Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DEVI DAS GOPAL KRISHNAN & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1967
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
SHELAT, J.M.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1895 1967 SCR (3) 557
CITATOR INFO :
F 1968 SC 331 (6)
RF 1968 SC1232 (20,27,50,88,97)
RF 1971 SC2100 (19,21)
R 1972 SC1168 (7)
RF 1973 SC1374 (10)
R 1974 SC1660 (15,21,34,53)
R 1975 SC1007 (14)
APL 1976 SC 800 (12)
R 1979 SC 321 (10,20)
E 1979 SC1475 (22,30)
RF 1980 SC1789 (36)
R 1981 SC1649 (12,13)
RF 1988 SC1737 (72)
R 1990 SC 560 (13)
RF 1992 SC 422 (3,4)
ACT:
Rate fixation-Delegation--Constitutional and Statutory
necessity, if proper guides-East Punjab General Sales Tax
Act, 1948 (46 of 1948), s. 5.
Severability-Charging section made subject to section
granting power to fix rates-Latter declared void-If charging
section also void-Efffect of subsequent amendment-East
Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (46 of 1948), ss. 4, 5,
6-East Punjab General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1952
(19 of 1952).
East Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948-Legislative
competence Section 2 Cl. (ff)-’Acqisition’ meaning of-
Valuable consideration, meaning of-Act, if in
conflict with Sale of Goods Act, 1930; Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956, s. 15.
HEADNOTE:
Section 5 of the East Punjab Sales Tax Act, 1948, as
originally enacted, conferred on the Government power to
levy tax at such rates as the Government might fix. The
section was amended by Act 18 of 1952, with retrospective
effect, fixing the rate of tax at "not exceeding two piece
in a rupee". Section 2(ff) of the Act as amended by Act 13
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of 1959, define-, "purchase" as the "acquisition" of the
goods "for use in the manufacture of goods for sale, for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration
otherwise than under a mortgage hypothecation, charge or
pledge". The appellants’ petition in the High Court
challenging the imposition of purchase tax for the years
1958-59 and 1959-60 on the purchase of oil seeds, steel
scrap and cotton for manufacture of goods for sale, were
dismissed, and they appealed to this Court. Mean while, the
High Court had considered the validity of the Act in a Sales
Tax Reference and declared s. 5, as it originally stood,
void. In this Court it was contended : (i) since s. 5 as
originally enacted, was declared void,that being the
charging section, the entire act was void and the Amending
Act of 1952 could not revive an Act which was non est, and
(ii) section 2(ff) was invalid for want of legislative
competence.
HELD : (i) Section 5 as it stood before the amendment
was void, but the section as amended by the Amending Act of
1952 is valid.
An Act conferring a power to fix rates of taxation must
lay down clear legislative policy or guide-lines in that
regard and the doctrine of constitutional and statutory
needs would not afford -reasonable guidelines in the
fixation of such rates. There was nothing in the provisions
of the Act, including the preamble disclosing any policy or
guidance to the State for fixing rates. Section 5 as it
stood before the Amendment conferred on the Government an
uncontrolled power in the matter of fixation of rates and
was therefore void. [565 G-566 B; 569 F]
Corporation of Calcutta v. Liberty Cinema, [1965] 2
S.C.R. 377, explained.
State of Madras, v. Gannon Dunkerlev & Co. (Madras)
Ltd. [1959] S.C.R. 379, 435, Vasantlal Maganbhai Sanjanwala
v. State of Bombay.
558
[1961] 1 S.C.R. 341 and The Union of India v. M/s. Bhana
Mal Gulzari .Mal, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 627, referred to.
Although s. 5 was void, the entire Act was not void.
Section 4 is the ’Charging section and Section 5 dealt only
with the quantification of tax, that is, the charging
section was intact and what was struck down was only the
section providing for rates. The fact that s. 4 is made
subject to s. 5 does not render the former void on the
principle of non-severability, because, under the Act, there
is a clear distinction between chargeability and the
quantification of tax. Therefore, striking out s. 5 only
made s. 4 unenforceable. The amendment of s. 5 has, in
substance, the effect of amending an existing Act. [567 G-H;
568 F-G; 569 B-C]
B. Shama Rao v. The Union Territory of Pondicherry, [1967] 2
S.C.R., distinguished.
Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Wealth Tax (Central) Calcutta, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 688, referred
to.
Conferment of a reasonable area of discretion by a fiscal
statute is permissible and the discretion to fix the rate
between 1 pice and 2 pice cannot be said to exceed the
permissible limits. [569D-F]
Khandige Sham Bhat v. The Agricultural Income Tax Officer,
[1963] 3 S.C.R. 809, referred to.
(ii) Clause (ff) of s. 2 is not void for want of legislative
competence.
Although the words "acquisition" and "valuable consideration
in -the definition of "purchase" in s. 2(ff) of the Act
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indicate, prima facie, that this definition is wider in
scope than the definition "sale", these expressions in the
context must be given a restricted meaning. The expression
"acquisition" in the definition means only "transfer" and
the expression "valuable consideration" takes colour from
the preceding expression "cash or deferred payment" and can
only mean some other monetary payment in the nature of cash
or deferred payment. [571 F-G; 572 B]
The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras) Ltd.
[1959] S.C.R. 379, Sales Tax Officer v. Budh Prakash, A.I.R.
1964 S.C. 459 and George Oakes v. State of Madras, A.I.R.
1962 S.C. 1039, referred to.
Purchase tax, under the Act is leviable on the purchase of
goods and not in respect of manufacture of goods and
therefore is not an excise duty. The purpose for which
goods are purchased is only relevant for fixing the taxable
event and the taxable event is fixed before the goods are
actually manufactured. [572 H-573 B]
M/s. Shinde Bros. v. The Deputy Commissioner, Raichur,
C.As. Nos. 1580-1586 and 1590-1600 of 1955 (decided on 26-9-
1966), referred to.
The Act does not enable levy of tax on the same goods at
more than one stage and therefore is not in conflict with s.
15 of the Central Sales Tax Act 1596. Manufacture changes
the identity and the goods purchased and the goods sold are
not identical and therefore the same goods are not taxed at
two stages. Further, cl. (ff) of s. 2 of the Act during.
the periods relevant to the present case, in terms, fixed
the stage for taxation, i.e., the stage of purchase by a
dealer for use in the manufacture of goods. [573 B-C; 576 B]
559
The fact that the same goods when purchased by a
manufacturer would be taxed but would not be taxed when
purchased by a person other than a manufacturer would not
violate Art. 14 of the Constitution as s. 2(ff) discloses a
reasonable classification. [572C-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 526,527 and
529 of 1964.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated December 15, 1959,
of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 827, 826 and 823
of 1959 respectively.
Civil Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of 1965.
Appeals by special leave from the judgments and orders dated
March 30, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ Nos.
467, 473, 476, 474 and 477 of 1960 respectively.
Civil Appeal No. 81 of 1965.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 2, 1963 of the
Punjab High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 155 of 1963.
Civil Appeal No. 540 of 1965.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 18, 1963
of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ No. 206 of 1962.
M. C. Setalvad, R. K. Garg and S. C. Agarwala, for the
appellants (In C.As. No. 526, 527 and 529 of 1964).
R. Ganapathy Iyer and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents
(in C. A. Nos. 526, 527 and 529 of 1964).
Rameshwar Nath and Mahinder Narain, for the appellants (in
C.As. Nos. 39-43 of 1965).
Hardev Singh and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents (in
C.As. Nos. 39-43 of 1965).
S. T. Desai and O. C. Mathur, for the appellants (in C.As.
Nos. 81 and 540 of 1965).
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R. Ganapathy Iyer and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents
(in C.A. No. 81 of 1965).
O. P. Malhotra and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents (in
C.A. No. 540 of 1965).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, C.J. The decision on these appeals depends upon
the interpretation of the relevant provisions of the Punjab
General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (Punjab Act 46 of 1948), as
amended by Punjab Act 7 of 1958, relating to three
categories of goods, namely, oil-seeds, iron and cotton.
The facts may be briefly stated.
560
The assessees in. Civil Appeals Nos. 526, 527 and 529 of
1964 carry on business at Moga in Punjab and each owns an
oil-mill They purchase oil-seeds and, after crushing the
same in their oil mills, sell the oil and the residual oil-
cake. They are registered dealers under the Act. The
Amending Act imposed a purchase tax of 2% on the purchase of
oil-seeds "for the use in the manufacture of goods for
sale." This was in addition to the sales-tax leviable on the
sales of oil and oil-cake. On June 23, 1959, the Excise and
Taxation Officer, Ferozepore, the 3rd respondent ill the
said appeals, issued notices to the 3 appellants-assessees
to the effect that they did not submit their returns for the
year ending 1958-59 and failed to pay purchase-tax in
respect thereof and asked them to show cause why they should
not be prosecuted for the said default. The appellants
filed 3 petitions under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the
High Court of Punjab questioning the validity of the
relevant provisions of the Act and for appropriate reliefs.
A Division Bench of the High Court heard the petitions,
along with other connected petitions, and dismissed the
petitions of the appellants so far as they related to
purchase-tax on oil-seeds. Hence the appeals.
Civil Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of 1965 relate to purchase-tax
on iron. The appellants carry on business in rolling steel
at Gobindgarh. They purchase steel scrap and steel ingots
and convert them into rolled steel sections. Under the Act,
the assessing authority imposed purchase-tax at the rate of
2% on the purchase of steel scrap and steel ingots made by
them during the period April 1, 1958 to March 31, 1959 for
making rolled steel section and selling the same. The
appellants filed petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court for appropriate writs for
quashing the orders of the assessing authorities and for
prohibiting them from levying purchase-tax on the goods
purchased and for refund of the tax illegally collected from
them. A Division Bench of the High Court dismissed the
petitions. Hence the appeals.
Appeals Nos. 81 of 1965 and 540 of 1965 relate to purchase-
tax on cotton. The appellants in Civil Appeal No. 81 of
1965 are the trustees of Birla Education Trust. They own a
cotton and textile mill, Bhiwani. They purchase cotton from
various dealers in Punjab and outside for the manufacture of
yarn and cloth. By ,in order dated March 11, 1962, the
District Taxation Officer, Hissar, imposed purchase-tax on
the appellants in respect of the cotton purchased by them
for the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60. The appellant
in Civil Appeal No. 540 of 1965 is a limited company
carrying on the business of producing and selling yarn. For
the purpose of its business it acquires cotton from
commission agents. It is a registered dealer under the Act.
The Excise and Taxation Officer, Hissar, by his order dated
November
561
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29, 1961, assessed the appellant to purchase-tax for the
assessment year 1958-59 in respect of the cotton purchased
by it and so too on January 27, 1962, he had taken
proceedings for making assessment to purchase-tax for the
assessment year 1959-60 in respect of the same commodity.
The appellants in both the appeals filed petitions under
Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High Court questioning
the validity of the said orders. The said writ petitions
were dismissed by a Division Bench of the High Court. Hence
the appeals.
We shall at first take the points raised which are common to
all the appeals and then proceed to consider the points
peculiar to some of the appeals.
Mr. M. C. Setalvad, learned counsel appearing for the appel-
lants in the batch of appeals relating to tax on purchase of
oil seeds, raised before us the following points which are
common to other appeals : (1) Section 5 of the East Punjab
General Sales Tax Act, 1948, was held to be, void on the
ground that it conferred essentially legislative power on
the provincial Government and, therefore, the said section
was stillborn and that,, as the said section was the
charging section, the entire Act was void, with the result
Act 19 of 1952, which amended s. 5 with retrospective effect
could not breathe a new life into the said Act. A void Act
was non est and, therefore, could not be brought into force
by an amending Act. (2) Clause (ff) of section 2 introduced
by Act 7 of 1958 defining "purchase", subject to the
conditions mentioned therein as a taxing event was ultra
vires the State Legislature inasmuch as the transaction
defined therein was not a sale" within the meaning of that
expression in entry 52 of List 11 of the 7th. Schedule to
the Constitution and was in fact an "excise" duty inasmuch
as it was imposed on the production of oil in the garb of
purchase tax. (3) The said amendment was also bad in that it
made an unreasonable discrimination in the matter of
taxation between the same classes of goods based on the
character of the purchaser. If the goods were purchased by
a manufacturer, they were liable to purchase tax; and if the
same goods were purchased by an ordinary dealer, they were
not liable to the said tax. (4) The amended ’provision,
section 2(ff), was also void because it contravened ss. 14
and 15 of the Central Sales-tax Act, 1956, whereunder sales-
tax was prohibited to be imposed on the declared goods at
more than one stage, whereas under the Act it could be
imposed both at the purchase point and at the sale point of
the transactions entered into by the manufacturer. (5)
Purchase-tax was not leviable on oil-seeds, as the assessees
did not manufacture oil out of the seeds but only produced
the oil.
We shall now proceed to consider the points seriatim. The
provisions relevant to the first two points read thus:
C1167-6
562
East Punjab General Sales Tax Act (46 of 1948)
Section 5. Subject to the provisions of this
Act, there shall be levied on the taxable
turnover every year of a dealer a tax at such
rates as the Provincial Government may by
notification direct.
East Punjab General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1952
(Act No. 19 of 1952).
Section 2. Amendment of section 5 of Punjab
Act 46 of 1948 :
In sub-section (1) of section 5 of the East
Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948, after the
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word " rates" the following words shall be
inserted and shall be deemed always to have
been so inserted, namely, ’not exceed in two
pice in a rupee’.
The High Court of Punjab held that s. 5 of the Act was void
as it gave an unlimited power to the executive to levy
sales-tax at a rate which it thought lit. But it held that
the amendment of section 5 by the Punjab Act 19 of 1952
cured the defect in the said Act and had the effect of
giving a new life to it.
The first question, therefore, is whether section 5 of the
East Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (46 of 1948), as it
originally stood, was void, and the second question is, if
the said section was void, whether the amendment could give
life to it.
The law on the subject is fairly well settled, though
difficulties are met in its application to each case. In
Corporation of Calcutta, v. Liberty Cinema(1) on which Mr.
Ganapati Iyer relied relates to a levy imposed on cinema
houses under the Calcutta Municipal Act (33 of 1951).
There, the majority held that the levy therein was a tax,
that the fixing of a rate of tax was not of the essence of
legislative power, that the fixing of rates might be left to
a nonlegislative body and that when it was so left to such a
body, the Legislature must provide guidance for such
fixation. The majority he-Id in that case that such a
guidance was found in the monetary needs of the Municipality
for discharging the functions entrusted to it under the Act.
Sarkar I., speaking for the majority &aid thus :
"It (the Municipal Corporation) has to perform
various statutory functions. It is often
given power to decide when and in what manner
the functions are to be performed. For all
this it needs money and its needs will very
from time to time, with the prevailing exigen-
cies. Its power to collect tax, however, is
necessarily
(1) [1965]2 S.C.R.4 7
563
limited by the expenses required to discharge
those functions. It has, therefore, where
rates have not been specified in the statute,
to fix such rates as may be necessary to meet
its needs. That, we think, would be
sufficient guidance to make the exercise of
its power to fix the rates valid."
If this decision is an authority for the position that the
Legislature can delegate its power to a statutory authority
to levy taxes and fix the rates in regard thereto, it is
equally an authority for the position that the said statute
to be valid must give a guidance to the said authority for
fixing the said rates and that guidance cannot be judged by
stero typed rules but would depend upon the provisions of a
particular Act. To that extent this judgment is binding on
us. But we cannot go further and hold, as the learned
counsel for the respondents asked us to do, that whenever a
statute define-, the purpose or purposes for which a
statutory authority constituted and empowers it to levy a
tax that statute necessarily contains a guidance to fix the
rates it depends upon the provisions of each statute.
Learned counsel for the State argued that under Art. 162 of
the Constitution the executive power of the State shall
extend to: matters with respect to which the Legislature of
a State has power to make laws : that is to say, the
executive power of a State extends to matters mentioned in
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List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to, the Constitution, that
under Art. 266(1) of the Constitution all the taxes
collected will go to the Consolidated Funds of the State,
that the State has an unlimited power to raise funds by
taxation to discharge its vast constitutional duties and
that necessarily the amount of tax required would depend
upon its needs which can only be known to it. In the said
circumstances, the argument proceeds’.. the doctrine of
constitutional and statutory needs would afford reasonable
guidelines for the Government to fix the rate and that the
principle laid down by this Court in the aforesaid decision
would equally apply to this case. If this argument be
accepted, it would mean that every statute conferring a
naked power on the Government to impose taxes would be good,
for in every case the discharge of the constitutional duties
by the Government would be deemed to be a sufficient guide
for fixing the rate. We cannot accept this argument for
three reasons, namely, (1) the decision of this Court in
Calcutta Corporation v. Liberty Cinema(1) should he confined
only to the provisions of the Calcutta Municipal Act Wherein
this Court found a guidance; (2) the provisions of the
Sale,; Tax Act, including the preamble, do not disclose any
policy or guidance to the, State for fixing the rates: and
(3) the general
(1) [1965]2 S.C.R. 477,
564
constitutional power to impose taxes has no relevance for
discovering a statutory policy under a particular Act.
Nor does the decision of this Court in The State of Madras
v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co., (Madras) Ltd.(1) lend support to
the argument so widely advanced by the learned counsel.
That case has nothing to do with the fixation of rates of
taxes. There section 6(1) of the Madras General Sales Tax
Act, 1939, as amended by Madras Act 25 of 1947, provided
that no tax will be payable on any sale of goods specified
in the schedule to it. Section 6(2) ,of that Act authorised
the State Government to amend the schedule by notification.
The amendment of the Schedule by the State Government was
challenged on the ground that section 6(2) was invalid as it
was a delegation of the essential power of legislation ,of
the State Government. Venkatarama Ayyar, J., speaking for
the Court, in rejecting that contention, observed thus :
"Now, the authorities are clear that it is not
unconstitutional for the legislature to leave
it to the executive to determine details
relating to the working of taxation laws, such
as the selection of persons on whom the tax is
to be laid, the rates at which it is to be
charged in respect of different classes of
goods, and the like."
It is not necessary to scrutinize the correctness of this
statement, having regard to the decisions relied upon, for
this Court in Corporation of Calcutta v. Liberty Cinema(2)
accepted it, but made it clear that such a power to fix the
rates must be supported by some reasonable guidance given
under the Act whereunder the said power was conferred. Nor
the observations of Rajagopala Ayyangar, J., in the said
decision speaking for the minority, lend support to the
contentions of the respondents.
The decision in Vasantlal Maganbhai Sanjanwala v. The State
of Bombay(3) raised the question whether section 6(2) of the
Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 (Bom. 67 ,of
1948), which enabled the Government to fix the rent payable
by a tenant within the maximum limits prescribed thereunder,
was valid. When it was argued that it was bad because of
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excessive delegation, this Court sustained it on the basis
of a legislative policy disclosed by section 12(3) of the
Act.
In The Union of India v. Messrs. Bhana Mal Gulzari Mal(4),
this Court rejected the contention that caluse 11B of Iron
and Steel (Control of Production & Distribution) Order,
1941, whereunder the Central Government was authorised to
issue notification fixing the maximum price of steel, was
void on the ground of excessive -delegation, as it found
that the said clause only further canalized the policy
disclosed in ss. 3 and 4 of the Act.
(1) [1959] S.C.R
1 S.C.R.379, 435. (2) [1965]2 S.C.R.
477.
(3) [1961] 341. (4) [1960]
2 S.C.R. 627.
565
Further citation is unnecessary, for the principle of
excessive delegation is well settled and the cases are only
illustrations of the application of the said principle. The
law on the subject may briefly be stated thus :
"The Constitution confers a power and imposes
a duty on the legislature to make laws. The
essential legislative function is the
determination of the legislative policy and
its formulation as a rule of conduct. Obvi-
ously it cannot abdicate its functions in
favour of another. But in view of the
multifarious activities of a welfare State, it
cannot presumably work out all the details to
suit the varying aspects of a complex
situation.It must necessarily delegate the
working out of details to the executive or any
other agency. But there is a danger inherent
in such a process of delegation. An overbur-
dened legislature or one controlled by a
powerful executive may unduly overstep the
limits of delegation. It may not lay down any
policy at all; it may declare its policy in
vague and general terms; it may not set down
any standard for the guidance of the
executive; it may confer an arbitrary power on
the executive to change or modify the policy
laid down by it without reserving for itself
any control over subordinate legislation.
This self effacement of legislative power in
favour of another agency either in whole or in
part is beyond the permissible limits of
delegation. It is for a Court to hold on a
fair, generous and liberal construction of an
impugned statute whether the legislature
exceeded such limits. But the said liberal on
struction should not be carried by the Courts
to the extent of always trying to discover a
dormaint or latent legislative policy to
sustain an arbitrary power conferred on
executive authorities. It is the duty of the
Court to strike down without any hesitation
any arbitrary power conferred on the executive
by the legislature.
See Vasantlal Maganbhai Sanjanwala v. The State of Bombay(1)
at pp. 356-357.
Under section 5 of the Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1,948,
as it originally stood, an uncontrolled power was conferred
on the provincial Government to levy every year on the
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taxable turnover of a dealer a tax at such rates as the said
Government might direct. Under that section the Legislature
practically effaced itself in the matter of fixation of
rates and it did not give any guidance either under that
section or under any other provisions of the Act no other
provision was brought to our notice. The
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 341.
566
argument of the learned counsel that such a policy could be
gathered from the constitutional provisions cannot be
accepted, for, if accepted,. it would destroy the doctrine
of excessive delegation. It would also sanction conferment
of power by Legislature on the executive Government without
laying down any guide-lines in the Act. The minimum we
expect of the Legislature is to lay down in the Act
conferring such a power of fixation of rates clear legis-
lative policy or guide-lines in that regard. As the Act did
not prescribe any such policy, it must be held that section
5 of the ,said Act, is it stood before the amendment, was
void.
The next step in the argument of Mr. M. C. Setalvad was that
sections 4. 5 and 6 of the Punjab Central Sales Tax Act,
1948, together formed a group of charging sections and they
were so integrally connected with each other that if section
5 was void, sections 4 and 6 also fell with it, as one was
not severable from the other. As the charging sections were
the crux of the Act, the argument proceeded, the whole Act
was void and therefore the Act amending section 5 could not
revive the Act which was still-born.
The relevant provisions may now be read.
Section 4 (1). Subject to the provisions of
sections 5 and 6, every dealer except one
dealing exclusively in goods declared tax-free
under section 6 whose gross turnover during
the year immediately preceding the com-
mencement of this Act exceeded the taxable
quantum shall be liable to pay tax under this
Act on ill sales effected after coming into
force of this Act.
Section 5 his already been extracted.
Section, 6(1). No tax shall be payable on the
sale of goods specified in the first column of
Schedule B subject to the conditions and
exceptions, if any, set out in the
corresponding entry in the second column
thereof and no dealer shall charge sales tax
on the sale of goods which are declared tax-
free from time to time under this section.
It will be seen that section 4 is a charging section, that
section 5 provides for fixation of rates- and that section 6
prescribes for exemptions. Section 4 is made subject to
sections 5 and 6. IF section 5 is struck out, will section 4
become void This will depend upon two
questions, namely, (i) whether section 5 is a charging
section ? and (ii) even if section 4 alone is the charging
section., as it is made subject to section 5 and as the
section subject to which it is made was still born, whether
section 4, on the application of the doctrine of severance,
becomes void.
567
In the context of Income-tax Act it was held by this Court
in Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Wealth-tax, (Central), Calcutta(1) that the charging
section for the purpose of income-tax was section 3 of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, and the annual Finance Acts
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only gave the rate for quantifying the tax. Section 3 of
the said Income-tax Act read:
"Where any Central Act enacts that income-tax
shall be charged for any year at any rate or
rates, tax at that rate or those rates shall
be charged for that year in accordance with,
and subject to the provisions of, this Act in
respect of the total income of the previous
year of every individual, Hindu undivided
family, company and local authority, and of
every firm and other association of persons or
the partners of the firm or tile members of
tile association Individually."
Section 2 of tile Finance (No. 2) Act, 1957,
read
"(1) Subject to the provisions of subsections
(2), (3), (4) and (5) for the year beginning
on the 1st day of April, 1957,-
(a)income-tax shall be charged at the rates
specified in Part 1 of the First Schedule,
and, in the cases to which Paragraphs A, B and
C of that Part apply, shall be increased by a
surcharge for purposes of the Union and a
special surcharge on unearned income,
calculated in either case in the manner
provided therein;"
It was argued that the liability to tax did not arise till
the Finance Act was made and the tax quantified. Dealing
with this question, this Court by majority observed
"A liability to pay income-tax is a present
liability though it becomes payable after it
is quantified in accordance with ascertainable
data."
The only difference between Income-tax Act and the present
Act is that while in the Income-tax Act section 3 thereof
does not expressly make, the liability subject to the
provisions of tile Finance Act which fixes the rate, under
the Sales-tax Act in question section 4 thereof in terms is
made subject to section 5. But under both the Acts there is
a clear distinction between chargeability and the
quantification of tax. While, it is true that the tax
cannot be, realised without it being quantified, the non-
quantification of the liability will not destroy the
liability tinder the clearing section. The liability has to
be distinguished from its enforceability. It cannot be
said, and indeed it Is not said, that the Income-tax Act has
no legal existence till the Finance Act is made, though till
the Finance
(1) [1966]2 S.C.R. 688, 7,8.
568
Act is made it cannot be enforced. But reliance is placed
on section 67B of the Income-tax Act in support of the
contention that its existence in the statute book keeps the
Act alive, for the rate prescribed by the previous Finance
Act is applicable till the new Finance Act is passed. But
it will be noticed that the Court’s decision was not based
on the existence of the said provision but on that of the
charging section itself. It follows that striking out
section 5 does not make section 4 void, though till an
appropriate section is inserted it remains unenforceable.
The decision of this Court in B. Shama Rao v. The Union
Territory of Pondicherry(,) is clearly distinguishable.
There, subsection (1) of section 2 of the Pondicherry
General Sales Tax Act, 10 of 1965, provided that :
"The Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (No.
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1 of 1959) (hereinafter referred to as the
Act) as in force in the State of Madras
immediately before the commencement of this
Act shall. extend to and come into force in
the Union of Territory of Pondicherry subject
to the following modifications and
adaptations.........
Section 1(2) of the said Act provided that the Act would
come into force on such date as the Government by
notification may appoint. The effect of the section was
that the Madras Act as it stood on the date (if the
notification issued would be in force in the Union Territory
of Pondicherry. Indeed it turned out that the Madras Act
was ended before the said notification. This Court held
that there was a total surrender in the matter of sales-tax
legislation by the Pondicherry Assembly in favour of the
Madras legislature and for that reason the said sections
were void or stillborn.
It was argued that the Act could not be said to be still-
born as it contained certain provisions independent of the
Madras Act, viz., a section which provided for the appellate
tribunal and the schedule. But it was pointed out that the
core of the taxing statute was in the charging section and
that the remaining sections bad no independent existence.
In the present case the charging section was intact and what
was struck out was only the section providing for rates. It
cannot, therefore, be said that when section 5 was struck
out, section 4 or other sections fell with it.
It was then contended that even if the whole Act was not
stillborn, section 5 was non est, that the amending Act did
not insert a new section 5 but purported to amend the
earlier section 5 which was not in existence. Now under the
East Punjab General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1952
(Act No. 19 of 1952) section 5 of the East Punjab General
Sales Tax Act, 1948 was amended. Section 2 of the said
amending Act says:
(1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 650.
569
.lm15
"In sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the East Punjab General
Sales Tax Act, 1948, after the word ’rates’ the following
words shalt be inserted and shall be deemed always to have
been so inserted, namely :-’not exceeding two pice in a
rupee’."
No doubt in terms the section inserts the words "not
exceeding two, pice in a rupee" in section 5. If section 5
is inserted in the Act by the Amending Act with the said
words added, there cannot possibly be any objection, for
that would be an amendment of an existing Act. But in
substance the amendment brings about the same effect. The
words "shall be deemed always to have been so inserted"
indicate that in substance section 5, as amended, is
Inserted in the Act with retrospective effect.
Even so it wits contended that section 5, as amended, only
gave the maximum rate and did not disclose any policy giving
guidance to the executive for fixing any rate within that
maximum. Here we are concerned with sales-tax. If the Act
had said "2 pice In a rupee" it would be manifest that it
was a clear guidance. But as the Act applies to sales or
purchases of different commodities it had become necessary
to give some discretion to the Government in fixing the
rate. Conferment of reasonable area of discretion by a
fiscal statute has been approved by this Court in more than
(me decision : see Khandige Sham Bhat v. The Agricultural
Income-tax Officer(1). At the same time a larger statutory
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discretion placing a wide gap between the minimum and the
maximum rates and thus enabling the Government to fix an
arbitrary rate may not be sustained. In the ultimate
analysis, the permissible discretion depends upon the facts
of each case. The discretion to fix the rate between I pice
and 2 pice in a rupee is so insignificant that it is not
possible to hold that it exceeds the permissible limits. It
follows that section 5 of the Act as amended is valid.
The next argument is that section 2(ff) inserted in the
Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948, by the East Punjab
General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1958 (Act No. 7 of 1958)
Lind amended by Amending Act 13 of 1959 is void. The said
clause (ff) as amended by Act 13 of 1959 reads
" ’Purchase’, with all its grammatical or
cognate expressions, means the acquis
ition of
goods specified in Schedule ’C’ for use in the
manufacture of goods for sale for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable considera-
tion otherwise than under a mortgage,
hypothecation, charge or- pledge."
The first limb of the argument is that the definition of
"purchase" is more comprehensive than the definition of
"sale" under the Indian Sale of Goods Act and, therefore,
the State Legislature was
(1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 809.
570
incompetent to make a law under entry "sale or purchase" in
List 11 of the 7th Schedule to the Constitution. The
constitutional position is well settled. Entry 54 of List
II of the 7th Schedule to the Constitution reads :
"Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other
than newspapers, subject to the provisions of
entry 92A of List 1."
In The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras)
Ltd.(1) Venkatarama Aiyer, J., speaking for the Court,
observed :
"Thus, according to the law both of England
and India, in order to constitute a sale it is
necessary that there should be an agreement
between the parties for the purpose of
transferring title to goods which of course
presupposes capacity to contract, that it must
be supported by money consideration, and that
as a result of the transaction property must
actually pass in the goods. Unless these
elements are present, there can be no sale.
Thus, if merely title to the goods passes but
not as a result of any contract between the
parties, express or implied, there is no
sale."
This Court also held that the State Legislature, by
enlarging the ,definition of "sale", could not include
transactions which were not sales according to the well
established concepts of law tinder the Law of Contract or
the Sale of Goods Act; see Sales-tax Officer v. Budh Prakash
(2 ) and George Oakes v. State of Madras(3).
Bearing that in mind let us look at clause (ff) in section 2
of the Principal Act in which the said clause was inserted.
The ingredients of the definition of "purchase" are as
follows : (i) there shall be acquisition of goods; (ii) the
acquisition shall be for cash ,or deferred payment or other
valuable consideration; (ii) the said valuable consideration
shall not be other than under a mortgage, hypothecation,
charge or pledge. Clause (h) of’ section 2 defines thus
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"sale" means an transfer of property in goods
other than goods specified in Schedule C for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable
consideration but does not include a mortgage,
hypothecation, charge or pledge.
If we turn to the Sale of Goods Act, section 4 thereof
define contract of sale of goods. It reads :
"Contract of sale of goods is a contract
whereby the seller transfers or agrees to
transfer the property ill goods to the buyer
for a price......
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 379,397-398.
(2) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 459
(3) A. 1. R. 1962 S.C. 1037
571
The essential requisite of sale are (i) there shall be a
transfer of property or agreement to transfer property by
one party to another; and (ii) it shall be for consideration
of money payment or promise thereof by the buyer. A sale
and a purchase are different aspects of the same
transaction. If we look at it from the standpoint of a
purchaser it is purchase and if we look at it from the
standpoint of the seller it is a sale. Whether purchase or
sale it shall have the said ingredients both in common law
and under the Indian Contract Act. ’Price’ has been defined
in the Sale of Goods Act to mean money consideration for the
sale of goods : see s. 2(10) of the Indian Sale of Goods
Act. It will, therefore, be seen that the definition of
’purchase’ in the Act prima facie appears to be wider in
scope than ’sale’. While transfer of goods from one person
to another is the ingredient of ’sale’ in general law,
acquisition ion of goods, which may in its comprehensive
sense take in voluntary as well as involuntary transfers, is
an ingredient of ’purchase’ in clause (ff). While ’price’,
i.e., money consideration, is the ingredient of ’sale’,
cash, deferred payment or any valuable consideration is an
ingredient of ’Purchase’. But a closer scrutiny compels us
to give a restricted meaning to the expression "acquisition"
and "price". Acquisition is the act by which a person ac-
quires property in a thin-. "Acquire" is to become the
owner of the property. One can, therefore, acquire a
property either by voluntary or involuntary transfer. But
the Sales Tax Act applies only to "sale" as defined in the
Act. Under clause (h) of section 2 of the Act it is defied
as a transfer of property. As purchase is only a differed,
aspect of sale, looked at from the stand point of the
purchaser, and as the Act imposes tax at different points in
respect of sales, having regard to the purpose of the ,ale,
it is unreasonable to assume that the Legislature
contemplated different categories of transactions when the
taxable event is it the purchase point. Whether it is sale
or purchase the transaction is the same. If it was a
transfer inter vivos, in the case of a sale it must equally
be so in the case of a purchase. Context, consistency and
avoidance of anomaly demand a restricted meaning. That it
must only mean transfer is also made clear by the nature of
the transactions excluded from the acquisition, namely,
mortgage, hypothecation,charge or pledge-all of them belong
to the species of transfer. We must, therefore,hold that the
expression "acquisition" in clause (ff) of section2
of the Act means only "transfer".
Now. coming to the expression "price". it is no doubt
defined in the Sale of Goods Act as "money consideration".
Cash or deferred payment in clause (ff) of section 2 of the
Act satisfied the said definition. The expression "valuable
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consideration" has a wider connotation, but the said
expression is also used in the same collocation in the
definition of "sale" in section 2(h) of the Act. The said
expression must bear the same meaning, in clause
5 72
(ff) and clause (h) of section 2 of the Act. It may also be
noticed that in most of the Sales Tax Acts the same three
expressions are used. It has never been argued or decided
that the said expression means other than monetary
consideration. This consistent legislative practice cannot
be ignored. The expression "valuable consideration" takes
colour from the preceding expression "cash or deferred
payment". If so, it can only mean some other monetary
payment in the nature of cash or deferred payment. We,
therefore, hold that clause (ff) of section 2 of the Act is
not void for legislative incompetence.
Another argument to invalidate clause (ff) of section 2 of
the principal Act may also be noticed. It is said that that
clause offends Art. 14 of the Constitution on the ground
that by reason of the said definition the same goods if
purchased by a manufacturer would be taxed but they would
not be taxed if purchased by a person other than a
manufacturer. But a close scrutiny of clause (ff) of
section 2 discloses that there is a reasonable classi-
fication in the said definition. The raw goods purchased by
a manufacturer are transformed on manufacture into some
other goods and that is the reason why the Legislature taxes
the goods before they lose their identity. But where no
manufacturer intervenes there is no such metamorphosis and,
therefore, the taxable event is the sale. There is
certainly a reasonable relation between the object of the
statute and the differences between the two categories of
transactions.
The next argument turns upon the interpretation of clause
(ff). The argument is, to come Linder the definition of
"purchase" it is not enough that the acquisition of goods
shall be for cash etc. but that the acquisition shall be for
use in the manufacture of goods for sale for cash etc. On
this construction it is argued that the tax levied was
excise duty and, therefore, beyond the competence of the
State Legislature. The contention is that the tax on the
purchase was in connection with the manufacture of goods
and, therefore, an excise duty. There is an essential
distinction between the two imposts : while excise duty is
in respect of manufacture of goods, the sales-tax is upon
the sale of the goods. The question, therefore, is whether
under the Act the purchase tax is imposed on the sale of the
goods or in connection with the manufacture of goods. The
decisions of this Court establish that "in order to be ,in
excise duty (a) the levy must be upon ’goods’ and (b) the
taxable event must be the manufacture or production of
goods." : see Messrs. Shinde Brothers v. The Deputy
Commissioner, Raichur(1) The tax has no nexus with the
manufacture of goods. The purpose for which the goods are
purchased is only relevant for fixing the
(1) Civil Appeals No. 1580-1586, 1588 and 1590-1600 of 1966
(decided on 26-9-1966).
573
taxable event, but the tax is on the purchase of the goods.
That taxable event is fixed before the goods are actually
manufactured. We, therefore, hold that the tax under the
Act is a purchase tax and not an excise duty.
Then it is contended that while section 15 of the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956 (Act 74 of 1956) imposes a restriction
on the State not to tax at more than one stage, the amending
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Act by introducing the definition of "purchase" enables the
State to tax the same goods at the purchase point and at the
sale point. But this argument misses the point that goods
purchased and the goods sold are not identical ones.
Manufacture changes the identity. Therefore, the same goods
are not taxed at two stages.
The last argument is that the said definition only takes in
the purchase of goods for use in the manufacture of goods,
but tax is imposed on the purchase of goods for producing
oil. To state it differently, oil is not manufactured out
of oil seeds but only produced. Reliance is placed upon the
user of two words in the Act, viz. manufacturing or
processing in the proviso to sub-section (2) of section 4
and sub-section (5) thereof and the expression "edible oils
produced" in entry 57 of Schedule B to the Act and a con-
tention is raised that the Act itself makes a distinction
between manufacturing and processing and manufacture and
production and, therefore, oil is not manufactured but only
produced from oil seeds. Support is sought to be derived
for this argument from the decision of this Court in Union
of India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills(1). But a perusal
of the judgment shows that this Court only held that refined
oil produced out of seeds was only an intermediate stage in
the manufacture and was, therefore, not liable to excise
duty. On the other band, the dictionary meaning of
"manufacture" is "transform or fashion raw materials into a
changed form for use". When oil is produced out of the
seeds the process certainly transforms raw material into
different article for use. We cannot, therefore, accept
this contention.
Now coming to Civil Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of 1965, the first
additional point raised is that when iron scrap is converted
into rolled steel it does not involve the process of
manufacture. It is contended that the said conversion does
not involve any process of manufacture, but the scrap is
made into a better marketable commodity. Before the High
Court this contention was not pressed. That apart, it is
clear that scrap iron ingots undergo a vital change in the
process of manufacture and are converted into a different
commodity, viz., rolled steel sections. During the process
the scrap iron loses its identity and becomes a new
marketable commodity. The process is certainly one of
manufacture.
(1) [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 586.
574
The next argument is that the Act is in conflict with
section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, inasmuch as
it enables the levy of sales-tax at more than one stage. In
these and connected appeals we are concerned only with two
periods-the first period upto October 31, 1958 and the
second period from November 1, 1958 to March 31, 1960. It
is, therefore, necessary to notice the relevant provisions
governing the said two periods.
The relevant part of section 15 of the Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956 (74 of 1956), as amended by Central Sales Tax
(Amendment) Act 16 of 1957, reads thus :
"Every sales tax law of a State shall, in so
far as it imposes or authorises the imposition
of a tax on, the ,,ale or purchase of declared
goods, be subject to the following
restrictions and conditions, namely
(a) the tax payable under that law in
respect of any sale or purchase of such goods
inside the State shall be levied only in
respect of the last sale or purchase inside
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the State and shall not exceed two per cent of
the sale or purchase price;
(b) notwithstanding anything contained in
clause (a), no tax shall be levied in respect
of the last sale or purchase inside the State
if the declared goods purchased are intended
for sale in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce.
Explanation. The expression "last sale or purchase inside
the State means the transaction in which a dealer registered
under the sales tax law of the State--
(i) sells to or purchases from another such
dealer declared goods for use by the purchaser
in the manufacture of goods for sale or for
use by the purchaser in the execution of any
contract; or
(ii) purchases declared goods from another
such dealer for sale to a dealer not
registered under the sales tax law of the
State or to a consumer in the State."
This section was amended by the Central Sales Tax (Amend-
ment) Act 31 of 1958 with effect from October 1, 1958. The
relevant part of the amended section reads :
"Every sales tax law of a State shall, in so
far as it imposes or authorises the imposition
of a tax on the sale or purchase of declared
goods, be subject to the following
restrictions and conditions, namely
(a)the tax payable under that law in respect
of any
sale or purchase of such goods inside the
State shall not
exceed.two per cent. of the sale or purchase
price there-
575
of, and such tax shall not be levied at more
than one stage;
(b) Where a tax has been levied under that
law in respect of the sale or purchase inside
the State of any declared goods and such goods
are sold in the course of interstate trade or
commerce, the tax so levied shall be refunded
to such person in such manner and subject to
such conditions is may be provided in any law
in force in that State.
While section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act before the
amendment described the stage at which the purchase tax can
be levied, section 15 after the amendment only declares that
it cannot be levied at more than one stage. This Court in
M/s Modi Spinning & Weaving Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Punjab & Anr. (1) observed as follows :
"The meaning or the intention of clause (3) of
Art. 286 is not to destroy all charging
sections in the Sales Tax Acts of the States
which are discrepant with section 5(a) of the
Central Sales Tax Act, but to modify them in
accordance therewith. The law of the State is
declared to be subject to the restrictions and
conditions contained in the law made by
Parliament and the rate in the State A
ct would
pro tanto stand modified. The effect of Art.
286(3) is now brought out by the second
proviso to s. 5(1). But this proviso is
enacted out of abundant caution and even
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without it the result was the same."
The effect of this judgment is that the stage prescribed
under section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act before the
amendment and the prohibition against taxation at more than
one stage contained in the amended section would
automatically control the provisions of the Punjab Genet-at
Sales Tax Act, 1948. With the result upto October 1, 1958,
tinder the State Sales Tax Act a tax could be levied only in
respect of purchase of declared goods inside the State and
only on the purchase made by a dealer of goods for use by
him in the manufacture of goods; and from October 1, 1958,
the State can only levy tax at one stage. For the second
period the Central Act by its own force did not fix the
stage.
Pursuant to the provisions of section 15 of the Central
Sales Tax Act, before it was amended, Act 7 of 1958 added
clause (ff) to section 2 of the Principal Act fixing the
same stage indicated by section 15 of the Central Act, i.e.
the stage when the purchase is made by a dealer for use in
the manufacture of goods. This section was amended by Act
13 of 1959 and Act 24 of 1959. Under the latter amendment
in clause (ff) of section 2 for the words "goods for use in
the manufacture of goods for sale" the
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 592.600.
576
words "goods specified in Schedule ’C’ for use in the
manufacture of goods for sale" were substituted; that is to
say, the stage for taxation prescribed in the earlier
definition was amended. It may be recalled that under the
Central Sales Tax Act, as amended, the description of the
stage was omitted, but that does not affect the question,
for that description is maintained even under the amended
clause (ff). It follows from the said discussion that the
Punjab General Sales Tax Act, during the crucial period
which is the subject matter of these appeals, in terms fixed
a stage for taxation, i.e., the stage of purchase by a
dealer for use in the manufacture of goods. There are,
therefore, no merits in this contention either,.
Now coming to Civil Appeals Nos. 81 of 1965 and 540 of 1965,
three additional points are raised by Mr. Desai, namely, (i)
by including in the term "purchase", read with the
definition of "dealer", where there is acquisition of cotton
through commission agents, the State Legislature has
exceeded its legislative power under entry 54 of List 11, of
Schedule 7 to the Constitution; (ii) ,during the relevant
period tax was leviable on cotton without fixing any stage
and at more than one stage in violation of section 15 of the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956; and (iii) there is no rational
basis to single out the three items, namely, cotton, oil-
seeds and resin for imposition of purchase tax and,
therefore, the relevant provisions offend Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
We have already held in another context that there are no
merits in the second point.
The first point need not detain us, as in the High Court no
specific point was raised in that regard.
On the third point also no adequate material was placed in
the court below and, therefore, it does not call for our
consideration.
In the result the appeals are dismissed with costs. One
hearing fee
R.K.P.S. Appeals
dismissed.
577
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