Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. RAM NARAIN SONS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASST. COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX AND OTHERS(and other cases)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/09/1955
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1955 AIR 765 1955 SCR (2) 483
ACT:
Constitution of India-Article 286(2)-Proviso thereto-Whe-
ther the proviso is meant to lift the ban only under Article
286(2) and no other-And thus does not lift the ban under
Article 286(1)(a) read with the Explanation-Assessment
consisting of a single undivided sum in respect of totality
of property-Wrongful inclusion therein of certain item of
property expressly exempted from taxation-Legal effect
thereof-Central Provinces and Berar Act 1947 (XXI of 1947)
-Explanation II to Section 2(g) as originally enacted-before
its amendment by Madhya Pradesh Act IV of 1951-Whether
offended Article 286(1)(a) read with the Explanation-Whether
the President’s order issued under the proviso to Article
286(2) protected the same.
HEADNOTE:
Held, per S. B. DAs ACTING CHIEF JUSTICE, BHGWATI,JAFER
IMAM and CHANDRASEKHARA AIYAR JJ. (JAGANNADHADAS J.
484
dissenting). The bans imposed by Article 286 of the
Constitution on the taxing powers of the States are
independent and separate and each one of them has to be got
over before a State Legislature can impose tax on
transactions of sale or purchase of goods. The Explanation
to Article 286(1)(a) determines by the legal fiction created
therein the situs of the sale in the case of transactions
coming within that category and once it is determined by the
application of the Explanation that a transaction is outside
the State it follows as a matter of course that the State,
with reference to which the transaction can thus be
predicated to be outside it, can never tax the transaction.
The ban under Article 286(1)(a) read with the
Explanation is effective independently of the fact that the
transaction may have taken place in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce or with reference to goods as have
been declared by Parliament by law to be essential for the
life of the community. The ban imposed under Article 286(2)
is an independent and separate one and looks at the
transactions entirely from the point of view of their having
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taken place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.,
Even if such transactions may also fall within the category
of transactions covered by Article 286(1)(a) and the
Explanation thereto or Article 286(3) the moment Article
286(2) is attracted by reason of the transactions being in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce, the ban under
Article 286(2) operates and such transactions can never be
subjected to tax at the instance of a State Legislature
except in so far as Parliament by law may otherwise provide
or such power of taxation is saved by the President’s order
contemplated in the proviso. The ban under Article 286(2)
may be saved by the President’s order but that does not
affect or lift the ban under Article 286(1)(a) read with the
Explanation.
Apart from the aforesaid construction put upon the
several clauses of Article 286 in The Bengal Immunity Co.
case the terms of the proviso to Article 286(2) itself make
it abundantly clear that the proviso is meant only to lift
the ban under Article 286(2) and no other. It is a cardinal
rule of interpretation that a proviso carves out an
exception to the main provision to which it is enacted as a
proviso and to no other. This is made further clear by the
nonobstante clause which states in express terms that it is
enacted only with reference to "this clause" i.e. Article
286(2).
The proviso cannot be extended to any of the other
provisions of Article 286 and it has. therefore, not the
effect of lifting the ban which is imposed by Article
286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto.
Therefore, so far as the post-Constitution period is
concerned the ban imposed by Article 286(1)(a) and the
Explanation thereto could not be removed by the President’s
order which was issued under the proviso to Article 286(2)
in the present case.
Explanation 11 to Section 2(g) of the Central Provinces
and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 offended Article 286(1)(a)
-road with the
485
Explanation to the same and the State of Madhya Pradesh was
therefore, not entitled to tax the transactions of sale in
which goods had actually been delivered as a direct result
of such sale for purposes of consumption outside Madhya
Pradesh and the said Explanation was riot protected by the
President’s order issued under the proviso to Article
286(2).
Where an assessment consists of a single undivided sum in
respect of the totality of the property treated as
assessable, the wrongful inclusion in it of certain items of
property which by virtue of a provision of law were
expressly exempted from taxation, renders the assessment
invalid in toto.
Bennett & White (Calgary) Ltd. and Municipal District of
Sugar City No. 5 (1951 Appeal Cases 786 at p. 816), referred
to.
JAGANNADHADAS J. (Dissenting)-’The two bans under Articles
286(1)(a) and 286(2) are overlapping and-the fact that they
are imposed from different angles cannot obscure the result,
viz., that the bring about the demareation of the same-or
substantially the same field of no taxation.
To construe the two bans as independently and cumulatively
operative is -to impute to them some kind of picturesque
potency and is to miss the reality, viz., that all the bans
under Article 286 are meant to serve the same purpose, viz.,
that of imposing restrictions and thereby demarcating the
fields of no taxation. The bans and the proviso are part&
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of the same Article and have to be harmoniously construed.
The unequivocal and positive language of one part, cannot be
taken to have been obliterated by the negative language of
,the other part so as to result in futility.
The result of construing the proviso and by parity of
reasoning the saving clause, as merely removing the ban of a
particular nature leaving another overlapping ban to
operate, would be to reuder both the saving clause in,. and
the proviso to, Article 286(2) virtually nugatory.
A non-obstante clause does not normally add to or subtract
from the main provision of which it is a part, It is often
enough inserted by way of extra caution. But it does not
have the effect of limiting the operation of the main
provision, The suggestion that the Presidential action lifts
the ban only as regards the inter-State sales would be to
read the phrase "notwithstanding that" as meaning "in so
far". There is no warrant for any such reading.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 132,
133 and 137 of 1955 and Petition No. 567 of 1954.
Appeals under Article 132(1) of the Constitution of India
from the Judgment and Order dated the 18th October 1954 of
the Nagpur High Court in Misc. Peti-
486
tions Nos. 265, 348 and 275 of 1953 respectively and
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India R. M. Hajarnavis
and G. C. Mathur, with him) for the appellant in C.A. No.
132 of 1955.
N. C. Chatterji, (R. M. Hajarnavis and G. C. Mathur, with
him) for Intervener No. 1 in C. A. No. 132 of 1955.
R. M. Hajarnavis and G. C. Mathur, for Intervener No. 2 in
C. A. No. 132 of 1955.
R. M. Hajarnavis and G. C. Mathur, for the appellant in C.
A. No. 133 of 1955.
R. M. Hajarnavis and G. C. Mathur, for the appellant in
C.A. No. 137 of 1955.
M. Adhikari, Deputy Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh and
I. N. Shroff, for respondents in allappeals.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India and C. K.
Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India (A. P. Sen, J. B.
Dadachanji and Rajinder Narain, with them) for the
petitioner in Petition No. 567 of 1954.
T. L. Shevde, Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh
(M. Adhikari, Deputy Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh and
I. N. Shroff, with him) for respondents.
J. B. Dadachanji, R. M. Hajarnavis and Rajinder Narain,
for the Intervener.
1955. September 20. The judgment. of S. R. Das,. Acting
Chief Justice, Bhagwati, Jafer Imam and Chandrasekhara Aiyar
JJ. was delivered by Bhagwati J. Jagannadhadas J. delivered
a separate judgment.
Civil Appeals Nos. 132, 133 and 137 of 1955
BHAGWATI J.-These 3 appeals with certificate under article
132(1) of the Constitution involve the interpretation of the
proviso to article 286(2) and raise a common question as to
whether that proviso also saves
487
the transactions of sale or purchase covered by the
Explanation to article 286(1) (a) from the ban imposed
therein.
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The Appellants in Civil Appeal No. 132 of 1955 are Messrs
Ramnarain Sons Ltd., a firm registered as a As. "dealer"
under the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947,
and carrying on business at Amravati and at other places in
Madhya Pradesh. After the Cotton Control Order, 1949, came
into force on the 12th September, 1949, the Appellants
entered into agreements with several mills situated outside
Madhya Pradesh by which they undertook to purchase kapas in
the various markets in Madhya Pradesh as their agents on
their account and on their behalf The kapas after purchase
was to be ginned and pressed into bales and sent to the
mills. All the expenses involved in the process were to be
borne by the mills which were also to be credited with the
sale proceeds of the cotton seeds and the Appellants were
only entitled to commission on a percentage basis. The Ap-
pellants worked as such agents for the period 1st October,
1949 to 30th September, 1950. By his order dated the 30th
June, 1953 the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Amravati, Respondent No. 1, included the transactions valued
at Rs. 72,86,454-5-10 with the said- mills in the
Appellants’ turnover and ordered the Appellants to pay Rs.
1,13,850-13-6 as sales tax on the said transactions. The
Appellants filed an appeal to the Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Madhya Pradesh, Respondent No. 2, on the 30th July, 1953.
The appeal was, however, entertained by the Deputy
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Respondent No. 3,
who ordered the Appellants to pay Rs. 25,000/- by the 31st
August., 1953. The Appellants thereupon filed a petition
under Article 226, being Misc. Petition No. 265 of 1953, in
the High Court of Judicature at Nagpur, asking inter alia
for the quashing of the order of 30th June, 1953, passed by
Respondent No. I and for consequential reliefs. The
Respondents filed a return denying the contentions of the
Appellants and praying for the dismissal of the petition
with costs.
62
488
The Appellants in Civil Appeal No. 133 of 1955 are the
Eastern Cotton Company, a firm registered as a "dealer"
under the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947,
and carrying on business at Amravati and at other places in
Madhya Pradesh. They also, during the period 1st October,
1949 to 30th September, 1950, worked as agents of certain
mills situated outside Madhya Pradesh, procured kapas for
them in Madhya Pradesh and sent it to the mills for
consumption outside the State. By his order dated the 9th
September, 1953, the Respondent No. I included the
transactions valued at Rs. 33,47,405-5-6 with the said mills
in the Appellants’ turn-over and ordered the Appellants to
pay Rs. 52,303-4-0 as tax on the said transactions. These
Appellants also filed a petition under article 226, being
Misc. Petition No. 348 of 1953, in the High Court of
Judicature at Nagpur for quashing the order dated the 9th
September, 1953, passed by Respondent No. 1 and for con-
sequential reliefs. The Respondents filed a return denying
their contentions.
The Appellants in Civil Appeal No. 137 of 1955 are the
firm, Ramdas Khimji Brothers, Bombay, registered as a
"dealer" under the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax
Act., 1947 and carrying on business as cotton dealers in
Madhya Pradesh. During the period 1st October, 1950 to 30th
September, 1951, the Appellants sold cotton worth Rs.
6,01,949-1-9 to various persons outside Madhya Pradesh. The
cotton was delivered to the buyers for consumption outside
Madhya Pradesh as a direct result of such sales. By his
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order dated the 29th December, 1952, the Sales Tax Officer,
Amravati, in the assessment of the Appellants for the same
period, included the said transactions in the Appellants’
turn-over and assessed sales tax thereon. The Appellants
filed an appeal to Respondent No. I but the same was
dismissed by an order dated the 10th July, 1953. The
Appellants filed on 22nd August, 1953, a revision before the
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh. The Appellants
also filed a petition under Article 226, being Misc.
Petition No. 274 of 1953, in the High Court of Judicature at
489
Nagpur, asking for a writ of certiorari quashing the order
of Respondent No. I passed by him in Sales Tax Appeal No.
13-A dated the 10th July, 1953, and for consequential
reliefs. The Respondents filed a return denying the
contentions of the Appellants and A asking that the petition
be dismissed with costs.
These petitions came up for hearing and final disposal
before the High Court of Judicature at Nagpur along with
Misc. Petitions No. 288 of 1953 and No. 132 of 1954. A
considered judgment was delivered in Miscellaneous Petition
No. 132 of 1954 and the reasoning contained therein governed
the decision in the connected Petitions Nos. 265, 274 and
348 of 1953. The High Court held that the Explanation II to
section 2(g) of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax
Act, 1947, as amended by the Central Provinces and Berar Act
XVI of 1949 having been declared invalid from its inception
by the High Court in Messrs Shriram Gulabdas v. Board of
Revenue (I.L.R. 1953 Nagpur 332) and by this Court in 1954
S.C.R. 1122, the original Explanation remained in force
until the 1st April, 1951, when it was amended by the Madhya
Pradesh Act IV of 1951. Explanation II originally enacted
was in the terms following:-
"Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the Indian
Sale of Goods Act., 1930, the sale of any goods which are
actually in the Central Provinces and Berar at the time when
the contract of sale as defined in that Act in respect
thereof is made, shall wherever the said contract of sale is
made, be deemed for the purpose of this Act to have taken
place in the Central Provinces and Berar".
The Appellants contended that this Explanation offended
article 286(1) (a) read with the Explanation to the same and
the State of Madhya Pradesh was, therefore, not entitled to
tax the transactions of sale in which goods had actually
been delivered as a direct result of such sale for the
purpose of consumption outside Madhya Pradesh. The
Respondents, on the other hand, contended that the said
Explanation was protected until the 31st March, 1951, by the
Sales Tax Continuation Order No. 7 of 1950 issued by the
490
President on’ the 26th January, 1950, under the proviso to
article 286(2).
The High Court was of the opinion that the original
Explanation was validly enacted as the assent of the
Governor-General to the enactment was given on the
23rd May, 1,947, and that under that Explanation the
tax prior to the commencement of the Constitution was
lawfully levied on the sales of goods wherever the contracts
of sale took place if the goods were actually in the State
at the time the contracts of sale were made. This power
could be exercised by the State even if the sales took place
during the course of inter-State trade or commerce and the
goods were delivered as a direct result of the sales for the
purpose of consumption outside the State. This was because
the situs of the goods constituted a sufficient nexus
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between the transactions and the taxing State which was the
foundation for taxation prior to the commencement of the
Constitution. This position continued until the com-
mencement of the Constitution and on the 26th January, 1950,
the President issued the Sales Tax Continuation Order No. 7
of 1950 in exercise of the powers conferred by the proviso
to article 286(2). The sales in question had taken place in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce and accordingly
they were covered by article 286(2) and would, therefore, be
liable to tax even after the commencement of the
Constitution by virtue of the President’s order. Reliance
was further placed on the majority judgment of this Court in
The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (1953
S.C.R. 1069) where it was held that the transaction vis-a-
vis the delivery State lost its inter-State character if it
fell within the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) and was
accordingly made liable to taxation by the delivery State.
So far, however, as the exporting State was concerned, it
retained its character of an inter-State transaction and
would not, therefore, be liable to taxation by that State,
vide article 286(2). The President’s order, however,
removed this ban and. the exporting State was entitled to
tax the transaction by virtue of the power derived by it
from the same. On a construction of
491
the relevant provisions of article 286(1) and article 286(2)
the High Court was of the opinion that it would be making
the proviso to article 286(2) nugatory if it was held that
article 286(1) overrides it and takes away the taxing power
of all States in inter-State trade or commerce except the
delivery State. The High Court accordingly dismissed the
petitions with costs.
The learned Attorney-General appearing for the Appellants
before us contended that so far as the post-Constitution
period is concerned, the position is governed by our
judgment in The Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. The State of
Bihar delivered on the 6th September, 1955. He urged that
the bans imposed on the powers of the State Legislatures to
levy taxes on the sale or purchase of goods in the several
clauses of article 286 are independent and separate and that
the transactions of sale or purchase referred to in the
various clauses must be looked at from different viewpoints.
Even if a transaction might fall within the category of
inter-State sale or purchase and the President’s order under
the proviso to article 286(2) might enable the State to levy
any tax on such sale or purchase which was being lawfully
levied by the State immediately before the commencement of
the Constitution, such transaction had also to surmount the
ban imposed under article 286(1) (a) and the Explanation
thereto so that, if, as a direct result of such sale, the
goods were actually delivered for the purpose of consumption
in another State, the exporting State ,(to use the
phraseology of the Nagpur High Court) or the title-State (to
use the phraseology adopted in some of the judgments in The
Bengal Immunity Co.’s Appeal) would not be entitled to levy
a tax on such sale the transaction being fictionally outside
the State by reason of the Explanation and therefore coming
within the ban of article 286(1)(a).
It was, however, urged on behalf of the State of Madhya
Pradesh that the President’s order not only saved the
transactions from the ban of article 286(2) but also from
the ban of article 286 (1) (a), because the transactions
covered by the Explanation to article
492
286(1)(a) were of the same category as transactions covered
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by article 286(2) and were all in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce. It was further urged that if the
transactions covered by the Expla nation to article 286 (1)
(a) were not saved from the ban by the President’s order,
the whole intention of the Constitution-makers in
maintaining the status quo qua the taxes on sales or
purchases of goods which were being lawfully levied by the
State immediately before the commencement of the Constitu-
tion would be frustrated, because the transactions covered
by the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) being necessarily
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce the
President’s order would be rendered nugatory and the
exporting State or the title State would’ be- restrained
from levying tax on such transactions in spite of the ban
having been lifted by the President’s order.
We are unable to accept this contention. As held by the
majority Judges in The Bengal Immunity Co.’s Appeal, the
bans imposed by article 286 on the taxing powers of the
States are independent and separate and each one of them has
to be got over before a State Legislature can impose tax on
transactions of sale or purchase of goods. These bans have
been imposed from different view-points, and, even though
the transactions of sale or purchase may in conceivable
cases overlap so far as these different viewpoints are
concerned, each of those bans is operative and has to be
enforced. So far as article 286(1) (a) is concerned, the
Explanation determines by the legal fiction created therein
the situs of the sale in the case of transactions coming
within that category and when a transaction is thus
determined to be inside a particular State it necessarily
becomes a transaction outside all other States. The only
relevant enquiry for the purposes of article 286(1) (a),
therefore, is whether a transaction is outside the State and
once it is determined by the application of the Explanation
that it is outside the State it follows as a matter of
course that the State with reference to which the transac-
tion can thus be predicated to be outside it can never
493
tax the transaction. This ban is effective independently of
the fact that the, transaction may also have taken place in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce or with
reference to goods as have been declared by Parliament by
law to be essential for the life of the community. The ban
imposed under article 286(2) is an independent and separate
one and looks at the transactions entirely from the point of
view of their having taken place in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce. Even if such transactions may also
fall within the category of transactions covered by article
286 (1)(a) and the Explanation thereto or article 286(3),
the moment article 286(2) is attracted by reason of the
transactions being in the course of interState trade or
commerce, the ban under article 286 (2) operates and such
transactions can never be subjected to tax at the instance
of a State Legislature except in so far as Parliament by law
may otherwise provide or such power of taxation is saved by
the President’s order contemplated in the proviso. The ban
under article 286(2) may be saved by the President’s order
but that does not affect or lift the ban under article 286
(1 (a) read with the Explanation.
Apart from the construction thus, put upon the several
clauses of article 286 by the majority of the Judges in The
Bengal Immunity Co.’s Appeal as above, the terms of the
proviso itself make it abundantly clear that the proviso is
meant only to lift the ban under article 286 (2) and no
other. It is a cardinal rule of interpretation that a
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proviso to a particular provision of a statute only embraces
the field which is covered by the main -provision. It
carves out an exception to the main provision to which it
has been enacted as’ a proviso and to no other. Even if the
non’ obstante clause: "Notwithstanding that the imposition
of such tax is contrary to the provisions of this clause":
had not been enacted in the proviso, the proviso could only
have been construed as operating upon the field enacted in
article 286(2) and could not be extended to any of the other
provisions of article 286. The non-obstante clause,
however, makes it abundantly and further clear and states in
494
explicit terms that it is enacted only with reference to
"this clause", i.e., article 286(2). The President’s order
may direct that any tax on the sale or purchase of goods
which was being lawfully levied by the Government of any
State immediately before the commencement of the
Constitution was to continue to be levied until 31st March,
1951, but the effect of that order was to raise the ban in
so far as it was imposed by the provisions of "this clause".
The President’s order therefore, only lifted the ban in so
far as the transactions took place in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce and could not be projected into the
sphere of any other clause of article 286. It bad,
therefore’ not the effect of lifting the ban which was
imposed by article 286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto,
even though the transactions covered by the Explanation to
article 286(1) (a) by and large fell within the category of
transactions which took place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce. The ban imposed by article 286(1) (a)
was independent and separate and could not be lifted by the
President’s order which had operation only in regard to the
interState -character of the transactions. The moment it
was determined that the transactions were outside the State
by virtue of the Explanation to article 286(1)(a) the ban
imposed by article 286(1)(a) attached to the same and could
not be lifted by the President’s order which operated only
on the interState character of the transactions and saved
only those inter-State transactions which did not come
within the Explanation.
If the contention urged on behalf of the State of Madhya
Pradesh is accepted it would mean that we should re-write,
or amend the proviso to article 286(2) in, order to
effectuate the supposed intention of the Constitution-
makers. The supposed intention of the Constitution-makers
was alleged to be to preserve to the States all the taxes on
sale or purchase of goods which were being lawfully levied
by them immediately before the commencement of the
Constitution by having resort to the territorial connection
or nexus theory. We have no evidence before us of this
495
supposed intention of the Constitution-makers, Whatever
their intention was can only be gathered from the language
which they have used and where the language is plain there
is no scope whatever for speculation in that behalf When the
Constitution-, makers themselves used the words
"Notwithstanding that the imposition of such a tax is
contrary to the provisions Of this clause" it would not be
legitimate for us to go behind the plain words and try to
read into the proviso something which would involve either a
deletion of the non-obstante clause ’or a re-writing thereof
as suggested. Whatever be the effect of our judgment on the
treasuries of the exporting or title States we cannot
assist them by reading something into the proviso which is
not warranted by any canon of construction. The proviso has
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reference only to article 286(2) and cannot be projected
into any other clause of article 286.
The untenability of the contentions of the Respondents
will be clear from the following illustration:Suppose the
goods are in the State of Madhya Pradesh at the time the
contracts of sale of those goods are made in, say, the State
of Bombay. Suppose further that the property in the goods
has by reason of such sales passed in the State of Bombay
but the goods as a direct result of such sales have been
delivered for consumption in the State of Madras. According
to the Respondents, the President’s order made under the
proviso to article 286(2) saves the transactions from the
ban of article 286 (1) (a) read with the Explanation. Then
the State of Madras will be able to tax by virtue of article
286(1) (a) read with the Explanation or on the nexus theory
by reason of the goods being delivered there for
consumption; the State of Bombay will be able to tax because
the title to the goods passed there; and the State of Madhya
Pradesh will also be able to tax under the Explanation 11 to
section 2(g) of the Act because the goods were in the State
of Madhya Pradesh at the time when the contracts of sale
were made in the State of Bombay. Nobody will say that the
Constitution makers intended to perpetuate multiple
taxation of
63
496
this kind and yet that will be the result if we were to
accede to the arguments advanced by the Respondents.
The result, therefore, is that so far as the post-Con-
stitution period is concerned the ban which is imposed by
article 286 (1) (a) and the Explanation thereto cannot be
removed by the President’s order which was issued under the
proviso to article 286(2) and the High Court was in error
when it construed the proviso to article 286(2) as
projecting into the field of article 286 (1) (a) and lifting
the ban imposed therein.
On the above reasoning, Civil Appeal No. 137 of 1955 filed
by the firm of Ramdas Khimji Brothers, Bombay, which relates
only to the post-Constitution period will be allowed and the
order of assessment dated the 29th December, 1952, will be,
set aside. The Respondents will pay the costs of the
Appellants here as well as in the Court below.
As regards Civil Appeals Nos. 132 of 1955,and 133 of 1955,
however, the assessments therein relate not only to the
post-Constitution period but also the preConstitution period
to which different considerations would apply. The validity
of the assessment in regard to the same would have to be
canvassed having regard to the various contentions of law
and fact which could be urged against the same by the Appel-
lants. There are two outstanding questions which have been
mooted before us by the learned AttorneyGeneral in regard to
this period, viz., (1) a question of fact, as to whether
the Appellants were agents of the various mills in regard to
the transactions which were the subject-matter of the
assessment, and (2) a question of law, whether the law under
which the tax was levied, viz., Explanation II to section-
2(g) of the Act was validly,, enacted. Both these
contentions, though they are also relevant to the post-
Constitution period were not specifically pressed before us
because the argument based on the proviso to article 286 (2)
was considered sufficient to set aside the assessment for
that period. They would, however, appropriately arise and
be urged by the appellants when the liability to assessment
for the pre-Constitution
497
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period is to be determined and if we were to determine that
liability we would have to deal with the same. The
necessity for doing so is, however, obviated by reason of
the fact that the assessment is one composite whole relating
to the pre-Constitution as well as the post-Constitution
periods and is invalid in toto. There is authority for the
proposition that when an assessment consists of a single
undivided sum in respect of the totality of the property
treated as assessable, the wrongful inclusion in it of
certain items of property which by virtue of a provision of
law were expressly exempted from taxation renders the
assessment. invalid in toto. ’.The Privy Council have
observed in Bennett & White (Calgary) Ld. And Municipal
District of Sugar City No. 5 (1951 Appeal Cases, 786 at page
816):--
"When an assessment is not for an entire sum, but for
separate sums, dissected and earmarked each of them to a
separate assessable item, a court can sever the items and
cut out one or more along with the sum attributed to it,
while affirming the residue. But where the assessment
consists of a single undivided sum in respect of the
totality of property treated as assessable, and when one
component (not dismissible as "de minimis") is on any view
not assessable and wrongly included, it would seem clear
that such a procedure is barred, and -(,he assessment is bad
wholly. That matter is covered by authority. in Montreal
Light, Heat & Power Consolidated V. City of Westmount (
(1926) S.C.R. (Can.) 515) the court (see especially per
Anglin, C.J.) in these conditions held that an assessment
which was bad in part was infected throughout, and treated
it as invalid. Here their Lordships are of opinion, by
parity of reasoning, that the assessment was invalid in
toto".
It was, therefore, urged that on the facts of this case
the assessment was invalid in toto and that it should be set
aside. The learned Deputy Advocate-General of Madhya
Pradesh did not seriously contest this position and the
result, therefore, is that the order of assessment dated the
30th June, 1953, in Civil Appeal No. 132 of 1955 and the
order of assessment dated the
498
9th September, 1953, in Civil Appeal No. 133 of 1955 are
liable to be set aside. The appeals will therefore be
allowed, the orders of assessment will be set aside and the
matters will go back to the Assessment Officer for re-
assessment of the Appellants in accordance with law. The
Appellants will be at liberty to urge before the Assessment
Officer the-contentions -of law and fact available to them
in the fresh assessment proceedings including those adverted
to above. The Respondents will pay the costs of these
Appellants here as well as in the Court below.
Petition No. 567 of 1954.
BHAGWATI J.-This petition under article 32 of the
Constitution also involves the interpretation of the proviso
to article 286(2) and raises the same question as to the
meaning, scope and operation of the proviso as was raised in
the Civil Appeals Nos. 132, 133 and 137 of 1955 just
disposed of
The facts giving rise to this Petition may be shortly
stated. The petitioners are a partnership firm carrying on
business of manufacturing bidis at Jabalpur and registered
as a "dealer" under the Central Provinces and Berar Sales
Tax Act, 1947. The petitioners had their branches at
Lucknow, Kanpur, Faizabad, Agra, Bombay and Bhopal. They
had also their selling agents at various places in Uttar
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Pradesh and elsewhere outside the Stae of Madhya Pradesh.
They also entered into transactions direct with merchants in
Uttar Pradesh. The transactions in. question which were the
subject-matter of assessment at the instance of the Sales
Tax authorities were for the period of assessment 21st
October, 1949 to 9th November, 1950., and spread over two
periods, viz., (1) the period between 21st October, 1949 to
25th January, 1950, which may be called the pre-Constitution
period, and (2) the period subsequent to the inauguration of
the Constitution on the 26th January, 1950, up to the 9th
November., 1950, which may be called the postConstitution
period. The petitioners’ gross turn-over was determined to
be Rs. 49,40,140-6-9 and the
499
amount of Sales Tax assessed on the transactions was Rs.
1,51,291-13-0 as per the order of the Deputy Commissioner,
Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Respondent No. 3, dated the 14th
July, 1954, in Sales Tax Appeal No. 6/A-1.6.54. The
petitioners preferred_a second appeal to the Respondent No.
2 against the said order. The Respondent No. 2, however,
refused to admit or register the appeal unless the amount of
tax assessed was paid up. The petitioners paid about Rs.
91,000/- towards the amount of tax assessed but finding it
difficult to pay the balance filed this Petition against the
State of Madhya Pradesh, Respondent No, 1, the Commissioner
of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Respondent No. 2, and the
Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Respondent
No. 3, for a writ of certiorari quashing the said order
dated the 14th July, 1954, made by Respondent No. 3 and for
consequential reliefs. The Respondents filed a return
denying the contentions of the petitioners and maintaining
that the Sales Tax was lawfully assessed by them against the
petitioners.
The position as regards the petitioners’ turn-over for the
period of assessment was as stated below:-
Nature of the Parties. Sales Prices of goods.Rs.
(a) Direct to selling agents
on orders................... 6,15,236- 3-0
(b) Direct to merchants on
orders. 3,99,450- 2-0
(c) Direct to destinations
other than branches or depots
but accounted for against
branchesand depots. 6,20,996-14-0
(d) Direct to Stations or
destinations having
branches or depots owned by the
proprietors of this registered
firm-Kanpur, Bombay, Lucknow and
Faizabad.............. 31,06,739-13-0
500
The Sales Tax authorities treated all these transactions as
transactions of sale coming within the definition contained
in Explanation II to section 2(g) of the Act and assessed
the petitioners to sales tax in respect of the same,
negativing the contentions of the petitioners that they were
in any event sales effected by them outside the State of
Madhya Pradesh and that the State of Madhya Pradesh was,
therefore, not entitled to impose a tax on those tran-
sactions by virtue of the provisions of article 286(1) (a)
and the Explanation thereto.
The learned Attorney-General who appeared for the
petitioners contended that the bidis manufactured by the
petitioners were all actually delivered as a direct result
of the transactions of sale for the purpose of consumption
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in the State of Uttar Pradesh and that after the
inauguration of the Constitution on the 26th January, 1950,
it was only the State of Uttar Pradesh which was the
delivery State that alone had the right to impose the tax on
these transactions notwithstanding the fact that under the
general law relating to the sale of goods the property in
the goods might have passed in the State of Madhya Pradesh.
He, therefore, urged that these transactions were sales
outside the State of Madhya Pradesh and that the State of
Madhya Pradesh was not entitled to impose a tax on such
sales.
The learned Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh on the
other hand contended that these were purely intra-state
transactions entered into by the petitioners within the
State of Madhya Pradesh and that the Explanation to article
286(1)(a) did not come into play at all because the goods
were not actually delivered as a direct result of such sales
for the purpose of consumption in the State of Uttar
Pradesh. He, therefore, maintained that even for the post-
Constitution period there was no ban on the State of Madhya
Pradesh imposing the sales tax on what were purely "inside
sales".
It is necessary in view of these rival contentions to
ascertain the true nature of the transactions in question.
In paragraph 15 of the Petition,, the petitioners
501
had averred that the bidis manufactured by the firm were all
delivered in the State of Uttar Pradesh for consumption in
that State and that after the 26th January, 1950, the
delivery State, viz., the State of Uttar Pradesh, had alone
the right to impose tax on the sales of the commodity. They
had further submitted that the State of Madhya Pradesh where
the bidis were manufactured and from where they were sent
could not any more exercise its right to levy a tax on such
transactions of sale taking place elsewhere by reason of the
inhibition contained in article 286. In the return filed by
the Respondents, they did not deny the allegation made by
the petitioners in their Petition that the bidis
manufactured by the firm were all delivered,-in the State of
’Uttar Pradesh for consumption in that State. In substance,
they contended that in spite of the State of Uttar Pradesh
being the delivery State within the meaning of the
Explanation to article 286 (1) (a), the liability of these
transactions to sales tax at the instance of the State of
Madhya Pradesh was saved by the President’s order made under
the proviso to article 286(2) and that the imposition of
such tax at the instance of the State of Madhya Pradesh was
lawful and did not contravene the provisions of article
286(1)(a) read with the Explanation thereto.
Both the order which was made by the Assistant
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Jabalpur, in the original
assessment case No. 16 of 1950-51, dated the 7th August,
1953, and the order which was made in Sales Tax Appeal No.
6/A-1.6.54 by the Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya
Pradesh, Respondent No. 3, dated the 14th July, 1954,
proceeded on the basis that even though the transactions in
question were transactions of sale where the goods had
actually been delivered as a direct result of such sales for
the purpose of consumption in the State of Uttar Pradesh,
the President’s order made under the proviso to article 286
(2) saved the transactions also from the ban of article
286(1) (a) and the Explanation thereto and that the State of
Madhya Pradesh was, therefore, entitled to impose a tax on
the same. It was never.
502
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contended before either of them that the sales were purely
"inside sales" and that the Explanation to article 286(1)(a)
did not come into play at all under the circumstances of the
case. The facts as found by the Sales Tax authorities also
emphasized that these transactions fell within the
definition of sale contained in the Explanation 11 to
section 2(g) of the Act and that so far as the post-
Constitution period was concerned they were saved from the
ban of article 286 (1) (a) and the Explanation thereto by
the President’s order made under the proviso to article
286(2). It was, however, urged by the learned Advocate-
General of Madhya Pradesh that the transactions were pure
"inside sales" entered into by the petitioners in Madhya
Pradesh on orders received by them from outside the State.
These orders were accepted by the petitioners in the State
of Madhya Pradesh and goods were appropriated to the
contracts and the property in the goods passed within the
State of Madhya Pradesh and that, therefore, they were pure
intraState sales or "inside sales" which it was within the
competence of the State of Madhya Pradesh to tax.
This contention of the learned Advocate-General of Madhya
Pradesh is untenable. So far as direct supplies to selling
agents on orders and direct supplies to merchants on orders
covered by items (a) and (b) above are concerned, it was
found that these supplies were made to the merchants buying
the goods on commission basis or profit on their previous
orders, instructions or indents which were either in printed
forms or in ordinary letters and the sale prices were
realised by sending bills and railway receipts through some
scheduled banks. The very fact that the bills and the
railway receipts were sent through the scheduled banks went
to show that the petitioners reserved the right of disposal
of goods covered by those railway receipts and the property
in the goods passed in the State of Uttar Pradesh only after
the relative bills were either accepted or honoured by the
purchasers and the railway receipts delivered by the
scheduled banks to them. It is clear, therefore, that
503
in those cases the sales were completed in the State of
Uttar Pradesh and were not intra-State sales or "inside
sales" qua the State of Madhya Pradesh. As regards the
direct supplies to destinations other than branches or
depots but accounted for against the branches or depots
being item (c) above, it was found that the petitioners
despatched the goods and billed them to depot managers who
were responsible for the collection of the orders and then
the railway receipts and bills were sent there. The
managers prepared other bills adding incidental or other
charges and delivered the railway receipts to the customers
to whom the goods were sent from the State of Madhya
Pradesh. Here also the despatches of the goods were made
from the State of Madhya Pradesh by the petitioners to their
depot managers and it was the depot managers who in their
turn prepared and submitted their own bills and handed over
the railway receipts to the respective customers
appropriating the goods themselves to the contracts of sale
which had been entered into by them with the latter and
completing the sales in the State of Uttar Pradesh. These
transactions also were, therefore, sales effected in the
State of Uttar Pradesh and did not fall within the category
of intra-state sales or "inside sales" qua the State of
Madhya Pradesh.
The direct supplies to Stations or destinations having
branches or depots owned by the proprietors of the firm,
Kanpur, Bombay, Lucknow and Faizabad being item (d) above,
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also were outside sales qua the State of Madhya Pradesh
inasmuch as the branch managers asked the petitioners to
send stocks of goods to execute the orders which they had
obtained from the customers to make their own supplies to
them. As a matter of fact it was found that several
consolidated indents were placed by the depot managers with
the petitioners in respect of the previous orders which had
been collected by them and the petitioners supplied the
goods to the depots or branches in pursuance of such
indents. If this was the true position qua these supplies,
these sales also were completed in
64
504
the State of Uttar Pradesh by the depots or branches
supplying the goods in their turn to several customers.
There could be no sales as such between the petitioners on
the one hand and their depots or branches on the other hand
and the State of Madhya Pradesh could certainly not be at
all in a position to tax the same.
The whole theory, therefore, of "inside sales" falls to
the ground and the only thing which we are left with is-that
these transactions were inter-State transactions in which as
a direct result of such sales the goods were actually
delivered for the purpose of consumption in the State of
Uttar Pradesh. The Explanation to article 286(1)(a)
determined the State of Uttar Pradesh to be the State in
which the sales took place and which alone was entitled to
tax these transactions, the State of Madhya Pradesh becoming
an "outside" State for the purpose.
Apart from the ban imposed on the State of Madhya Pradesh
under article 286(1) (a) and the Explanation thereto, these
transactions were also in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce and were hit by the ban of article 286(2). The
President’s order no doubt lifted that ban but was not
competent to lift the ban under article 286 (1) (a) and the
Explanation thereto with the result that in spite of that
order the State of Madhya Pradesh was not in a position to
impose a tax on these transactions during the post-Constitu-
tion period.
The assessment of these transactions to tax for the post-
Constitution period, therefore, is invalid and cannot be
sustained. The assessment, moreover, is a composite one
covering the pre-Constitution period as well. The case,
therefore, falls within our judgment in Civil Appeals Nos.
132, 133 and 137 of 1955 just delivered, and following the
reasoning contained therein, we are of the opinion that the
order dated the 14th July, 1954, made by the Deputy
Commissioner, Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Respondent No. 3,
in Sales Tax Appeal No. 6/A- 1.6.54 should be set aside.
We accordingly allow the Petition, set aside the
505
said order dated the 14th July, 1954, and the matter will go
back to the Assessment Officer for re-assessment of the
petitioners in accordance with law. The petitioners will be
at liberty to urge before the Assessment Officer the
contentions of law and fact available to them in the fresh
assessment proceedings. The Respondents will pay the costs
of the petition.
JAGANNADHADAS J.-I regret I feel constrained to differ from
the view taken by my learned brothers as regards the
construction of proviso to article 286(2) and the effect of
the Presidential order issued there, under.
There is no dispute that the proviso has to be construed
as part of article 286(2). It is meant to empower the
President to keep the ban arising thereunder in temporary
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abeyance so that the States may continue to levy taxes on
sales by virtue of their preConstitution sales-tax laws (if
then lawful) for a limited period. It is urged, however,
that the proviso (meaning thereby also the Presidential
order thereunder) is effective to lift only the ban under
article 286(2) and that the ban under article 286(1)(a) is
operative nonetheless. Now, it may be correct to say that
these two bans are imposed from different angles and are in
that sense independent. But there can be no doubt that they
are substantially overlapping in operation. A transaction
which brings about an outside sale is also an inter-State
transaction (barring, if at all, a few ingeniously conceived
and illustrated cases). The effect of each of the bans
under article 286 is to demarcate the fields within which
the taxing power of the States on sales cannot operate. If,
as I conceive, the two bans under articles 286(1) (a) and
286(2), are overlapping, the fact that they are imposed from
different angles cannot obscure the result, viz., that they
bring about the demarcation of the same-or substantially the
same-field of no taxation. It appears to me that it is in
this light that the proviso and the Presidential order
issued thereunder have to be construed. Now, the proviso
(with the Presidential order) declares the field covered by
sales in the course
506
of inter-State trade and commerce as taxable for a limited
period by stating positively and emphatically that "any tax
on the sale or purchase of goods which was being lawfully
levied by the Government of any State, immediately before
the commencement of the Constitution. shall continue to be
levied until the 31st day of March, 1951". There is no
doubt the non-obstante clause which will be dealt with
presently, and which only emphasises the fact that this is a
proviso to article 286(2). But there is no mistaking the
positive and mandatory terms of the proviso. The effect of
this is clearly and unequivocally to make the whole field of
inter-State trade and commerce temporarily taxable in
respect of the sales which take place in the course thereof.
-If this be so, it appears to me to be implicit therein that
no other ban on such taxation can operate, for the time
being, within that very field. To construe the two bans as
independently and cumulatively operative is to impute to
them some kind of Picturesque potency and is to miss the
reality, viz., that all the bans under article 286 are meant
to serve the same purpose, viz., that of imposing
restrictions and thereby demarcating the fields of no
taxation. The bans and the proviso are parts of the same
article and have to be harmoniously construed. The un-
equivocal and positive language of one part, cannot be taken
to have been obliterated by the negative language of the
other part so as to rsult in futility.
A similar situation as that contemplated by the proviso
would also arise with reference to the saving clause in
article 286(2). If the proviso is to be construed in the
way suggested by the learned AttorneyGeneral, it would seem
to follow that when and as the Parliament lifts the ban
under article 286(2), the lifting of that ban would equally
become futile by virtue of article 286(1)(a). The
Parliament has not in terms Veen given the power to lift the
latter ban. This, therefore, will lead to the extraordinary
result that though the Constitution has in terms provided
that the ban on taxation of sales in the course of inter-
State trade and commerce can be lifted, by the Parliament
generally, and by the President for a
507
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limited period, the exercise of both these powers would
become ineffective and still-born by virtue of article
286(1)(a). It appears to me unreasonable to impute any such
intention as inevitably arising from the language used. It
appears to me, with great respect, that, whether it is by
parliamentary legislation or by the Presidential action that
the ban on taxing sales in the course of inter-State trade
and commerce is lifted, the principle of harmonious
construction of article 286 taken as an integral whole,
requires that the lifting of the ban is to be construed as
laying open for taxation the entire field covered by article
286(2) and to carry with it the implication that no other
overlapping ban will be operative. No doubt, it has been
suggested that so far as lifting of the ban under article
286(2) by the Parliament is concerned, the same would be at
least partly operative by virtue of article 286(1) (a) taken
with the Explanation under which the consumption-delivery
State may well be free to tax. This was the view expressed
by the learned dissenting Judge in the case in The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1). But the
majority in the recent decision in the Bengal Immunity Co.
Ltd. v. State of Bihar(2) including the said learned Judge,
have left that question open. It is problematical whether
having regard to the inevitable extra-territorial operation
of the levy of such a tax and the consequent harassment to
the business community which looms large, the Explanation
will receive that construction again and not receive the
strict construction preferred in the dissenting judgment in
the case in State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha Vilas
Cashew Nut Factory(3). The result, therefore, of construing
the proviso and by parity of reasoning the saving clause, as
merely removing the ban of a particular nature leaving
another overlapping ban to operate, would be to render both
the saving clause in, and the proviso to, article 286(2)
virtually nugatory.
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
(2) Supreme Court Judgment in Civil Appeal No. 159 of 1958,
(3) [1954] S.C.R. 53.
508
The argument based on the non-obstante clause in the
proviso, viz. "Notwithstanding that the imposition of such
tax is contrary to the provisions of this clause" remains to
be considered. It is urged that this clause clearly
indicates the intention that the operation of the proviso is
to be confined to the sole purpose of lifting the ban
arising under article 286(2). With respect, I am unable to
agree. The non-obstante clause undoubtedly affirms the fact
that the ’proviso is operative in respect of article 286(2).
But it does not purport to limit the effect of the proviso,
which a reasonable construction thereof may justify. A non-
obstante clause does not normally add to or subtract from
the main provision of which it is a part. It is often
enough inserted by way of extra caution. But it does not
have the effect of limiting the operation of the main
provision. (See Aswini Kumar Ghosh v. Arabinda Bose(1) and
The Dominion of India v. Shrinbai A. Irani(2)). The
suggestion that the Presidential action lifts the ban only
as regards the inter-State sales would be to read the phrase
"notwithstanding that" as meaning "in so far as". I can see
no warrant for any such reading.
In my view, therefore, the pre-Constitution salestax laws,
if then lawful, are not hit by article 286(1) (a)-at least
to the extent that the ban under article 286(1) (a) overlaps
with that under article 286(2). ’In this ’view, the orders
of assessment in these cases cannot be set aside and the
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validity of the relevant preConstitution laws will have to
be considered and the further facts gone into.
But it is now not necessary to do so in these cases in the
view taken by my learned brothers and the order proposed by
them will govern these cases.
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1, 21 and 24.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 206, 213.
509