Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
B. G.SOMANNA & SONS ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/07/1972
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
RAY, A.N.
DUA, I.D.
PALEKAR, D.G.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2227 1973 SCR (1) 708
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh General Sales-tax Act, (6 of 1970) Schedule 3
item 6-Item levying tax on groundnuts when purchased by a
miller other than a decorticating miller in the state at the
point of purchase by such miller and in all other cases at
the point of purchase by the last dealer who buys in the
State-Item whether levies tax at two points and is thus in
conflict with Central Sales-tax Act, section 15.
HEADNOTE:
Under s. 15 of the Central Sales-tax Act the imposition of a
tax on the sale or purchase of declared goods is inter alia
subject to the restriction that such tax shall not be levied
at more than one stage. Groundnuts are declared good under
s. 14 of the Act. Item 6 of schedule 3 to the Andhra
Pradesh General Sales-tax Act (6 of 1957) levies tax on
groundnuts when purchased by a miller other than a
decorticating miller in the State at the point of purchase
by such miller, And in all other cases at the point of
purchase by the last dealer who buys in the State. The
appellants were millers other than decorticating millers.
In writ petitions under Article 226 of the Constitution they
challenged the levy of tax at the point of purchase by them
on the ground that item 6 of schedule III was in conflict
with section 15 of the Central Act in as much as tax on
groundnut purchased by a non-decorticating miller and later
sold as such to other dealers would be taxed at two points
once in the hands of the said miller, and again, at the
point of purchase by the last dealer. The High Court
dismissed the petitions. By certificate appeals were filed
in this Court.
Dismissing the appeals,
HELD : The validity of the levy of tax upon a purchase by a
last dealer could be questioned by one of the appellants
only if he was being taxed as a last dealer and not as a
miller. It was apparent that the appellants were being
taxed at the point of purchase by them as millers only.
Each of the appellants became liable to the payment of tax
as a purchasing miller just as a last dealer would be liable
on the purchases made by him. Hence the last dealer and the
miller who purchases presumably to convert the groundnuts
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into other products, are placed on an equal ’footing. It
was not shown that there was a possibility of double
taxation or of taxation of the same product at more than one
point of purchase.
[711 D]
Sri Venkataswara Rice, Ginning & Groundnut Oil Mill
Contractors Co. etc. v. The State of A.P. & Ors., A.I.R.
1972 S.C. 51, applied to.
[On the facts of the case the Court did not find it
necessary to consider the position of a miller who purchases
some grounds( for milling and the rest for sale.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: C.A. Nos. 323-332, 1312 & 1174
of 1969.
709
Appeals by certificate from the judgment and a decree dated
September 27, 1968 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court of
Judicature at Hyderabad in Writ Petitions Nos. 2956, 1798,
1931, 2313, 3372, 3740, 3964, 3956 and 4088 of 1968 and
Civil Appeal No. 1518 of 1970.
On appeal by certificate from the judgment and order dated
March 31, 1970, of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ
Petition No. 3501 of 1968 and Appeal by certificate against
the judgment and order dated August 25, 1970 of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad in Writ
Petition No. 4034 of 1970.
B. V. Subramanyam and G. Narayana Rao for the appellants
(in CA Nos. 323/69 and 1312/69).
G. Narayana Rao, for the appellants (in all the appeals).
P. Basi Reddy and B. Parthasarathy, for the respondents
(in C. As Nos. 323, 332, 1312, 1174/69.)
P. Basi Reddy and A. V. V. Nair, for the respondent, (In
C.A. No. 1518/70).
P. Basi Reddy and P. Parameshwara Rao, for the respondent
(In C.A. Nos. 2117/70).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered
Beg, J. In these appeals by Certificate only one question of
law has been argued. It may be formulated as follows :
"Is any part of the provision of Item 6 of Schedule III of
the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act (6 of 1957)
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) relating to the
’point of levy’ void for contravening Section 15 (a) of the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 ?"
Each of the appellants before us is a miller and one of a
large number of such millers who had applied to the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh, under Article 226 of the
Constitution, for a Writ of Prohibition against proceedings
for assessment of Sales-Tax taken on the strength of an
allegedly void provision of law. The validity of item 6 of
Schedule III of the Act was challenged on a number of
grounds in the High Court which need not be mentioned here
as the only ground which has been argued before us is
covered by the question formulated above.
It may be mentioned that none of the appellants set out
facts showing the nature of the demand in the proceedings
under the Act aganist them, or, the extent, if any, to which
each petitioner, who is a miller, registered also as a
dealer under the Act as well
710
as under the Central Act, sells groundnuts, or, whether
groundnuts were purchased specifically only for purposes of
crushing them and converting them into oil or into any other
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product or for the purpose of sale as well. They have
merely questioned the validity of item 6 of Schedule III of
the Act by reason of alleged conflict with Section 15 of the
Central Act so that all we need do is to set out the two
provisions and give our reasons for our conclusions. We
have already dismissed the appeals after hearing them. We
now proceed to record our reasons.
Item 6 of Schedule III reads as follows
Description of
goods-- Point of levy Rate of tax
Groundnuts 3 naya paise
in the rupee
When purchased by a miller
other than a decorticating
miller in the State at the point
of purchase by such miller,
and, in all other cases at the
point of purchase by the last.
dealer who buys in the
State".
Groundnuts have been declared as goods of special importance
in inter-state trade or commerce under Section 14 of the
Central Act. Section 15 of the Central Act lays down:
"15. 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 three per
cent of the sale or purchase Price thereof,
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 inter-State trade or
commerce, the tax so levied shall be refunded
to such person in such manner and subject to
such conditions as may be provided in any law
in force in that State".
711
It may be mentioned that, in so far as the rate of tax
specified in item 6, Schedule III of the Act is concerned,
the Andhra Pradesh High Court had itself given some relief
to the appellants, on the ground that the definition of
turn-over under the Act could include what is more than the
sale price as defined by the Central Act, so that the rate
may exceed the limit imposed by Section 15(a) of the Central
Act. We are, therefore, no longer concerned with the
question of rate but only with that part of item 6, Schedule
III, which makes millers other than decorticating millers
liable to pay the tax when they purchase groundnuts.
It is contended that the groundnuts purchased by the appel-
lants would be taxed at the point of purchase by them and
also again in the hands of "last dealers" to whom they may
sell. The short answer to this argument could be that the
validity of the levy of a tax upon a purchase by a last
dealer could be questioned by one of the appellants only if
he was being taxed as a last dealer and not as a miller. It
is apparent that they are, being taxed at the point of
purchase by them as millers only. When they purchase
groundnuts as millers they do so presumably in order to
convert the groundnuts into another product altogether, and,
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they would, therefore, presumably be last purchasers of
ground-nuts as "groundnuts". They may be selling their
products in forms other than groundnuts. The appellants
are, however, not questioning the validity of a tax upon any
sales of these other products. They are questioning the
validity of the tax on ground-nuts purchased by them. They
submit that only one point of taxation can be provided for
these sales by a State law. We will, therefore, consider
this ground.
It is clear to us that, in such cases, the liability to pay
tax, which is a tax on purchase, falls only at one point.
In fact, the question raised before us seems to us to be
covered by a decision of this Court on item 6 of Schedule
III in Sri Venkateswara Rice, Ginning & Groundnut Oil Mill
Contractors Co. etc. v. The, State of A. P. & Ors. (1) where
this Court said at page 5 3 :
"None of the assessees before us is a
decorticating miller. Hence we have to see
whether the purchases of’ groundnut made by,
them did not become taxable as soon as they
made those purchases. it is now well settled
that even under the Sales Tax laws, the charge
in respect of a sale or purchase becomes
effective as soon as the sale in the case of
purchase tax is made, though the liability of
the dealer can be computed only at the end of
the year. The incurring of the charge is one
thing and its computation is a totally
different
(1) A.I.R. 1972 S.C.51.
712
thing.. Hence the turnover relating to the
purchases with which we are concerned in these
appeals became charged with the liability to
pay tax as soon as those purchases were made
by the assessee-millers. To restate the
position, whenever a miller purchases ground-
nut, the turnover relating to that purchase
becomes exgible to tax subject to such
exemptions as may be given under the Act.
This means that as soon as a first miller
purchases groundnut, the turnover relating to
that purchase, the question of exemption
apart, becomes liable to tax. This is also
the view taken by the High Court".
It may be mentioned here that, in the above mentioned case,
the assessee had already been taxed and one of the arguments
advanced there was that the part of the taxed turnover which
was sold by the assessee miller to other millers should be
excluded because it was not dealt with by him as a miller
but as a dealer who was not the last purchaser. The Court
said
"The next argument advanced on behalf of the
assessees is that in the case of some of the
assessees a part of the groundnut purchased
had, been sold to other millers; hence in
those cases, the assessees must be taxed only
in respect of that part of the turnover which
relates to groundnut which they had crushed
for extracting oil and in the case of
remaining part, it is the last dealer who
purchased the same should be taxed. This
contention again is unacceptable. As
mentioned earlier the event which attracted
tax is the act of the miller purchasing
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groundnut and not his act of crushing the
groundnut purchased or dealing with that
groundnut in any other manner. We have
earlier mentioned that very act of purchase by
a miller attracts the liability to pay tax
under Section 5 read with Schedule 3 item 6.
His subsequent dealings in those goods become
irrelevant. In none of the cases before us it
was shown that any of. the assessees had pur-
chased groundnut with a view to sell them.
Hence we need not go into the question as to
what would be the position in law where a
miller purchases some ground-nut for milling
and the rest for sale’.
In the cases before us also we need not consider the
position of a miller who purchases some groundnuts for
milling and the rest for sale. It is clear that each of the
appellants becomes liable to the payment of tax as a
purchasing miller just as a last dealer would be liable on
the purchases made by him.
713
Hence, the last dealer and the miller, who purchases
presumably to convert the groundnuts into other products,
are placed on an equal footing. We were not satisfied that
there is a possibility of double taxation or of taxation of
the same product at more than one point of purchase.
These appeals were, therefore, dismissed by us on 1-5-1972.
The respondents are entitled to their costs in this Court.
G.C. Appeals dismissed.
-L152 Sup CI/ 73
714