Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CENTRAL POTTERIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/03/1962
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1966 AIR 932 1963 SCR (1) 166
ACT:
Sales Tax-Assessment-Liability to pay tax, if depends upon
being registered as dealer-Want of jurisdiction and irregu-
lar assumption of jurisdiction-Distinction-C. P. and Berar
Sales Tax Act, 1947 (C. P. & Berar 21 of 1947), s. 3, 4
(1), 8,10, 11.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a company carrying on business in the
manufacture of sale of potteries and Chinaware in Nagpur.
The Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act came into
force on June 1st 1947. On May 27, 1947, notifications Nos.
597 and 599 were issued. Notification No. 597 fixed August
15, 1947 as the date by which the, dealers liable to pay tax
under the said Act were to get themselves registered and by
notification No. 599 the District Excise Officer was
appointed as the Sales Tax Officer for receiving application
for registration and for issuing certificates. The
appellant company presented an application to the said
officer and the certificate was issued on July 21st 1947 but
actually delivered, to the appellant on September 13, 1947.
Thereafter, the appellant had been duly submitting returns
and paid taxes till June 30th 1951. The appellant
instituted a suit in December 1951 contending that the Sales
Tax Officer who issued the Registration Certificate to the
appellant on July 21st, 1947, was not authorised to do so
under the Act, and the recoveries of tax from him were
illegal and void, The Trial Court held that the certificate
of registration was delivered to the- appellant on 13th
September, 1947, i.e. after the Rules had been finally
published on August 15, 1947, and the irregularity if any in
the issue of the certificate had been cured, and further
held that the liability of the appellant to pay sales tax
was not affected by the invalidity of the registration under
s. 8. On appeal the High Court held that the question
whether the registration of the appellant as dealer under s.
8 of the Act was valid or not did not call for a decision as
even if it was invalid, that did not affect its liability to
be assessed to sales tax, and dismissed the appeal. The
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appellant came up in appeal by certificate to the Supreme
Court.
167
The question was whether the appellant was not liable to pay
tax under the provisions of the Central Provinces and Berar
Sales Tax Act 1917 on the ground alleged that it had not
been validly registered as a dealer under
s. 8 of the Act.
Held, that the High Court was correct in its view that the
appellant was liable to pay the tax under the Act
irrespective of whether the registration under s. 8 was
valid or not. The liability arose under s. 4 of the Act
which was the charging section and the liability was not
conditional on the registration of the dealer under s. 8 of
the Act.
The position of the dealer who has obtained a certificate of
registration which turns out to be invalid cannot on princi-
ple be distinguished from that of one who has failed to
obtain a certificate. The provision of ss. 8 and 11 do not,
to any extent, affect the substantive liability to be
assessed to tax which is imposed by s. 4 of the Act.
There is a fundamental distinction between want of juris-
diction and irregular assumption of jurisdiction. Whereas
the order passed by an authority with respect to a matter
over which it has no jurisdiction is a nullity and is open
to collateral attack, an order passed by an authority which
has jurisdiction over the matter, but as assumed it
otherwise than in the mode prescribed by law is not a
nullity. It may be liable to be questioned in those very
proceedings, but subject to that it is good and not open to
collateral attack. Therefore even if the proceedings for
assessment were taken against a nonregistered dealer without
the issue of a notice under s. 10 (1) that would be a mere
irregularity in the assumption of jurisdiction and the
ordered of a assessment passed in those proceedings cannot
be held to be without jurisdiction and no suit will lie for
impeaching them on the ground that s. 10 (1) had not been
followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 205 of 1961.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated June 16, 1959, of
the Bombay High Court (Circuit Bench) at Nagpur in F. A. No.
32 of 1955.
Shankar Anand, M. S. Gupta and Ganpot Rai for the
appellants.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney General for India,
168
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor General of India, H. N. Sanyal,
Additional Solicitor General of India, N. S. Bindra and P.
D. Menon, for the respondent No. 3.
1962. March 30. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR, J.-The sole point for determination in
this appeal, which is directed against the Judgment of the
High Court of Bombay is whether the appellant is not liable
to pay tax under the provisions of the Central Provinces &
Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Act 21 of 1947), on the ground
alleged that it had not been validly registered as a dealer
under s.8 of the Act. The facts bearing on this contention
are that the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act,
hereinafter referred to as "the Act", received the assent of
the Governor-General on May 23, 1947 and came into force on
June’ 1, 1947. On May 27, 1947 a notification No. 601 was
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issued by the Provincial Government publishing draft rules
which it "proposed to make, in exercise of the powers
conferred by s. 28 of the Act" and on August 15, 1947, the
rules as finally adopted were published. In the meantime
two other notifications Nos. 597 and 599 had been issued on
May 27, 1947, No. 597 under s.8 of the Act fixing August 15,
1947 as the date by or on which all dealers liable to pay
tax under the said Act shall get themselves registered’ and
No. 599 under s.3 of the Act appointing the District Excise
Officers as the Sales Tax officers for "receiving
applications for registration and for issuing certificates
under section 8 of the Act".
The appellant is a Company carrying on business in the
manufacture and sale of potteries chinaware in Nagpur. On
July 2, 1947 it- presented, pursuant to the notifications
aforesaid, an application to the Sales-Tax Officer for
registering itself as a dealer under the Act. On this
application a certificate was issued on July 21, 1947 and
actually delivered
169
to the appellant on September 13, 1947. Thereafter the
appellant had been duly submitting returns as provided in
the Act and assessment were made thereon and taxes paid from
the period commencing from June 1, 1947 to June 30, 1951.
Some time thereafter the idea dawned on the appellant that
the proceedings taken by the respondents under the Act were
unauthorised, that the assessments were illegal and that in
consequence it was entitled to refund of the amounts paid as
sales tax. And so, on December 18, 1951, it instituted the
suit out of which the present appeal arises claiming a
refund of Rs. 6,650-11-9 being the amount paid for, sales
tax during the period June 1, 1947 to June 30, 1951 and a
sum of Rs. 2,000/- as damages, in all Rs. 8,650-11-9.
Though a number of grounds were put forward in support of
the claim, it is necessary now to deal with only one of
them, and that is that the Sales Tax Officer who issued the
registration certificate to the appellant on July 21, 1947
was not authorised to do so under that Act and in
consequence all the assessments and recoveries of tax were
illegal and void. The basis for this contention is that s.
3(1) of the Act confers authority on the State Government to
appoint any person to be a Commissioner of Sales Tax, and
"such other persons under any prescribed designations" to
assist him as it thinks fit. By notification No. 595 dated
May 27, 1947 the Government appointed in exercise of the
powers conferred by s. 3(1) the Excise Commissioner, Central
Provinces & Berar to be the Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Central Provinces & Berar. The validity of this
notification is not now in question. The attack is on the
notification No. 599 dated May 27, 1947 whereby the
Government acting under s. 3 of the Act directed that the
District Excise Officers in charge of districts shall be the
Sales Tax Officers for purpose of registration of
certificates under s.8 of the Act. It is said that
170
s. 3(1) authorises the Government to appoint "other
persons under any prescribed designations", that the word I
’prescribed" is defined in s. 2(e) as meaning "prescribed by
rules made under this Act" and that as the rates finally
came into force only on August 15, 1947 the appointment of
District Excise officers as Sale Tax Officers for the
purpose of s. 8 on May 27, 1947 was in contravention of s.
3(i) and that in consequence the issue registration
certificate on July 21, 1947 by an officer appointed under
this notification was void.
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The Civil Judge of Nagpur who tried the suit held that as
the certificate of registration was delivered to the
appellant on September 13, 1947 i.e. after the rules had
been finally published on August 15, 1947, the irregularity,
if any, in the issue of registration certificate on July 21,
1947 bad been cured. He also further held that the
liability of the appellant to pay sales tax was not affected
by the invalidity of the registration under s. 8. In the
result he dismissed the suit with costs.
Against this decision appellant preferred an appeal to the
High Court of Nagpur and that was heard by a Bench of the
Bombay High Court to which it stood transferred under the
States Reorganisation Act. The learned Judges held that the
question whether the registration of the appellant as dealer
under s. 8 of the Act was valid or not did not call for a
decision as even if it was invalid that did not affect its
liability to be assessed to sales tax and in that view they
dismissed the appeal with costs but granted a certificate
under s. 109 C.P.C. and Art. 132(2) of the Constitution.
In our judgment the High Court is clearly correct in its
view that the appellant was liable to pay the tax under the
Act irrespective of whether
171
the registration under s. 8 was valid or not. That
liability arose under s. 4 which is the charging ,section.
Section 4 is as follows:-
34(1) (a). In Madhya Pradesh excluding the
merged territories every dealer whose turnover
during the year proceeding the commencement of
this Act exceeded the taxable quantum shall be
liable to pay tax in accordance with the
provisions of this Act on all sales effected
after the commencement of this Act."
This liability is not conditional on the registration of the
dealer under s. 8. Section 8 (1) enacts that no dealer
shall, while being liable to pay tax under this Act carry on
business as a dealer unless he has been registered as such
and possesses a registration certificate’). Section 11(i)
provide,.; that "If the Commissioner is satisfied that the
returns furnished by a registered dealer in respect of any
period are correct and complete, he shall assess the dealer
on them". These provisions do not, to any extent effect the
substantive liability to be assessed to tax which is imposed
by a. 4-A dealer who fails to get himself registered would
be hit by s. 8(1) and may loss the benefit conferred by s.
II (1) but the Act does not put him in a better position
than a dealer who has got himself registered under s. 8(1)
and absolve him from his liability to pay tax under s. 4.
The position of the dealer who has obtained a certificate of
registration which turns out to be invalid cannot on
principal, be distinguish from that of one who has failed to
obtain a certificate.
It was argued for the appellant that it would make a
difference in the procedure prescribed for making assessment
whether a dealer was registered or not. It was said that
under s. 10(1) while every registered dealer is under an
obligation to make returns for the purposes of assessment, a
dealer who is not registered becomes liable to send the
return
172
only if he is required to do so by the Commissioner by
notice served in the prescribed manner and Rule 22 which has
been framed for carrying out the purpose of s. 14(1)
provides that if the Commissioner is of opinion that a
dealer other than a registered dealer is liable to pay tax,
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he may send a notice to him in a form prescribed therein,
requiring him to furnish returns. It is contended that the
jurisdiction of the Sales Tax Officer to take proceedings
for assessment with respect to non-registered dealers
depends, on the issue of a notice such as is prescribed by
s. 10 and rule 22 and that as no such notice had been issued
in the case of the appellant, the assessment proceedings
must be held to be incompetent, if the registration
certificate is invalid. We see no force in this contention.
The taxing authorities derive their jurisdiction to make
assessments under s. 3 and II of the Act, and not under s.
10, which is purely procedural. The appellant had itself,
acting under s. 10(1) been submitting voluntarily returns on
which the assessments had been made and it is now idle for
it to contend that the proceedings taken on its own returns
are without jurisdiction.
In this connection it should be remembered that there is a
fundamental distinction between want of jurisdiction and
irregular assumption of jurisdiction, and that whereas an
order passed by an authority with respect to a mattar over
which it has no jurisdiction is a nullity and is open to
collateral attack, an order passed by an authority which has
jurisdiction over the matter, but has assumed it otherwise
than in the mode prescribed by law, is not a nullity. It
may be liable to be questioned in those very proceedings,
but subject to that it is good, and not open to collateral
attack. Therefore even if the proceedings for assessment
were taken against a non-registered dealer without the
isssue of a notice under s. 10 (1) that would be a mere
irregularity in the assumption
173
of jurisdiction and the order of assessment passed in those
proceedings cannot be held to be Without jurisdiction and no
suit will lie for impeaching them on the ground that s. 10
(1) had not been followed. This must a fortiori be so when
the appellant has itself submitted to jurisdiction and made
a return. We accordingly agree with the learned Judges that
even if the registration of the appellant as a dealer under
s. 8 is bad that has no’ effect on the validity of the
proceedings taken against it under the Act and the
assessment of tax made thereunder.
We should add that s. 21 of the Act bare the jurisdiction of
Civil Courts to entertain suits calling in question any
orders passed by the authorities under the Act, and in the
view which we have taken it is unnecessary to go into the
question whether in view of this section the present suit is
maintainable.
There are no merits whatsoever in this appeal and it is
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.