Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
ANAND SWARUP MAHESH KUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/09/1980
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 440 1981 SCR (1) 707
1980 SCC (4) 451
CITATOR INFO :
D 1986 SC 649 (36)
E&D 1987 SC 611 (12)
ACT:
U. P. Sales Tax Act, 1948, Section 3D & U. P. Krishi
Utpadan Mandi Adhiniyam 1964, Sections 10 and 17 (iii) (b).
Market fee payable under the Adhiniyam-Cannot be
included in the turnover of purchases for assessment of
sales tax under the Act.
Commission (dami) paid by dealer to commission agent-
Not being a tax or fee but reward for services rendered-To
be included in turnover.
HEADNOTE:
Section 3D of the U. P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 provides
for the levy of a tax on the turnover of purchase of goods
by a dealer. Sub-section (4) provides that on the issue of a
notification under sub-section (1), no tax shall be levied
under any other section in respect of the goods included in
the notification. In 1971 section 3F was included in the Act
providing for the levy of additional tax on certain dealers.
The section provides that every dealer liable to pay tax
under section 3D (among others) whose total turnover exceeds
rupees two lakhs would in addition to the said tax be liable
to pay for that assessment year an additional tax at the
rates specified therein subject to the other provisions of
the section.
Section 10 of the U. P. Krishi Utpadan Adhiniyam, 1964
provides no levy or realisation of any trade charges other
than those prescribed by rules or byelaws made under the
Adhiniyam in respect of transactions of sale or purchase of
specified agricultural produce. Section 17(iii)(b) empowers
the market committee to levy market fees and to utilize such
market fees collected by it under that section for purposes
of the Adhiniyam. Before the amendment of the provision by
U. P. Act No. 7 of 1978, it specifically provided that
market fee payable on transactions of sale or purchase of
specified agricultural produce in the market area should be
paid by the purchaser. After the amendment which was brought
into force with retrospective effect from June 12, 1973,
market fees payable on transactions of sale or purchase of
agricultural produce within the market area can be realized
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
by the Market Committee from the Commission agent who is
authorized to realize the same from the purchaser by virtue
of section 17(iii)(b)(1). The rules and bye-laws made under
the Act also provide that a commission agent shall not
realise any commission higher than that prescribed by law.
The Sales Tax Officer included the market fee and
commission (dami) payable to the commission agent operating
within a market area established under the U. P. Krishi
Utpadan Mandi Adhiniyam, 1964 in the turnover of purchases
708
of the appellant for the purposes of levy of sales tax under
section 3D of the U. P. Sales Tax Act, 1948: On appeal by
the appellant the Assistant Commissioner (Judicial) Sales
Tax upheld the order of the Sales Tax Officer. In an earlier
case the High Court upheld the inclusion of the market fee
and the commission (dami) in the purchases turnover for the
purposes of levy of sales tax and therefore, the appellant
was granted special leave to appeal to this Court directly
from the order of the Assistant Commissioner.
Before this Court, it was contended that (i) it was not
open to the Assessing Authority to demand any additional tax
under section 3F in view of the provisions contained in
section 3D(4)(ii). The market fee paid on transactions of
sale or purchase of specified agricultural produce in the
market area could not under the Adhiniyam, be included in
the turnover of purchases for the purposes of levy of tax
under the Sales Tax Act. (iii) The commission (dami) payable
by a purchaser of goods to the commission agent, being a
trade charge could not also be included in the turnover of
purchases.
^
HELD: 1. There is no substance in the contention that
additional tax levied under section 3F could not be levied
in respect of turnover of purchases of goods notified under
section 3D(1) of the Sales Tax Act. Although, section 3D(4)
says that in respect of turnover of purchases of goods
notified under section 3D(1), no tax can be levied under any
other provisions, section 3F introduced in 1971 provides,
that every dealer liable to pay tax under section 3D whose
total turnover of sales or of purchases, or of both in any
assessment year exceeds rupees two lakhs would, in addition
to the said tax, pay for that assessment year an additional
tax at the rate specified therein. [714F, B-C].
Since section 3D is expressly mentioned in section 3F,
this section overrides section 3D(4), and that additional
tax can be collected even in respect of turnover of
purchases of goods notified under section 3D(1)
notwithstanding section 3D(4). [714D].
It cannot be said that by enacting sub-section 4 of
section 3D the legislature has forfeited its power to levy
any other tax under the Act on the goods notified under
section 3D(1) for ever. It is always open to the legislature
to modify the effect of section 3D(4) by subsequent
legislation. [714E].
2. The contention of the appellant that market fee
payable under the Adhiniyam cannot be included in the
turnover of purchases must be upheld. Where a dealer is
authorised by law to pass on any tax payable by him on
transaction of sale to the purchaser, such tax does not form
part of the consideration for the purposes of levy of tax on
sale or purchases but where there is no statutory provision
authorising the dealers to pass on tax to the purchaser,
such tax does form part of the consideration when he
includes it in the price and realises the same from the
purchaser. The distinguishing factor between the two is the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
existence of a statutory provision authorising a dealer to
recover the tax payable on the transaction of sale from the
purchaser. [718D, 716D-E].
The use of the word, "may" in section 17(iii)(6)(1)
providing that the commission agent may realise the market
fee from the purchaser is not of much consequence. The
seller or the commission agent who is liable to pay the tax
or the fee is entitled statutorily to realise it from the
purchaser and wherever a dealer is authorised by law to do
so, the tax or fee realised by him from the purchaser cannot
be treated as part of the turnover for the purpose of levy
of sales tax. [718B-C].
709
M/s. George Oakes (P) Ltd. v. State of Madras [1962] 2
S.C.R. 570, Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. etc. v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Indore, [1971] Supp. S.C.R. 945,
Paprika Ltd. & Anr. v. Board of Trade [1944] 1 K. B. 327,
Love v. Norman Wright (Builders) Ltd. [1944] 1 K.B. 484
(C.A.) referred to.
Joint Commercial Officer, Division 11, Madras-2 etc. v.
Spencer & Co. etc. etc. [1975] Supp. S.C.R. 439 applied.
3. There is no force in the appellant’s contention that
the commission (dami) payable by the purchaser on goods to
the commission agent operating within a market area
established under the Adhiniyam cannot be treated as forming
part of the turnover of purchases because a conspectus of
the provision of the Adhiniyam and rules made thereunder and
the bye-laws of Market Committee shows that a commission
agent cannot realise any commission higher than what is
prescribed by law. The commission chargeable by the
commission agent is not a sum which he has in his turn to
pay to an authority either by way of tax or by way of fee
but is only a reward for the services rendered by him.
[718E, 719 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
3345/1979.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 31-7-1979 of the Assistant Commissioner (Judicial)
Sales Tax. Meerut in Appeal No. 1502 of 1978.
V. M. Tarkunde, P. H. Parekh and S. B. Singh for the
Appellant.
S. Markendaya for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J.-The appellant is a firm carrying on
business at Mandi Anandganj, Barut, District Meerut in the
State of Uttar Pradesh and is a dealer as defined in the
U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 (Act No. XV of 1948) (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Act’). It has filed this appeal by
special leave under Article 136 of the Constitution against
the order dated July 31, 1979 passed in Appeal No. 1502 of
1978 on the file of the Assistant Commissioner (Judicial)
Sales Tax, Meerut Range, Meerut upholding the inclusion of
the market fee and the commission (otherwise called ’dami’)
payable to the commission agent operating within a market
area established under the U.P. Krishi Utpadan Mandi
Adhiniyam, 1964 (U.P. Act No. XXV of 1964) (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Adhiniyam’) in the turnover of purchases
of the appellant for purposes of levy of sales tax under
section 3-D of the Act. The assessment year in question is
1974-75. The appellant was granted leave to appeal to file
the above appeal directly against the order of the Assistant
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
Commissioner (Judicial) since the question involved in this
case had already been decided by the High Court of Allahabad
in M/s. Durga Dass Narain Dass v. The State of Uttar Pradesh
710
Ors. upholding the inclusion of the market fee and the
Commission (dami) in the purchase turnover for purposes of
levy of sales tax.
It is necessary at the out set to refer to some of the
relevant provisions of law bearing on the questions involved
in the case in order to appreciate the contentions urged on
behalf of the appellant. There is no dispute that the
appellant is a dealer as defined in section 2(e) of the Act
and is a purchaser of goods notified under section 3-D(1).
Section 3-D of the Act provides that except as provided in
sub-section (2) thereof, there shall be levied and paid for
each assessment year or part thereof a tax on the turnover
to be determined in the prescribed manner of purchases of
such goods and with effect from such date as the State
Government may be notification in the Gazette specify in
relation to purchases made within Uttar Pradesh by a dealer
(whether on his own account or on account of any one else)
or through a dealer acting as a purchasing agent at the rate
specified therein. Sub-section (4) of section 3-D of the Act
provides that on the issue of a notification under sub-
section (1) thereof, no tax shall be levied under any other
section in respect of the goods included in the
notification. The expression ’purchase price’ is defined in
section 2(gg) of the Act as follows:
"2(gg) ’purchase price’ means the amount of
valuable consideration paid or payable by a person for
the purchase of any goods, less any sum allowed by the
seller as cash discount according to trade practice and
shall include any sum charged for anything done by the
seller in respect of the goods at the time of or
before, delivery thereof, other than the cost of
freight or delivery or the cost of installation when
such cost is separately charged;"
The expression ’turnover of purchases’ is defined in
section 2(ii) of the Act thus:
"2(ii) ’turnover of purchases’ with its cognate
expressions means the aggregate of the amounts of
purchase price paid of payable by a dealer in respect
of purchase of goods made by or through him after
deducting the amount, if any refunded to the dealer by
the seller in respect of any goods returned to such
seller within such period as may be prescribed;"
711
Section 3-F of the Act which provides for the levy of
additional tax on certain dealers was introduced into the
Act by U.P. Act No. 3 of 1971. When it was so introduced it
provided that every dealer liable to pay tax under section
3, section 3A, section 3-AA or section 3-D, whose total
turnover of sales or of purchases, or of both in any
assessment year exceeded rupees two lacs would, in addition
to the said tax, be liable to pay for that assessment year
an additional tax at the rates specified in respect of his
turnover liable to tax subject to the other provisions
contained in that section.
We shall hereafter refer to some of the provisions of
the Adhiniyam and the Rules made thereunder. Clauses (b) and
(e) of section 2 of the Adhiniyam define the expressions
’broker’ or ’dalal’ and ’commission agent’ or ’arhatiya’
respectively. ’Broker’ or ’dalal’ means a person who, in the
ordinary course of business, negotiates or arranges
contracts for the purchase or sale of agricultural produce,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
on behalf of his principal on payment of commission or
remuneration, whether in cash or kind, but does not include
the servant of such principal whether engaged in negotiating
or arranging such contracts. ’Commission agent’ or
’arhatiya’ means a person who, in the ordinary course of
business, makes or offers to make, a purchase or sale of
agricultural produce, on behalf of the owner or seller or
purchaser of agricultural produce, for arhat or commission.
Section 10 of the Adhiniyam provides that as from the date
to be notified by the State Government in the Gazette, no
person shall, in a Principal Market Yard or Sub-Market Yard,
levy, charge or realise, any trade charges, other than those
prescribed by rules or bye-laws made under the Adhiniyam, in
respect of any transaction of sale or purchase of the
specified agricultural produce and no Court shall, in any
suit or proceeding arising out of any such transaction,
allow in any claim or counter claim, any trade charges not
so prescribed, and that all trade charges shall be payable
by the purchaser. Sub-clause (b) of clause (iii) of section
17 of the Adhiniyam empowers the market committee to levy
market fees and to utilize such market fees and other fees
collected by it under that section for purposes of the
Adhiniyam.
Section 17(iii)(b) of the Adhiniyam, as it stood before
its amendment in 1973, read as follows:-
"17. A Committee shall, for the purposes of this
Act, have the power to:-
.... .... .... .... ....
(iii) levy and collect:
712
.... .... .... .... ....
(b) market fees on transactions of sale or
purchase of specified agricultural produce in the
Principal Market Yard and Sub-Market Yards from
such persons and at such rates as may be
prescribed, but not exceeding one-half percentum
of the price of the specified agricultural produce
sold or purchased therein".
After clause (b) of section 17(iii) was substituted by
a new clause by U.P. Act 13 of 1973 as re-enacted by U.P.
Act 20 of 1974, it read thus:
"17.....................
(iii) ...................
(b) market fees, which shall be payable
by purchasers, on transactions of sale of
specified agricultural produce in the
Principal Market Yard or a Sub-Market Yard at
such rates, being not less than one percentum
and not more than one-and-a-half percentum of
the price of the agricultural produce so
sold, as the State Government may specify by
notification in the Gazette."
The above clause was substituted by a new clause by
U.P. Act No. 7 of 1978 with retrospective effect from June
12, 1973 as follows:-
"17.............................................
(iii) .............................
(b) market fee, which shall be payable
on transactions of sale of specified
agricultural produce in the market area at
such rates, being not less than one percentum
and not more than one and half percentum of
the price of the agricultural produce so
sold, as the State Government may specify by
notification, and such fee shall be realised
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
in the following manner:-
(1) if the produce is sold through
a commission agent, the commission agent
may realise the market fee from the
purchaser and shall be liable to pay the
same to the Committee;
713
(2) if the produce is purchased
directly by a trader from a producer the
trader shall be liable to pay the market
fee to the Committee;
(3) if the produce is purchased by
a trader from another trader, the trader
selling the produce may realise it from
the purchaser and shall be liable to pay
the market fee to the Committee; and
(4) in any other case of sale of
such produce, the purchaser shall be
liable to pay the market fee to the
Committee."
Rule 79(1) of the Rules framed under the Adhiniyam for
purposes of section 10 of the Adhiniyam provides that as
from the date notified by the State Government under section
10, no person shall, in a Principal Market Yard or Sub-
Market Yards, levy, charge or realize, in respect of any
transaction of sale or purchase of the specified
agricultural produce, any trade-charges, other than those
specified by the Market Committee under sub-rule (2)
thereof. Sub-rule (2) of Rule 79 of the Rules provides that
the Market Committee shall specify in its bye-laws the trade
charges that may be charged or realized by a trader or a
commission agent or a broker or a weighman or a measurer or
a palledar holding licence under the Rules, but not
exceeding the limits prescribed by that sub-Rule. Sub-rule
(3) of Rule 79 of the Rules also provides that all trade
charges including commission shall be payable by the
purchaser.
Three contentions are urged before us in support of the
above appeal-(1) that it is not open the assessing authority
to demand any additional tax under section 3-F of the Act in
view of the provision contained in sub-section (4) of
section 3-D of the Act which expressly prohibits the levy of
tax under any other section of the Act in respect of
purchase turnover of the goods notified under section 3-
D(1); (2) that the market fees payable under the Adhiniyam,
being a sum which can be collected from the purchaser by
virtue of the provision contained in section 17(iii) (b) of
the Adhiniyam by the commission agent who is required to pay
the same to the Market Committee, cannot be considered as
forming part of the consideration paid or payable by the
purchaser to the commission agent in respect of purchase of
goods at an auction held within a market area established
under the Adhiniyam and, therefore, it cannot be included in
the turnover of purchases for purposes of levy of tax under
section 3-D of the Act and (3) that the commission (dami)
payable by a purchaser of goods to the commission agent
714
operating within the market area being a trade charge
payable by the purchaser by virtue of section 10(2) of the
Adhiniyam read with Rule 79(3) of the Rules framed
thereunder cannot also be included in the turnover of
purchases.
In so far as the first contention is concerned, the
appellant depends upon sub-section (4) of section 3-D of the
Act which no doubt says that in respect of the turnover of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
purchases of the goods notified under section 3-D(1), no tax
can be levied under any other provision of the Act. But
section 3-F of the Act which was introduced into the Act
subsequently by U.P. Act No. 3 of 1971 provides that every
dealer liable to pay tax under section 3, section 3-A,
section 3-AA or section 3-D whose total turnover of sales or
purchases or of both in any assessment year exceeds rupees
two lacs shall, in addition to the said tax, pay for that
assessment year an additional tax at the rate specified
therein. Since section 3-D of the Act is expressly mentioned
in section 3-F, it has to be held that section 3-F,
overrides sub-section (4) of section 3-D and that additional
tax can be collected even in respect of the turnover of
purchases of goods notified under section 3-D(1)
notwithstanding sub-section (4) of Section 3-D of the Act.
It cannot be said that by enacting sub-section (4) of
section 3-D, the State Legislature forfeited its power to
levy any other tax under the Act on the goods notified under
section 3-D(1) for ever. It is always open to the
Legislature to modify the effect of sub-section (4) of
section 3-D by a subsequent legislation. We do not,
therefore, find any substance in the contention that
additional tax levied under section 3-F cannot be levied in
respect of the turnover of purchases of goods notified under
section 3-D(1) of the Act. The first contention, therefore,
fails.
We shall now proceed to consider the question whether
market fees paid on transactions of sale or purchases of
specified agricultural produce in the market area
established under the Adhiniyam can be included in the
turnover of purchases for purposes of levy of tax under the
Act. Before the amendment of section 17(iii) (b) of the
Adhiniyam by U.P. Act No. 7 of 1978, it specifically
provided that market fee payable on transactions of sale or
purchase of specified agricultural produce in the market
area should be paid by the purchaser. After the amendment
which was brought into force with retrospective effect from
June 12, 1973, market fees payable on transactions of sale
or purchase of agricultural produce within the market area
can be realized by the Market Committee
715
from the commission agent who is authorised to realize the
same from the purchaser by virtue of section 17(iii)(b)(1)
which reads:-
"17......................
(iii) ..............................
(b)... ... ... ...
(1) If the produce is sold through
a commission agent the commission agent
may realise the market fee from the
purchaser and shall be liable to pay the
same to the Committee."
The argument urged on behalf of the appellant is that
when a dealer who in this case happens to be a commission
agent is permitted by law to collect the market fee which he
is liable to pay to the Market Committee from the purchaser,
such market fee cannot form part of the consideration for
sale and, therefore, cannot be included in the turnover of
purchases for purposes of levy of tax under the Act. But on
behalf of the State Government, it is urged that all sums
paid by a purchaser to a seller or to a commission agent for
the purchase of the goods including any tax or fee payable
by him form the consideration for the purchase and,
therefore, are liable to be included in the turnover of
purchases. Reliance is placed by the State Government on M/s
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
George Oakes (P.) Ltd. v. State of Madras in which this
Court while interpreting a similar provision in the Madras
General Sales Tax Act, 1939 observed that the expression
’turnover’ meant the aggregate amount for which goods were
bought or sold whether for cash or deferred payment or other
valuable consideration and when a sale attracted purchase
tax and the tax was passed on to the consumer what the buyer
had to pay for the goods included the tax as well and the
aggregate amount so paid would fall within the definition of
turnover. In the above case, the Court was construing the
meaning of the expression ’turnover’ appearing in a statute
in which there was no provision authorising the seller to
recover the sales tax payable by him from the purchaser
although the price of the goods realized by him included the
sales tax payable by him and thus he had passed on his
liability to the purchaser. The next decision on which
reliance was placed by the State Government is Delhi Cloth
and
716
General Mills Co. Ltd. etc. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax
Indore. In that case this Court held that the expression
’Sale price’ as defined in section 2(o) of the Madhya
Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1958 included the sales tax
collected by a dealer from his purchaser as there was no
provision in that statute imposing any liability on the
purchaser to pay the tax imposed by it on the dealer and
there was no law empowering the dealer to collect the tax
from his buyer. In both the decisions referred to above,
this Court relied upon Paprika Ltd. & Anr. v. Board of Trade
and Love v. Norman Wright (Builders) Ltd. in which it had
been laid down that the price payable by a purchaser under a
contract of goods for the purpose of certain penal
provisions was the price fixed by the contract and a seller
who wished to recover the amount of the purchase tax should,
except where an adjustment was authorised by statute,
include that amount in the price so fixed. From the
observations made in the decisions referred to above, it
follows that where a dealer is authorised by law to pass on
any tax payable by him on the transaction of sale to the
purchaser, such tax does not form part of the consideration
for purposes of levy of tax on sales or purchases but where
there is no statutory provision authorising the dealer to
pass on the tax to the purchaser, such tax does form part of
the consideration when he includes it in the price and
realizes the same from the purchaser. The essential factor
which distinguishes the former class of cases from the
latter class is the existence of a statutory provision
auhorising a dealer to recover the tax payable on the
transaction of sale from the purchaser. It is on account of
the above distinction that this Court held in Joint
Commercial Officer Division II. Madras-2 etc. v. Spencer &
Co. etc. etc. that the sales tax which a seller of foreign
liquor was liable to pay under section 21-A of the Madras
Prohibition Act, 1937 did not form part of the turnover on
which sales tax could be levied under the Madras General
Sales Tax Act, 1959 because the seller was entitled to
recover the sales tax payable by him from the purchaser. The
relevant part of section 21-A of the Madras Prohibition Act,
1937 referred to above read thus:
"21-A. Every person or institution which sells
foreign liquor-
(a) X X X
(b) X X X
717
shall collect from the purchaser and pay over to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
Government at such intervals and in such manner as may
be prescribed, a sales tax calculated at the rate of
eight annas in the rupee, or at such other rate as may
be notified by the Government from time to time, on the
price of the liquor so sold."
In the course of the decision in the case of Spencer &
Co. this Court observed thus:
"It is clear from sec. 21-A of the Madras
Prohibition Act, 1937 that the sales tax which the
section requires the seller of foreign liquor to
collect from the purchaser is a tax on the purchaser
and not on the seller. This is what makes the
authorities on which counsel for the appellants relied
inapplicable to the cases before us. Under sec. 21-A
the tax payable is on the price of the liquor and that
tax is to be paid by the purchaser, the seller is
required to collect the tax from the purchaser which he
has to pay over to the Government Sec. 21-A makes the
seller a collector of tax for the Government and the
amount collected by him as tax under this section
cannot therefore be a part of his turnover. Under the
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 the dealer has no
statutory duty to collect the sales tax payable by him
from his customer, and when the dealer passes on to the
customer the amount of tax which the former is liable
to pay, the said amount does not cease to be the price
for the goods although "the price is expressed as X
plus purchase tax" (Paprica Ltd. & Anr. v. Board of
Trade (1944) 1 All E. R. 372). But the amounts
collected by the assessees concerned in these appeals
under a statutory obligation cannot be a part of their
taxable turnover under the Madras General Sales Tax
Act, 1959."
We do not find any substantial difference between
section 21-A of the Madras Prohibition Act, 1937 and section
17(iii) (b) (1) of the Adhiniyam. Whereas the levy under
section 21-A of the Madras Prohibition Act, 1937 was sales
tax payable to the State Government, under section 17(iii)
(b) of the Adhiniyam, the levy in question is market fees
payable to the Market Committee and secondly whereas the
former provision stated that "every person or institution
which sells foreign liquor........shall collect from the
purchaser and pay over to the Government.......", the latter
provision states that "If the produce is sold through a
commission agent, the commission agent may realize the
market fees from the purchaser and shall be liable to pay
the same to the Committee".
718
The levies in both the cases are statutory although under
the Madras Prohibition Act, 1937, it is a tax payable to the
Government and under the Adhiniyam, it is a fee payable to a
Market Committee which is a statutory body. The only
distinguishing feature between the two laws is that whereas
the Madras Act provides that every person who sells foreign
liquor shall collect sales tax from the purchaser, the
Adhiniyam provides that the commission agent may realize the
market fees from the purchaser. The use of ’shall’ in the
former case and of ’may’ in the latter case is not of much
consequence in so far as the question involved in the
present case is concerned because in both the cases the
seller or the commission agent who is liable to pay the tax
or the fee, as the case may be, is entitled statutorily to
realize it from the purchaser and wherever a dealer is
authorised by law to do so, the tax or fee realized by him
from the purchaser cannot be treated as part of the turnover
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
for purposes of levy of sales tax. The contention of the
appellant that market fees payable under the Adhiniyam
cannot be included in the turnover of purchases has,
therefore, to be upheld.
There is, however, no substance in the third contention
of the appellant that the commission (dami) payable by a
purchaser to a commission agent operating within a market
area established under the Adhiniyam cannot be treated as
forming part of the turnover of purchases for two reasons-
(i) the commission paid by the purchaser is not any tax or
fee payable to a Government or statutory body which is not a
party to the contract of sale and (ii) the commission is
actually the profit of the dealer who in this case happens
to be a commission agent and should, therefore, necessarily
be considered as consideration for the sale of goods.
The provisions contained in section 10 of the Adhiniyam
and the Rules framed thereunder do not in any way affect the
above conclusion reached by us. Section 10 of the Adhiniyam
merely provides that as from the date to be notified by the
State Government in the Gazette, no person shall, in a
Principal Market Yard or Sub-Market Yard, levy, charge or
realize, any trade charges other than those prescribed by
rules or bye-laws made under the Adhiniyam, in respect of
any transaction of sale or purchase of the specified
agricultural produce and no Court shall, in any suit or
proceeding arising out of any such transaction, allow in any
claim or counter claim, any trade charges not so prescribed.
It also provides that such charges shall be collected from
the purchasers thereby barring the collection of such
charges from the producers of agricultural produce who are
ordinarily the sellers in a market area. Sub-rule
719
(1) of Rule 79 of the Rules framed under the Adhiniyam
provides that as from the date notified by the State
Government no person shall, in a Principal Market Yard or
Sub-Market Yard, levy, charge or realise, in respect of any
transaction of sale or purchase of the specified
agricultural produce any trade charges, other than those
specified by the Market Committee under sub-rule (2)
thereof, and sub-rule (2) of Rule 79 authorises the Market
Committee to make bye-laws prescribing the maximum
commission that may be charged by a commission agent or a
broker. Sub-rule (3) of Rule 79 reiterates that all trade
charges shall be payable by the purchaser. A combined
reading of section 10 of the Adhiniyam, Rule 79 of the Rules
made under the Adhiniyam and the bye-laws made by the Market
Committee shows that a commission agent cannot realize any
commission higher than what is prescribed by law. The
commission chargeable by the commission agent is not a sum
which he has in his turn to pay to an authority either by
way of tax or by way of fee but is only a reward for the
services rendered by him. We, therefore, reject the above
submission made on behalf of the appellant.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal is allowed in
part. The inclusion of the market fees in the turnover of
purchases of the assessee for purposes of levy of tax under
the Act is set aside. The assessing authority is directed to
modify the order of assessment in accordance with this
decision. In the circumstances of the case, the parties
shall bear their own costs.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed in part.
720