Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ABDEALI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/08/1962
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1237 1963 SCR Supl. (3) 704
ACT:
Inter-State Trade-Discrimination-Sales Tax-Exemption-Sales
of hand-made footwear by manufacturer-Madhya Bharat Sales
Tax Act, 195O (M. B. 30 of 1950), ss. 4(3)Constitution of
India, Art. 304(a).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a dealer in imported hand-made shoes and
chappals, claimed exemption in respect of his sales turn:
over on the basis of the notification issued under s. 5 of
the Madhya Bharat Sales Tax Act which exempted hand-made
shoes and chappals the sale price of which did not exceed
Rs. 12/8/- in case of sale by the manufacturer or by a
member of his family. The claim for exemption was rejected
by the Sales Tax Officer and the respondent was assessed on
the total turnover. The respondent challenged the
assessment by a petition under Art. 226 before the Madhya
Bharat High Court which allowed the petition on the view
that the exemption granted by the notification applied to
sales of hand-made shoes, chappals, etc., whether made
within or outside the State and held that any other
interpretation of the notification would bring it into
conflict with Art. 304(a) of the Constitution.
Held, that the notification lays down three conditions for
the grant of exemption : (1) that the sale must be of such
shoes, chappals etc., as are hand-made and not manufactured
on power machine (2) that the sale price must not exceed Rs.
12-8-0 per pair and (3) that the sale must be by the
manufacturer or any member of his family. The notification
when it uses the expression "in case of sale" has reference
to the taxable event in the State ; in other words, it
refers to a sale in the State and not outside it. Therefore
the notification has reference to such sales as would come
but for the exemption within item 32 of Schedule 3 of the
notification. The interpretation pat by the High Court
would obliterate one of the conditions and is not correct.
Held, further, that the exemption granted by the
notification is for the protection and benefit of small
manufacturers who make hand made shoes and chappals of small
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705
value and are unable to compete with large-scale
manufacturers of footwear made on machines. Such a
classification in the interests of small manufacturers is
valid.
Orient Weawing Mills (P) Ltd. v, Union of India, [1962]
Supp. 3 S.C.R, 481 and British India Corporation Ltd, v.
The Collector of Central Excise, Allahabad,[1963] 3 S.C.R.
642 referred,
The exemption creates no discrimination between footwear
manufactured or produced in the State and those imported
from outside and is not therefore hit by Art.304(a) of the
Constitution.
M/s. Ram Narain Sons Ltd, v. Assistant Commissioner of
Sales Tax, (19551 2 S.C.R. 483, held inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 373 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 14, 1959, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc.
Petition No. 274 of 1958.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the appellants.
W. S. Barlingay and A. G. Ratnapakhi, for the respondents.
1962. August 24. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
S.K.DAS, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment and order of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh dated
December 14, 1959, by which the said High Court quashed an
assessment of sales tax made against the respondent for the
assessment year 1956-57. The appellant before us are the
State of the Madhya Pradesh, the Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Madhya Pradesh. ’and the Sales Tax Officer, Circle No.2,
Indore.
We may first state the circumstances under which the
respondent was assessed to sales tax and
706
the reasons for which the High Court quashed the, said
assessment. The respondent carried on the business of
importing and selling different types of footwear in the
State of Madhya Pradesh under the name and style of Munwar
Shoe Company, Indore. During the assessment year 1956-57
the taxable turnover of the goods sold by the respondent was
determined to be a little over Rs. 60,000/-, and he was
assessed to sales tax on his taxable turnover in accordance
with item 32 Sch.3 of the notification dated October 24,
1953 issued under s. 5 of the Madhya Bharat Sales Tax Act,
1950 (Act 30 of 1950) "hereinafter referred to as the Act).
Section 3 of the Act is the charging section which imposes
the tax. Section 4(3) empowers the Government to grant
exemption by means of a notification in respect of the sale
of any goods or class of goods. Section 5 of the Act fixes
the rate of tax and states that the tax payable by a dealer
under the Act shall be a single point. It permits the State
Government to notify the goods and the point of their sale
at which the tax is payable. Item 32 of Sch. 3 of the
notification referred to above was in these terms.
S.No. Name of goods Point of sale in
Madhya Bharat
at which tax it;
payable
32 All leather goods Sale by importer
and all shoes, or manufacturer.
chappals (footweer)
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etc.
Though the item in question made all leather goods and all
shoes, chappal etc. liable to sales tax at the point of sale
by the importer or manufacturer, an exemption was granted in
respect of certain sales of footwear by means of
notification issued under s. 4
707
(3) of the Act. We may now refer to these notifications.
The first notification was dated May 27, 1955 and was in
these terms:
"In exercise of the powers conferred by
section 4(3) of Madhya Bharat Sales Tax Act,
Samvat 2007 the Rajpramukh has passed order
exempting from the payment of sales tax, all
such shoes, the selling price of which does
not exceed rupees te per pair and such
country shoes which are prepared by the
manufacturer himself and for the production of
which power is not used in any stage if the
same are sold by the Manufacturer himself or
any member of his family."
This notification was later superseded by another
notification dated January 28, 1956, which read as follows:
"In exercise of the powers conferred by
section 4, sub-section(3) of the Madhya Bharat
Sales Tax Act, Samvat 2007 the Rajpramukh in
supersession of the notification No. 59(c)(t)
P.R. 412-54, dated 27-5-1955 of this depart-
ment has exempted from the payment of sales
tax, in case of sale by the manufacturer or
any member of his family, the sale of all such
shoes,chappals, country shoes and footwears
which are hand-made and which are not manu-
factured on power machine and whose sale price
does not exceed Rs. 12/8/-."
The respondent contended before the Sale Tax Officer that he
was not liable to pay any sales tax on the sale of hand-made
shoes, chappal and other type of footwear whose sale price
did not exceed Rs. 12/8/- per pair on the ground that such
footwear was exempt from tax by reason of the notification
dated January 28, 1956. The Sales Tax Officer negatived
this contention. He pointed out in his order
708
dated March 25, 1958 that the condition laid down in the
notification to the effect that the sale must be by the
manufacturer or any member of his family was not fulfilled,
and as the respondent was an importer and dealer of footwear
and not the manufacturer or a member of the family of the
manufacturer, he was not entitled to claim any exemption
under the notification. Consequently the Sales Tax Officer
passed an order assessing sales tax on the total turnover of
the respondent.
The respondent then moved the High Court of Madhya Pradesh
by means of a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution
and in that petition the respondent said that the
notification dated January 28, 1956, exempted from tax all
sales of footwear which fulfilled the following to
conditions, viz., (a) such footwear was hand-made and not
manufactured on power machine, and (b) the sale price
whereof did not exceed Rs. 12/8/- per pair. The respondent
further averred that if the exemption were held to be in
favour of sales by a manufacturer or a member of his family
and not sales by an importer, then the notification would be
discriminatory in nature and would contravene the provisions
of Art. 304(a) of the Constitution. On these grounds the
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respondent prayed that the assessment order dated March 25,
1958, be quashed and the Sales Tax Officer be directed to
’exempt from tax such sales by the respondent as were
covered by the exemption granted by the notification dated
January 28, 1956. In their reply to the writ petition the
appellants pointed ’out that the notification dated January
28, 1956 did not in any way discriminate between footwear
manufactured or produced in the State of Madhya Pradesh and
footwear imported from outside, because the conditions laid
down in the notification were enqually applicable to both
types of goods and one of these conditions was that the sale
709
which was to be exempted from tax must be by the
manufacturer or a member of his family.
The High Court accepted the petition of the respondent and
held that the respondent’s contention that hand-made shoes,
chappals and footwear purchased by him directly from the
manufacturer outside the State and imported by him for sale
were entitled to exemption under the notification dated
January 28, 1956, must prevail. The High Court said:
"What that notification does is to exempt from
sales tax the sale of hand-made chappals
shoes, footwear ’and country shoes if the
price of the article sold does not exceed Rs.
12/8/- and if it is sold by the manufacturer
or any member of his family. It makes no
difference whether the sale is by the manu-
facturer within the State directly to the pur-
chaser or whether it is by the manufacturer
outside the state to the importer who then
sells it to the purchaser. The notification
is, no doubt, not clearly worded. x x x x x x
The notification has to be read in consonance
with the provisions of Article 301 of the Con-
stitution. So read, it must be held that the
exemption applies to hand-made shoes, chapp-
also etc., whether made within or outside the
State if the other conditions mentioned in the
notification are satisfied."
Accordingly, the High Court quashed the assessment dated
March 25, 1958, and directed the Sales Tax Officer to make a
fresh assessment in the light of the decision of the High
Court.
On behalf of the appellants it has been contended before us
that the interpretation which the
710
High Court put on the notification dated January 28, 1956,
is not correct. We think that this contention is right and
must be accepted. The notification clearly lays down three
conditions for the grant of exemption: one of the conditions
is that the sale must be of such shoes, chappals, country
shoes and footwear as are hand-made and not manufactured on
power machine; the second condition is that the sale price
must not exceed Rs. 1218/-; and the third condition is that
the sale mast be by the manufacturer or any member of his
family. The notification when it uses the expression "in
case of sale" must refer to the sale which is being exempted
from tax in the State; in other words, it has reference to
the taxable event in the State as per Soh. 3 of the
notification dated October 24, 1953. That notification
makes it clear that the tax is a single point tax, and the
taxable event is the sale by the importer or manufacturer in
the State. Therefore, the expression ",in case of sale" in
the exemption notification can have no reference to ’a sale
outside the State,. The High Court was in error when it
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said that, it made no difference whether the sale was by the
manufacturer within the State directly to the purchaser or
whether the sale was by the manufacturer outside the State
to the importer who then sold the shoes to the ’purchaser in
the State. When a manufacturer sells shoes outside the
State to an importer And the importer again sells shoes in
the State, there are really two sales, one outside the State
and one inside it. The sales outside the State are not
taxable under the Act and the notification of January 28,
1956, has no reference to such sales. When the notification
uses the expression ",in case of sale by the manufacturer or
a member of his family", it has reference to such sales as
would come but for the exemption within item 32 of Sch. 3 of
the notification dated October 24, 1953. If the
interpretation put by the High
711
Court is correct, then the practical effect will be to
obliterate one of the conditions laid down in the
notification, namely, that the sale, which is the taxable
event, must be by the manufacturer or any member of his
family. We do not think that the notification is capable of
such an interpretation. All the three conditions laid down
in the notification must be fulfilled before the exemption
referred to therein can be claimed and we cannot, by inter-
pretatiod, delete one of the conditions.
On the question whether the notification contravenes Art.
304(a) of the Constitution learned counsel for the
appellants has, canvassed before us the larger question that
Art. 304(a) has no reference to sales tax legislation. He
has contended that Art. 304(a) refers to a tax on goods
meaning thereby a tax on the goods themselves, e.g. excise
duty or countervailing duty on goods, and it has no
reference to a tax on transactions of sale.
In view of the alternative submissions which learned counsel
for the appellants has made and to which we shall presently
refer, it is unnecessary for us to deal with the aforesaid
larger question in this appeal. The alternative submissions
made by learned counsel for the appellants are these.
Firstly, learned counsel for the appellants bad argued that
on the assumption ’that sales tax legislation is
contemplated by Art. 304(a), the notification in question
does not in any way contravene that provisions of the said
Article. He has submitted that the three conditions laid
down by the notification apply equally to both types of
footwear, footwear manufactured or produced in the State and
footwear imported from other States. Secondly, he has
submitted that. if the notification in question is bad on
the ground that it contravenes the provisions of Art. 30(4a)
of the Constitution, then the
712
result will be that the notification dated January 28, 1956,
will be void. This will not, however, affect the validity
of the notification of October 24, 1953, made under s. .5 of
the Act, by which all, leather goods and all footwear are
made liable to a tax at the point of sale in the State by an
importer or manufacturer. Learned counsel has submitted
that the respondent is an importer who sells footwear in the
State, and he will be liable to tax on all footwear sold by
him and will not be entitled to claim any exemption if the
exemption notification is bad; in other words, the
assessment will be the same as has been found by the Sales
Tax Officer by his order dated March 25, 1958, and in that
view also, the order of the High Court quashing the
assessment will be erroneous.
We now proceed to, consider these alternative submissions of
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learned counsel for the appellants. We do not think that
the notification dated January 28, 1956 makes any such
discrimination between footwear remanaufactured or produced
in the State of Madhya Pradesh and footwear imported from
other States as is prohibited by Art. 304(a) of of the
Constitution. We have already pointed out that the
exemption granted by the notification in question depends on
the fulfilment of three conditions and all the three
conditions are equally applicable to footwear manufactured
or produced in the State and footwear imported from other
States. It is obvious that the exemption is for the
protection and benefit of small manufacturers who make hand-
made shoes of small value and who may be unable to compete
with large-scale manufacturers of footwear made on machines.
Such a classification in the interests of small
manufacturers has often been made and upheld by this Court.
(See Orient Weaving Mills (P) Ltd. v. The Union of India
(1): and The British India Corporation Ltd. v. The Collector
of Central Exeise, Allahabad (2)
(1) (1962) Supp. 3 S.C.R. 481. (2) (1969) 3 S.C.R. 642.
713
In the course of his arguments learned counsel for
respondent has first supported the interpretation put on the
notification by the High Court. That question we have
already dealt with earlier in this judgment. Learned
counsel for, the respondent has then submitted that the
discrimination arises in the following way. He points out
that a small manufacturer outside the State has to travel
into the State and sell hand-made shoes there in order to
get the benefit of the exemption whereas a small
manufacturer in the State has not to travel anywhere in
order to get the benefit of the exemption. This, learned
counsel bag submitted, results in such discrimination as is
forbidden by Art. 304(a) of the Constitution. We do not
agree. The argument of learned counsel for the respondent
is really an argument of inconvenience. The exemption by
itself creates no discrimination between footwear
manufactured or produced in the State and imported from
outside. Even a small manufacturer in the State must fulfil
the conditions laid down by the notification in question
before he can claim exemption from tax; in other words, he
or a member of his family must also sell the hand-made shoes
before he can claim the exemption. So must a small
manufacturer outside the State if he wants to claim the
benefit of the exemption. Unless he has travelled and
brought the goods into another State, Art, 304(a) does not
apply ; hence be cannot complain under that Article that he
has to travel. It is worthy of note that the exemption
relates to sales in the State and that is why a small manu-
facturer outside the State can claim no benefit of the
exemption with regard to sales out side the State which are
not taxable under the Act,. It is necessary here to refer
to one other point- which has been urged by learned counsel
for the respondent. Learned counsel has pointed out that
the word ’himself’ used in the earlier notification of
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May 27, 1955, in connection with the word manufacturer’ has
been omitted from the later notification January 28, 1956,
and he has contented that by reason of the omission of the
word ’himself’ the benefit of the later notification may be
available to a servant or an agent of the manufacturer. We
do not think that this question falls for decision in the
present appeal. The respondent in the present case is
neither a servant nor an agent of the manufacturer. It is
admitted that he is merely an importer and in his case
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nothing turns upon the omission of the word himself ’from
the later notification.
We also agree with the alternative submission of learned
counsel for the appellants that if the notification dated
January 28, 1956 is bad, then the respondent stands to gain
nothing. If the exemption notification is struck down as
invalid, that will not affect the validity of the
notification of October 24, 1953, particularly of item 32 of
Sch. 3 thereof. Learned counsel for the respondent has
submitted that the two notifications must be read together
and if the exemption goes, the notification of October 24,
1953, issued under a. 5 of the Act must also go. We are
unable to agree, The notification of October 24, 1953. fixes
the point of sale at which the tax is to be imposed. The
rate of tax is fixed by s. 5 of the Act. There is no reason
why the notification dated October 24, 1953, should fall
with the notification dated January 28, 1956 which was
issued under s.. 4 (3) of the Act. The principle laid down
by this Court in M/s Ram. Narain Sons of Ltd. v. Assistant
Commissioner of Sales Tax (1) that where an assessment
consists of a single undivided sum in respect of the
totality of the property treated as assessable, the wrongful
inclusion in it of certain items of property which
(1) [1955] 2. S. C. R. 483.
715
by virtue of a provision’ of law were expressly exempted
from taxation, renders the assessment invalid in toto, will
not a ’ply in the present case for the simple reason that
there is no wrongful inclusion of any item in the amusement
order. If the exemption goes, then the respondent has been
rightly assessed on his total turnover. It is only when the
respondent is entitled to the exemption claimed that he can
say that the assessment is bad and must be quashed. The
respondent can claim the exemption only if the
interpretation put by the High Court on the notification
dated January 28, 1956 is accepted as correct. If that
interpretation is not correct, then this appeal must be
allowed even if the notification is bad by reason of the
provisions of Art. 304(a) of the Constitution.
For the reasons given above, we would allow the appeal, set
aside the judgment and- order of the High Court dated
December 14, 1949 and dismiss the writ petition. The
appellants will be entitled to their costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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