Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN COPPER CORPORATION LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/11/1960
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 347 1961 SCR (2) 276
CITATOR INFO :
F 1964 SC 569 (9)
F 1965 SC 161 (3,4,5)
RF 1966 SC 376 (6)
APL 1970 SC 306 (2,8,9)
ACT:
Sales Tax--" Explanation Sales "--Sale in one State but
delivery outside--Consumption not in State of first
destination--Whether "outside" sale--Constitution of
India Art. 286(1)(a)--Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Bihar XIX
of 1947), ss. 2(g) and 33.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant effected sales during the period 26-1-1950 to
31-3-1950, whereunder the property in the goods passed in
the State of Bihar but delivery was effected outside Bihar
for consumption outside Bihar. In some of these sales the
goods were delivered in the State of first destination for
consumption therein whilst in other cases the goods were not
for consumption in the State of first delivery of
destination. The appellant contended that both these
categories of sale were exempt from tax under Art. 286(1)(a)
as they were outside sales.
Held (per Hidayatullah, Das Gupta and Rajagopala Ayyangar,
JJ.) that the sales where delivery in the State of first
destination was for consumption therein, were outside the
State of Bihar within the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) and
Bihar could not tax them, but the sales where delivery in
the State of first destination was not for consumption
therein were not " Explanation Sales " and were not "
outside " sales and Bihar could tax them. Where the
property in the goods passed within the State as a direct
result of the sale the sale was not an " outside " sale for
the purpose of Art. 286(1)(a) unless it fell within the
Explanation. In the first category of sales the appellant
was entitled to the. exemption and it was not necessary for
it to prove that the goods delivered for consumption in the
State of first destination were actually consumed therein.
The State of Bombay v. United Motors (India) Ltd., [1953]
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S.C.R. 1060 and Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. v. The State of
Bihar, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603, referred to.
Burmah Shell Oil Storage & Distributing Co. of India Ltd. v.
The Commercial Tax Officer, C. A. No. 751 of 57 and C. A.
No. 10 of 1958 (Unreported), relied on.
Per S. K. Das and Shah, Jj.--Section 33 introduced in the
Bihar Sales Tax Act by the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1951,
engrafted the same restrictions on the taxing power of the
State on the pre-Constitution statutes as were imposed by
Art. 286 upon post-Constitution statutes. Section
33(1)(a)(1) of the Act took away only the power to tax "
Explanation Sales " but not the power to tax " non-
Explanation Sales ". A sale in which goods had been
delivered outside Bihar, but not as a direct result of
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the sale or not for the purpose of consumption in the State
of first delivery was not covered by the Explanation, and
the right to tax the sale, if it arose otherwise under the
Act, was not impaired by S. 33(1)(a)(i).
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 210 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 16, 1958, of the Patna High Court in Mis. Judicial
case No. 156 of 1957.
B. C. Ghose and P. K. Chatterjee, for the Appellant.
S. P. Varma, for Respondents Nos. 1 to 5.
R. C. Dutta, for Respondents Nos. 6 to 20.
1960. November 7. The Judgment of Hidayatullah, Das Gupta
and Ayyangar, JJ., was delivered by Ayyangar, J., and that
of S. K. Das and Shah, JJ., was delivered by Shah, J.
AYYANGAR. J.-The sole question which arises in this appeal,
which comes by way of special leave is as to whether sales
under which goods were delivered outside the State of Bihar
for the purpose of consumption but not within the State of
first delivery or first destination, are exempt from the
levy of sales-tax by the Bihar State by virtue of Art.
286(1)(a) of the Constitution as it stood before the recent
amendment.
The India Copper Corporation Ltd. (referred to hereafter as
the assessee-company) carries on business in copper and
various other materials and mineral pro. ducts and the
office of its General Manager is in the district of
Singhbhum in Bihar. The period covered by the assessment
now in dispute is January 26, 1950 to March 31, 1950. The
normal practice of the assessee-company was to deposit sums
of money from time to time provisionally towards payment of
sales-tax in advance and have the amount finally adjusted
after the completion of the assessment of each year. The
assessee-company followed this practice in respect of the
amount of sales-tax due by it for the year 1949-50. For the
financial year April 1, 1949 to March 31, 1950, the
Superintendent of Sales-tax, Singhbhum,
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computed the tax liability of the company in the sum of Rs.
3,60,703-4-0 by an order of assessment dated November
13,1950, and the company made payment of the amount due by
it beyond the sums already paid. It would be noticed that
this financial year comprised two periods-(1) before the
Constitution, viz., April 1, 1949 to January 25, 1950, and
(2) the post-Constitution period from January 26, 1950 to
March 31, 1950. There is now no controversy as regards the
sales-tax payable in respect of sales effected during the
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pre-Constitution period. The assessee-company however
raised a dispute that in respect of the post-Constitution
period, it was not liable to pay any sales-tax in respect of
sales to buyers, under which though the property in the
goods passed within the State, delivery of the goods was
effected outside the State of Bihar for consumption outside
that State on the ground that such sales were exempted from
tax by Art. 286(1)(a) of the Constitution as it originally
stood. It addressed a formal letter to the Commissioner of
Commercial Taxes, Bihar, on December 30, 1952, making this
demand enclosing a statement showing full particulars of the
goods sold, the bill numbers, the date and the amount etc.,
to enable the refund claimed to be calculated. The
assessee-company followed it up by a formal petition for
review of the assessment order by filing a revised return
under s. 12(2) of the Bihar Sales-tax Act together with an
application for refund. The departmental authorities
rejected these applications by order dated July 20, 1953.
Further proceedings before the department by way of revision
etc. failed to secure to the assessee-company the relief
which it claimed and thereafter it filed an application
under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution before the High
Court of Patna praying for the issue of a writ to quash the
order of assessment dated November 30, 1950, and the orders
rejecting the prayers for review, reassessment and refund
and for a direction to the departmental authorities to
refund the sum realised by them in so far as the tax related
to sales as a result of which goods were delivered outside
the State of Bihar.
279
The learned Judges of the High Court held that the order of
the Superintendent of Sales-tax, Singhbhum, dated November
13, 1950, should be set aside and that the matter should go
back to the Superintendent to make a reassessment according
to law for the post Constitution period. A further
direction was added requiring the respondent to refund to
the assessee so much of the tax as had been paid in excess
of the amount of reassessment to be made by the Superinten-
dent in accordance with the law as laid down by the Court.
In formulating the law applicable, the learned Judges drew a
distinction between sales as a direct result of which goods
were delivered in a State outside the State of Bihar and
consumed in that State and those cases in which the goods
thus delivered, were not consumed in the State of first
destination but were re-exported from the State of first
destination to other States. They held that the first
category of sales were covered by the Explanation to Art.
286 (1)(a) of the Constitution and were " inside " the State
of first delivery and consequently " outside " the State of
Bihar within the meaning of the Article and therefore exempt
from tax by the Bihar State. In regard, however, to the
second category of sales, it was held that they were not
within the Explanation and were therefore outside the
constitutional exemption under Art. 286(1)(a).
The assessee-company not being satisfied, filed an
application to the High Court for a Certificate of fitness
under Arts. 132 and 133 of the Constitution, but this having
been rejected, they applied to and obtained special leave
from this Court under Art. 136 of the Constitution and that
is how the appeal is now before us.
Three points were urged before us by Mr. B. C. Ghose,
learned Counsel for the appellants: (1) that on a proper
construction of Art. 286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto
(as it stood before the Article was amended by the
Constitution Sixth Amendment Act, 1956) every sale as a
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direct result of which goods were delivered for consumption
outside the State, was not within the taxing power of the
State in which the
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goods were at the time of the sale, and ,in which property
passed as a result thereof, and that it was immaterial
whether the delivery was for the purpose of consumption in
the State of first destination or whether the delivery in
such State was not for the purpose of consumption therein
but, for re-export to other States, (2) that even if Art.
286(1)(a) exempted only sales in which as a direct result of
the sale the goods were delivered for the purpose of
consumption in the State of first destination, on the
pleadings and the evidence before the Court the assessee-
company must be taken to have established that all the sales
effected by it and in regard to which exemption from payment
of tax was claimed, conformed to this requirement, (3) a
narrower submission, that even it be that to fall within the
Explanation the delivery has to be for the Purpose of
consumption in the State of first destination, the learned
Judges of the High Court erred in requiring the assessee-
company to prove not merely that the goods were delivered
for the purpose of consumption but further that the goods so
delivered were actually consumed within that State.
We shall now deal with these points in that order. Article
286(1)(a) together with the Explanation on whose
construction the first point depends ran in these terms:
" Article 286(1). No law of a State shall impose, or
authorise the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase
of goods where such sale or purchase takes place-
(a) outside the State; or
(b)...............................................................
Explanation.-For the purposes of sub-clause (a) a sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the State in
which the goods have actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State, notwithstanding the fact that
under the general law relating to sale of goods the property
in the goods has by reason of such sale or purchase passed
in another State."
The scope and the purpose of this Explanation was
281
discussed and explained by this Court in The State of Bombay
v. Unitea Motors (India) Ltd. (1) and it is the passage in
this judgment extracted below on which reliance was placed
by the learned Counsel in support of his submission:
".............. The authors of the Constitution had to
devise a formula of restrictions to be imposed on the State-
power of taxing sales or purchases involving inter-State
elements which would avoid the doubts and difficulties
arising out of the imposition of sales-tax on the same
transaction by several Provincial Legislatures in the
country before the commencement of the Constitution. This
they did by enacting clause (1) (a) with the Explanation and
clause (2) of Article 286. Clause (1)(a) prohibits the
taxation of all sales or purchases which take place outside
the State but a localised sale is a troublesome concept,
for, a sale is a composite transaction involving as it does
several elements such as agreement to sell, transfer of
ownership, payment of the price, delivery of the goods and
so forth, which may take place at different
places. ............ To solve the difficulty an easily
applicable test for determining what is an outside sale had
to be formulated, and that is what, in our opinion, the
Explanation was intended to do. It provides by means of a
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legal fiction that the State in which the goods sold or
purchased are actually delivered for consumption therein is
the State in which the sale or purchase is to be considered
to have taken place, notwithstanding the property in such
goods passed in another State ...... An " outside " sale or
purchase is explained by defining what is an inside sale,
and why actual delivery and consumption in the State are
made the determining factors in locating a sale or purchase
will presently appear. The test of sufficient territorial
nexus was thus replaced by a simpler and more easily
workable test: Are the goods actually delivered in the
taxing State, as a direct result of a sale or purchase, for
the purpose of consumption therein ? Then, such sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069, 1081
36
282
in that State and outside all other States. The latter
States are prohibited from taxing the sale or purchase; the
former alone is left free to do go. Multiple taxation of
the same transaction by different States is also thus
avoided."
It might be mentioned that this portion of the judgment is
unaffected by the dissent expressed in the later decision in
The Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. v. The State of Bihar (1).
The argument based upon this passage was broadly on these
lines: Article 286 (1)(a) imposes a ban on the legislative
power to levy a tax on sales which are outside " the taxing
State. What sales are " outside is not easy to decide
because that depends upon " the situs " of a sale, which
cannot, in most cases, be located in any one place with
certainty-being dependent on a variety of factors which
might or might not converge. The Constitution makers did
not directly define what was meant by a ,sale that was "
outside the State " but achieved the same purpose by
explaining an " inside " sale with the result that what was
not an " inside " sale should be held to bean ,outside"
sale. It must however be pointed out that it was not
disputed that the terms of the " Explanation " would not be
satisfied unless the delivery was for the purpose of
consumption therein, i.e. in the State of first destination,
If the terms of the Explanation were satisfied, the State of
" delivery. cum-consumption ", (to coin a convenient
expression to designate the State in which goods are
delivered as a direct result of the sale for the purpose of
consumption therein), used in the Explanation, would have
power to tax the sale as being one fictionally " inside "
it. In such an event all the other States in India, barring
that State would be prevented from taxing that sale because
the sale would be " outside " those States. This however,
it was urged, would not exhaust the operation of the
Explanation, but further that the Explanation was exhaustive
of what the Constitution makers conceived to be a sale which
alone may be the subject of tax by a State. The deduction
learned Counsel made from these premises was twofold (1)
that
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
283
in cases where goods were as a direct result of the sale
delivered outside the State of Bihar for the purpose of
consumption in the State of first destination, the
conditions of the Explanation were satisfied and the sales
being " outside " the State of Bihar could not be taxed by
that State. So far there is no dispute and indeed the
learned Judges of the High Court have, subject to a matter
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of detail to which reference will be made later, accepted
the contention of the assessee. (2) a further consequence,
that in cases where goods were delivered as a result of the
sale outside the State of Bihar, but not for the purpose of
consumption in such State of first destination, the terms of
the Explanation were no doubt not satisfied and consequently
the, sale was not inside such State of delivery and indeed
not " inside " any State in India within the Explanation,
but that such sales also must be held to be " outside "
every State in India within Art. 286 (1)(a).
The learned Judges of the High Court repelled this
contention and, in our opinion, correctly. The passage in
the judgment of the United Motors case extracted earlier
dealt with Explanation sales and with none else. When the
terms of the Explanation were satisfied such sales were by a
fiction deemed to be " inside " the State of delivery-cum-
consumption and therefore " outside " all other States. In
such cases therefore, only the State " inside " which the
sale is deemed to take place by virtue of the Explanation,
is exempt from the ban imposed by Art. 286(1)(a). All other
States would be subject to that ban in respect of such
sales.
The learned Chief Justice however did not, in the passage
extracted, deal with the case of sales which did not satisfy
the terms of the Explanation. The situs of what might be
termed 1 non-Explanation’ sales has therefore to be
determined independently of the terms of the Explanation.
Such sales would be exempt from tax only if the sale took
place " outside the State but not otherwise.
The next question is, does a sale take place " outside " the
State, where as a result of the contract of
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sale, the property in the goods passes to the purchaser
within the State; in other words, is a sale completed by
the passing of property within the State not " inside" a
State, for the more reason that as a direct result of the
sale the goods are delivered outside the State. The answer
depends on the meaning to be attributed to the words " a
sale or purchase which has taken place " outside the State
occurring in the body of Art. 286 (1). The expression "
outside the State " is capable of being understood in more
senses than one. It could be understood as comprehending
cases where no element or ingredient which constitutes a
sale takes place within the State; in other words as
applying solely to those cases where there exists no
territorial nexus between the State imposing the tax and the
sale. Obviously, this could not have been intended to be
incorporated in Art. 286(1) because the tax in such cases
would be beyond the legislative power of the State under
Entry 54 of the State List read with Art. 246 of the
Constitution. The expression " outside " has therefore to
be understood not as a sale so " outside " as not to have
any territorial connection between the State in question and
the sale, but in a somewhat narrower sense. The real
difficulty arises in ascertaining the precise content of the
narrower sense in which the word is used as meaning a sale
in substance " outside " the State, though there might be
some elements of the sale which if the exemption under Art.
286(1)(a) were not enacted, would enable a State to levy a
tax on the sale on the ground that it was within the
legislative power of the State under Art. 246 read with
Entry 54.
As already pointed out, the situs of a sale is not easy to
determine and several factors which constitute a completed
transaction of sale including the delivery of the goods, lay
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claim to be considered as in themselves constituting
sufficient next to justify their being treated as
determining the locus of a sale. Thus, merely by way of
illustration, the place where the goods are at the time of
the contract of sale, the place where the contract of sale
is concluded, the place where the property in the goods
passes and that
285
in which the delivery takes place compete for recognition as
constituting the locus of a sale. Before the Constitution,
these and other similar factors were treated as affording
sufficient territorial connection to endow the State in
which any of the events occurred with legislative competence
to tax the sale. This led to a multiplicity of the taxation
of the same transaction of sale by a plurality of States,
with the result that the consumer was hard hit and trade
itself, and national economy suffered in the process. It
has been pointed out that Art. 286(1)(a) was designed to
counteract that state of affairs.
If a single State was designed to have the power to tax any
particular transaction of sale, the question that next falls
to be considered is the determination of that State in
regard to which it could be predicated that the sale in
question was not " outside " that State or in other words,
the determination of the particular State in regard to which
it could be said that the sale was " inside " that State.
The key to the problem is afforded by two indications in the
Article itself: (1) the opening words of Article 286(1)
which speak of a sale or purchase taking place and (2) the
non-obstante clause in the Explanation which refers to the
general law relating to " sale of goods under which property
in the goods has, by reason of such sale or purchase, passed
in another State." These two together indicate that it is
the passing of property within the State that is intended to
be fastened on, for the purpose of determining, whether the
sale in question is " inside " or " outside " the State, and
therefore, subject to the operation of the " Explanation "
that State in which property passes would be the only State
which would have the power to levy a tax on the sale. As
was explained in the recent decision of this Court in Burmah
Shell Oil Storage & Distributing Co., of India, Ltd. v. The
Commercial Tax Officer (1) :
" By sale here (Art. 286(1)(a) ) is meant a completed
transaction by which property in the goods passes. Before
the property in the goods passes, the contract
(1) C.A. 751 of 1957 & C.A. 10 of 1958 (Unreported).
286
of sale is only executory, and the buyer has only a chose in
action................. The Constitution thinks in terms of
a completed sale by the passing of property and not in terms
of an executory contract for the sale of goods."
Notwithstanding that is not an " outside " sale, the power
of the State to tax might be negatived by the operation of
the Explanation which by its non-obstante clause-shifts the
situs of the sale and renders the sale transaction one
within the delivery-cum-consumption State, i.e. as the State
in which the sale transaction must be deemed to take place.
Where the terms of the Explanation are satisfied, the sale
transaction will, by a legal fiction created by it, be
deemed to take place "inside" the State of delivery and
therefore " outside " the State in which the property
passes. The conclusion reached therefore is that where the
property in the goods passes within a State as a direct
result of the sale, the sale transaction is not outside the
State for the purpose of Art. 286(1)(a), unless the
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Explanation operates. We need also add that the power of
the State to impose the tax might still not be available
unless the transaction in question is unaffected by the
other bans imposed under sub-cl. (1)(b), (2) and (3) of Art.
286. The submission therefore of learned Counsel for the
appellants, that in respect of non-Explanation sales the
State of Bihar has no power to levy a tax by reason of such
sales being ’outside " the State within Art. 286(1)(a) must
be rejected.
The second contention urged by the learned Counsel for the
appellant was that even assuming he was wrong on the first
point, all the sales by the assessee-company fell within the
terms of the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) being sales as a
direct result of which the goods were delivered for
consumption in the State of first destination, and that the
learned Judges of the High Court were in error in
considering, that some of the sales did not conform to this
requirement. In support of this submission learned counsel
drew our attention to two matters. He first referred us to
the application dated December 30, 1952 made on behalf
287
of the assessee-company to the Commissioner of Commercial
Taxes, Bihar, Patna in which the claim for refund of the tax
paid was rested on the following ground :
After getting out that the tax on sales effected between the
period January 26, 1950 to March 31, 1950 was not assessable
by virtue of Art. 286 of the Constitution, the application
stated: " Total sales of raw materials of copper and brass
sheet and circles sold by us and despatched under railway
receipts for buyers’ consumption are as follows". Then
followed the sales effected and the tax paid in respect of
the sales. The claim in this form was annexed to and made
part of the petition to the High Court under Art. 226 and
227 of the Constitution and in paragraph 9 of the petition,
this letter was referred to and a copy thereof was
incorporated and marked as 1A. In this paragraph which was
the other matter relied on the claim for refund was said to
be " on sales made to buyers outside Bihar State for
consumption ". Learned Counsel strongly pressed upon us that
paragraph 9 and the annexure had clearly asserted that the
sales which were the, subject of the claim for refund
involved a delivery of the goods outside the State of Bihar
for consumption in the State of first destination and the
State of Bihar not having filed any counter-affidavit
challenging the correctness of these allegations, the High
Court should have held that the terms of the Explanation
were satisfied and should have ordered the refund claimed.
We however consider that this submission is without force.
Neither in the claim put forward in Exh. ’A’ nor in para-
graph 9 of the petition was any distinction drawn between
sales under which deliveries were effected outside the State
of Bihar for the purpose of consumption in the State of
first destination and those in which the deliveries outside
the State were effected for the purpose of consumption not in the State
of first destination but in other States. In
fact, this was made clear in the later paragraphs of the
petition to the High Court from which it is apparent that
the assessee-company made a claim for tax exemption in
288
respect of sales in which the delivery took place outside
the State of Bihar, whether the delivery was for the purpose
of consumption in the State of first destination or
otherwise. In paragraph 17(1) of the petition to the High
Court the assessee stated: " (the petitioner was not liable
to pay tax on goods delivered outside the State of Bihar
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which was also for consumption outside the State of Bihar ",
and again in clause (iii) of the same paragraph this was
repeated: " the goods being outside the State of Bihar,
delivered outside the State of Bihar and consumed outside
the State of Bihar were not liable to sales-tax by the State
of Bihar " and similarly in cl. (v) of the same paragraph a
reference was made to " goods delivered outside the State of
Bihar for consumption outside the State of Bihar ". The same
idea is emphasized in paragraph 19 also which contained the
prayer of the petition. On these averments it is clear that
the claim made by the assessee was that to invoke the
exemption contained in Art. 286(1)(a) it was sufficient that
the goods were delivered outside the State of Bihar and that
it was immaterial whether the delivery was for the purpose
of consumption in the State of first destination or
otherwise. This involved the same argument which was raised
by the learned Counsel that we have dealt with earlier. The
learned Judges of the High Court were therefore right in
drawing a distinction between the two types of sales which
we have already indicated.
The last point that was urged by the learned Counsel was
that the learned Judges of the High Court erred in requiring
the assessee to prove that the goods delivered outside the
State of Bihar were actually consumed in the State of first
destination before the exemption from tax could be availed
of In their judgment now under appeal the learned Judges
have stated:
"The petitioner would not be entitled to exemption if the
goods were not consumed in the State of first destination
but were re-exported from the State of first destination to
other States)’.
Learned Counsel for the appellant complained that
289
under the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) there need be no
proof of actual consumption of the goods delivered in the
State of first destination but that the Explanation was
satisfied if the purpose of the delivery tinder the sale was
for consumption in that State. If after a sale that
satisfied that requirement, viz., for the purpose of
consumption in the State of first destination, the buyer
under such a sale for his own purposes reexported the goods
that was not a matter with which the seller was concerned
and would not affect the character of the sale as one
falling within the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a). Learned
Counsel therefore urged that the learned Judges of the High
Court went wrong in requiring proof on the part of the
assessee that the goods were actually consumed within the
State of first delivery outside Bihar and that this was an
unwarranted addition to the requirements of the Explanation.
We consider this submission well-founded and indeed the
learned Counsel for the respondent did not dispute that the
actual order of the High Court went beyond the terms of the
Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a). The order of the High Court
will, therefore, be modified by making it clear that if the
goods were as a direct result of the sale delivered outside
the State of Bihar for the purpose of consumption in the
State of first delivery the assessee would be entitled to
exemption of the sales-tax imposed and that it would not be
necessary for the assessee to prove further that the goods
so delivered were actually consumed in the State of first
destination.
Subject to this modification, the appeal fails, but in the
circumstances of the case there will be no order as to
costs.
SHAH J.-We agree with the conclusion of Mr. Justice
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Rajagopala Ayyangar, J., but because our approach to the
question is somewhat different, we propose to record our
reasons separately.
The Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947, was enacted in exercise of
legislative authority conferred upon the Provincial
Legislatures by entry 42 in List II read
37
290
with s. 100(3) of the Government of India Act, 1935. By s.
2(g) of the Act, " sale " was defined (in so far as it is
material) as meaning any " transfer of property in goods for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable
consideration....... provided....... provided further that
notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the Indian Sales
of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of any goods-
(i) which are actually in Bihar at the time when, in
respect thereof, the contract of sale as defined in s. 4 of
that Act is made, or
(ii) which are produced or manufactured in Bihar by the
producer or manufacturer thereof, shall, wherever the
delivery or contract of sale is made, be deemed for the
purposes of this Act to have taken place in Bihar."
Under entry 42 of List II of the Government of India Act,
1935, the Provincial Legislatures could tax sales by
selecting some fact or circumstance which provided a
territorial nexus with the taxing power of the State even if
the property in the goods sold passed outside the Province
or the delivery under the contract of sale took place
outside the Province. Legislation taxing sales depending
solely upon the existence of a nexus, such as production or
manufacture of the goods, or presence of the goods in the
Province at the date of the contract of sale, between the
sale and the Legislating Province could competently be
enacted under the Government of India Act, 1935 see the Tata
Iron and Steel Co., Ltd. v. The State of Bihar and Poppatlal
Shah v. The State of Madras (2).
By Art. 286 of the Constitution, certain fetters were placed
upon the legislative powers of the States as follows:
Art. 286:-" (1) No law of a State shall impose, or authorise
the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of goods
where such sale or purchase takes place-
(a) outside the State ; or
(b) in the course of the import of the goods into, or
export of the goods out of, the territory of India.
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1335.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 677.
291
Explanation:For the purposes of sub-cl. (a) a sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the State in
which the goods have actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State notwithstanding the fact that
under the general law relating to sale of goods the property
in the goods has by reason of such sale or purchase passed
in another State.
(2) Except in so far as Parliament may by law otherwise
provide, no law of a State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of any goods
where such sale or purchase takes place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce :
Provided that the President may by order 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 this Constitution shall, notwithstanding
that the imposition of such tax is contrary to the
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provisions of this clause, continue to be levied until the
thirty-first day of March, 1951.
(3) No law made by the Legislature of a State imposing, or
authorising the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase
of any such goods as have been declared by Parliament by law
to be essential for the life of the community shall have
effect unless it has been reserved for the consideration of
the President and has received his assent."
With a view to impose restrictions on the taxing power of
the States under the pre-Constitution statutes, amendments
were made in these statutes by the Adaptation of Laws Order.
By the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1951, in the Bihar Sales
Tax Act was incorporated with retrospective operation from
January 26, 1950, s. 33, which provided:
"’ (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act,-
(a) a tax on the sale or purchase of goods shall not be
imposed under this Act-
(i) where such sale or purchase takes place outside the
State of Bihar ; or
292
(ii) where such sale or purchase takes place in the course
of import of the goods into, or export of the goods out of,
the territory of India ;
(b) a tax on the sale or purchase of any goods shall not,
after the 31st day of March, 1951, be imposed where such
sale or purchase takes place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce except in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide;
(2) The Explanation to cl. (1) of Art. 286 of the
Constitution shall apply for the interpretation of sub-cl.
(1) of cl. (a) of sub-s. (1)."
By this amendment, on the taxing power of the Bihar State
the same restrictions were engrafted on the pre-Constitution
statute as were imposed by Art. 286 of the Constitution upon
post-Constitution statutes.
This court has held in the Bengal Immunity Co., Ltd. v. The
State of Bihar (1) that the operative provisions of the
several parts of Art. 286 namely cl. (1) (a), (1)(b) and (2)
and cl. (3) were intended to deal with different topics and
one could not be projected or read into another. Therefore,
by the incorporation of s. 33 in the Bihar Sales Tax Act
read with Art. 286, notwithstanding the amplitude of the
power otherwise granted by the charging section read with
the definition of " sale ", a cumulative fetter of triple
dimension was imposed upon the taxing power of the State.
The Legislature of the Bihar State could not since January
26, 1950, levy a tax on sale of goods taking place outside
the State or in the course of import of the goods into, or
export of the goods out of the territory of India, or on
sale of any goods where such sale took place in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce. By the Explanation to
Art. 286(1)(a) which is incorporated by sub-s. (2) s. 33 of
the Bihar Sales Tax Act, a sale is deemed to take place in
the State in which the goods are actually delivered as a
direct result of such sale for the purpose of consumption in
that State even though under the law relating to sale of
goods the property in the goods has by reason of such sale
passed in another State. In the State of Bombay v. The
United Motors (India) Ltd. (2), it was held that
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
293
since the enactment of Art. 286(1)(a), a sale described in
the Explanation which may for convenience be called an "
Explanation sale " is taxable by that State alone in which
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the goods sold are actually delivered as a direct result of
sale for the purpose of consumption in that State. The
right to tax arises because the sale is deemed to take place
in that State and outside all other States and the latter
States are prohibited from taxing the sale ; the former
alone is left free to do so.
The Bihar Sales Tax Act enacted in exercise of the power
conferred by entry 42 of List II of the Government of India
Act, 1935, upon the Provincial Legislatures is saved by Art.
372 of the Constitution as existing law, but by the combined
operation of sub-ss. (1) and (2) of s. 33, the Bihar State
is incompetent to tax sales of goods in the course of
imports into and exports out of the territory of India, and
after March 31, 1951, sales of goods in the course of inter
State trade or commerce. In view of the exposition of the
content of the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) by this court
in the United Motors case (1), the Bihar State is also
incompetent to tax " Explanation sales " where the goods are
delivered in another State as a direct result of the sale
for consumption in that State. By this last ban, to the
extent provided by subs. (1)(a)(i) and sub-s. (2) of s. 33,
the State of Bihar is deprived of its power to tax sales;
but the ban does not wholly extinguish the power of the
State to tax sales relying upon a real territorial nexus
between the sale and the State. In other words, by enacting
that a tax shall not be imposed under the Act when the sale
takes place outside the State of Bihar in s. 33(1)(a)(i),
only the power to tax " Explanation sales " which do not
take place within the State of Bihar in taken away, but not
the power to tax " non-Explanation sales " in which though
under the general law of sale of goods the property passes
outside the State, there exists between the taxing power of
the State and the sale a nexus as contemplated by the
definition of sale in s. 2(g). If the sale is one in which
the goods have been delivered outside the State of
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
294
Bihar, but not as a direct result of the sale or not for the
purpose of consumption in the State of first delivery, the
sale will not be covered by the Explanation, and the right
to tax the sale, if arising-otherwise under the Act relying
upon the territorial nexus, will not be impaired by the
prohibition imposed by cl. (1)(a)(i) of s. 33. The right of
the State of Bihar to tax a sale relying upon a real
territorial nexus not being impaired by s. 33 of the Act,
all sales as defined by s. 2(g) of the Bihar Sales Tax Act
are liable to be taxed, except those falling within s.
33(1)(a)(ii), s. 33(2) and " Explanation sales " outside the
State of Bihar.
The appellant company carries on the business of
manufacturing copper and other mineral products in the State
of Bihar. It has its registered office and its place of
business in the District of Singhbhum in the State of Bihar
and is registered as a " dealer " under the Bihar Sales Tax
Act, 1947. The appellant company sent out its products to
various places in India in the year of assessment ending on
March 31, 1950 and has paid the tax assessed by the Sales
Tax Officer. The appellant is now seeking to obtain a
refund of the tax paid for the period between January 26 and
March 31, 1950, on the plea that the tax was paid under a
misapprehension of the law. The High Court in an
application under Art. 226 of’ the Constitution directed the
Sales Tax authorities to refund so much of the tax as was
not proved to have been paid in respect of sales of goods
delivered and consumed in the State of first destination.
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On the goods delivered and consumed in the State of first
destination outside Bihar, the appellant could not be called
upon to pay sales tax. That is undisputed. The appellant
also claimed that on the goods delivered for consumption in
the State of first delivery outside Bihar, it was not liable
to pay sales tax, even if there was no evidence to prove
that the goods were in fact consumed in such State. In our
judgment, the High Court was in error in directing that the
exemption provided by Art. 286(1)(a) read with the
Explanation which was at the material time incorporated by
s. 33 in the Bihar Sales Tax Act by the Adaptation of
295
Laws Order, 1951, only applied to all sales of goods
delivered and consumed in the State of first destination.
If the goods were delivered for consumption, it is
immaterial whether they were in fact consumed in the State
where they were delivered. The power of the State to levy
sales tax relying upon the territorial nexus between the
taxing power of the State and the sale, is impaired for
reasons already set out to the extent to which it is
restricted by the incorporation of Art. 286(1)(a)(i) and the
Explanation thereto, in that Act. Therefore, sales effected
on or after January 26, 1950, where goods are as a direct
result of the sale delivered in another State for
consumption in that other State, are not liable to be taxed.
The directions issued by the High Court will therefore be
modified as follows:
The order of the Superintendent of Taxes is set aside. He
is directed to grant refund of tax paid in the light of this
judgment. The appellant will be entitled to exemption from
payment of tax if the goods are, as a direct result of the
sale, delivered in another State for the purpose of
consumption in that State.
Appeal dismissed subject to modification.