Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C. B. GOSAIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ORISSA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/04/1963
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 767 1964 SCR (2) 879
ACT:
Sales Tax-Contract for Manufacture and supply of bricks-
Bricks manufactured and supplied according to contract and
payment received- Contractor whether liable to sales tax on
bricks Supplied- Transfer of property in the bricks-What
constitutes Sale-Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Orissa 14 of
1947).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant manufactured and supplied a large quantity of
bricks to a company under a contract according to the
specifications contained in it. The contract provided that
land would be given by the company to the appellant free for
providing earth for the manufacture of the bricks.
Held that the supplies constituted a sale of goods and were
liable to be subjected to sales tax. The proper interpre-
tation of the contract was that the earth supplied by the
company to the appellant became the latter’s property and
that the bricks that the appellant manufactured were also
his property and these brick,; were what he sold to the
company under the contract and the contract was not,
therefore, one only for labour supplied or work done.
P.A. Raju Chettiar v. The State of Madras, [1955] 6 S. T.
C. 1 3 1, distinguished.
Nor was the contract one of work done and materials found.
Whether a contract is one of work done and materials found
or one for sale of goods depends on its essence. If not of
its essence that a chattel should be produced and
transferred as a chattel,, then it may he a contract for
work done and materials found and not a contract for sale of
goods. The contract in this case no doubt required the
appellant to bestow a certain amount of skill and labour in
the manufacture of bricks but the object of the contract
nevertheless remained the delivery of bricks manufactured,
as chattel.
P. A. Raju Chettiar v. The State of Madras, [1955] 6 S.T.
C. 131, Clay v. Yates (1856) 1 H & N. 73, Robinson v.
Graves, [1935] 1 K. B. 579, Grafton v. Armitage, [1845]
880
2 C. B.336 and J. Marcel (Furriers) Ltd. v. Tapper, (1953) 1
All. E. R. 15, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 41 to 49
of 1962.
Appeals by special leave from the.’ judgment and order
dated’ July 23, 1959, of the Orissa High Court in O. J. C.
No’ 33 of 1959.
A.Ranganadham Chetty, B. D. Dhawan,, S. K. Mehta and K.
L, Mehta, for the appellant.
C . K. Daphtary, Attorney-General for India, R. Ganapathy
Iyer and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents.
1963. April 5. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKAR J.-The appellant had entered into a contract with a
company called the Hindusthan Steel Private Ltd., for the
manufacture and supply of bricks at Rourkela in Orissa.
Large quantities of bricks were manufactured and supplied
under the contract and the appellant received payment for
them. The respondent State assessed the appellant to sales
tax under the Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1947 on these supplies
on the basis that they were sales. The appellant contended
that the contract was only for labour or for work done and
material found, and that there was really no sale of any
goods on which the tax could be levied. He moved the High
Court of Orissa for a write of mandamus directing the res-
pondent State not to assess or levy the tax. The
application was rejected in limine by the High Court. The
appellant has now come to this Court in further appeal.
Now a sale which can be taxed under the Act has been defined
as "Any transfer of property in
881
goods for cash or deferred payment or other valuable
consideration." The point at issue is whether the contract
was for a transfer of property in the bricks from the
appellant to the Company for a consideration.
It is said that the bricks were made out of earth belonging
to the Company and, therefore, the bricks had all along been
its property and there could be no transfer of property in
them to it. This contention is founded on a clause in the
contract which says., "land will be given free" and which
was apparently intended to make the earth available to the
appellant for making the bricks.
We are unable to agree that this clause proved that the
earth all along continued to belong to the Company. It
seems to us that when the clause said, "land will be given",
it meant that the property in the earth to be dug out for
making the bricks would be transferred to the appellant. It
may be presumed that it was understood that in quoting his
rate for the bricks, the appellant would take into account
the free supply of earth for making the bricks. Again what
was supplied to the Company by the appellant was not the
earth which be got from it but bricks, which we think, are
something entirely different. It could not have been
intended that the property in the earth would continue in
the Company in spite of its conversion into such a different
thing as bricks. Further we find that the contract provided
that the bricks would remain at the appellant’s risk till
delivery to the Company. Now, obviously bricks could not
remain at the appellant’s risk unless they were his
property. Another clause provided that the appellant would
not be able to sell the bricks to other parties without the
permission of the Company. Apperantly, it was contemplated
that without such a provision the appellant could have sold
the bricks to others.
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882
Now he could not sell the bricks at all unless they belonged
to him. Then we find that in the tender which the appellant
submitted and the acceptance of which made the contract, he
stated, "II/we hereby tender for the supply to the
Hindusthan Steel Private Ltd. of the materials described in
the undermentioned memorandum". The memorandum described
the materials as bricks, and also stated the "Quantities to
be delivered" and the "Rate at which materials are to be
supplied". All these provisions plainly show that the
contract was for sale of bricks. If it were so, the
property in the bricks must have been in the appellant and
passed from him to the Company. The same conclusion follows
from another provision in the contract which states that if
bricks are stacked in a specified manner "then 75% of the
value of the bricks at kiln site will be measured and paid
The balance of 25%... ... will be paid finally when all the
bricks have been delivered Only full bricks as finally
delivered ...... will be taken into account "
Before we leave this part of the case we have to notice the
decision in P. A. Raju Chettiar v. The State of Madras (1),
to which learned counsel for the appellant referred. We do
not think however that it is of any assistance. That was a
case in which a merchant had delivered silver to workmen for
manufacture of utensils and the workmen returned the
manufactured utensils. It was held that there was no sale
of the silver by the merchant to the workmen. It was so
held because the weight of the silver had been debited to
the workmen on delivery and credited to them on the
manufactured goods being made over to the merchant and the
price of the silver had never been debited or credited to
them. Furthermore, the workmen had been paid only the
charges for their labour. On these facts it could not be
said that the property in the silver had ever passed to the
workmen. The facts in the
(1) [1955] 6 S. T. C, 131.
883
present case are different and for the reasons earlier
mentioned, justify the view that here there was a transfer
of the property in the earth to the appellant by the
Company.
Learned counsel stressed the fact that the contract nowhere
used the word sale in connection with the supply of the
bricks, in support of his argument that there was no sale.
But it is not necessary that to constitute a sale, the word
’sale’ has to be used. We have sail enough to show that
under the contract there was a transfer of property in the
bricks for consideration and, therefore, a sale
notwithstanding that the word "sale’ was not used.
The other argument of learned counsel for the appellant was
that even if the earth of which the bricks had to be made be
taken to have been transferred under the contract to the
appellant, this was not a contract for sale of goods but one
of work done and materials found. A contract of this kind
is illustrated by the case of Clay v. Yates (1). There the
contract was to print a book, the printer to find the
materials including the paper. Robinson v. Graves (2), was
also referred to. There a person had commissioned an artist
to paint the portrait of a lady and it was held that the
contract was not for sale of goods though the artist had to
supply the paint and canvas and had to deliver the completed
picture. In these cases in arriving at the view that the
contract was not for sale of goods the test that was applied
is, what was the essence of the contract ? Was it the
intention of the parties in making the contract that a
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chattel should be producedand transferred as a chattel
for a consideration? This test has now been accepted as of
general application to decide whether a contract was for
sale of goods or for labour supplied and materials found:
see Benjamin on Sales (8th ed.) p. 161 and Halsbury’s Laws
of England (3rd ed.) vol. 34, p. 6.
(1) (1856) 1 H & N 73,
(2) (1935) 1 K,B, 579,
884
It is true that the test will often be found to be difficult
of application. But no such difficulty arises in the
present case. Here the intention of the parties in making
the contract clearly was that the Company would obtain
delivery of the bricks to be made by the appellant; it was a
contract for the transfer of chattels qua chattels. The
essence of the contract was the delivery of the bricks,
though no doubt they had to be manufactured to a certain
specification. It would be absurd to suggest that the
essence of the contract was the work of manufacture and the
delivery of the bricks was merely ancillary to the work of
manufacture, in the same way as the delivery of the paint
and the canvas were held to be ancillary to the contract to
paint the portrait -in Robinson V. GraVes
The fact that under the contract the bricks had to be
manufactured according to certain specifications, and,
therefore, the appellant had to bestow a certain amount of
skill and labour in the manufacture of the bricks, does not
affect the question. That was not the essence of the
contract. The object of the contract nonetheless remained
the delivery of bricks. It has never been doubted that
"’the claim of a tailor or a shoemaker is for the price of
goods when delivered, and not for the work or labour
bestowed by him in the fabrication of them" : see Grafton v.
Armitage (2) and J. Marcel (Furriers) Ltd. v. Tapper (3).
The present case, therefore, must a fortori be one of sale
of goods.
It remains now to notice a preliminary objection to this
appeal raised by the respondent. It was said that before
the High Court was moved under Art. 226 for the writ, the
appellant had filed appeals against the orders of assessment
to the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal. These appeals failed
and the appellants application for an order on the Tribunal
(1) (1935) 1 K.B. 579. (2) (1845) 2 C. B. 3 3.6.
(3) (1953) 1 All. E.R. 15.
885
to refer to the High Court the question of law raised in
this appeal was also rejected by the High Court. It is,
therefore, said that this appeal is concluded by the order
of the High Court last mentioned. But it appears that this
Court had granted leave to appeal from the High Court’s
order refusing to issue the writ before the appeal to the
tribunal had been dismissed. The appellant could have
appealed from the High Court’s order refusing to direct a
reference of the question but he chose to prosecute the
appeal against the order in the petition for the writ which
would have given him the same relief. Either remedy was
open to him and neither can be said in the circumstances to
be barred by the other.
The appeal however fails on the merits and it is dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.