Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHNA COCONUT CO. & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
EAST GODAVARI COCONUT & TOBACCO MARKETCOMMITTEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/10/1966
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 973 1967 SCR (1) 974
ACT:
Madras Commercial Crops Market Act, 1933, ss. 2(1) (a), and
11 (1) on Goods declared under s. 2(1) (a) as commercial
crops--levy of fee under S. 11(1) on goods "bought and sold"
in notified area-whether referred to single transaction of
purchase and corresponding sale--or applied to subsequent
sale by purchaser-whether object of the Act to be
considered-whether levy valid.
HEADNOTE:
By a notification in June 1949, the State Government, in
exercise of a power under s. 2(1)(a) of the Madras
Commerical Crops Market Act, 1933, declared coconuts and
copra to be ’commercial crops’ within the meaning of the
Act. The respondent Market Committee IL-vied in respect of
the declared commerical crops, a fee on the goods ’bought
and sold’ within the notified area under s. 11(1) of the
Act, read with Rule 28(1) of the Rules made under the Act.
The appellants filed various suits contesting the levy on
the ground that they sold coconuts and copra to customers
outside the notified area and in some cases outside the
State; consequently, they sought refund of the fees
collected by the respondent committee.
The suits filed were tried together and the trial Judge held
that the levy, though called a "fee", was -really a "tax",
and that the Committee was only empowered to impose such tax
when the goods were bought and sold within the notified
area. He therefore passed decrees in all the suits .for
refund of the fees collected.
The first appeal by the respondent Committee was dismissed
by the Sub-Judge who further held that the fee in substance
being a tax, such tax on sales completed outside the State
would also offend Art. 286 of the Constitution. However, a
second appeal to the High Court was allowed on the view that
the transactions which were the subject-matter of the levy
under Section 11(1) were transactions consisting of the
purchase of the goods by the appellants and the
corresponding sales to them by the producers and not the
subsequent sales effected by the appellants to their cus-
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tomers outside the notified area or the States; therefore
the transactions on which the said fee was levied were
effected and completed inside the notified area and fell
within the expression "bought and sold" in section 11(1).
In the appeal before this court it was contended on behalf
of the appellants that the transactions effected by them
consisted in their purchasing the goods and stopped at the
stage of goods "bought" so that no fee could be levied in
the absence of the other ingredient, i.e., sale within the
notified area.
HELD : The construction placed on s. II (1) by the High
Court was correct and the respondent Committee had therefore
rightly charged the fee. [983 B]
975
The words "bought and sold" used in s. 11(1) aim at those
transactions where under a dealer buys from a producer who
brings to the market his goods for sale. The transaction
aimed at must be viewed in the sense in which the
legislature intended it to be viewed, that is, as one
transaction resulting in buying on the one hand and selling
on the other. Such a construction is commendable because it
is not only in-consonance with the words used in s. 11 (1)
but is consistent with the object of the Act as expressed
through its various provisions,, i.e., to prevent the
mischief of exploitation of producers of commercial crops
such as coconuts and copra and to see that such producers
got a fair price for their goods. [982 A-B, E-F]
Kutti Koya v. State of Madras A.I.R. 1954 Mad. 621;
Satyanarayana and Venkataraju Firm v. Godavari Market
Committee A.I.R. 1959 Andh. Pra. 398; M.C.V.S. Arunachala
Nadar v. The State of Madras [1959] Suppl. 1 S.C.R. 92;
Louis Drevfus & Co. v. South Arcot Groundnut Market
Committee A.I.R. 1945 Mad. 383; referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 858 to 861
of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in Second Appeals Nos. 720 and 724
to 726 of 1957.
C.B. Agarwala and T. V. R. Tatachari, for the appellants (in
all the appeals).
P. Ram Reddy and K. R. Sharma for the respondent (in all
the appeals. )
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. All these four appeals by special leave raise a
common question regarding interpretation of section 11(1)
of the Madras Commercial Crops Market Act, XX of 1933 and
Rule 28 of the Rules made thereunder and therefore can be
disposed of by a common judgment.
The Act was originally enacted by the Madras Legislature.
It was a law in force immediately before the constitution of
the State of Andhra Pradesh and governed the territories now
forming part of that State. By virtue of Andhra Pradesh Act
of 1953 and the Adaptation of Laws Order passed on November
1, 1953 by the State Government of Andhra Pradesh it became
applicable to the newly formed State of Andhra Pradesh. By
a Notification dated June 27, 1949 the then Government of
Madras, in exercise of the power conferred on it by section
2(1)(a), declared coconuts and copra to be commercial crops.
Under section 4 of the Act, the State Government also
declared the District of East Godavari as the "notified
area" for purposes of the Act in respect of coconuts and
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copra. By a further notification dated December 5, 1950
issued under section 4(a) of the Act it established a Market
Com-
976
mittee at Rajahmundry for the said notified area. The said
Market Committee levied the following fees, viz., (1) a
licence fee under s. 5(1) of the Act read with Rule 28(3);
(2) a licence fee for storage, wharfage etc., under section
5(3) read with Rule 28(3); (3), a registration fee under s.
18 read with Rule 37; (4) a fee on the said goods bought and
sold within the notified area and under s. II (1) read
with Rule 28(1); and (5) a fee under the same section on consign
ments
of coconut oil.
Contesting the levy of fees under items 2 to 5 as being
illegal on the ground that they sold coconuts and copra to
customers outside the notified area and in some cases
outside the State, the appellants filed various suits in the
court of the District Munsif, Amalapuram for refund of the
said fees collected by the said Committee at different
times. The Market Committee resisted the said suits
claiming that the aforesaid provisions conferred power upon
it to levy the said- fees and that the said levy was valid
and legal. The said suits were tried together and the
District Munsif by his judgment dated October 17, 1955,
inter alia, held that the levy under section 11(1) read with
Rule 28(1) though called a "fee" was really a "tax", that
the said provisions empowered the Committee to impose the
said tax only when the said goods were bought and sold
within the notified area, that the sales effected by the
appellants were to customers outside the said area and in
some cases outside the State, that the Committee had no
power to levy and collect the said fees’ and therefore the
appellants were entitled to refund of the said fees and
accordingly passed decrees in all the suits. In appeals by
the Committee, the Subordinate Judge, Amalapuram, held that
though the appellants purchased the said goods within the
notified area they exported them to their customers outside
the notified area and outside the State and relying upon the
decision in Kutti Koya v. State of Madras() he held that
though section II (1) called the said levy as fee it was in
substance a tax and that such a tax being oil sales
completed at the places of their customers outside the State
offended Art. 286 of the Constitution and was therefore
illegal. The Subordinate Judge, except for deleting the
relief granted in respect of licence fee under s. 5(3) of
the Act, dismissed the appeals and confirmed the judgment
and decree of the Trial Court. The Market Committee
thereupon filed Second Appeals in the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh. Before the High Court the controversy centered
round the question of fee under s. 11 (1) only. By its
common judgment dated November 8, 1961 the High Court
relying upon the judgment of a Division Bench of that Court
in Satyanarayana and Venkataraju Firm v. Godavari Market
Committee(2) held that the word "fee" in section II (1) was
in fact a fee and not a tax, The Division Bench also held
that the said goods were pur-
(1) A.I.R., 1954 Mad. 621.
(2) A.I.R. 1959 Andh. Pradesh 398.
977
chased by the appellants from producers or petty dealers
within the notified area and then sold by them to customers
outside the said area or the State, that the transactions
which were the subjected matter of the levy under section
11(1) were transactions consisting of purchase of the said
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goods by the appellants and the corresponding sales to them
by the producers and petty dealers and not the subsequent
sales effected by them to their customers outside the
notified area or the State, that therefore the transactions
on which the said fee was levied were effected and completed
inside the notified area and fell within the expression
"bought and sold" in section 11 (1) and therefore the Market
Committee rightly levied the said fee on those.
transactions. In the result, the Division Bench allowed the
appeals and dismissed the appellants’ suits. It is this
judgment and decree against which these appeals are
directed.
The preamble of the Act states that the Act was passed for
making provisions for better regulation of buying and
selling of and the establishment of markets for commercial
crops. As stated in M.C.V.S. Arunachala Nadar v. The State
of Madras(1), the Act was the result of long exploratory
investigation by experts in the field, conceived and enacted
to regulate the buying and selling of Commmercial crops to
provide suitable and regulated markets, to eliminate
middlemen and bring face to face the producer and the buyer
so that they meet on equal terms thereby eradicating or at
any rate reducing the scope for exploitation of the
producers. It therefore provided a machinery for regulating
trade by providing a common place where facilities would be
furnished by way of space, buildings and storage
accommodation, and where market practices would be
regularised and market charges clearly defined and
unwarranted ones prohibited, where correct weighment would
be ensured by licensed weighmen and all weights would be
checked and stamped, where payment on hand would be ensured,
where provision would be made for settlement of disputes,
where daily prevailing prices would be made available to the
grower and reliable market information provided regarding
arrivals, stocks, prices etc., and where quality standards
would be fixed when necessary and contract forms
standardized for purchase and sale. The result of the
implementation of the Act would be thus to give reasonable
facilities to the growers of commercial crops ensuring
proper price for their commodities.
Section 4(a) (1) provides for the formation of a market com-
mittee for enforcing the provisions of the Act and the Rules
and bylaws framed thereunder. Sub-section (2) lays down
that the Committee shall establish in the notified area such
number of markets providing such facilities, as the State
Government may from time to time direct, for purchase and
sale of commercial crops. Section 5
(1) [1959] Suppl. 1 S.C.R. 92.
978
prohibits any person to set up, establish or use, continue
or .allow to be continued any place within the notified area
for the purchase or sale of commercial crops except under a
licence and in accordance with the conditions thereof. The
Market Committee, however, can exempt from the provisions of
this sub-section any person who carries on the business of
purchasing or selling any .,commercial crop in quantities
not exceeding those prescribed by the Rules. It also
exempts from the provisions of this section a person selling
a commercial crop which has been grown by him or a co-
operative society selling a commercial crop which has been
grown by any of its members and also a person purchasing for
his private use a commercial crop in quantities not
exceeding those prescribed by the rules. Section 6 provides
that every market committee shall consist of such number of
members not exceeding twelve as may be fixed by the State
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Government and provides for representatives of licencees
under section 5 and buyers, sellers and buyers and sellers
registered under the Rules prescribed in that behalf.
Section II (1) with which we are concerned in these appeals
reads:
"The Market Committee shall, subject to such
rules as may be made in this behalf, levy fees
on the notified commercial crop or crops
bought and sold in the notified area at such
rates as it may determine."
The Explanation to sub-section (1) provides that all
notified commercial crops leaving a notified area shall,
unless the contrary is proved, be presumed to be bought and
sold within such area. Sub-section 2 provides that the fee
chargeable under sub-section(1) shall be paid by the
purchaser of the commercial crop concerned provided that
where such a purchaser cannot be identified the fee shall be
paid by the seller. Section 12 provides that all monies
received by a market committee shall be paid into a fund and
all expenditure incurred by the market committee shall be
defrayed out of the said fund. The expenditure which the
committee can incur is for purposes set out in section 13
which incidentally reflect the object and purpose of the
Act. Section 18 empowers the State Government to make rules
including rules for licence fee under section, 5, the
registration fee and the prohibition of buying and selling
,of commercial crops in the notified area by persons not so
registered and the fee to be levied on commercial crops
bought and sold in the notified area. Rule 28 lays down the
maximum fee leviable on commercial crops under section 11
(I) as also the maximum fee payable for licences and
registration. Rule 28-A provides that the fees referred to
in sub-rule (1), that is, "fees" under section 11 (1), shall
not be levied more than once on a commercial crop in a
notified area. These provisions clearly show the policy of
safe_guarding the interests of the producers and of
guaranteeing to them
979
reasonable return for the crops they would bring to sell
without being exploited.
Mr. Agarwala raised the following contentions: (1) that the
fee charged by the Market Committee under s.11(1) was on
sales effected by the appellants with their customers, some
of whom were admittedly outside the notified area and the
rest outside the State; (2) that that was the footing on
which the parties proceeded with the suits but that case was
given up in the High Court and the High Court was in error
in permitting the Committee to shift its case and argue that
the fee was levied not on those sales but on transactions of
purchase entered into by the appellants with the producers
and other petty dealers.
It is true that in para 3 of their plaint the appellants
averred that their business activities consisted of buying
coconuts and copra in East Godavari District and selling
them to customers outside the notified area and even the
State and that those sales were completed at the respective
places of those customers. The appellants’ case therefore
was that in respect of these sales with customers some of
whom were outside the notified area and the rest outside the
State, the levy of fee was in the former case beyond the ken
of s. II (1) and in the latter case repugnant to Art. 286 of
the Constitution. The written statement of the respondent
committee denied these allegations. The Committee asserted
that both the purchases and sales took place in the notified
area and that though the fee levied by it was on sales by
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the appellants and though delivery of the said goods
thereunder took place outside the notified area the sales in
respect thereof were made within the notified area and
therefore the question of the levy under section 11 (1)
being repugnant to Art. 286 of the Constitution did not
arise. Besides these pleadings Mr. Agarwala drew our
attention to certain notices of demand and circulars issued
by the Committee in which it was stated that the said fee
was being levied on goods exported outside East Godavari
District and that the traders were liable to pay it both on
coconuts exported to outsiders and also consumed internally.
That presumably was stated because if the goods were "bought
and sold" within the notified area, even if they were
subsequently exported outside, section 11(1) would apply.
The practice followed by the appellants and not denied by
the Committee was that they used to despatch these goods by
rail to their customers. Railway receipts and hundies were
then sent to their bankers at the destination and railway
receipts were delivered to the customers on their honouring
the hundies Thus the goods were delivered outside the
notified area and the sales effected by the appellants to
their customers were also completed at places outside the
notified area and in some cases outside the State.
On these facts the District Munsif held that property in the
goods having passed at destination, sales took place outside
the
980
notified area and therefore the fee charged by the Committee
was illegal as section 11(1) permitted such a levy only on
goods bought and sold within the notified area. On appeal
by the Committee, the Subordinate Judge held that the said
fee was a tax, that it was a tax on sales outside the
notified area and the State and was not therefore warranted
under section 11 (1) and was repugnant to Art. 286. It
seems that in both the courts, the real issue was lost sight
of, viz., whether the goods in respect of which the fee
under s. 1 1 (I) was levied were goods "bought and sold"
within the notified area as envisaged by the section.
In the High Court however the questions convassed were (1) whethe
r
the fee provided in section 11 (1) was a fee or a tax and
(2) even if it was a fee whether the Committee had the
power to levy it in respect of goods sold by the appellants
outside the notified area. As already stated the Trial
Judge and the Subordinate Judge had proceeded on the footing
that the said fee was levied on sales entered into by the
appellants with their customers who undoubtedly were outside
the notified area. But the real question that ought to have
been dealt with by the Trial, Judge and on appeal by the
Subordinate Judge was not whether the appellant’s sales were
to customers outside the notified area or the State but
whether the fee which was levied was valid. The question of
the validity of the levy entailed another question, viz.,
whether the levy was on transactions effected by the
appellants before they sold those goods to their customers.
Were the appellants entitled to a refund of the fees levied
on them under s. II (1) ?, was the principal question in the
suits. To decide that question it was necessary for the
court to go into the question whether the fee was charged on
the sales by the appellants or on the transactions made
between them and those from whom they purchased the goods in
question. Since neither the Trial Court nor the Subordinate
Judge had gone into that question, it was necessary for the
High Court to go into it not only to do justice to the
parties but also because that was the real issue arising in
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the suits and was the crux of the litigation. There was
therefore no question of the High Court allowing the
respondent-Committee to make out a new case. The question
from the very inception was whether the Committee was
competent to levy the fee in question under section 11(1).
To answer that question the court necessarily had to enquire
on which transactions could the said fee be levied under
section 11(1) and whether it was rightly levied by the Com-
mittee. The High Court answered these questions by holding
that it was levied, on the transactions effected by the
appellants with those from whom they bought the said goods,
that section 11(1) dealt with those transactions and was not
therefore concerned with the subsequent sales entered into
by the appellants with their customers outside the notified
area. Since, according to the High Court, those
transactions were admittedly effected within the noti-
981
fied area the levy was valid and warranted under s. 1 1 (1).
In our view the High Court approached the question from a
correct angle and therefore there was no question of its
having allowed the Committee to change its case or make out
a new case.
That being the position, the next question is whether the
Committee could levy fee under section II (1) on the
transactions effected by the appellants before they sold
those goods to their customers. Mr. Agarwala’s contention
was that the fee levied under section 11(1) could only be in
respect of goods "bought and sold" and not in respect of
transactions where goods were only "bought" or only "sold".
According to him it is only when a person bought goods and
sold those identical goods within the notified area that the
fee under section 11(1) could be levied. According to him,
the transactions effected by the appellants consisted in
their purchasing the said goods; they stopped at the stage
of goods "bought". Therefore, the other ingredient for a
valid levy of the fee not being present the fee levied in
the present case was not in accordance with the requirements
of section 11 (1) and was unwarranted. This contention
raises the question as to the meaning of the words "bought
and sold" in section 11(1). At first sight they would
appear to be susceptible of three meanings; viz., (1) that
they mean duality of transactions where the same person buys
goods and sells those identical goods in the notified area;
(2) that they mean "bought" or "sold" the conjunctive "and"
meaning in the context of the sub-section the disjunctive
"or" and (3) that they apply to a transaction of purchase as
the concept of purchase includes a corresponding sale. When
a person buys an article from another person, that, other
person at the same time sells him that article and it is in
that sense that section 11(1) uses the words "bought and
sold." The incidence of the fee under section 11(1) is on
the goods thus "bought and sold". This last interpretation
was favoured by the High Court of Madras in Louis Dreyfus &
Co. v. South Arcot Groundnut Market Committee(1) which has
been accepted by the High Court in the present case.
If the construction commended to us for acceptance by Mr.
Agarwala were to be correct, viz., that the appellant’s
transactions stopped at the stage of goods "bought", they
would not be transactions in respect of goods "bought and
sold". If the fee was levied on sales effected by the
appellants with their customers its levy would not be valid
under section 1 1 (1) and would also be repugnant to Art.’
286 where goods were delivered outside the State. But it is
a well settled rule of construction that the court should
endeavour as far as possible to construe a statute in such a
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manner that the construction results in validity rather than
its invalidity and gives effect to the
(1) A.I.R. 1945 Mad. 383.
982
manifest intention of the legislature enacting that statute.
The object in passing the Act was to prevent the mischief of
exploitation of producers of commercial crops such as
coconuts and copra and to see that such producers got a fair
price for their goods. The mischief to prevent which the
Act was enacted was the exploitation of these producers by
middlemen and those buying goods from them and therefore the
Act provided facilities such as market place, place for
storage, correct weighment etc., so that the producers and
his purchasers come face to face in a regulated and
controlled market and a fair price was obtained by them. If
the construction suggested by Mr. Agarwala were to be
accepted and the section were to be construed as being
applicable to those transactions only which have a dual
aspect, that is, buying by a dealer from a producer and the
dealer selling those identical goods within the notified
area, the object of the Act would be defeated, for in a
large number of cases the transactions would halt at the
stage of buying and the Committee in those cases would have
no power to levy the fee on them. Why is a buyer or a
seller or a buyer and seller required to be registered and
why does the Act prevent those who have not registered
themselves from effecting transactions in commercial crops
unless the object was to regulate and control transactions
in those commodities at all stages and in a manner
preventing the exploitation of the producer ? The
legislature had thus principally the producer in mind who
should have a proper market where he can bring his goods for
sale and where he can secure a fair deal and a fair price.
The Act thus aims at transactions which such a producer
would enter into with those who buy from him. The words
"bought and sold" used in section 11(1) aim at those
transactions where under a dealer buys from a producer who
brings to the market his goods for sale. The transactions
aimed at must be viewed in the sense in which the
legislature intended it to be viewed, that is, as one
transaction resulting in buying on the one hand and selling
on the other. Such a construction is commendable because it
is not only in consonance with the words used in section
11(1) but is consistent with the object of the Act as
expressed through its various provisions. The construction
on the other hand canvassed by the appellants is defeative
of the purpose of the Act and should, unless we are
compelled to accept it, be avoided. The construction which
we are inclined to accept acquired some support from the
fact that section II makes the purchaser and not the seller
primarily responsible for payment of the fee and it is only
when the purchaser cannot be identified that the seller is
made liable.
Mr. Agarwala at first also urged that the fee under s. 11
(1) amounted to a tax and that it was in fact a sales tax.
But at the last moment he stated that he- did not wish to
press that contention and requested us not to express any
opinion thereon. Since the contention is not pressed we
need not express any opinion on that ques-
983
tion and confine ourselves to the question as to the
interpretation of the words "bought and sold" in that
section.
In our view the construction placed by, the High Court on s.
11(1) was a correct construction and therefore the
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respondent-committee had rightly charged the appellants with
said fee.
The appeals therefore fail and are dismissed with costs.
One hearing fee.
R.K.P.S. Appeals dismissed...
984