Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOODYEAR INDIA LTD. ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA & ANR. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/10/1989
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
CITATION:
1990 AIR 781 1989 SCR Supl. (1) 510
1990 SCC (2) 71 JT 1989 (4) 229
1989 SCALE (2)982
ACT:
Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973: Section 9 (Prior to
its amendment by Act No. 11 of 1979)--Purchase Tax--Provi-
sion for levy of purchase tax on ’Disposal’ of manufactured
goods--Notification--(No. S.O 119/H.A. 20/73/Ss. 9 & 15/74
dated July 19, 1974)--Levy of tax on mere despatch of goods
to the dealers themselves outside the State--Validity of.
Section 9(1)(b) (As amended by Haryana General Sales Tax
(Amendment and Validation Act, 1983--Purchase Tax--Taxing of
purchase of raw material if goods manufactured therefrom
despatched outside the State otherwise than by way of sale
in the course of inter State trade--Whether taxing of con-
signments in the course of inter State trade--Whether beyond
the legislative competence of State Legislature--Effect of
Constitution (Forty-Sixth) Amendment Act, 1982.
Section 9(1)(c)--Purchase tax on Exports--Food Corpora-
tion of India--Purchase of foodgrains from farmers within
the State--Despatch of food grains to its Branches outside
the State--Levy of Tax at the Point Of Despatch--Validity
of.
Section 24(3)--Validity of:
Haryana General Sales Tax (Amendment and Validation) Act,
1983--- Law declared ultra rites State Legislature--Validat-
ing Act--No change made in substantive law mere direction to
ignore judgment--Whether void.
Section 50--Penalty--Charging provision held ultra
vires-Penalty proceedings based on charging provision wheth-
er invalid.
Bombay Sales Tax Act 1959: Section 13-AA (As inserted by
Maharashtra Act XXVIII of 1982)--Scope, effect and validity
of. Purchase tax--Raw material purchased by paying tax used
in the manufacture of goods--Manufactured goods despatched
to Agents in other States--Levy of Additional Tax--Whether
tax on the consignment of manufactured goods outside the
State--Whether beyond the legislat-
511
tive competence of State Legislature--Whether violative of
Articles 14 and 301 of the Constitution of India.
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 14--Section 13-AA
of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 (As inserted by Maharash-
tra Act XXVIII of 1982)--Vires of.
Articles 245 and 246--Doctrine of Pith and
Substance--What is-- Test for determination--Legislative
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competence--Relevancy of pith and substance rule.
Article 269(1)(h)--Constitution (Forty-Sixth) Amendment
Act, 1982--Object and effect of.
Article 301--Freedom of Trade Commerce and Intercourse
Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 Section 13-AA (As inserted by
Maharashtra Act XXVIII of 1982)--Vires of--Imposition of
Additional purchase tax--Permissibility of.
Schedule VII--Entries in the Legislative Lists--Only
demarcate legislative field--Do not confer legislative pow-
ers.
Statutory Interpretation: Rules of interpretation of
statutes-applicability of to interpretation of
Constitution--Constitution--Not to be interpreted in a
narrow pedantic sense.
Fiscal statutes--Tax liability--Whether can be deter-
mined by reference to interpretation of a statute other than
the statute creating liability--Should be construed strict-
ly--Assumptions and presumption in interpretation of fiscal
law--Whether permissible.
Determination of nature of a tax--Standard or measure on
which the tax is levied--Whether relevant and
conclusive--Courts whether to look into Pith and Substance
Rule.
Taxable event--Charging event--What is--Test for deter-
mination--What is--Stages of taxation explained.
Excise duty--Sales Tax--Distinction between--Tax on sale
of goods--Tax on use or consumption of goods--Distinction
between--Reasonable construction should be followed and
literal construction to be avoided if that defeats the
manifest object and purpose of the Act.
512
Mischief Rule: Provisions of Constitutional changes--To
be construed in the context of Mischief Rule.
Practice and Procedure: Precedent--What is--A decision
on a question which has not been argued--Whether can be
treated as precedent.
Words and Phrases: ’Disposal’--Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant/petitioner company--Good Year India Limit-
ed--a registered dealer both under the Haryana General Sales
Tax Act, 1973 and Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, was manufac-
turing automobile tyres and tubes at Ballabgarh in the State
of Haryana. For the said manufacturing activity it was
purchasing various kinds of raw materials both within the
State and from outside the State of Haryana. The Company was
despatching these manufactured goods viz. tyres and tubes to
its own branches and sales depots outside the State of
Haryana.
The assessing authority imposed upon the appellant
company the purchase tax under section 9 of the Haryana
General Sales Tax Act, 1973 in view of the despatches made
by it of the manufactured goods to its various depots out-
side-the-State.
The petitioner company filed writ petition in the Punjab
and Haryana High Court challenging the validity of the
Notification levying the tax. A Division Bench of the High
Court allowed the petition holding that disposal of goods
being separate and ’distinct from despatch thereof, a mere
despatch of goods out Of the State by a dealer to his own
branch while retaining both ’the title-and possession there-
of does not come within the ambit of the phrase "disposes of
the manufactured goods in any manner otherwise than by way
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of sale", as employed in Section 9(i)(a)(ii) of the Act.
Accordingly the High Court set aside the assessment orders
and quashed the impugned Notification as ultra vires of
section 9 on the ground that whereas Section 9 provided only
for the levy of purchase tax On the disposal of the manufac-
tured goods, the impugned Notification makes mere despatch
of goods to the dealer themselves taxable. To override the
effect of the said judgment the Haryana Legislature enacted
Haryana General Sales Tax (Amendment and Validation) Act
1983 where by Section 9 of the Act was amended with retro-
spective effect to include within its sweep the despatch of
manufactured goods to a place outside the State in any
manner otherwise than by way of sale. The impugned Notifica-
tion and the con-
513
sequential action taken thereunder were also validated.
The petitioner company filed writ petitions challenging
the assessments. The High Court allowed the petitions hold-
ing section 9(1)(b) of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act
1973 as amended by the Haryana General Sales Tax (Amendment
and Validation) Act, 1983 in so far as it levied a purchase
tax on the consignment of goods outside the State in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce was beyond the
legislative competence of the State of Haryana and was void
and inoperative because it intruded and trespassed into an
arena exclusively meant for taxation by the Union of India
under Entry 92-B of List I of the Seventh Schedule. Accord-
ingly the High Court set aside the amended provisions of
section 9 as also the retrospective validation of the Noti-
fication and the consequential validation of all actions
taken thereunder. Against this decision of the High Court,
State of Haryana preferred Special Leave Petitions in this
Court.
During the pendency of these Special Leave Petitions,
the assessing authority issued Show-cause notices asking the
petitioner company to show-cause why in addition to the
purchase tax, it should not be liable to penalty as well.
The Petitioner company again filed writ petitions in the
Punjab & Haryana High Court challenging the validity of
these notices. In the meantime a Full Bench of the High
Court decided the question again and overruling the decision
of the earlier Division Bench held that the taxing event was
the act of purchase and not the act of despatch of the
consignment. The Full Bench of the High Court held that
section 9(1)(b) as amended was neither invalid nor ultra
vires. Against the aforesaid judgment of the Full Bench the
Petitioner Company filed appeals in this Court. All these
questions are the subject matters of these appeals.
In the connected appeals, the Food Corporation of India
was procuring food-grains from the farmers through commis-
sion agents in tile mandis of Haryana and despatching them
to its own branches in the deficit State of the country. The
Corporation branches in the recipient States were supplying
these stocks to the State agencies/Fair Price Shops and were
also paying tax as per the provisions of the Sales Tax law
of the respective States. Some of the stocks were distribut-
ed within the State of Haryana for the public distribution
system for which sales tax was charged. and deposited with
the sales-tax depots as per the Haryana General Sales Tax
Act, 1973. In respect of the inter-State despatch of wheat
and other food-grains by the Food Corporation of India to
its own branches tax was attracted at the time of despatch
514
under section 9(1)(c) of the Haryana Act. The Food Corpora-
tion of India impugned the levy of tax.
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In the other connected appeals the appellant
companies--Hindustan Lever Ltd. and Wipro Products--were
manufacturing vanaspati, soaps, chemicals and agro chemi-
cals. For the said manufacturing activities, they were
purchasing non-essential vegetable oil (VNE oil) and other
raw materials and were paying purchase tax @4% under section
3 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959. The VNE oil was subse-
quently used by the appellant companies in the manufacture
of vanaspati and soaps. The finished products manufactured
by the appellant companies viz. vanaspati and soaps used to
be despatched outside the State of Maharashtra to their
clearing and forwarding agents. The assessing authority
levied additional purchase tax @ 2% under section 13-AA of
the Act on the purchase of said goods---VNE oil.
The appellant companies filed writ petitions in the
High Court challenging the orders of the assessing authority
levying the additional tax of 2% and also the vires of
section 13-AA of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 under which
the additional tax was levied, contending that the addition-
al tax of 2% levied on raw materials, where the finished
goods manufactured therefrom were despatched outside the
State was in the nature of consignment tax which was not
within the legislative competence of the State Legislature.
The High Court dismissed the petitions holding (i) the
additional purchase tax levied under section 13-AA of the
Act was on the purchase value of VNE oil used in the manu-
facturing of goods transferred outside the State and not on
the value of the manufactured goods so transferred; (ii) the
State Legislature was competent to levy the tax under Entry
54 of the State List in the Seventh Schedule to the Consti-
tution, and (iii) Section 13-AA was not violative of either
Article 14 or Article 301 of the Constitution of India.
Against the decision of the High Court appellant compa-
nies filed appeal in this Court.
Disposing of the matters, this Court,
HELD: (Per Mukharji, J.)
1. Analysing section 9 of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act,
515
1973 it is clear that the two conditions specified, before
the event of despatch outside the State as mentioned in
section 9(1)(b), namely, (i) purchase of goods in the State
and (ii) using them for the manufacture of any other goods
in the State, are only descriptive of the goods liable to
tax under Section 9(1)(b) in the event of despatch outside
the State. If the goods do not answer both the descriptions
cumulatively, even though these are despatched outside the
State of Haryana, the purchase of those goods would not be
put to tax under Section 9(1)(b). The liability to pay tax
under section 9(1)(b) does not accrue on purchasing the
goods simpliciter, but only when these are despatched or
consigned out of the State of Haryana. The section itself
does not provide for imposition of the purchase tax on the
transaction of purchase of the taxable goods but when fur-
ther the said taxable goods are used up and turned into
independent taxable goods, losing its original identity, and
thereafter when the manufactured goods are despatched out-
side the State’ of Haryana and only then tax is levied and
liability to pay tax is created. It is the cumulative effect
of that event which occasions or causes the tax to be im-
posed. [539F-H; 540A-B]
1.1 A taxable event is that which is closely related to
imposition. In the instant section viz. section 9(1)(b)
there is such close relationship only with despatch. The
goods purchased are used in manufacture of new independent
commodity and thereafter the said manufactured goods are
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despatched outside the State of Haryana. In this series of
transactions the original transaction is completely eclipsed
or cease to exist when the levy is imposed at the third
stage of despatch of manufacture. The levy has no direct
connection with the transaction of purchase of raw-materi-
als, it has only a remote connection of lineage. The mere
consignment of goods by a manufacturer to his own branches
outside the State does not in any way amount to a sale or
disposal of the goods as such. The consignment or despatch
of goods is neither a sale nor a purchase. The tax imposed
under Section 9(1)(b) is a tax on despatch. The tax on
despatch of goods outside the territory of the State cer-
tainly is in the course of inter-State trade or commerce and
amounts to imposition of consignment tax, and hence the
latter part of section 9(1)(b) is ultra vires and void.
[540G-H; 542H; 543A; 544E; 545A]
Tata Iron & Steel Co. v. State of Bihar, [1958] SCR 1355,
referred to.
Good Year India Ltd. v. State of Haryana, 53 STC 163 and
Bata India Ltd. v. State of Haryana & Anr., 54 STC 226,
approved.
516
Des Raj Pushap Kumar Gulati v. The State of Punjab, 58
STC 393, overruled.
Yusuf Shabeer & Ors. v. State of Kerala & Ors., 32 STC
359; Coffee Board v. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes &
Ors., 60 STC 142 and Coffee Board, Karnataka v. Commissioner
of Commercial Taxes, Karnataka, 70 STC 162, distinguished.
State of Tamil Nadu v. M.K. Kandaswami, 36 STC 191;
Ganesh Prasad Dixit v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P.,
[1969] 24 STC 343 and Malabar Fruit & Company v. Sales Tax
Officer, Pallai, 30 STC 537, distinguished.
1.2 The effect of the Constitution (Forty-sixth Amend-
ment) Act, 1982 is that the field of taxation on the con-
signment/despatch of goods in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce expressly comes within the purview of the
legislative competence of the Parliament. [543H]
2. If section 9(1)(b) is ultra vires, the penalty pro-
ceedings would automatically go as they are in substance,
based on the violation of section 9(1)(b) of the Act and the
consequent proceedings flowing therefrom. [545B]
3. Section 24(3) of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act,
1973 without making any change in the substantive provision
purports to give a direction to ignore the judgments in
Goodyear and Bata India Ltd. cases. This provision is void.
[546B]
Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Broach Borough Munici-
pality, [1969] 2 SCC 283 and Dy. Commissioner of Sales Tax
(Law) Board of Revenue (Taxes) v. M/s Thomas Stephen & Co.
Ltd. Quilon, [1988] 2 SCC 264, followed.
4. In respect of inter-State despatch of wheat and other
food grains by Food Corporation of India to its own branch-
es, tax is attracted at the time of despatch under Section
9(1)(c) of the Haryana Act. Section 9 is the charging sec-
tion for taxation in case where the goods are purchased for
export. There is no other provision for levy of purchase or
sales tax in such cases of export. [547B]
4.1 No tax is payable under the Haryana Act when exports
outside the State take place either in the course of inter-
State sale or export out of the territory of India. But the
tax is payable for sale in the course
517
of inter-State trade and commerce i.e. under the Central
Sales Tax Act. It is only when the goods are
despatched/consigned to the depots of the FCI in other
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States that tax is levied under section 9 of the Haryana
Act. This is in addition to the sales tax paid by the FCI on
the sale of grains in the recipient States. In view of
sections 14 & 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, it becomes
clear that wheat is one of the commodities specified as
’declared goods’ and in respect of which the intention is
clear that the tax is payable only once on the declared
goods. In the case of inter-State sale if any tax has been
paid earlier on declared goods inside the State the same is
to be refunded to the dealer who is paying tax on such
inter-State Sales. On these transactions no tax is liable in
the recipient State, while in case of inter-State despatch-
es, the tax is leviable twice. Section 9(1)(c), which inso-
far as it purports to tax, exports, is beyond the legisla-
tive competence of the State of Haryana. [547E-G]
5. The incidence of the levy of additional tax of two
paise in the rupee under Section 13-AA of the Bombay Sales
Tax Act, 1959 is not on the purchase of goods, but such a
levy is attracted only when--(a) the goods which so pur-
chased on payment of purchase tax are used in the manufac-
ture of taxable goods; and (b) the goods so manufactured are
despatched to his own place of business or to his agent’s
place of business outside the State. Therefore, the inci-
dence of tax is attracted not merely on the purchase but
only when the goods so purchased are used in the manufacture
of taxable goods and are despatched outside the State. The
incidence of additional tax has no nexus with the purchase
of the raw-materials. [553A-B; D]
5.1 Purchase tax under section 3 of the Act is attracted
when the taxable event i.e. the purchase of goods occurs but
the taxable event for the imposition of additional tax of
two paise in the rupee occurs only when the goods so pur-
chased are used in the manufacture of taxable goods and such
taxable goods are despatched outside the State by a dealer
manufacturer. The goods which are despatched are different
products from the goods on the purchase of which purchase
tax was paid. It is therefore not possible to accept the
argument that the chargeable event was lying dormant and is
activated only on the occurrence of the event of despatch.
[553E; 556F; 557C]
5.2 The charging event is the event the occurrence of
which immediately attracts the charge. Taxable event cannot
be postponed to the occurrence of the subsequent condition.
In that event, it would be the subsequent condition the
occurrence of which would attract the Charge which will be
taxable event. Therefore the charge under
518
section 13-AA is a duty on despatch. Accordingly this charge
can not be sustained.[557D]
The Bill to amend s. 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 and
S. 3 of the Central Excises & Salt Act, [1944], (1964) 3 SCR
787; M/s Guruswamy & Co. v. State of Mysore, [1967] 1 SCR
548; Mukunda Murari Chakravarti & Ors. v. Pabitramoy Ghosh &
Ors., AIR 1945 FC 1; Kedar Nath Jute Mfg. Co. Ltd. v.
C.I.T., 82 ITR SC 363; State of M.P. v. Shyam Charan Shukla,
29 STC SC 215; R.C. Jail v. Union of India, [1962] Suppl. 3
SCR 436; Union of India v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd.,
[1984] 1 SCR 347 and State of Karnataka v. Shri Ranganatha
Reddy, [1978] 1 SCR 641, referred to.
Wipro Products v. State of Maharashtra, [1989] 72 STC 69
Bom., Reversed.
5.3 Imposition of a duty or tax in every case would not
tantamount per se to any infringement of Article 301 of the
Constitution. Only such restrictions or impediments which
directly or immediately impede free flow of trade, commerce
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and intercourse fail within the prohibition imposed by
Article 301. A tax in certain cases may directly and immedi-
ately restrict or hamper the flow of trade. but every impo-
sition of tax does not do so. Every case must be judged on
its own facts and its own setting of time and circumstances.
Unless the court first comes to the finding on the available
material whether or not there is an infringement of the
guarantee under Article 301 the further question as to
whether the Statute is saved under Article 304(b) does not
arise. [558B-C]
5.4 In the instant case. the goods taxed do not leave
the State in the shape of raw material, which change their
form in the State itself and there is no question of any
direct, immediate or substantial hindrance to a free flow of
trade. Therefore Section 13-AA of the Bombay Sales Tax Act
1959 is not violative of Article 301. [558D-E]
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. The State of Assam & Ors.,
[1961] 1 SCR 809; The Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd.
v. The State of Rajasthan, [1963] 1 SCR 491; Andhra Sugars
Ltd. v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1968] 1 SCR 705; State of
Madras v. N.K. Nataraja Mudaliar, [1968] 3 SCR 829 and State
of Kerala v. A.B. Abdul Khadir & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 700,
referred to.
Kalyani Stores v. The State of Orissa & Ors., [1966] 1
S.C.R. 865, relied on.
519
6. The provisions of constitutional changes have to be
construed not in a narrow isolationism but on a much wider
spectrum and the principles laid down in Heydon’s case are
instructive. [529H; 530A]
Black Clawson International Ltd. v. Papierwerke
Waldhof-Aschaffenburg, [1975] 1 All E.R. 810, referred.
Heydon’s case, (1584) 3 Co. Rep. 7a, relied on.
7. In construing the expressions of the Constitution to
judge whether the provisions of a statute are within the
competence of the State Legislature, one must bear in mind
that the Constitution is to be construed not in a narrow or
pedantic sense. The Constitution is not to be construed as
mere law but as the machinery by which laws are to be made.
[533F]
James v. Commonwealth of Australia, [1936] A.C. 578; The
Attorney General for the State of New South Wales v. The
Brewery Employees Union etc., [1908] 6 C.L.R. 469; Re.
Central Provinces & Berar Sales of Motor Spirit and Lubri-
cants Taxation Act 1938, A.I.R. 1939 F.C.I. and The Province
of Madras v. M/s Boddu Paidanna & Sons, A.I.R. 1942 F.C. 33,
referred to.
8. The nomenclature of the Act is not conclusive and for
determining the true character and nature of a particular
tax, with reference to the legislative competence of a
particular Legislature, the Court will look into its pith
and substance. [543H; 544A]
Governor General in Council v. Province of Madras,
[1945] 72 I.A. 91 and Ralla Ram v. The Province of East
Punjab, A.I.R. 1949 F.C. 81, referred to.
9. The doctrine of pith and substance means that if an
enactment substantially falls within the power expressly
conferred by the Constitution upon the Legislature which
enacted it, it cannot be held to be invalid merely because
it incidentally encroaches upon matters assigned to another
legislature. [555H; 556A]
Kerala State Electricity Board v. Indian Aluminium Co.,
[1976] 1 S.C.R. 552 and Prafulla Kumar Mukherjee & Ors. v.
Bank of Commerce, A.I.R. 1947 PC 60, referred to.
9.1 The true test to find out what is pith and substance of
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the
520
legislation is to ascertain the true intent of the Act which
will determine the validity of the Act. [577B]
10. There are three stages in the imposition of tax.
There is the declaration of liability, that is the part of
the Statute which determines what persons in respect of what
property are liable. Next, there is the assessment- Liabili-
ty does not depend on assessment, that exhypothesi has
already been fixed. But assessment particularises the exact
sum which a person is liable to pay. Lastly comes the method
of recovery if the person taxed does not voluntarily pay.
[539B-C]
Whitney v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue, [1926] A.C.
37 and Chatturam & Ors. v. C.I.T., Bihar, 15 I.T.R. F.C.
302, referred to.
11. While determining nature of a tax, though the stand-
ard or the measure on which the tax is levied may be a
relevant consideration, it is not the conclusive considera-
tion. [556C]
Governor General in Council v. Province of Madras,
[1945] 72 I.A. 91; R.R. Engineering Co. v. Zila Parishad
Bareilly & Anr., [1980] 3 S.C.R. 1; In Re A reference under
the Government of Ireland Act, 1920, [1936] A.C. 352 and
Navnitlal C. Javeri v. K.K. Sen, Appellate Asstt. Commis-
sioner of Income Tax ’D’ Range Bombay, [1965] 1 S.C.R. 909,
referred to.
12. The liability to tax would be determined with
reference to the interpretation of the Statute which creates
it. It cannot be determined by referring to another Statute.
[555G]
13. In fiscal legislations normally a charge is creat-
ed. The. mischief of taxation occurs on the happening of the
taxable event. Different taxes have different taxable
events. A taxing event is that event the occurrence of which
immediately attracts the levy or the charge of tax. What is
the taxable event or what necessitates taxation in an appro-
priate Statute must be found by construing the provisions.
The main test for determining the taxable event is that on
the happening of which the charge is affixed. [552H; 553A:
552G: 533E; 539B]
14. Fiscal laws must be strictly construed. n is not
permissible to make assumptions and presumptions in a fiscal
provision. [536H; 538G]
C.S.T., U.P. v. The Modi Sugar Mills Ltd., [1961] 2
S.C.R. 189 and Baidyanath Ayurved Bhawan (P) Ltd., Jhansi,
v. Excise Commis-
521
sioner, U.P. & Ors., [1971] 2 S.C.R. 590, referred to.
15. While interpreting a Statute a reasonable construc-
tion should be followed and literal construction may be
avoided if that defeats the manifest object and purpose of
the Act. [555F]
Commissioner of Wealth-tax, Bihar & Orissa v. Kripashan-
kar Dayashankar Worah, 81 I.T.R. 763 and Income Tax Commis-
sioners for City of London v. Gibbs, 10 I.T.R. (Suppl.) 121
H.L., referred to.
16. The Entries in the Constitution only demarcate and
legislative fields of the respective legislatures and do not
confer legislative powers as such. [544H; 545A]
17. A precedent is an authority only for what it actual-
ly decides and not for what may remotely or even logically
follows from it. [537E]
Quinn v. Leathem, [1901] A.C. 495 and The State of
Orissa v. Sudhansu Sekhar Misra & Ors., [1968] 2 S.C.R. 154,
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followed.
17.1 A decision on a question which has not been argued
cannot be treated as a precedent. [542B]
Rajput Ruda Maha & Ors. v. State of Gujarat, [1980] 2
S.C.R. 353, followed.
(Per Ranganathan, J.) (Concurring)
1. Section 9 of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973
as well as section 13-AA of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959
purport only to levy a purchase tax. The tax, however,
becomes exigible not on the occasion or event of purchase
but only later. It materialises only if the purchaser (a)
utilises the goods purchased in the manufacture of taxable
goods, and (b) despatches the goods so manufactured (other-
wise then by way of sale) to a place of business situated
outside the State. The legislation, however, is careful to
impose the tax only on the price at which the raw materials
are purchased and not on the value of the manufactured goods
consigned outside the State. [559G-H; 560A]
2. It is one thing to levy a purchase tax where the
character and class of goods in respect of which the tax is
levied is described in a particular manner and a case like
the present where the tax, though described as purchase tax,
actually becomes effective with reference to
522
a totally different class of goods and, that too, only on
the happening of an event which is unrelated to the act of
purchase. [560D-E]
2.1 The "taxable event", if one might use the expression
often used in this context, is the consignment of the manu-
factured goods and not the purchase. [560E]
2.2 The background of the Constitutional (Forty-sixth
Amendment) indicates that there were efforts at sales tax
avoidance by sending goods manufactured in a State out of
raw materials purchased inside to other States by way of
consignments rather than by way of sales attracting tax.
This situation lends force to the view that the State,
unable to tax the exodus directly, attempted to do so indi-
rectly by linking the levy ostensibly to the "purchases" in
the State. [560G-H]
Andhra Sugar Ltd. & Anr. v. State, [1968] 1 SCR 705, re-
ferred to.
State of Tamil Nadu v. Kandaswami, [1975] 36 S.T.C. 191,
distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1166-72
of 1985 etc. etc.
From the Judgment and Order dated 24.1.85 of the Punjab
& Haryana High Court in C.W.P. Nos. 698 to 703 and 733 of
1984.
Raja Ram Aggarwal, B. Sen, Dr. Devi Paul, D.S. Tawatia,
Soli J. Sorabjee, Kapil Sibal and S.K. Dholakia, A.N. Haka-
sar, D.N. Misra, Mukul Mudgal, Ravinder Narain, P.K. Ram, S.
Sukumaran, S. Ganesh, Mahabir Singh, H.S. Anand. R. Karania-
wala, Mrs. Manik Karanjawala, A.S. Bhasme and A.M. Khanwil-
kar for the Appearing Parties.
The following Judgments of the Court were delivered:
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. Except civil appeals Nos. 416263
of 1988, in these appeals along with the special leave
petitions and the writ petition, we are concerned with
Sections 9(1) and 24(3) as well as the penalty proceedings
initiated under Section 50 of the Haryana General Sales Tax
Act, 1974 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). So far as
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civil appeals Nos. 4 162-63 of 1988 are concerned, these
involve the scope, effect and validity of Section 13AA of
the Bombay Sales
523
Tax Act. 1959 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Bombay Act’)
as introduced by the Maharashtra Act No. XXVIII of 1982. It
will, therefore, be desirable first to deal with the ques-
tion of the Act, and then with the provisions of the Bombay
Act as mentioned hereinbefore.
The appellant/petitioner--Goodyear India Ltd., was
engaged at all relevant times, inter alia, in the manufac-
ture and sale of automobile tyres and tubes. It manufactured
the said tyres and tubes at its factory at Ballabhgarh in
the district of Faridabad in the State of Haryana. For the
said manufacturing activity the appellant had, from time to
time, to purchase various kinds of raw-materials both within
the State and outside the State. It is stated that about 7
to 10% of the total needs of raw-materials on an all India
basis were locally procured by the appellant from Haryana
itself. The raw-materials purchased in Haryana were: (i)
pigments (partly), (ii) chemicals (partly), (iii) wires
(partly), (iv) carbon black (partly), (v) rubber (partly),
and (vi) fabric (partly). The rest of the requirements were
imported from other States. The appellant had its depots at
different places in the State of Haryana as well as in other
States. After manufacturing the said tyres and tubes, about
10 to 12% of the total manufactured products used to be sold
in the State of Haryana either locally or in the course of
inter-State trade & commerce or in the course of export
outside the country and also sold locally against Declara-
tion Form No. ST-15. It was stated that at the relevant time
the local sales including sales in the course of inter-State
trade & commerce and in the course of export from the State
of Haryana was about 30 to 35%. The appellant was a regis-
tered dealer both under the Haryana Act and the Central
Sales Tax Act, and had been submitting its quarterly returns
and paying the sales-tax in accordance with law, according
to the appellant. In 1979, the assessing authority, Farida-
bad, imposed upon the appellant the purchase tax under Sec-
tion 9 of the Act for the assessment year 1973-74 and subse-
quently for the years 1974-75 and 1975-76 as well on the
despatches made by the appellant on the manufactured goods
to its various depots outside the State. Subsequently, the
relevant revenue authorities sought to impose purchase tax
under Section 9(1) of the Act and imposed purchase tax on
despatches of manufactured goods, namely, tyres and tubes,
to its various depots in other States. This led to the
filing of various writ petitions in the Punjab & Haryana
High Court by the appellant/petitioner.
In respect of the assessment years 1976-77 to 1979-80.
these questions were considered by the Punjab and Haryana
High Court, and the writ. petitions were decided in favour
of the appellant on December
524
4, 1982. The said decision being the decision in Goodyear
India Ltd. v. The State of Haryana & Anr. is reported in 53
STC 163. The Division Bench of the High Court in the said
decision held that both on principle and precedent, a mere
despatch of goods out of the State by a dealer to his own
branch while retaining both title and possession thereof,
does not come within the ambit of the phrase "disposes of
the manufactured goods in any manner otherwise than by way
of sale", as employed in section 9(1)(a)(ii) of the Act. The
High Court further held that the decision of this Court in
The State of Tamil Nadu v. M.K. Kandaswami, [1975] 36 STC
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191 was no warrant for the proposition that a mere despatch
of goods was within the ambit of disposing them of. The High
Court also distinguished the decision of this Court in
Ganesh Prasad Dixit v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P.,
[1969] 24 STC 343, and held that Notification No. S.O.
119/H.A. 20/73/Ss. 9 & 15/74 dated July 19, 1974 issued
under Section 9 (prior to its amendment by Act No. 11 of
1979) was ultra vires of Section 9 of the Act. It was held
that whereas the section provided only for the levy of
purchase tax on the disposal of manufactured goods, the
impugned notification by making a mere despatch of goods to
the dealers themselves taxable, in essence, legislates and
imposes a substantive tax which it obviously could not. It
was held that this was contrary to and in conflict with the
provisions of section 9. The High Court referred to the
relevant portion of unamended Section 9 of the Act with
which it was confronted and the notification. In order to
appreciate the said decision and the position, it will be
appropriate to set out the said provisions, namely, the
unamended provisions of Section 9 as well as the notifica-
tion:
"9. Where a dealer liable to pay tax under
this Act purchases goods other than those
specified in Schedule B from any source in the
State and--
(a) uses them in the State in the manufacture
of,--
(i) goods specified in Schedule B or
(ii) any other goods and disposes of the
manufactured goods in any manner otherwise
than by way of sale whether within the state
or in the course of inter--State trade or
commerce or within the meaning of sub-section
(1) of Section 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956, in the course of export out of the
territory of India,
525
(b) exports them,
in the circumstances in which no tax is pay-
able under any other provision of this Act,
there shall be levied, subject to the provi-
sions of section 17, a tax on the purchase of
such goods at such rate as may be notified
under section 15."
The relevant notification was as follows:
"Notification No. S.O. 119/H. A. 20/73/Ss. 9
and 15/74 dated the 19th July, 1974.
In exercise of the powers conferred by section
9 and subsection (1) of section 15 of the
Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973, the
Governor of Haryana hereby directs that the
rate of tax payable by all dealers in respect
of the purchases of goods other than goods
specified in Schedules C and D or goods liable
to tax at the first stage notified as such
under section 18 of the said Act, if used by
them for purposes other than those for which
such goods were sold to them shall be the rate
of tax leviable on the sale of such goods:
Provided that where any such dealer,
instead of using such goods for the purpose
for which they were sold to him, despatches
such goods or goods manufactured therefrom at
any time for consumption or sale outside the
State of Haryana to his branch or commission
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agent or any other person on his behalf in any
other State and such branch, commission agent
or other person is a registered dealer in that
State and produces a certificate from the
assessing authority of that State or produces
his own affidavit and the affidavit of the
consignee of such goods duly attested by a
Magistrate or Oath Commissioner or Notary
Public in the form appended to this notifica-
tion to the effect that the goods in question
have been so despatched and received and
entered in the account books of the consignee,
the rate of tax on such goods shall be three
paise in a rupee on the purchase value of the
goods so despatched."
The High Court, as stated before, referred to section 9
and held that the expression ’disposes of’ was not basically
a term of legal art and, therefore, it was proper and neces-
sary to first turn to its ordinary
526
meaning in order to determine whether a mere despatch of
goods by a dealer to himself would connote ’disposal of’
such goods by him. The High Court referred to the dictionary
meaning of ’disposes of’ in Webster’s Third New Internation-
al Dictionary. Reference was also made to 27 Corpus Juris
Secundum, P. 345, and ultimately it came to the conclusion
that the phrase ’disposes of’ or ’disposal’ cannot be possi-
bly equated with the mere despatch of goods by a dealer to
himself. After referring to the relevant provisions with
which this Court was concerned in Kandaswami’s case (supra),
the High Court held that that case was no warrant for con-
struing the expression ’despatch’ as synonymous to ’dispos-
al’. On the other hand, the court held that the decision of
this Court emphasises that the expression ’disposal’ of
goods is separate and distinct from despatch thereof. Ac-
cording to the High Court, the same position was applicable
to Ganesh Prasad Dixit’s case (supra), and in those circum-
stances held that the term ’disposes of’ cannot be synony-
mous with ’disposal’, and once that is held then the notifi-
cation mentioned above travelled far beyond what is provided
in Section 9 of the Act, while the said provision provided
only for levy of purchase tax on disposal of manufactured
goods.
The High Court observed as follows:
"Once it is held as above, the
impugned Notification No. S.O. 119/H.A.
20/73/Ss. 9 and 15/74 dated 19th July, 1974
(annexure P-2), plainly travels far beyond the
parent section 9 of the Act. Whereas the said
provision provided only for the levy of a
purchase tax on the disposal of manufactured
goods, the notification by making a mere
despatch of goods to the dealers themselves
taxable in essence, legislates and imposes a
substantive tax which it obviously cannot.
Indeed, its terms run contrary to and are in
direct conflict with the provisions of section
9 itself. There is thus no option but to hold
that the notification, which is a composite
one, is ultra vires of section 9 of the Act
and is hereby struck down."
The High Court also noted that though the challenged
assessment orders were appealable, however, as the challenge
was to the very validity of the notification which was
obviously beyond the scope of the appellate authority, the
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writ petitions were entertainable as the assessment was
based on the notification which was frontally challenged. As
a result, the High Court quashed the notification and set
aside the assessment orders. The said decision is under
challenge in appeal to this Court.
527
It may be mentioned that sub-section (1) of section 9 of
the Act had been introduced by the Haryana Act, 55 of 1976
in the Act. After the aforesaid decision of the High Court,
the Haryana Legislature intervened and enacted the Haryana
General Sales Tax (Amendment & Validation) Act, 1983 by
which Section 9 of the principal Act was amended as follows:
"Amendment of Section 9 of Haryana Act 20 of
1973--in Section 9 of the principal Act,--
(a) in sub-section (1) ,--
(i) for clause (b), the following clause shall
be substituted and shall be deemed to have
been substituted for the period commencing
from the 27th day of May, 1971, and ending
with the 8th day of April, 1979, namely:
"(b) purchases goods, other than those speci-
fied in Schedule B, from any source in the
State and uses them in the State in the manu-
facture of any other goods and either disposes
of the manufactured goods to a place outside
the State in any manner otherwise than by way
of sale in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce or in the course of export outside
the territory of India within the meaning of
Sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956; or",
(ii) after clause (b), the following clause
shall be deemed to have been inserted with
effect from the 9th day of April, 1979, name-
ly:
"(bb) purchases goods, other than those speci-
fied in Schedule B except milk, from any
source in the State and uses them in the State
in the manufacture of any other goods and
either disposes of the manufactured goods in
any manner otherwise than by way of sale in
the State or despatches the manufactured goods
to a place outside the State in any manner
otherwise than by way of Sale in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce or in the course
of export outside the territory of India
within the meaning of Sub-Section (1) of
Section 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956;
or";
528
{iii) the following proviso shall be added,
namely:
"Provided that no tax shall be leviable under
this section on scientific goods and guar gum,
manufactured in the state and sold by him in
the course of export outside the territory of
India within the meaning of Sub-section (3) of
Section .... of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956."; and
(b) in sub-section (3), the words "other than
Railway premises" shah be omitted."
After the aforesaid amendment the writ petitions were
filed in the High Court by Bata India Ltd. In the meantime,
the petitioner Company also filed writ petitions for the
assessment years 1973-74 to 1975-76 and 1980-81 in the High
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Court challenging the assessment. The High Court decided
these matters on August 2, 1983. The said decision Bata
India Ltd. v. The State of Haryana & Anr. has been reported
in 1983 Vol. 54 STC 226. The High Court held that "mere
despatch of goods to a place outside the State in any manner
otherwise than by way of sale in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce" is synonymous with or is in any case
included within the ambit of the consignment of goods either
to the person making it or to any other person in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce as specified in Article
269(1)(h) and Entry No. 92-B of List 1 of the 7th Schedule
to the Constitution. Hence, the levy of sales or purchase
tax on such a despatch or consignment of goods and matters
ancillary or subsidiary thereto, will be within the exclu-
sive legislative competence of Parliament to the total
exclusion of the State Legislature. Therefore, section
9(1)(b) of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973, as
amended by the Haryana General Sales Tax (Amendment & Vali-
dation) Act, 1983, insofar as it levies a purchase tax on
the consignment of goods outside the State in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce is beyond the legislative
competence of the State of Haryana and is void and inopera-
tive. It was held that the retrospective validation of the
notification of 19th July, 1974 referred to hereinbefore,
and the consequential validation of all actions taken there-
under were liable to be quashed. The High Court further held
that mere manufacture and consignment of goods outside the
State to himself by a manufacturer is not sale or disposal
thereof with the result that it will not be within the ambit
of Entry No. 54 of List II of the 7th Schedule to the Con-
stitution. Consequently, it was held that irrespective of
the 46th Amendment, an attempt to tax the mere consignment
or despatch of manufactured goods outside the State in the
course of inter-State trade
529
or commerce will not come within the ambit of Entry No. 54
of List II of the 7th Schedule, and consequently of the
competence of the respective State Legislatures. Even before
the 46th Amendment, the mere consignment of goods in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce was beyond the scope
of the said Entry and thus not within the legislative compe-
tence of the States and was entirely within the parliamen-
tary field of. legislation by .virtue of Article 248 and the
residuary Entry No. 97 of List I.
The High Court was of the view that neither the original
purchase of goods nor the manufacture thereof into the end-
product by itself attracts purchase tax and consequently are
not even remotely the taxable events. What directly and
pristinely attracts the tax and can be truly labelled as the
taxing event under section 9(1)(b) of the Act is the three-
fold exigency of; (i) disposal of the manufactured goods in
any manner otherwise than by way of sale in the State; or
(ii) despatch of the manufactured goods to a place outside
the State in any manner otherwise than by way of sale in the
course of inter--State trade or commerce, or (iii) disposal
or despatch of the manufactured goods in the course of
export outside the territory of India. It was these three
exigencies only which were the taxable events in the amended
section 9(1)(b) of the Act. Consequently, in a Statute where
the taxable event is the despatch or consignment of goods
outside the State, the same would come squarely within the
wide sweep of Entry No. 92B of List I of the Constitution,
and thus excludes taxation by the States.
The High Court was of the view that section 9 of the Act
must be strictly construed as it was a charging section. If
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the charging section travels beyond the legislative Entry
and thereby transgresses the legislative field, then the
same cannot possibly be sustained. The constitutional
changes brought by the 46th Amendment in Art. 269 of the
Constitution read with the insertion of Entry No. 92B in the
Union List, leave no doubt that the legislative arena of tax
on the consignment of goods (whether to one’s ownself or to
any other person) in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce and all ancillary or complementary or consequential
matters, are now declared to be exclusively reserved for
parliamentary legislation and any intrusion into this field
by the State Legislatures would be barred.
In my opinion, the High Court correctly noted in the
said decision that the provisions of constitutional change
have to be construed, and such problems should not be viewed
in narrow isolationism but on a much wider. spectrum and the
principles laid down in Heydon’s case
530
1584 3 Co. Rep 7a are instructive. Hence, in a situation of
this nature, it was just and proper to see what was the
position before the 46th Amendment of the Constitution, and
find out what was the mischief that was sought to be reme-
died and then discover the true rationale for such a remedy.
In Black-Clawson International Ltd. v. Papierwerke Waldhof-
Aschaffenburg Ag., [1975] 1 All ER 810, Lord Reid observed
as follows:
"One must first read the words in the context
of the Act as a whole, but one is entitled to
go beyond that. The general rule in construing
any document is that one should put oneself
’in the shoes’ of the maker or makers and take
into account relevant facts known to them when
the document was made. The same must apply to
Acts of Parliament subject to one qualifica-
tion. An Act is addressed to all the lieges
and it would seem wrong to take into account
anything that was not public knowledge at the
time. That may be common knowledge at the time
or it may be some published information which
Parliament can be presumed to have had in
mind.
It has always been said to be impor-
tant to consider the mischief which the Act
was apparently intended to remedy. The word
’mischief’ is traditional. I would expand it
in this way. In addition to reading the Act
you look at the facts presumed to be known to
Parliament when the Bill which became the Act
in question was before it, and you consider
whether there is disclosed some unsatisfactory
state of affairs which Parliament can properly
be supposed to have intended to remedy by the
Act ...."
The state of affairs that the Parliament has sought to
remedy by the 46th Amendment of the Constitution, was that
prior to the promulgation each State attempted to subject
the same transaction to tax on the nexus doctrine under its
sales tax laws. Consequently, on the basis of one or the
other element of the territorial nexus, the same transaction
had to suffer tax in different States with the inevitable
hardship to trade and consumers in the same or different
States. The framers of the Constitution being fully aware of
the problems sought to check the same by a somewhat complex
constitutional scheme and by imposing restrictions on the
States’ power with regard to levy tax on the sale or pur-
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chase of goods under Art. 286. The High Court in the judg-
ment referred to hereinbefore, mentioned these factors. It
is in
531
this background that Art. 269 was amended and clause (3) was
added to it. The effect, inter alia, is that the power to
levy tax on the sale or purchase of goods is now referable
to the legislative power vested in the States by virtue of
Entry No. 54 in List II of the 7th Schedule. However, this
legislative authority of the States is restricted by three
limitations contained in Articles 286(1)(a), 286(1)(b) &
286(3) of the Constitution. It may be mentioned that Parlia-
ment by the 6th Amendment to the Constitution, enacted the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, with the object to formulate
principles for determining when a sale or purchase of goods
takes place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
or outside a State or in the course of import into or export
from India, to provide for the levy, collection and distri-
bution of taxes on sales of goods in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce and to declare certain goods to be
of special importance and specify the restrictions and
conditions to which State laws imposing taxes on the sale or
purchase of such goods shall be subject. In this connection,
the High Court referred to the various propositions as
mentioned by the Law Commission in its 61st Report rendered
in May, 1974. It is not necessary to set out the same in
detail. It was in the aforesaid historical background that
the High Court construed the provisions in question and came
to the conclusion that a plain reading of these would leave
little manner of doubt that the legislative power to tax
consignment transfers of goods from one branch of an insti-
tution to another branch thereof outside the State and all
matters incidental, ancillary or complementary thereto were
then declared to be vested in the Union of India to the
total exclusion of the States. The High Court referred to
the observations of this Court in Khyerbari Tea Co. Ltd. v.
State of Assam, AIR 1964 SC 925; Navinchandra Mafatlal v.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City, [1955] SCR 829
and Waverly Jute Mills Co. Ltd. v. Raymon & Co. (1) Pvt.
Ltd., [1963] 3 SCR 209, and concluded that Entry 92B enabled
the Union of India not only to tax the consignment of goods
in the strict sense but also embraced all ancillary and
complementary areas as well to the exclusion of the State
Legislature therefrom. In the aforesaid light the High Court
construed section 9(1)(b) of the Haryana Act, 1983. Analy-
sing the provisions in detail it observed that Section 9 of
the Act was a charging section for the levy of purchase tax.
It imposed liability for payment of purchase tax, therefore,
it should be distinguished from the machinery section. The
High Court examined the real nature of the business outside
the State and found that there was merely a change in the
physical situs of the goods without any change in the basic
incidents of ownership and control. Therefore, in its true
nature a mere despatch of goods outside the State to another
branch of the original institution is not and never
532
can be the equivalent of a sale either as a term of art in
the existing sales tax legislation and not remotely so in
common parlance, and construing section 9(1)(b) of the Act,
the High Court was of the view that the real taxing event is
the despatch of the manufactured goods to a place outside
the, State in any manner otherwise than by way of sale in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
The High Court found that there was no distinction
between the despatch as defined in the said amended section
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and the consignment of goods by the manufacturer to himself
or any other person in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce, and referred to the meanings of the expressions
’despatch’ and ’consign’, which are similar and almost
interchangeable when used in specific commercial sense. The
High Court referred to Webster’s New International Diction-
ary, Shorter Oxford English Dictionary and also to Random
House dictionary for their meanings. On construction, the
High Court came to the conclusion that the amended provi-
sions of section 9(1)(b) of the Act attempt to levy an
identical tax in the garb of a levy on the despatch of
manufactured goods to places outside the State of Haryana,
and therefore intruded and trespassed into an arena exclu-
sively meant for taxation by the Union of India. The High
Court also viewed from another point of view, namely, who
was liable as it was the consignment of goods which attract-
ed the liability of purchase tax and in pristine essence was
the "taxable event" under section 9(1)(b) of the Act. The
High Court also analysed it from the point of view that
under section 9(1)(b), where a dealer purchases goods for
the express purpose of manufacturing other goods within the
State, then in strict sense such purchase by itself did not
attract any tax under the provisions. Hence, the High Court
set aside the amended provision so far as it sought to levy
purchase tax on the consignment of goods outside the State
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce, consequently
it also set aside the retrospective validation of the noti-
fication and the consequential validation of all actions
taken thereunder. Special leave petitions were filed in this
Court against the said decision of the High Court. These are
special leave petitions Nos. 8397 to 8402 of 1983. During
the pendency of the special leave petitions, show cause
notices were issued by the assessing authority in respect of
the assessment years 1973-74 to 1980-81 (except for 1978-79
& 1979-80) and also for 1982-83 asking the petitioner to
show cause why in addition to purchase-tax, it should not be
liable to penalty as well. The petitioner-Company again
filed writ petitions in Punjab & Haryana High Court chal-
lenging the validity of those notices. It appears that in
the meantime, a Full Bench of the High Court decided the
question again in the case of Des Raj Pushap
533
Kumar Gulati v. The State of Punjab & Anr.. This decision
was rendered on January 24, 1985, and is reported in 58 STC
393. The assessment years involved in all appeals are 1973-
74 to 1982-83. According to the Full Bench, the taxing event
is the act of purchase and not the Act of despatch or con-
signment as held in Bata India Ltd., (supra). In the prem-
ises, it was held that section 9(1)(b) as amended, was
neither invalid nor ultra vires and overruled the decision
of Bata India Ltd. The writ petitions filed were also dis-
missed.
The petitioner-Company filed special leave petitions
against the aforesaid judgment of the Punjab & Haryana High
Court which were admitted in Civil Appeals Nos. 1166-72/85.
Goodyear India also filed writ petition No. 3834 of 1985 in
respect of the assessment year 1981-82, as the notices for
assessment and penalty were received after the decision of
Punjab & Haryana High Court in Des Raj Pushap Kumar’s case
(supra). The said decision was passed in appeal against the
decision of the said court in Goodyear India reported in 53
STC 163, number being 1514 (NT) of 1984. All these questions
are the subjectmatters of these appeals.
It is well-settled that what is the taxable event or
what necessitates taxation in an appropriate Statute, must
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be found out by construing the provisions. The essential
task is to find out what is the taxable event. In what is
considered to be indirect tax, there is a marked distinction
between the consequence of manufacture and the consequence
of sale.
It is well to remember that in construing the expres-
sions of the Constitution to judge whether the provisions
like Section 9(1)(b) of the Act, are within the competence
of the State Legislature, one must bear in mind that the
Constitution is to be construed not in a narrow or pedantic
sense. Constitution is not to be construed as mere law but
as the machinery by which laws are to be made. It was ob-
served by Lord Wright in James v. Commonwealth of Australia,
[1936] AC 578 at 614, that the rules which apply to the
interpretation of other Statutes, however, apply equally to
the interpretation of a constitutional enactment. In this
context, Lord Wright referred to the observations of the
Australian High Court in The Attorney-General for the State
of New South Wales v. The Brewery Employees Union etc.,
[1908] 6 CLR 469 where it was observed that the words of the
Constitution must be interpreted on the same principles as
any ordinary law, and these principles compel us to consider
the nature and scope of the Act, and to remember that the
Constitution is a mechanism under which laws
534
are to be made, and not a mere Act which declares what the
law is to be. Hence, such mechanism should be interpreted
broadly, bearing in mind in appropriate cases, that the
Supreme Court like ours is a nice balance of jurisdictions.
A Constitutional Court, one must bear in mind, will not
strengthen, but only derogate from its position if it seeks
to do anything but declare the law; but it may rightly
reflect that a Constitution is a living and organic thing,
which of all instruments has the greatest claim to be con-
strued broadly and liberally. See the observations of Gwyer,
C.J. in Re: Central Provinces & Berar Sales of Motor Spirit
and Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938, AIR 1939 PC 1 at 4). Mr.
Justice Sulaiman in his judgment at p. 22 of the report
observed that the power to tax the sale of goods is quite
distinct from any right to impose taxes on use or consump-
tion. It cannot be exercised at the earlier stage of produc-
tion nor at the later stage of use or consumption, but only
at the stage of sale, (emphasis supplied). The essence of a
tax on goods manufactured or produced is that the right to
levy it accrues by virtue of their manufacture. On the other
hand, a duty on the sale of goods cannot be levied merely
because goods have been manufactured or produced. Nor can it
be levied merely because the goods have been consumed or
used or even destroyed. The right to levy the duty would not
at all come into existence before the time of the sale. In
this connection, reference may be made to the observations
of Chief Justice Gwyer in The Province of Madras v. M/s.
Boddu Paidanna & Sons, AIR 1942 FC 33.
Mr Raja Ram Agarwala, learned counsel for the
appellant/assessees, contended before us that it is neces-
sary to find out or identify the taxable event. If on a true
and proper construction of the amended provisions of section
9(1)(b) it is the despatch or consignment of the goods that
is the taxable event as contended by the petitioners and
appellants, then the power is beyond the State’s competence.
If, on the other hand, it is the purchase of the goods that
is the taxable event as held by the Full Bench of the High
Court, then it will be within its competence. The Full Bench
in Des Raj Pushap Kumar’s case (supra) has relied on the
background of the facts and the circumstances which necessi-
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tated the introduction of the amendment.
Mr. Tewatia, learned counsel appearing for the State
canvassed before us the historical perspective and stated
that Haryana State came into being as a result of the Punjab
State Reorganisation Act, 1966, therefore, part of the
legislative history of the taxing Statute like any other
Statute is shared by the Haryana State with the Punjab
State, and as such it is proper to notice the concept of
purchase tax as it
535
evolved in the State of Punjab. Purchase-tax was introduced
in the State of Punjab for the first time by the East Punjab
General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1958. Section 2(ff) was
introduced for the first time to define the expression
’purchase’. The definition of the term ’dealer’ was changed
to include therein a purchaser of goods also. The definition
of the term ’taxable turnover’ was also altered. Some deal-
ers who crushed oil-seeds, were called upon to pay purchase
tax on the raw-material purchased by them on the ground that
the raw material had not been subjected to a manufacturing
process as the process of crushing oil-seeds did not involve
a process of manufacturing. He referred to the fact that
Punjab had originally exempted purchase tax on the purchase
of raw-material by the dealers if such raw-material was to
be used for the manufacture of goods for sale in Punjab and
thus generate more revenue to the State as a result of the
sales tax on such manufactured goods. But when the dealers
started avoiding this condition for sale in Punjab by var-
ious ingenious devices after having escaped the payment of
purchase tax on the raw-material purchased by them, the
Legislature amended the Act and Punjab Act No. 18 of 1960
was brought on the statute-book w.e.f. April 1, 1960. Sec-
tion 2(ff) of the Act was amended and it provided that all
the goods mentioned in Schedule C when purchased shall be
exigible to purchase tax and thus the concession given to
the manufacturers was withdrawn. Explaining this background,
Mr. Tewatia contended that section 9, sub-section (i) of the
Act envisages payment of tax at such rate as may be notified
under Section 15 on the purchase of goods from any source
within the State by a dealer liable to pay tax under the Act
when such goods, not being Schedule ’B’ goods, were consumed
either in producing Schedule ’B’ goods or when the manufac-
tured goods were other than Schedule ’B’ goods, the same not
being sold within the State or in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce, or in the course of export outside the
territory of India, or the purchased goods were exported
outside the State.
After referring to the relevant provisions and the
provisions of section 9(1)(b), Mr Tewatia emphasised that
the contingency contemplated by "or despatches the manufac-
tured goods to a place outside the State in any manner
otherwise than by way of sale in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce or in the course of export outside the
territory of India within the meaning of section 5(1) of the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956; or" as well as clause (c) of
section 9(1) which encompasses "purchases goods, other than
those specified in Schedule B, from any source in the State
and exports them, in the circumstances in which no tax is
payable under any other provision of
536
this Act, there shall be levied, subject to the provisions
of Section 17, a tax on the purchase of such goods at such
rate as may be notified under Section 15.", have to be
judged for determining their validity in the true historical
perspective as well as bearing in mind the remedial aspect
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of the provisions for the purpose of which these were enact-
ed. Therefore, the main question is whether the tax envis-
aged by section 9(1) is a tax on purchase/sale of given
goods or is a tax on the despatch/ consignment of such goods
and that depends on, as to whether the taxable event is a
purchase/sale of goods or despatch/consignment of such
goods. As mentioned hereinbefore, Mr. Tewatia laid great
deal of emphasis on the background of the provisions of
section 9(1). He urged that the said section is both a
taxing as well as a remedial provision, as would be evident
from the scheme of the Act. The legislative policy was to
see that all goods except non-taxable goods i.e. Schedule
’B’ goods, must yield tax/revenue to the State in the hands
of a dealer, at one stage or the other, according to Mr.
Tewatia. He analysed the scheme and referred us to section 6
along with section 27 of the Act, and then submitted that
the provision of section 9(1) along with subsection (3) of
section 24 of the Act are both composite provisions, i.e.
they are both charging provisions as also remedial provi-
sions. According to him, such composite provisions of a
fiscal Statute deserve to be interpreted properly and in
such a manner as to further remedy and thus effectuate the
legislative intent and suppress the mischief intended to be
curbed.
Reliance was placed by the High Court as well as Mr.
Tewatia before us on the observations of this Court in The
State of Tamil Nadu v. Kandaswami, (supra), where at p. 198
of the Sales Tax Cases, this Court while dealing with sec-
tion 7A of the Tamil Nadu (Amendment) Act, observed that it
was at once a charging as well as a remedial provision. Its
main object was to plug leakage and prevent evasion of tax.
In interpreting such a provision, a construction which would
defeat its purpose and, in effect, obliterate it from the
statute book, should be eschewed. If more than one construc-
tion is possible, that which preserves its workability and
efficacy is to be preferred to the one which would render it
otiose or sterile, observed this Court in that case. While
bearing the aforesaid principle in mind, it has to be exam-
ined as to how far the application of this provision can be
construed with the well-settled principle of fiscal legisla-
tion and the terms and conditions of the present legisla-
tion. It has been said and said on numerous occasions that
fiscal laws must be strictly construed, words must say what
these mean, nothing should be presumed or implied, these
must say so. The true test must always be the language used.
537
On behalf of the assessee, Mr. Rajaram Agarwala, howev-
er, further contended that the ratio of Kandaswami’s case
(supra) to which Mr. Tewatia referred, must be understood in
the light of the question involved in that case. The said
decision of this Court was concerned with the limited point
as to whether the Madras High Court was right in observing
"whether one could say that the sale which is exempted is
liable to tax and then assume that because of exemption, the
tax is not payable". This Court held that the language of
section 7A of the said Act was far from clear as to its
intention and did not concern with the identification of the
taxing event. Furthermore, it has to be borne in mind, as
emphasised by Mr. Agarwala, that if at all the taxing event
was spelt out, it was on the assumption that the goods in
question were generally taxable and these were to be put to
tax under section 7A of the Tamil Nadu Act, if these came to
be purchased without payment of tax and then sought to be
dealt with in any manner as to escape payment of State
sales/purchase tax within the State.
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Mr. Tewatia drew our attention to the observations of
this Court in Kandaswami’s case (supra) to prove that the
observations in Malabar Fruit Products Co. v. The Sales Tax
Officer, Palai, 30 STC 537, where these questions were
decided by Justice Poti of the Kerala High Court, who spelt
out that the taxing event was not the event of despatch but
the event of purchase/sale of goods. It has, however, to be
borne in mind that the questions involved in Malabar Fruit
Products’ case and Kandaswami’s case (supra) were not con-
cerned with the actual argument with which we are concerned
in the instant matter. It is well-settled that a precedent
is an authority only for what it actually decides and not
for what may remotely or even logically follows from it. See
Quinn v. Leathem, [1901] AC 495 and The State of Orissa v.
Sudhansu Sekhar Misra & Ors., [1968] 2 SCR 154. Therefore,
the ratio of the said decision cannot be properly applied in
construing the provisions of section 9(1)(b) in this case to
determine what is the taxable event.
It was contended by Mr. Rajaram Agarwala that clause (b)
of Section 9(1) dealt with non-exempted goods purchased in
the State, used in the manufacture of any goods whether
exempted or not, but when despatched outside the State of
Haryana i.e. by way of stock transfer consignment will
attract the tax liability under this section, hence, the
event of despatch or consignment is the immediate cause
which attracts the tax liability under section 9. The quali-
ty or the character of goods which should be liable to tax
under section 9 in clause (1)(a) is the non-exempted goods
purchased in the State; while
538
under the first part of clause (b) the quality of goods
liable to tax is the non-exempted goods purchased in the
State and under the second part of clause (b), the quality
of goods must be non-exempted goods purchased and manufac-
tured in the State, whether exempted or not in the State
which is liable to tax on despatch outside Haryana; and
under clause (c) the goods purchased in Haryana without
undergoing any further change or use is the quality of goods
liable to tax when exported.
The submission of the State is that the taxable event is
the purchase of goods in Haryana while the obligation to pay
is postponed on the fulfilment of certain conditions. The
further argument is that there is a general liability to
purchase tax which the dealer avoids on furnishing a Decla-
ration in S.T. Form 15 as provided by section 24 at the time
of purchase, wherein certain conditions are mentioned and
when those conditions are not fulfilled, those revive. It
was further argued that the conditions are incorporated in
section 9 of the Act. For testing which of the contentions
are nearer to find out the exact taxable event, certain
indicias and illustrations may be seen. Their analysis will
indicate that there is no liability to pay sales tax under
the Haryana Act on the purchaser. It is admitted that on
such sales the selling dealer is liable to pay sales-tax. On
such purchases, the sale and purchase being the two sides of
the same coin, no purchase tax is imposed under the Act.
This has been the accepted position by the State also for,
while replying to the question of double taxation counsel
for the State admitted that sales as well as purchase tax is
to be imposeable under the scheme of the Act which are of
two sides. Hence, it was rightly urged by Mr. Rajaram Agar-
wala that the first contention for attracting the applica-
bility of section 9(i), "whether a dealer is liable to pay
tax under this Act purchases goods", is missing when the
section (1) talks of a dealer liable to pay tax under the
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Act, obviously it is with reference to his purchasing activ-
ity and if on that activity no purchase tax is payable,
section 9(1) would not be applicable.
To accept the submissions advanced by Mr. Tewatia,
assumptions and presumptions are to be made. It is not
permissible to do so in a fiscal provision. See in this
connection the observations of this Court in C.S.T.U.P. v.
The Modi Sugar Mills Ltd., [1961] 2 SCR 189 and Baidyanath
Ayurved Bhawan (P) Ltd., Jhansi v. Excise Commissioner, U.P.
& Ors., [1971] 2 SCR 590 at 592. In that background it must
be noted that section 9 of the Act nowhere makes a reference
to section 24 or any declaration furnished by the purchasing
dealer on the basis of which he was granted temporary exemp-
tion and thereby revival of
539
the original purchase tax on the breach of declaration as
such. Section 9 of the Act opens with the expression "where
a dealer liable to pay tax under this Act" and not "whether
a dealer has paid tax or has not paid tax". The phrase
’liable to pay tax’ under the Act must relate to liability
to pay sales tax on such purchases.
It is well-settled that the main test for determining
the taxable event is that on the happening of which the
charge is affixed. The realisation often is postponed to
further date. The quantification of the levy and the recov-
ery of tax is also postponed in some cases. It is well
settled that there are three stages in the imposition of
tax. There is the declaration of liability, that is the part
of the Statute which ’determines what persons in respect of
what property are liable. Next, there is the assessment.
Liability does not depend on assessment, that exhypothesi
has already been fixed. But assessment particularises the
exact sum which a person is liable to pay. Lastly comes the
method of recovery if the person taxed does not voluntarily
pay. Reference may be made to the observations of Lord
Dunedin in Whitney v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue, [1926]
AC 37 at p. 52 and of the Federal Court in Chatturam & Ors.
v. C.I.T., Bihar, 15 ITR FC 302 at 308.
Taxable event is that which on its occurrence creates or
attracts the liability to tax. Such liability does not exist
or accrue at any earlier or later point of time. The identi-
fication of the subject-matter of a tax is to be found in
the charging section. In this connection, one has to analyse
the provisions of section 9(2)(b) as well as section 9(1)(b)
and 9(1)(c). Analysing the section, it appears to us that
the two conditions specified, before the event of despatch
outside the State as mentioned in section 9(1)(b), namely,
(i) purchase of goods in the State and (ii) using them for
the manufacture of any other goods in the State, are only
descriptive of the goods liable to tax under Section 9(1)(b)
in the event of despatch outside the State. If the goods do
not answer both the descriptions cumulatively, even though
these are despatched outside the State of Haryana, the
purchase of those goods would not be put to tax under sec-
tion 9(1)(b). The focal point in the expression "goods, the
sale or purchase of which is liable to tax under the Act",
is the character and class of goods in relation to exigibil-
ity. In this connection, reference may be made to the obser-
vations of this Court in Andhra Sugars Ltd. v. State of
Andhra Pradesh, [1968] 1 SCR 705. On a clear analysis of the
said section, it appears that section 9(1)(b) has to be
judged as and when liability accrues under that section. The
liability to pay tax under this section does not accrue on
purchasing the goods simpliciter, but only when these are
despatched or consigned out of
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540
the State of Haryana. In all these cases, it is necessary to
find out the true nature of the tax. Analysing the section,
if one looks to the alleged purchase tax under section 9,
one gets the conclusion that the section itself does not
provide for imposition of the purchase tax on the transac-
tion of purchase of the taxable goods but when further the
said taxable goods are used up and turned into independent
taxable goods, losing its original identity, and thereafter
when the manufactured goods are despatched outside the State
of Haryana and only then tax is levied and liability to pay
tax is created. It is the cumulative effect of that event
which occasions or causes the tax to be imposed, to draw a
familiar analogy it is the last straw on the camel’s back.
In this connection, reference may be made to the obser-
vations of Justice Vivian Bose in The Tata Iron & Steel Co.
Ltd. v. The State of Bihar, [1958] SCR 1355 at 1381, where
he observed as follows:
"I would therefore reject the nexus theory in
so far as it means that any one sale can have
existence and entity simultaneously in many
different places. The States may tax the sale
but may not disintegrate it, and, under the
guise of taxing the sale in truth and in fact,
tax its various elements, one its head and one
its tail, one its entrails and one its limbs
by a legislative fiction that deems that the
whole is within its claws simply because,
after tearing it apart, it finds a hand or a
foot or a heart or a liver still quivering in
its grasp. Nexus, of course, there must be but
nexus of the entire entity that is called a
sale, wherever it is deemed to be situate.
Fiction again. Of course, it is fiction, but
it is a fiction as to situs imposed by the
Constitution Act and by the Supreme Court that
speaks for it in these matters and only one
fiction, not a dozen little ones."
It is, therefore, necessary in all cases to find out
what is the essence of the duty which is attracted. A taxa-
ble event is that which is closely related to imposition. In
the instant section, there is such close relationship only
with despatch. Therefore, the goods purchased are used in
manufacture of new independent commodity and thereafter the
said manufactured goods are despatched outside the State of
Haryana. In this series of transactions the original trans-
action is completely eclipsed or ceases to exist when the
levy is imposed at the third stage of despatch of manufac-
ture. In the instant case the levy has no direct connection
with the transaction of purchase of raw-materials, it has
only a remote connection of lineage. It may be indirectly
and very
541
remotely connected with the transaction of the purchase of
raw-material wherein the present levy would lose its charac-
ter of purchase tax on the said transaction.
Mr. Rajaram Agarwala submitted that the measure of tax
is with reference to the value of purchased goods in the
State of Haryana. As mentioned before, reference has been
made to the decision of Kandaswami’s case (supra), where
this Court dealt with section 7A of the Tamil Nadu Act,
which was not identical but similar to section 9 of the Act.
There at p. 196 of the report, this Court observed as fol-
lows:
"... Difficulty in interpretation has been
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experienced only with regard to that part of
the sub-section which relates to ingredients
(4) & (5). The High Court has taken the view
that the expression "goods, the sale or pur-
chase of which is liable to tax under this
Act", and the phrase "purchases ... in circum-
stances in which no tax is payable under
Sections 3, 4 or 5 are a "contradiction in
terms".
Ingredients Nos. 4 & 5 are as follows:
"4. The goods purchased are "goods, the sale
or purchase of which is liable to tax under
this Act".
5. Such purchase is, "in circumstances, in
which no tax is payable under sections 3, 4 or
5, as the case may be;"
The relevant ingredient involved, as
mentioned at page No. 196, was as under:
"6. The dealer either--
(a) consumes such goods in the manufacture of
other goods for sale or otherwise or
(b) despatches all such goods in any manner
other than by way of sale in the State or
(c) despatches them to a place outside the
State except as a direct result of sale or
purchase in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce."
This ingredient was neither argued nor was considered, so
the
542
passing reference based on the phraseology of the section is
not the dictum of Kandaswami’s case. Secondly, in section 9,
in the instant case, the raw-materials purchased or used in
the manufacture of new goods and thereafter those new goods
were despatched outside the State of Haryana whereupon the
tax was levied. This important factor is wholly missing in
Section 7A of the Tamil Nadu Act, which was considered in
Kandaswami’s case. In that decision, this Court approved the
Kerala High Court’s decision in Malabar Fruit Products,
(supra), which was confined to the interpretation of the
words ’goods’, the sale or purchase under the Act. A deci-
sion on a question which has not been argued cannot be
treated as a precedent. See the observations of this Court
in Rajput Ruda Maha & Ors. v. State of Gujarat, [1980] 2 SCR
353 at 356. The decision of the Division Bench of the Kerala
High Court in Yusuf Shabeer & Ors. v. State of Kerala &
Ors., 32 STC 359 is clearly distinguishable. In Ganesh
Prasad Dixit’s case (supra) the question of constitutional
validity was not argued. A reference was made by Mr. Tewatia
to the decision of the High Court in The Coffee Board v.
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes & Ors., 60 STC 142 and the
decision of this Court in Coffee Board, Karnataka v. Commis-
sioner of Commercial Taxes, Karnataka, 70 STC 162. In these
cases the question involved was the acquisition of coffee by
the Coffee Board under compulsory acquisition or purchase or
sale of goods. That question is entirely different from the
question with which we are concerned in these appeals.
Prior to 46 the Amendment, Entry 54 of List II of the
7th Schedule of the Constitution of India which demarcated
the exclusive field of State Legislation, read with Article
246(3) of the Constitution conferred power on the State
Legislature to impose tax on the transactions of sale or
purchase of goods. The said Entry read as follows:--
"Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other
than Newspapers, subject to the provisions of
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Entry 92-A of List I".
Entry 92A of List I, which is in the exclusive domain of
the Union, was to the following extent:
"Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other
than Newspapers, where such sale or purchase
takes place in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce."
The mere consignment of goods by a manufacturer to his
own branches outside the State does not in any way amount to
a sale or
543
disposal of the goods as such. The consignment or despatch
of goods is neither a sale nor a purchase. The first judg-
ment in case of Goodyear India was on December 4, 1982 when
it was held that the Notification was beyond the Act, as the
word ’disposal’ did not include the word ’mere despatch’ as
mentioned in the notification. The Constitution (46th Amend-
ment) Act, 1982 came into force on February 2, 1983, whereby
section 9 was amended. This amendment was after 46th Consti-
tutional Amendment Act, 1982. The 46th Constitution Amend-
ment Act in the Statement of Objects & Reasons, inter alia,
stated as follows:
"There were reports from State Government to
whom revenues from sales-tax have been as-
signed, as to the large scale avoidance of
Central Sales Tax leviable on inter-State
sales of goods through the device of consign-
ment of goods from one State to another and as
to the leakage of local Sales Tax in works
contracts, hire purchase transactions, lease
of films etc. Though, Parliament could levy a
tax on these transactions, as tax on sales has
all along been treated as an item of revenue
to be assigned to the States, in regard to
these transactions which are semble sales
also, it is considered that the same policy
should be adopted."
The Law Commission of India in its 61st Report made, as
indicated before, certain recommendations, and noticed that
the provisions of existing Central Sales Tax Act were insuf-
ficient to tax the consignment transfers from branch to
another, as it was beyond the concept of sale, and its
recommendations are contained in paragraph 2.23 of Chapter
II (at page 66), it recommended that the definition of sale
in the Central Sales Tax Act, after carrying out the requi-
site Constitution Amendment be amended somewhat on the lines
indicated by them in their report. The Union of India, in
part, accepted the recommendations but instead of amending
the definition of sales in Central Sales Tax Act, inserted a
new Entry in the Union List in the shape of Entry 92B and
also inserted a new sub-clause (4) after subclause (g) in
Art. 269 (1) of the Constitution. The Parliament also amend-
ed clause (3) of Article 269.
It appears to us that the effect of the aforesaid amend-
ment is that the field of taxation on the consignment/des-
patch of goods in the course of inter-State trade or com-
merce expressly come within the purview of the legislative
competence of the Parliament. It is wellsettled that the
nomenclature of the Act is not conclusive and for
544
determining the true character and nature of a particular
tax, with reference to the legislative competence of a
particular Legislature, the Court will look into its pith
and substance. See the observations of Governor General in
Council v. Province of Madras, [1945] 72 IA 91. There, Lord
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Simonds observed as follows:
" ..... For in a Federal Constitution, in
which there is a division of legislative
powers between Central and provincial legisla-
tures it appears to be inevitable that contro-
versy should arise; Whether one or other
legislature is not exceeding its own, and
encroaching on the others Constitutional
Legislative Power, and in such a controversy
it is a principle, which their Lordships do
not hesitate to apply in the present case,
that it is not the name of the tax, but its
real nature, "it is pith and substance", as it
has some times been said which must determine
into what category it fails."
We must, therefore, look not to the form but to the
substance of the levy. See the observations of the Federal
Court in Ralla Ram v. The Province of East Punjab, AIR 1949
FC 81.
Therefore, the nomenclature given by the Haryana Legis-
lature is not decisive. One has to find out whether in pith
and substance, a consignment tax is sought to be imposed, a
tax on despatch in the course of inter-State trade or com-
merce. I have no hesitation in holding that it is a tax on
despatch. Inter-state trade or commerce, it has been empha-
sised, is of great national importance and is vital to the
federal structure of our country. As the imposition of
consignment tax requires very deep consideration of all its
aspects and certain amount of consensus among the States
concerned, especially with regard to the rates, grant of
exemption, and ratio relating to distribution of proceeds
amongst the States inter se, the actual imposition of tax is
bound to take some time till an agreeable solution is found,
but that would not make the consignment tax to be in sus-
pended animation in the State, and make us hold that a tax
which is in essence a tax on consignment should be taxed by
the States by the plea either that otherwise there is ample
scope of evasion and further States are without much re-
sources in these days when there is such a tremendous demand
on the revenue of the States.
It is well settled that the Entries in the Constitution
only demarcate the legislative fields of the respective
legislatures and do
545
not confer legislative powers as such. The tax on despatch
of goods outside the territory of the State certainly is in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce, and in other
words, amounts to imposition of consignment tax, and hence
the latter part of section 9(1)(b) is ultra vires and void.
In these cases, we are concerned with the validity of
the latter part of section 9(1)(b) of the Haryana Act which
imposes a tax on despatch of manufactured goods outside the
territories of Haryana. If it is accepted that section
9(1)(b) is ultra vires, the penalty proceedings would auto-
matically go as they are in substance, based on the viola-
tion of section 9(1)(b) of the Act and the consequent pro-
ceedings flowing therefrom. It is in that context that in
writ petition No. 3834 of 1985, Mr. Soli Sorabjee urged that
the attempt and action of the State in imposing tax and
attempt to penalise are bad.
In this connection, it may be mentioned that before the
Full Bench of the Punjab & Haryana High Court on behalf of
the State, a statement was made, which has been recorded in
58 STC 393 at p. 408, as follows:
"Counsel appearing for the State of Haryana
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made a statement that if the Full Bench held
that Bata India Limited’s, case (1983)54 STC
226 did not lay down the correct law and the
amendment effected by Act No. 11 of 1984 to
Section 9 was intra vires, then the provision
of sub-section (3) of section 24 regarding the
rate of tax shall not be enforced and only the
old rate will be leviable."
In view of the aforesaid statement, no higher rate
except the old rate admissible factually would be applica-
ble.
Section 24(3) was introduced by the Haryana Act with
retrospective effect from May 27, 1971, which is as follows:
"Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act or any Judgment, decree or order of any
Court or other authority to the contrary if a
dealer who purchases goods, without payment of
tax under Sub-section (1) and fails to use the
goods so purchased for the purpose specified
therein he shall be liable to pay tax on the
purchase value of such goods, at the rates
notified under Section 15 without prejudice to
the provisions of Section 50 provided that the
tax
546
shall not be levied where tax is payable on
such goods under any other provision of this
Act."
This provision without making any change in the substan-
tive provision purports to give a direction to ignore the
judgment, in other words, purports to overrule the judg-
ments, namely, Goodyear and Bata India, which is beyond the
legislative competence of the State Legislature and this
provision is void in view of the decision of this Court. See
Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Broach Borough Municipali-
ty, [1969] 2 SCC 283 at 286. For the same reason, applying
the main section instead of section 9(1), section 24 should
also fail as amended. Civil appeal No. 15 15/84 is also
liable to be dismissed in view of the judgment of this Court
in Dy. Commissioner of Sales Tax (Law), Board of Revenue
(Taxes) v. M/s. Thomas Stephen & Co. Ltd., Quilon, [1988] 2
SCC 264, where this Court observed that "disposal means
transfer of title in the goods to any other person", and
therefore it would not include mere despatch to own self or
to its agents or to its branch offices or depots. In the
premises, the decision of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in
Goodyear India Ltd., 53 STC 163 is correct on merits as
well.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, it cannot be held
that section 9(1) and sub-section (3) of section 24 are
constitutionally valid.
In civil appeals Nos. 1633 (NT) of 1985 and 3033/86
which are the appeals by the Food Corporation of India, Mr.
Sen submitted that the FCI is a service agency of the Govt.
of India and is discharging the statutory functions of
distribution of foodgrains by procuring/purchasing from the
surplus States and despatching the same to the deficit
States in accordance with the policy of the Govt. of India.
He further submitted that the Corporation procures food-
grains from the farmers through commission agents in the
Mandis of Haryana and despatch them to its own branches in
the deficit States of the country. The Corporation branches
in the recipient States supply these stocks to the State
agencies/fair price shops and also pay tax as per the provi-
sions of the Sales Tax law of the respective States. Some of
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the stocks are distributed within Haryana for the Public
Distribution System (PDS) for which sales tax is charged and
deposited with the Sales Tax depot as per the provisions of
the Haryana General Sales Tax Act. In case the stocks are
also sold in the course of inter-State trade or commerce,
central sales tax is levied and deposited with the Haryana
Sales Tax authorities. Some of the grains are also exported
out of India on which there is exemption on payment of any
tax.
547
In fact, the points at which the tax is to be levied
have been indicated in Schedule ’D’ to the Act. It is clear
from the perusal of the Schedule that in case of Paddy, the
taxable event is the last purchase. Similarly, in case of
rice the taxable event is the first sale point in the State.
In case of wheat and other cereals the point of taxation is
the last sale to the consumer by a dealer liable to pay tax
under the Act.
In respect of inter-State despatch of wheat and other
foodgrains by FCI to its own branches, tax is attracted at
the time of despatch under section 9(1)(c) of the Haryana
Act. Section 9 is, therefore, the charging section for
taxation in case where the goods are purchased for export.
There is no other provision for levy of purchase or sales
tax in such cases of export. Incidentally, "export" has been
defined in section 2(e) of the Act which reads as follows:
"2(e) "export" means the taking out of goods
from the State to any place outside it other-
wise than by way of sale in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce or in the course
of export out of the territory of India;"
No tax is payable under the Haryana Act when exports
outside the State take place either in the course of inter-
State sale or export out of the territory of India. No tax
is therefore payable in regard to export outside India but
the tax is payable for sale in the course of inter-State
trade and commerce i.e. under the Central Sales Tax Act. It
is only when the goods are despatched/consigned to the
depots of the FCI in other States that tax is levied under
section 9 of the Haryana Act. This is in addition to the
sales tax paid by the FCI on the sale of grains in the
recipient States. On perusal of sections 14 & 15 of the
Central Sales Tax Act, it becomes clear that wheat is one of
the commodities specified as ’declared goods’ and in respect
of which the intention is clear that the tax is payable only
once on the declared goods. In the case of inter-State sale
if any tax has been paid earlier on declared goods inside
the State the same is to be refunded to the dealer who is
paying tax on such inter-State sales. On these transactions
no tax is liable in the recipient State, while in case of
inter-State despatches, the tax is leviable twice. The
appeals of. the FCI are confined to section 9(1)(c), which
insofar as it purports to tax export, is beyond the legisla-
tive competence of the State of Haryana.
On behalf of the State in Bata Co. Ltd. v. State of
Haryana (supra), the submission of the State was on the
basis that it had power to tax consignment or despatches of
goods. But after the 46th Amend-
548
ment, the State Legislature is incompetent to legislate
about consignments/despatches otherwise than by way of sale
under which no purchase/sales tax is leviable under the
Haryana Act. It is the Parliament alone which is legisla-
tively competent to enact a legislation on consignment.
Now, it is necessary to deal with civil appeals Nos. 4
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162-63/85 which deal with the validity of section 13-AA of
the Bombay Sales Tax Act.
These appeals are by Hindustan Lever Ltd. and Wipro
Products the appellants herein. The appellants, at all
material times, manufacture, make and deal in vanaspati,
soaps, etc., chemicals and agro-chemicals, and they used to
purchase various types of VNE oils for their manufacture of
vanaspati, soaps and other products. Since the appellants
had a wide net of distribution of their products all over
India, they appointed 40 and more clearing and forwarding
agents in the country. The appellant used to despatch the
goods so manufactured from their factory to the clearing and
forwarding agents. They also used to purchase VNE oils and
other raw-materials and paid 4% tax by way of purchase tax
under section 3 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 (hereinaf-
ter called ’the Bombay Act’). The raw-materials are used in
the manufacture of said goods and as the said manufactured
goods are despatched outside the State to the several dis-
tributing agencies, the appellant companies were held to be
liable to pay, under section 13-AA of the Act, an additional
tax @ 2% on purchase of the said goods.
The question, therefore, that arises, is: whether the
levy of additional tax at 2% under Section 13-AA of the Act
is a tax on purchases failing under Entry 54 of List II of
the 7th Schedule or it is a tax on the despatch of consign-
ment of the manufactured goods outside the State. In case of
latter, the State Legislature will have no power to impose
any tax on such consignment or despatch of goods outside the
State. If it is the former, then it will be valid. The
question is that under the true constructions of section
13-AA of the Act, on which the imposition of tax is made, or
in other words, what is the incidence of that taxation or
taxable event? In both these appeals, namely, civil appeals
No. 4162/ 88 and 4163/88, the appellants M/s Wipro Products
Ltd. and Hindustan Lever Ltd. are contending that the levy
is bad. The issue involved in both the appeals is the con-
stitutional validity and legality of the provisions of
section 13-AA of the Act, which was introduced into the Act
by the Maharashtra Act XXVIII of 1982. The appellant
549
had a factory at Amalnar in Jalgaon district in the State of
Maharashtra wherein it uses non-essential oil purchased by
it for the manufacture and transport. The finished products,
namely, vanaspati manufactured by the appellant used to be
despatched to their various marketing depots in the State of
Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh,
U.P., Tamil Nadu and Kerala etc. On July 1, 1981 the rate of
purchase tax payable on VNE oils (falling under Schedule C,
part I at Entry 35) purchased within the State of Maharash-
tra from non-registered dealers increased from 3% to 4%, by
the Maharashtra Act 32 of 1981.
Section 13-AA was introduced into the Act providing for
levy of 2% additional purchase tax on the purchase of goods,
input goods, specified in part I of the Schedule from a
non-registered dealer if such goods were used in the manu-
facture of taxable goods within Maharashtra and thereafter
the manufactured goods were transferred outside Maharashtra
in the manner indicated in the said section.
The appellants filed writ petitions. An order was passed
by the Bombay High Court on July 19, 1988 in respect of
these two writ petitions by the Wipro Products as well as
Hindustan Lever Ltd. The decision of the High Court is
reported in [1989] 72 STC 69.
Dismissing the petitions of the appellants the High
Court held that (i) three different phases are contemplated
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in section 13-AA of the Act, namely, the initial purchase of
the raw material, the consumption thereof in the manufacture
of taxable goods, and the despatch of the manufactured goods
outside the State. If the goods purchased remain in the same
form within the State, the question of levying additional
tax would not arise. The High Court came to the conclusion
that there was no ground to hold that the additional tax was
levied on the despatch of goods and was unconnected with the
initial transaction of purchase, as it was required to be
paid in addition to the sales or purchase tax paid or pay-
able in respect of the same goods which had been so pur-
chased before the conditions specified in section 13-AA are
fulfilled, (ii) in the context of the other provisions of
the Act, a sort of concession is given at the time of pur-
chase on the quantum of tax payable on the purchase of goods
which fall under Part I of Schedule C. However, there is a
clear mandate of law, which is clearly understood between
seller and buyer, that though tax at the concessional rate
is paid, the obligation to pay the additional tax on the
happening of certain events, namely, use of such goods in
manufacture of finished goods, and despatch of finished
goods outside the State, is undertaken
550
by the purchaser; and (iii) implicit in the low rates of tax
prescribed on raw material attributable to goods in Part I
of Schedule C is the condition precedent that to avail of
this concession the goods in question are required to be
sold in the State after being used in the manufacture of
other taxable goods. The High Court, further, was of the
opinion that a manufacturer who purchases raw-material at a
concessional rate on the strength of declaration in Form 15
cannot transfer the goods manufactured out of such raw-
material outside the State. The High Court held that if he
does so, he is liable to pay purchase tax at the full rate
on the raw material under section 14. According to the High
Court, similarly, a manufacturer who purchases goods covered
in Part III of Schedule C, uses them in the manufacture of
other taxable goods which he despatches outside the State,
is liable to pay tax at rates ranging from 6% to 15%. Sec-
tion 13-AA, therefore, far from being discriminatory, serves
to wipe out any discrimination between the two categories of
manufacturers mentioned above and manufacturers purchasing
raw-material covered by Part I of Schedule C, according to
the revenue. The High Court was of the opinion that the
additional purchase tax leviable under section 13-AA of the
Bombay Act, is on the purchase value of VNE oil used in the
manufacture of goods transferred outside the State and not
on the value of the manufactured goods so transferred. It
further held that the tax levied under section 13-AA of
the Bombay Act, falls squarely and exclusively under Entry
54 of the State List in the 7th Schedule to the Constitution
of India and the State Legislature was competent to levy it.
It does not even remotely fall under Entry 92B of the Union
List, according to the High Court.
The High Court was also of the view that the goods taxed
under section 13-AA of the Bombay Act, are consumed in the
State as raw material in the process of producing other
commodities. Hence, there was no question of any hindrance
to a free flow of trade bringing into operation Article 301
of the Constitution. According to the High Court, the peti-
tioners had not brought forth any material to show how the
free flow of trade has been affected by this additional rate
of tax; and held that section 13AA is not violative of
Article 14 of the Constitution; and that section 13AA of the
Bombay Act and the orders requiring the appellants to pay
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additional tax @ 2% on purchase of VNE oil used by them as
raw-material in the manufacture of goods despatched outside
the State, were valid.
The High Court in the judgment under appeal has set out
the relevant provisions of the Act, which was enacted to
consolidate and
551
amend the law relating to levy of tax on the sale or pur-
chase of certain goods in the State of Bombay. Section 2
contains some of the definitions. Section 24 deals with
authorisations of turnover etc. Section 13AA of the Bombay
Act with which the High Court and these appeals are con-
cerned, is in the following terms:
"13-AA. Purchase tax payable on goods in
Schedule C, Part I, when manufactured goods
are transferred to outside branches.
Where a dealer, who is liable to pay
tax under this Act, purchases any goods speci-
fied in Part I of Schedule C, directly or
through Commission agent, from a person who is
or is not a Registered dealer and uses such
goods in the manufacture of taxable goods and
despatches the goods, so manufactured, to his
own place of business or to his agent’s place
of business situated outside the State within
India, then such dealer shall be liable to
pay, in addition to the sales tax paid or
payable, or as the case may be, the purchase
tax levied or leviable under the other provi-
sions of this Act in respect of purchases of
such goods, a purchase tax at the rate of two
paise in the rupee on the purchase price of
the goods so used in the manufacture, and
accordingly the dealer shall include purchase
price of such goods in his turnover of pur-
chases in his return under section 32, which
he is to furnish next thereafter."
The questions involved in these appeals are: whether
section 13AA of the Bombay Act is beyond the legislative
competence of the State Legislature; and it is violative of
Article 14 of the Constitution; and thirdly, whether the
said provision is violative of Article 301 of the Constitu-
tion. It was contended on behalf of the appeallant that
section 13AA of the Act is a charging section and imposes a
charge of an additional rate of 2% in the rupee if the
following conditions laid down therein are satisfied: (i)
the charge is levied upon a dealer who is liable to pay tax
under the Act; (ii) such a dealer purchases any goods speci-
fied in Part I of Schedule C, directly or through commission
agent, from a person who is or is not a registered dealer;
(iii) the goods so purchased are used in the manufacture of
taxable goods; and (iv) the goods which are so manufactured
(and not the goods on which purchase tax had been paid) are
despatched to the dealer’s own place of business or to his
agent’s place of business situated outside the State.
552
According to the appellant, the said section lays down
the person who is liable to pay tax, the goods on which the
same is leviable and the taxable event which would attract
the liability of additional tax of two paise in the rupee,
namely the despatch or consignment of goods by the
dealer/manufacturer outside the State.
According to Dr. Pal, counsel for the appellant, the
taxable event is not the purchase of goods as such which is
the raw-material, but it is the despatch or consignment of
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goods manufactured by the dealer/manufacturer to its own
branch outside the state; and that thus manufactured goods
are different from commercial commodity, distinct and sepa-
rate from the raw materials on which purchase tax has al-
ready been paid. It is well-settled, it was reiterated
before:us, that in case of excise duty, the taxable event is
the manufacture of goods and the duty is not directly on the
goods but on the manufacture thereof. In case of sales tax,
taxable event is the sale of goods. Hence, though both
excise duty and sales tax are levied with reference to the
goods, the two are different imposts, in one case the impo-
sition is on the act of manufacture or production while in
case of other the imposition is on the act of sale. But in
neither case the impost is a tax directly on the goods. See
in this connection, the observations of this Court in re:
The Bill to amend s. 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 and s.
3 of the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944, [1964] 3 SCR
787 at 821 and M/s. Guruswarny & Co. v. State of Mysore, [
1967] 1 SCR 548 at 562.
The power to tax the sale or purchase of goods is dif-
ferent from the right to impose taxes on use or consumption.
According to Dr. Pal such power to levy sales tax cannot be
exercised at the earlier stage of import or
manufacture/production nor the said power can be exercised
at the later stage of use or consumption but only at the
stage of sale or purchase. In respect of sales tax, the
right to levy duty would not at all come into being before
the time of sale/purchase. Sales tax cannot be imposed
unless the goods are actually sold and may not be leviable
if there is a transfer in some other form. See in this
connection the observations of the Federal Court in Mukunda
Murari Chakravarti & Ors. v. Pabitramoy Ghosh & Ors., AIR
1945 FC 1 at 22. Therefore, in this case it is necessary to
ascertain what is the taxable event under section 13-AA of
the Act which attracts duty. A taxing event is that event
the occurrence of which immediately attracts the levy or the
charge of tax.
In the fiscal legislations normally a charge is created.
The mischief of taxation occurs on the happening of the
taxable event. Diffe-
553
rent taxes have different taxable events. In the instant
case, Dr. Pal canvassed before us that the incidence of the
levy of additional tax of two paise in the rupee is not on
the purchase of goods but such a levy is attracted only
when--(a) the goods which so purchased on payment of pur-
chase tax are used in the manufacture of taxable goods; and
(b) the goods so manufactured are despatched to his own
place of business or to his agent’s place of business out-
side the State. Therefore, the incidence of tax is attracted
not merely on the purchase but only when the goods so pur-
chased arc used in the manufacture of taxable goods and are
despatched outside the State. In our opinion, it was rightly
submitted that it is the effect of section 13AA of the Act.
It was further highlighted by Dr. Pal on behalf... of the
assessee that additional tax is not levied on the goods
purchased on payment of purchase tax and despatched outside
the State. The goods which are purchased on payment of
purchase tax are used in the manufacture of taxable goods.
What is despatched is not the raw material which have been
purchased on payment of purchase tax but a completely dif-
ferent commodity, namely, vanaspati and soap. If the raw
materials as such purchased on payment of purchase tax are
despatched outside the State, the additional tax under
section 13-AA of the Act is not attracted. Hence, the inci-
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dence of additional tax has no nexus with the purchase of
the raw-materials, as was contended by Mr. S.K. Dholakia,
appearing for the State and as held by the High Court.
Purchase tax under section 3 of the Act is attracted
when the taxable event i.e. the purchase of goods occurs,
but the taxable event for the imposition of additional tax
of two paise in the rupee occurs only when the goods so
purchased are used in the manufacture of taxable goods and
such taxable goods are despatched outside the State by a
dealer-manufacturer. Dr. Pal drew our attention to some of
the observations of this Court in Kedarnath Jute Mfg. Co.
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (Central), Calcutta, 82
ITR SC 363 and State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors. v. Shyama
Charan Shukla, 29 STC SC 215 at 218-219. On the other hand,
Mr. Dholakia submitted that the submission of the appellant
proceeded on the assumption that the liability to pay is the
same as the obligation to pay but this was wrong. These two
are different. It was submitted that the obligation to pay
is not the same thing as liability to tax; and that it was
wrong to proceed on the basis that because ’obligation to
pay’ is a later event, ’the despatch of goods’ is the taxa-
ble event. This is a fallacy, according to Mr. Dholakia. In
this connection, reliance was placed on the observations of
this Court in R.C. Jail v. Union of India, [1962] Suppl. 3
SCR 436, where this Court reiterated that subject always to
the legislative com-
554
petence of the enacting authority, the tax can be levied at
a convenient stage, so long as the character of the impost
is not lost. The method of collection does not affect the
essence of the machinery of collection for administrative
convenience. Reliance was also placed on the observations of
Union of India v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd., [1984] 1
SCR 347.
It was submitted by Mr. Dholakia that the correct ap-
proach is to first determine whether the State Legislature,
having regard to Entry 54 of List II to the 7th Schedule to
the Constitution, can levy tax on purchase of a class of
goods, which class is to be identified by reference to the
condition of use of such goods into other taxable goods and
despatch of such taxable goods outside the State. He submit-
ted that if it is accepted that the State could have the
power to tax purchases of goods meant for use into manufac-
ture of other taxable goods and despatch outside thereafter,
then next question is whether the State enactment (like
section 13AA of the Bombay Act) is so formulated as to come
within the framework described. He admitted that even if it
did, it would still have to be subject to (a) the doctrine
of pith and substance, (b) the fundamental rights, and (c)
Article 301.
According to Mr. Dholakia, the Act contains a charging
section which is section 3. It levies tax on turnover of
sales and purchases within section 2(36) and 2(35) respec-
tively of the said Act. Section 13 of the Act levies tax on
purchases in accordance with rates prescribed in Schedule C
if the goods are purchased from an unregistered dealer.
Section 13A levies a concessional tax on purchases if the
goods are purchased from a registered dealer, provided a
declaration in the prescribed form is given under section
12(b) of the Act, if the purchaser buys directly, or one
under section 12(d) if the purchaser buys through a commis-
sion agent. In both the forms the relevant conditions are:
(a) that the goods fall within Part ii of Schedule C; and
(b) that the goods bought would be used for manufacture of
other taxable goods within the State and sold within the
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State. Mr. Dholakia submitted that on giving the aforesaid
declaration, the purchaser would have to pay only 4% tax.
The rates prescribed in Schedule C are as under:
Schedule ’C’
Part Minimum Rate Maximum Rate
I 2% 4%
II 6% 15%
555
The effect of section 13A without section 13-AA, accord-
ing to Mr. Dholakia, was that only those who bought goods
which fell into Part II, would have benefitted by the decla-
ration, since the rate mentioned in section 13A was 4%.
Hence, those buying goods falling within Part I of Schedule
C had not to give any declaration under section 12(b) or
12(d), as the case may be, and still manufacture the taxable
goods and despatch them outside the State. According to him,
as a result of this situation, two results emerged, i.e. (i)
the State lost revenue because the goods manufactured with
the help of the infrastructure provided by the State escaped
further tax, by goods being resold outside the State; and
(ii) the purchasers of raw-materials used by the manufactur-
ers for producing new taxable goods, were not being treated
equitably because those whose purchases of goods which fell
into Part II had to give a declaration to get the benefit of
reduced rate. On the other hand, those whose purchases of
goods fell in Part I, need not give such a declaration.
According to him, from the standpoint of the object of
encouraging resale within the State, the classification in
form of Part I and II had no rational nexus. Therefore, that
construction should be made which may make section 13-AA of
the Act, to avoid this mischief.
According to Mr. Dholakia, section 13AA speaks of the
requirement of additional purchase tax from those who have
paid purchase tax, if the object of the purchases is to use
the goods falling in Part I of Schedule C for manufacture of
taxable goods and the despatch of such goods outside the
State. He alleged it to be a fair and reasonable construc-
tion and it will subserve the purpose of the amendment.
It is well settled that reasonable construction should
be followed and literal construction may be avoided if that
defeats the manifest object and purpose of the Act. See
Commissioner of Wealth-tax, Bihar & Orissa v. Kripashankar
Dayashankar Worah, 81 ITR 763 at 768 and Income-tax Commis-
sioners for city of London v. Gibbs, 10 ITR Suppl. 121 HL at
132. Mr. Dholakia further submitted that the Statement of
Objects & Reasons also helps this construction. In our
opinion, he rightly submitted that because the accounts had
to be maintained in a particular manner, is no criterion or
evidence for determining when the liability arises. The law
is that the liability to tax would be determined with refer-
ence to the interpretation of the Statute which creates it.
It cannot be determined by referring to another Statute. As
contended by both the sides, it is well-settled that the
doctrine of pith and substance means that if an enactment
substantially falls within the powers expressly conferred by
the Constitution upon the Legislature
556
which enacted it, it cannot be held to be invalid merely
because it incidentally encroches upon matters assigned to
another Legislature. See Kerala State Electricity Board v.
Indian Aluminium Co, [1976] SCR 552 and Prafulla Kumar
Mukherjee & Ors. v. Bank of Commerce Ltd., AIR 1947 PC 60 at
65.
Therefore, the proper question which one should address
to oneself is, whether section 13AA is in pith and sub-
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stance, not levying tax on purchase but one levying tax on
consignment. Depending upon the answer to the question, the
validity of the action can be judged. Mr. Dholakia submitted
that the Act is in pith and substance, an Act levying tax on
purchase and not one levying tax on consignment, and re-
ferred to the observations of this Court in State of Karna-
taka v. Shri Ranganatha Reddy, [1978] 1 SCR 641. According
to him, the consignment contemplated in section 13-AA is
only of manufactured goods and no tax is levied under sec-
tion 13AA in respect of such manufactured goods. He empha-
sised as aforesaid. It is well-settled that while determin-
ing nature of a tax, though the standard or the measure on
which the tax is levied may be a relevant consideration, it
is not the conclusive consideration. One must have regard to
such other matters as decided by the Privy Council in Gover-
nor General in Council v. Province of Madras, (supra) not by
the name of tax but to its real nature, its pith and sub-
stance which must determine into what category it fails. See
the observations of R.R. Engineering Co. v. Zila Parishad
Bareilly & Anr., [1980] 3 SCR 1; in re: A reference under
the Govt. of Ireland Act, 1920, [1936] AC 352 at 358 and
Navnitlal C. Javeri v. K.K. Sen, Appellate Asstt. Commis-
sioner of Income Tax, ’D’ Range, Bombay, [1965] 1 SCR 909 at
915.
On an analysis we find that the goods which are des-
patched are different products from the goods on the pur-
chase of which purchase tax was paid. The Maharashtra legis-
lation has to be viewed in the context of 46th Amendment to
the Constitution. The 46th Amendment introduced Article 269
(1)(h) which lays down that the proceeds of the tax on
consignment of goods (whether the consignment is to the
person making it or to any other person) where such consign-
ment takes place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce, will be assigned to the States. The said Amendment
also introduced Entry No. 92B in List I of the 7th Schedule.
The said Amendment was made on the consideration of the 61st
Report of the Law Commission. Entry 92B in List I of the 7th
Schedule and Article 269(1)(h) of the Constitution bring
within its sweep the consignment of goods by a person either
to himself or to any other person in the course of inter-
State trade or
557
commerce. Article 269(3) gives the power to Parliament to
formulate the principles for determining when a consignment
of goods takes place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce. If Entry 92B in List I is to be given the widest
interpretation, as it should be, it would be clear that the
constitutional changes introduced by the 46th Amendment in
Article 269 read with the Entry, the tax on consignment of
goods now comes within the exclusive legislative field of
Parliament. The true test to find out what is the pith and
substance of the legislation is to ascertain the true intent
of the Act which will determine the validity of the Act. If
the Parliament in exercise of its plenary power under Entry
92B of List I imposes any tax on the despatch or consignment
of goods, Parliament will be competent to do so. It is,
therefore, not possible to accept the argument that the
chargeable event was lying dormant and is activated only on
the occurrence of the event of despatch. The argument on the
construction of the enactment is misconceived. The charging
event is the event the occurrence of which immediately
attracts the charge. Taxable event cannot be postponed to
the occurrence of the subsequent condition. In that event,
it would be the subsequent condition the occurrence of which
would attract the charge which will be taxable event. If
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that is so, then it is a duty on despatch. In that view of
the matter, this charge cannot be sustained.
As mentioned hereinbefore, the section has been chal-
lenged as being violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
This attack is based on the discrimination between the two
types of taxes but in the way we have construed the section,
in our opinion, this question does not survive. It was
further submitted by Dr. Pal that section 13AA of the Act is
violative of Article 301 of the Constitution. It makes a
discrimination between the dealer/manufacturer who despatch-
es the goods outside the State and the other dealer/manufac-
turer. Both the dealer/ manufacturers purchase the goods on
payment of purchase tax and use them in the manufacture of
taxable goods. The incidence of additional tax on the pur-
chase of goods is attracted only when such manufactured
goods are despatched outside the State. If a dealer/manufac-
turer has to despatch the goods outside the State, he has to
pay a higher rate of tax and thus he is discriminated as
compared to the other dealer/manufacturer who purchases the
raw material on payment of 4% purchase tax, but despatches
the raw material straightaway outside the State and uses
them in the manufacturer of goods outside the State. The
High Court held that there was no violation of Article 301
of the Constitution. Reference was made to the decision of
this Court in Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. The State of Assam &
Ors., [1961] 1 SCR 809;
558
The Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. The State of
Rajasthan, [1963] 1 SCR 491; Andhra Sugars Ltd. v. State of
Andhra Pradesh, (supra), State of Madras v. N.K. Nataraja
Mudaliar, [1968] 3 SCR 829 and State of Kerala v. A.B. Abdul
Khadir & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 700.
One has to determine: does the impugned provision amount
to restriction directly and immediately, on the trade or
commerce movement? As was observed by this Court in Kalyani
Stores v. The State of Orissa & Ors., [1966] 1 SCR 865,
imposition of a duty or tax in every case would not tanta-
mount per se to any infringement of Article 301 of the
Constitution. Only such restrictions or impediments which
directly or immediately impede free flow of trade, commerce
and intercourse fall within the prohibition imposed by
Article 301. A tax in certain cases may directly and immedi-
ately restrict or hamper the flow of trade, but every impo-
sition of tax does not do so. Every case must be judged on
its own facts and its own setting of time and circumstances.
Unless the court first comes to the finding on the available
material whether or not there is an infringement of the
guarantee under Article 301 the further question as to
whether the Statute is saved under Article 304(b) does not
arise. The goods taxed do not leave the State in the shape
of raw material, which change their form in the State itself
and there is no question of any direct, immediate or sub-
stantial hindrance to a free flow of trade. On the evidence
adduced, we are in agreement with the High Court that the
challenge to the imposition in the background of Article 301
cannot be sustained and, therefore, no question whether such
imposition is saved under Article 304(b) of the Constitution
arises.
In the aforesaid view of the matter and for the reasons
mentioned hereinbefore, it must be held that so far as the
appeals in respect of the Haryana Act are concerned, the
High Court was right in the view it took in Goodyear India
Ltd’s case, 53 STC 163 as well as the views expressed by the
High Court in Bata India Ltd. v. The State of Haryana &
Anr., 54 STC 226 are correct and are affirmed. The views of
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the High Court expressed in Des Raj Pushap Kumar Gulati’s
case (supra) are incorrect for the reasons mentioned herein-
before. The last mentioned judgment and the judgment and
orders following passed by the Punjab & Haryana High Court
are, therefore, set aside. In the premises, Civil Appeals
Nos. 1166--72/85 (M/s Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Har-
yana & Anr.), Civil Appeal No. 1173-77 (NT)/85 (Gedore (I)
Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Haryana & Anr.), civil appeal No.
2674/86 (M/s. Kelvinator of India Ltd. & Anr. v. State of
Haryana & Ors.), Civil Appeal No. 1633 (NT)/85 F.C.I. v.
State of Haryana & Anr.) and
559
Civil Appeal No. 3033 (NT)/86 F.C.I., Karnal v. The State of
Haryana & Ors.) are allowed and the judgment and order of
the High Court are set aside.
Civil Appeals Nos. 15 12 (NT)/84 [State of Haryana &
Anr. v. Gedore Tools (P) Ltd.] and 1515/84 [State of Haryana
& Anr. v. Goodyear India Ltd. ] are dismissed. Special leave
petitions Nos. 83988402/83 are dismissed, and for the rea-
sons mentioned hereinbefore, civil appeal Nos. 4162/88 (M/s.
Wipro Products Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra & Anr. and
4163/88 [Hindustan Lever Ltd. & Anr. v. State of Maharashtra
& Anr. ] are allowed and the judgment and order of the High
Court passed therein, are hereby set aside.
In the facts and the, circumstances of this case, the
parties will pay and bear the respective costs. So far as
the civil appeals Nos. 1633/85 and 3033/86 are concerned,
wherein the appellants are the Food Corpn. of India, I allow
these appeals and setting aside the judgment of the High
Court on the ground that tax on despatch or consignment was
not within the competence of the State Legislature. I am,
however, not dealing with or expressing any opinion on the
other contentions of the F.C.I. that in view of the nature
of its business it was not liable to tax in respect of the
sales tax. This contention will be decided in the appropri-
ate proceedings.
So far as the contention regarding penalty under the
Haryana Act, these proceedings fail because the charging
provisions fail. In so far as the penalty proceedings are
impugned on other grounds apart from the failure of the
charging provisions, I am expressing no opinion on these
aspects.
RANGANATHAN, J. I agree but wish to add a few words.
The question raised in these appeals is a fairly tick-
lish one. Simply stated, Section 9 of the Haryana General
Sales Tax Act, 1973 as well as section 13AA of the Bombay
Sales Tax Act, 1959, purport only to levy a purchase tax.
The tax, however, becomes exigible not on the occasion or
event of purchase but only later. It materialises only if
the purchaser (a) utilises the goods purchased in the manu-
facture of taxable goods and (b) despatches the goods so
manufactured (otherwise than by way of sale) to a place of
business situated outside the State. The legislation, howev-
er, is careful to impose the tax only on the price at which
the raw materials are purchased and not on the
560
value of the manufactured goods consigned outside the State.
The States describe the tax as one levied on the purchase of
a class of goods viz. those purchased in the State and
utilised as raw material in the manufacture of goods which
are consigned outside the State otherwise than by way of
sale. On the other hand, according to the respondentsasses-
sees, this is nothing but a tax on consignment of goods
manufactured in the State to places outside the State,
camouflaged as a purchase tax, by quantifying the levy of
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the tax with reference to the purchase price of the goods
purchased in the State and utilised in the manufacture. To
me it appeared as plausible to describe the levy as a tax on
purchase of goods inside the State (which attaches itself
only in certain eventualities) as to describe it as a tax on
goods consigned outside the State but limited to the value
of the raw material purchased inside the State and utilised
therein. 1, therefore, had considerable doubts not only
during the arguments but even some time thereafter as to
whether so long as the tax purports to be a tax on purchases
and has a nexus, though a little distant, with purchase of
goods in the State, the State Government’s competence to
impose such a tax should not be upheld. But, on deeper
thought, I am inclined to agree with the conclusion of my
learned brother. It is one thing to levy a purchase tax
where the character and class of goods in respect of which
the tax is levied is described in a particular manner (vide,
Andhra Sugars Ltd. & Anr. v. State, [1968] 1 SCR 705 and a
case like the present where the tax, though described as
purchase tax, actually becomes effective with reference to a
totally different class of goods and, that too, only on the
happening of an event which is unrelated to the act of
purchase. The "taxable event", if one might use the expres-
sion often used in this context, is the consignment of the
manufactured goods and not the purchase. I also agree with
my learned brother that the decision in State of Tamil Nadu
v. Kandaswami, [1975] 36 S.T.C. 191, though rendered in the
context of an analogous provision, does not touch the issue
in the present case.
The above distinction becomes significant particularly
in the background of the constitutional amendments referred
to in the judgment of my learned brother. These indicate
that there were efforts at sales tax avoidance by sending
goods manufactured in a State out of raw materials purchased
inside to other States by way of consignments rather than by
way of sales attracting tax. This situation lends force to
the contention of the assessees that the States, unable to
tax the exodus directly, attempted to do so indirectly by
linking the levy ostensibly to the "purchases" in the State.
561
Viewing the impugned statutory provisions from the
perspectives indicated above, I agree with my learned broth-
er that the appeals have to be allowed as held by him.
T.N.A. Appeals and petitions disposed of.
562