax. This is further made clear by the
fact that the registered dealer need not, if
he so pleases or chooses, collect the tax from
the purchaser and sometimes by reason of
competition with other registered dealers he
may find it profitable to sell his goods and
to retain his old customers even at the
sacrifice of the sales tax. This also makes
it clear that the sales tax need not
(1) [1954] 5 S.T.C. 88.
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 1355.
74
582
be passed on to the purchasers and this fact
does not alter the real nature of the tax
which, by the express provisions of the law,
is cast upon the seller. The buyer is under
no liability to pay sales tax in addition to
the agreed sale price unless the contract
specifically provides otherwise. See Love, v.
Norman Wright (Builders), Ltd. L. R. [1944] 1
K. B. 484."
These observations show that when the seller passes on the
tax and the buyer agrees to pay sales tax in addition to the
price, the tax is really part of the entire consideration
and the distinction between the two amounts-tax and price-
loses all significance from the point of view of legislative
competence. The matter is not in any way different under
the Turnover and Assessment Rules. It is true that in
column 11 of Form A the amount collected by way of tax under
s. 8-B has to be shown; that does not, however, mean that an
immutable distinction such as will go to the root of
legislative competence has been drawn and must be always
maintained. It appears to us that the true effect of s. 8-B
and the Turnover and Assessment Rules is that (a) a
registered dealer is enabled to pass on the tax, (b) an
unregistered dealer cannot do so, and (c) the amount
collected by way of tax is to be shown separately, for it
has to be paid over to Government. This does not mean that
it is incompetent to the legislature enacting legislation
pursuant to entry 54 in List 11 by suitable provision to
make the tax paid by the purchaser to the dealer together
with the sale price in consideration of the goods sold, a
part of the turnover of the dealer; nor does it mean that in
law the tax as imposed by Government is a tax on the buyer
making the dealer a mere collecting agency so that the tax
must always remain outside the sale price.
There is another aspect from which the question may be
considered. We shall assume that -under the ,scheme of the
principal Act a distinction is drawn between the amount
collected by way tax and the sale price other than the tax.
Is such a distinction continued and maintained by the
impugned Act? Learned Counsel for the appellants has
referred us to
583
s. 2 of the impugned Act where the expression "collected
by him by way of tax under the Madras General Sales Tax Act,
1939" occurs. It is argued that the aforesaid expression in
the impugned Act has to be read with the provisions of the
principal Act and so read, B. 2 maintains and continues the
distinction made under the principal Act. Again, we are
unable to agree. The expression "collected by him by way of
tax etc." is merely descriptive of the "amounts" so
collected; the essential and operative part of s. 2 says
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that the amounts so collected shall be deemed to have formed
part of the turnover of the dealer. Therefore, in express
terms s. 2 states that the tax shall be deemed to have
formed part of the turnover and obliterates the distinction,
if any, between ’tax’ and ’turnover’ for the limited period
during which the impugned Act operates. To hold that the
distinction is maintained and continued under the impugned
Act is to go against the express terms of s. 2. This aspect
of the question was adverted to in The Government of Andhra
v. East India Commercial Co. Ltd. (1) where the Andhra High
Court had occasion to consider the question from a somewhat
different point of view, namely, an amendment made by the
Andhra Pradesh Legislature in the definition of the
expression ’turnover’ in the principal Act. Section 2 of
the amending Act substituted the following definition of
’turn-over’:-
Turnover means the total amount set out in the
bill of sale (or if there is no bill of sale,
the total amount charged) as the consideration
for the sale or purchase of goods ...
including any sums charged by the dealer for
anything done in respect of the goods sold at
the time of or before the delivery of the
goods and any other sums charged by the
dealer, whatever be the description, name or
object thereof."
Section 4 of the amending Act repeated ss. 8-B
and 8-C of the principal Act. Dealing with
the effect of these amendments, the High Court
of Andhra Pradesh said,
(1) [1957] 8 S.T.C. 114.
584
"The ultimate economic incidence of the sales
tax is on the consumer or the last purchaser
and whatever he pays for the goods is paid
only as price, that is to say, as
consideration for the purchase. The statutory
liability, however, for payment of sales tax
is laid on the dealer on his total ’turnover’
whether or not he realises the tax from the
purchasers. Generally speaking, the price
charged by the dealer would be inclusive of
sales tax, for, it is to his interest to pass
the burden of the tax to the purchaser. So
far as the dealer is concerned, the payment of
a sum covering the tax made by a purebaser on
the occasion of sale, is really part of the
price which the purchasers pay for the goods."
Later, it referred with approval to the decision in Sri
Sundararajan and Co., Ltd. v. The State of Madras (1). In
this latter decision the validity of the impugned Act was
questioned and dealing with s. 2 of the impugned Act, the
High Court said:
"Section 2 only enacted that such amount shall
be deemed’ to be part of the turnover and for
a limited period. It may not be necessary to
set out authorities for the well-settled
principle of what the effect is of the use of
the expression ’deemed’ in a statute. Was the
legislature competent to enact section 2
including the deeming provision, is the real
question. If the validity of section 2 of the
impugned Act is established there should be
little difficulty in upholding the validity of
section 3, which gave effect to the legal
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fiction enacted by section 2.
Obviously, it is not the name the legislature
accords to a payment by a purchaser to a
seller, who is a dealer as defined by the Act,
that determines the question of the
legislative competence. No doubt section 8B
called the payment as amount (collected) by
way of tax. It is equally true that the
statutory liability to pay the sales tax is
laid on the dealer. What is taxable is not
each transaction of sale but the total
turnover of the dealer, computed in accordance
with the provisions of the
(1) (1956) 7 S.T.C. 105.
585
Act and the Rules. But it is well-recognised
that whatever be the form of the statutory
provisions, the ultimate economic incidence of
the tax is on the consumer, the purchaser. It
was that well-settled principle that was re-
stated in Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. State,
of Bihar (1). Even if the registered dealer
collects the amount by way of tax under the
authority of section 8B of the Act, the
payment is by the purchaser on the occasion of
the sale by the dealer. Vis-a-vis the dealer
it is in reality part of the price the
purchaser has to pay the seller for purchasing
the goods. A tax on such a payment, in our
opinion, is well within the ambit of Entry 54
of List 11, Schedule VII, read with Article
246(3) of the Constitution."
We are of the view that the aforesaid observations correctly
give the true effect of s. 2 of the impugned Act, and s. 3
of the impugned Act is merely consequential.
Mr. Sikri appearing on behalf of. the States of Maharashtra
and Punjab has drawn our attention to certain American
decisions which show that treating tax as part of the sale
price in cases where the tax is passed on to the buyer, is
well-recognised and is not unknown to law (see Lash’s
Products Company v. United States, 73 L. Edn. 251; Pure Oil
Company v. State Of Alabama, 148 American Law Reports 260).
We consider it unnecessary to examine these decisions,
because the validity of the impugned Act must be determined
on its own terms in the context of the provisions of the
principal Act. Reading the impugned Act in the light of the
provisions of the principal Act, it seems clear to us that
the impugned Act cannot be held to be bad on the ground of
legislative incompetence. Under the definition of turnover
the aggregate amount for which goods are bought or sold is
taxable. This aggregate amount includes the tax as part of
the price paid by the buyer. The amount goes into the
common till of the dealer till he pays the tax. It is money
which he keeps using for his business till he pays it over
to Government. Indeed,
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
586
he may turn it over again and again till he finally hands it
to Government. There is thus nothing anomalous in the law
treating it as part of the amount on which tax must be paid
by him. This conception of a turnover is not new. It is
found in England and America and there is no reason to think
that when the legislatures in India defined ’turnover’ to
include tax also, they were striking out into something
quite unknown and unheard of before.
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The only question which has been raised in these appeals is
regarding the validity of the impugned Act. That question
having been decided against the appellants, the appeals fail
and are dismissed with costs. One hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed.