Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. HINDUSTAN SHIPYARD LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/07/2000
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu, J. & R.C. Lahoti, J.
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
The question arising for decision in these appeals is whether the
transactions involved in manufacture and supply of ships by the
appellant to its customers are a sale as defined in clause (n)
of Section 2 of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957
(hereinafter the Act, for short) as held by the High Court or a
works contract as defined in clause (t) of Section 2 of the Act
and hence not exigible to sales-tax as contended by the
assessee-appellant.
M/s. Hindustan Shipyard Limited, the appellant before us, is a
public sector undertaking. It is engaged in the activity of
building ships for different ship owners under the orders placed
by them and as evidenced by the contracts entered into between
them.
The facts in brief. Between the assessment years 1974-75 and
1983-84 (both years inclusive) there were 18 ships involved and
formed subject matter of different assessments. The Assessing
Authority and the Commissioner (Appeals) held all the
transactions in question as transactions of sale liable to
payment of sales-tax by the appellant. Several tax appeals
preferred by the appellant were disposed of by the Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal, Andhra Pradesh, Hyderabad by a common order
dated 19th July, 1989. It appears that earlier also transactions
regarding building of ships by this very assessee have been a
subject of controversy travelling upto the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh and disposed of by a Division Bench by its order dated
27th January, 1969 reported as Hindustan Shipyard Limited,
Visakhapatnam Vs. The Commercial Tax Officer, Visakhapatnam
1970 (1) Andhra Weekly Reporter 197. The High Court having
examined several clauses of the contract dated 12.4.1965 entered
into between the appellant and its customers concluded that the
building of the ships under the contract under scrutiny was works
contract and not sale. This decision was heavily relied on by
the appellant before the Tribunal. The Tribunal has analysed the
terms and conditions of all the contracts forming subject matter
of appeals before it and thereafter divided the contracts into
two groups. The Tribunal noticed that the contracts relating to
10 ships before it incorporated recitals identical or similar to
the contract dated 12.4.1965 involved before the High Court in
1970 (1) Andhra Weekly Reporter 197. As to such contracts the
Tribunal held that it was bound to follow the Division Bench
decision of the High Court more so when the Department had not
pursued its challenge to the correctness of the findings of fact
and the principles laid down therein by approaching the Supreme
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Court. Such contracts were held to be works contract following
the abovesaid decision. This time also the Department has not
pursued the matter further. Therefore as to the transactions
involving 10 ships the order of the Tribunal has become final.
The Tribunal has then noted in its impugned order that after the
decision of the High Court dated 27th January, 1969 there was a
decision of a three-Judges Bench of the Supreme Court delivered
on 6th April 1977 reported as Union of India Vs. The Central
India Machinery Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (CIMMCO) & Ors. 1977
(40) STC 246, wherein the relevant law was dealt with and the
tests for determining the distinction between a contract of sale
and a works contract were laid down. The decision in CIMMCOs
case was followed by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in P.S. &
Co. Vs. State of Andhra Pradesh 1984 (56) STC 283 dealing
with exigibility to sales-tax of a transaction involved in
construction and supply of harbour ferry. Having followed the
law laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of CIMMCO and
several other decisions and having also considered the earlier
Division Bench decision of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in
the case of this assessee, the Division Bench held in PS & Co.s
case the transaction before it to be a sale and not merely a
contract for work and labour. This being the latest decision of
the jurisdiction High Court placed before the Tribunal, for the
transactions relating to remaining 8 ships before it, the
Tribunal applied the ratio of P.S. & Co.s case and held the
transactions to be those of sales liable to sales-tax and
dismissed appeals filed by the appellant. The appellant feeling
aggrieved by the decision of the Tribunal to the extent to which
the transactions were held to be sales, filed tax revision cases
before the High Court. The decision in 1970 (1) Andhra Weedly
Reporter 197 was once again heavily relied on by the appellant
before the High Court. The High Court examined the contention of
the appellant, scrutinised the terms and conditions of the
contracts entered into by the appellant with the several ship
owners and then held that the relevant terms and clauses led to
an irresistible inference of sales having taken place and such a
situation was governed by the Division Bench decision in P.S. &
Co.s case (supra). Accordingly, the revisions filed by the
appellant have been dismissed. The aggrieved appellant has come
up to this Court by filing these petitions for special leave to
appeal.
Clauses (n) and (t) of Section 2 of the Act respectively define
sale and works contract as under :-
Sale with all its grammatical variations and cognate expressions
means every transfer of the property in goods (Whether as such
goods or in any other form in pursuance of a contract or
otherwise) by one person to another in the course of trade or
business, for cash or for deferred payment or for any other
valuable consideration or in the supply or distribution of goods
by a society (including a co-operative society), club, firm or
association to its members, but does not include a mortgage,
hypothecation or pledge of, or a charge on goods.
xxx xxx xxx xxx
xxx
Works Contract includes any agreement for carrying out for
cash or for deferred payment or for any other valuable
consideration, the building construction, manufacture,
processing, fabrication, erection, installation, fitting out,
improvement, modification, repair or commissioning of any movable
or immovable property.
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The distinction between a contract of sale and a works contract
is not free from difficulty and has been subject matter of
several judicial decisions. No straight-jacket formula can be
made available nor can such quick-witted tests devised as would
be infallible. It is all a question of determining the intention
of the parties by culling out the same on an overall reading of
the several terms and conditions of a contract. In State of
Gujarat Vs. Variety Body Builders (1976) 38 STC 176 this Court
observed that there is no standard formula by which one can
distinguish a contract of sale from a contract for work and
labour. There may be many common features in both the contracts,
some neutral in a particular contract, and yet certain clinching
terms in a given case may fortify a conclusion one way or the
other. It will depend upon the facts and circumstances of each
case. The question is not always easy and has for all times
vexed jurists all over.
We would straightaway proceed to notice the relevant recitals of
the contracts in question. During the course of hearing Shri
T.L.V. Iyer, the learned senior counsel for the appellant
submitted that in the case at hand there are different contracts
relating to 8 ships. The terms and conditions of these several
contracts are more or less similar to each other though not the
same and it will suffice if the terms and conditions of one
contract, viz. the one entered into between the appellant and
the Great Eastern Shipping Co. Ltd. dated 3rd February, 1971
are taken into consideration. This contract relates to
construction of four motor vessels of Jag Darshan type. The
relevant recitals and terms and conditions of the contract are
summarised and wherever necessary reproduced, as under:-
1. The appellant is called the Builder and the customer the
Great Eastern Shipping Co. Ltd. - is called the Owner.
2. The Preamble to the contract speaks of the Builder having
agreed to build, launch, fit, equip, test and complete in all
respects four vessels at its Shipyard and after completion and
successful trials in all respects deliver them alongside safe
berth at Visakhapatnam from which supplies could be conveniently
loaded and the crew embarked and the owner having agreed to
accept delivery from the Builder of the said four vessels upon
the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.
(3) The vessels shall have Builders hull numbers 171002-3- 4-7
respectively and shall be constructed, fitted and completed in
strict accordance with the plans and specifications forming part
of the contract.
(4) The Builders shall arrange for assignment of a
representative/s called the Classification Surveyor to the vessel
from Lloyds Register of Shipping throughout the construction.
The plans and drawings, materials and workmanship shall be
subject to instructions and tests by the Classification Surveyor
for which the facilities shall be furnished by the Builder
without any charge to the owner.
(5) The Builder shall furnish all labour, machinery, materials,
equipments, appurtenances, spare parts and outfits required for
the construction of the vessel to make it completely ready.
(6) The total price of the vessel is fixed at Rs.5,50,00,000/-
per vessel which shall be called the contract price to be paid in
the following manner :-
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(a) 5% of the Contract Price upon signing this Contract.
(b) 10% of the Contract Price upon Builder producing adequate
documentary evidence to the Owner confirming that the Builder has
placed order for main engine and steel requirement.
(c) 10% of the Contract Price upon keel laying of the vessel.
(d) 15% of the Contract Price upon Builder submitting its
certificate to the Owner that 50% by weight of the steel
structure of the vessels hull has been erected. (Panels placed
on berth).
(e) 15% of the Contract Price upon launching of the vessel.
(f) 10% of the Contract Price upon Builder submitting its
certificate to the Owner that the main engine has been lowered in
position on board the vessel.
(g) 15% of the Contract Price upon satisfactory completion of the
dock trials.
(h) 20% of the Contract Price upon delivery of the vessels.
(7) The contract, vide Article 3, makes provision for payment of
liquidated damages at the prescribed scale by reference to the
period of delay for delayed delivery and also makes a similar
provision for payment of bonus by the owner to the Builder for
advanced delivery.
(8) The owner has the right to appoint at its expense one or more
superintendents who will be allowed to inspect regularly the
building of the vessel and also the machinery and all accessories
and workmanship during the work in progress.
(9) If owner may suggest any changes and alteration in the plans
and drawings the same shall be carried out by the Builder subject
to mutual agreement arrived at in writing between the owner and
the Builder regarding additional debits and credits involved.
(10) Before the vessel being delivered there shall be trial runs
intimation whereof shall be given by thirty working days advance
notice in writing and all expenses in connection with the trial
runs of the vessel are to be borne by the Builder. Prior to the
trial runs the vessel shall be dry-docked and the bottom shall be
painted as per the specifications. Dry-dockeing and painting
shall be at the expenses of the Builder. The required quantity
of the fuel oil, lubricating oils and greases shall be provided
by the owner but paid for by the Builder.
(11) Clause 5 of Article 6 provides method of acceptance or
rejection as under:-
If after successfully completed technical trial test procedures
according to the Specifications no legitimate complaints are made
concerning the completion or correct functioning of the vessel
according to this Contract, the Drawings and Specifications, the
Owner shall accept the vessel and confirm the acceptance in
writing.
(12) If any defects become evident they shall be made good by the
Builder at his own expense. The owner may demand a new set of
trial which shall be conducted by the Builder on the same terms
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and conditions as applicable to the first trial and paid for by
the Builder. After the first or second trial runs, as the case
may be, the owner may accept or reject the vessel by serving
notice in writing within seven days and stating the reasons for
rejection.
(13) Vide Article 7, there are the different dates appointed for
the four vessels by which the Builder agrees to deliver the
respective vessels. Simultaneously with the delivery the owner
has to fulfil its obligation for payment as stipulated.
Thereupon protocol of delivery shall be signed. All the
documents relating to the vessel have to be delivered by the
Builder to the owner upon the acceptance of the vessel by the
owner.
(14) Clause 5 of Article 7, dealing with title and risk, reads
as under:-
Title and risk of the Vessel shall pass to the Owner upon
acceptance when delivery of the Vessel is effected, as stated
above, it being expressly understood that, until such delivery is
effected, the Vessel and equipment thereof, is at the entire risk
of the Builder, including, but not limited to, risks of war,
insurrection and seizure by Government or Authorities, whether
Indian or foreign, and whether at war or at peace.
(15) There is warranty of quality to remain valid for a period of
12 calendar months from the date of actual delivery of the
vessel.
(16) Vide Article 11, for a certain period of delay and default
on the part of the owner the same is liable to the compensated by
payment of interest. Delay and default beyond a certain time
entitles the Builder to rescind the contract whereupon the
Builder shall refund to the owner all the instalments already
paid by the owner to the Builder without any interest thereon.
In this Article nothing is said about the vessel which implies
that the vessel continues to remain with the Builder.
(17) Article 15 entitled property in the vessel reads as
under:-
Article 15 Property in the vessel : Without prejudice to Article
17 hereof, the vessel as constructed and her engines, boilers and
machinery and all materials from time to time intended for her or
appropriated to the Contract whether in the building berth,
fitting out basin, workshop or elsewhere shall immediately after
payment of the first instalment on account of vessel as the work
proceeds, become the property of the Owner and such property
shall be conspicuously marked with the hull number or with other
appropriate markings for identification, as belonging to
vessel/Owner as its property and shall not be within the
ownership or disposition of the Builder. Until the vessel is
completed and delivered the Builder, shall not use or permit to
be used any such part/s, material/s, equipment and machinery so
allocated to the vessel for any other vessel. The Owner to the
extent of payment made by him will have a right to mortgage his
interest in materials mentioned above to Indian Government,
Lender and/or Shipping Development Fund Committee for loans taken
by Owner and formalities as required by Lender/Owner shall be
completed by the Builder. But the Builder at all times shall
have a lien on the above-mentioned property fcr any unpaid
portion of the price. All materials and other things
appropriated but not used for the purpose of this Contract shall
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after completion of the vessel become the property of Builder.
(18) Vide Article 16, in the event of the Builder defaulting in
the construction of the vessel, the owner may at his option and
after due notice :-
take possession of the vessel in her then state and of all
engines, boilers and machinery and all materials intended for her
as before mentioned and to complete the vessel, engines, boilers
and machinery. For this purpose the Owner shall have power to
enter into any contract with other Builders or manufacturers, and
to use the Yard or Yards; Workshops, Machinery and tools of the
Builders or such other Builders or manufacturers with whom the
Builders may have entered Sub-contracts, and costs directly
incurred by the Owners by the exercise of any of the powers
vested under this clause shall be deducted from the contracted
price then remaining unpaid is sufficient, and if not sufficient,
shall be made good by the Builders.
(19) Article 17 provides that the vessel shall be at the risk and
expense of the Builder until handed over and accepted by the
owner and until then so far the interest of the owner is
concerned the Builder shall keep her insured at its own cost for
all Builders risks under a policy or policies taken out in the
joint names of the Builder and the owner. The same clause
further provides :-
If, before delivery to the Owner, the Vessel (including the
engines, boilers, appurtenances or materials intended for her)
hull sustain damage not amounting to total or constructive or
compromised total loss, this Contract shall not be invalidated in
any way. But such damage shall be made good by the Builder as
speedily as may be reasonably expected having regard to all the
circumstances to the satisfaction of the Classification Society
and the reasonable satisfaction of the Owners authorised
representative or representatives. The Insurance moneys
recoverable in respect of such damage shall be applied by the
Builder to such reinstatement of the Vessel. The Owner shall not
on account of the said damage or repair be entitled to object to
the Vessel, engines, boilers, material or equipment or to make
any claim for any alleged consequential loss or depreciation.
If due to any cause the Vessel before delivery to the Owner shall
be destroyed or lost or so damaged as to become or to be deemed
to become at any time a total or constructive, arranged or
compromised total loss the Builder shall refund to the Owner the
instalments of the Contract Price if any; plus interest at the
rate of 5 per cent per annum from the date of payment of monies
by the Owner to the Builder out of monies payable by the
Underwriters under the insurance effected with them in terms of
this Contract. Every amount of the instalment, shall be endorsed
on the policy/policies and such endorsement shall be sufficient
authority to the Underwriters, to pay to the Owner the amount of
such instalments plus interest. On payment of such instalments
by the Underwriters to the Owner, the Owner shall have no further
right or claim on the Builder in respect of this Contract and the
Contract in respect of the particular Vessel or Vessels shall be
deemed to have ended in all respects. The remaining amounts
received from the Underwriters shall be retained by the Builder.
The decision of the Underwriters as to whether the Vessel is a
total or constructive, arranged or compromised total loss shall
be binding upon the parties to this Agreement.
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Even if the recovery of the claim for loss, damage or destruction
of the ship cannot be made from the insurers in terms of
insurance policies either because the risks are not insured or
for any reason whatsoever the Builder shall refund to the Owner
the amounts of instalments paid by the Owner together with
interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum form the dates of
payments of monies by the Owner to the Builder.
We will shortly revert back to analysing the above-said terms and
conditions of the contract and in between try to find out the
tests which would enable determination of the nature of the
transactions covered by such contracts. The distinction between
contract of sale and contract for work and labour has been so
stated in Halsburys Laws of England (Fourth Edition, Vol.41,
para 603) :-
Contract of sale distinguished from contract for work and labour.
A contract of sale of goods must be distinguished from a contract
for work and labour. The distinction is often a fine one. A
contract of sale is a contract the main object of which is the
transfer of the property in, and the delivery of the possession
of, a chattel as such to the buyer. Where the main object of
work undertaken by the payee of the price is not the transfer of
a chattel as such, the contract is one for work and labour. The
test is whether or not the work and labour bestowed end in
anything that can properly become the subject of sale. Neither
the ownership of the materials, nor the value of the skill and
labour as compared with the value of the materials, is
conclusive, although such matters may be taken into consideration
in determining in the circumstances of a particular case whether
the contract is in substance one for work and labour or one for
the sale of a chattel.
In Benjamins Sale of Goods (Fourth Edition) it is stated that it
is sometimes extremely difficult to decide whether a particular
agreement is more popularly described as a contract of sale of
goods, or a contract for the performance of work or services to
which the supply of materials or some other goods is incidental.
The learned author sums up the test for distinction in the
following words (vide para 1.042) :-
Where the parties have not settled the question by the form of
their contract, the decision whether the bargain is one for the
performance of work or the sale of a chattel must be made by the
court. It is now well established that the court does so by
having regard to the substance of the contract - a test which
assumes that every contract must be in substance one or the
other. This is a legitimate inquiry where the supply of the
goods and the performance of the work are, to some extent at
least, separate elements in the bargain; but it breaks down in
the case where all the work goes into the making of the goods to
be supplied, so that the two are inseparable. This point has
unfortunately not been appreciated. In the former type of
contract, the determination of the substance is a matter of
degree, involving an assessment of the relative importance of the
two elements; but in the latter type the designation of the
contract as one of work or sale must depend upon either an
arbitrary formula or a superficial impression.
The same learned author discusses the following types of
contracts :-
1. Chattel to be affixed to land or another chattel. Where work
is to be done on the land of the employer or on a chattel
belonging to him, which involves the use or affixing of materials
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belonging to the person employed, the contract will ordinarily be
one for work and materials, the property in the latter passing to
the employer by accession and not under any contract of sale.
2. Materials supplied wholly or principally by employer. Where
an article is to be manufactured, and all the materials are
supplied by the person for whom the work is to be done, it is
obvious that there can be no sale unless there is a specific
transfer of the materials followed by a repurchase of the
product. Where each party provides some of the materials or
components, the task of the court is to determine which of them
has supplied the principal materials; it then follows that the
materials supplied by the other vest by accession in the owner of
the principal materials.
3. Services independent of creation or furnishing of product.
Where work or skill is involved over and above what goes into the
making of the goods delivered, it is possible and often correct
to view the contract as substantially one for work or services.
A doctor or veterinary surgeon who supplies medicines does so as
an incident to a contract for professional services, which
include diagnosis and advice over and above any work in the
making up of the medicine. In contrast, a chemist who makes up a
prescription sells it, since his work and skill goes entirely
into the product- it is simply a component reflected in the price
of the goods.
4. Work wholly a component of article produced. The most
difficult type of contract remains to be discussed. In this case
the whole of the work or skill involved goes into the creation of
the product which is ultimately delivered in performance of the
contract: for example, a contract to make a suit of clothing or
to build a ship. The work or skill is here a component - perhaps
the most important - of the thing produced, but is a component
and nothing more. It is not logical to ask whether in such a
case the parties contracted primarily or substantially for the
performance of work or for the transfer of a chattel: they
contracted for both. In Clay v. Yates Pollock C.B. suggested
that the court should ask whether it was the work or the
materials supplied that was of the essence of the contract, a
question to be determined by comparing the importance, though not
perhaps necessarily the value, of the two items.
Pollock & Mulla on Sale of Goods Act (1990, Fifth Edition, at
page 53) lay down the test for distinction as under:-
Generally a contract to make a chattel and deliver it, when made,
is a contract of sale, but not always. The test would seem to be
whether the thing to be delivered has any individual existence
before delivery as the sole property of the party who is to
deliver it.
The learned authors have thereafter noted by way of illustrations
several decided cases to notice how the principle has played with
several courts in its actual application and then drawn the
following deduction from the decided cases:-
It will be observed that in the cases where there is no sale
there is never a moment when the thing produced is as a whole the
makers absolute property, notwithstanding that part, or even the
whole, of the materials may have been his property, whereas in
the other case he might, if he found it possible and profitable,
and if not restrained by patent, copyright or any other similar
branch of laws, make in duplicate or in greater numbers chattels
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of the kind ordered, appropriate one at his will to fulfil the
special contract, and sell the others to other persons (s).
A number of authorities were cited at the Bar during the course
of hearing. It would suffice for our purpose to notice only a
few of them, namely, Patnaik and Company Vs. The State of Orissa
- 1965 (16) STC 364, The State of Gujarat Vs. Kailash
Engineering Co. (Pvt.) Ltd. - 1967 (19) STC 13, State of
Gujarat (Commissioner of Sales Tax, Ahmedabad) Vs. Variety Body
Builders - 1976 (38) STC 176, Union of India Vs. The Central
India Machinery Manufacturing Co.Ltd. and Ors. - 1977 (40) STC
246, Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering Company Pvt. Ltd.
Vs. The Commissioner of Sales Tax - 1978 (42) STC 409, Hindustan
Aeronautics Limited Vs. The State of Orissa - 1984 (55) STC 327.
The principles deducible from the several decided cases may be
summed up as under:-
1. It is difficult to lay down any rule or inflexible rule
applicable alike to all transactions so as to distinguish between
a contract for sale and a contract for work and labour.
2. Transfer of property of goods for a price is the linchpin of
the definition of sale. Whether a particular contract is one of
sale of goods or for work and labour depends upon the main object
of the parties found out from an overview of the terms of the
contract, the circumstances of the transactions and the custom of
the trade. It is the substance of the contract document/s, and
not merely the form, which has to be looked into. The Court may
form an opinion that the contract is one whose main object is
transfer of property in a chattel as a chattel to the buyer,
though some work may be required to be done under the contract as
ancillary or incidental to the sale, then it is a sale. If the
primary object of the contract is the carrying out of work by
bestowal of labour and services and materials are incidentally
used in execution of such work then the contract is one for work
and labour.
3. If the thing to be delivered has any individual existence
before the delivery as the sole property of the party who is to
deliver it, then it is a sale. If A may transfer property for a
price in a thing in which B had no previous property then the
contract is a contract for sale. On the other hand where the
main object of work undertaken by the payee of the price is not
the transfer of a chattel qua chattel, the contract is one for
work and labour.
(4) The bulk of material used in construction belongs to the
manufacturer who sells the end product for a price, then it is a
strong pointer to a conclusion that the contract is in substance
one for the sale of goods and not one for work and labour.
However, the test is not decisive. It is not the bulk of the
material alone but the relative importance of the material qua
the work, skill and labour of the payee which have to be weighed.
If the major component of the end product is the material
consumed in producing the chattel to be delivered and the skill
and labour are employed for converting the main components into
the end products, the skill and labour are only incidentally used
and hence the delivery of the end product by the seller to the
buyer would constitute a sale. On the other hand if the main
object of the contract is to avail the skill and labour of the
seller though some material or components may be incidentally
used during the process of the end product being brought into
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existence by the investment of skill and labour of the supplier,
the transaction would be a contract for work and labour.
There may be three categories of contracts: (i) The contract may
be for work to be done for remuneration and for supply of
materials used in the execution of the work for a price; (ii) It
may be a contract for work in which the use of the materials is
accessory or incidental to the execution of the work; and (iii)
It may be a contract for supply of goods where some work is
required to be done as incidental to the sale. The first
contract is a composite contract consisting of two contracts one
of which is for the sale of goods and the other is for work and
labour. The second is clearly a contract for work and labour not
involving sale of goods. The third is a contract for sale where
the goods are sold as chattels and the work done is merely
incidental to the sale.
Two simple illustrations may be given to demonstrate
applicability of the above-said principles. A customer goes to a
tailoring shop accompanied by a suit length in his hands and
entrusts the same to the tailor for stitching a suit for him as
per his measurements. The tailor by devoting his skill and
labour stitches the suit and delivers the same to the customer.
In this process the tailor utilises lining, buttons and threads
of his own. The transaction would remain a contract for work and
labour. The stitched suit delivered by the tailor to the
customer is not a sale. It would not make any difference if the
customer would have selected a piece of cloth of his own choice
for a price to be paid or paid and having purchased the suit
length left it with the tailor for being stitched into a suit.
The property in the suit length had passed to the customer and
physical possession over the suit length by the tailor thereafter
was merely that of a bailee entrusted with the suit length.
However, if the tailor promises to stitch and deliver the suit
for a price agreed upon, investing his own cloth and stitching
materials such as lining, buttons and threads, and utilising his
own skill and labour then though the customer might have chosen
the piece of cloth as per his own liking as to the texture,
colour and qualilty and given his own instructions in the matter
of style, the transaction would remain a contract for sale of
goods, that is, a stitched suit piece in as much as the object of
the contract was to transfer property in the stitched suit piece
alongwith delivery of the suit by the tailor to the customer, all
investments, whether of material or of skill and labour having
been made by the tailor incidental to the fulfillment of the
contract. Yet another illustration is provided by Benjamin
(ibid, para 1.046). A doctor or veterinary surgeon who supplies
medicines does so as an incident to a contract for professional
services, which include diagnosis and advice over and above any
work in the making up of the medicine. In contrast, a chemist
who makes up a prescription sells it, since his work and skill
goes entirely into the product - it is simply a component
reflected in the price of the goods. Benjamin concludes - Where
work or skill is involved over and above what goes into the
making of the goods delivered, it is possible and often correct
to view the contract as substantially one for work or
services. In our opinion a reverse case would be one of sale.
Benjamin gives yet another illustration. A meal supplied to a
customer in a restaurant is a sale of goods, the element of
service being subsidiary; but a meal supplied to a lodger or a
resident hotel guest is part of a contract for services.
Patnaik & Co.s case (supra) is a Constitution Bench decision.
The appellant entered into a contract with the State of Orissa
for the construction of bus bodies on the chassis supplied by the
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State. On an interpretation of the terms of the contract this
Court by a majority of 4:1 concluded that the bus body built by
the appellant passed to the Government as moveable. It did not
make any difference that the process of manufacture was
supervised by purchaser. The contract was held to be a contract
for sale of goods.
In Sentinel Rolling Shutters & Engineering Companys case
(supra), the assessee carried on business as engineers,
contractors, manufacturers and fabricators. It entered into a
contract for fabrication, supply, erection and installation of
two rolling shutters in two sheds belonging to the customer for a
price which was inclusive of charges for erection at site.
Once the goods were delivered, rejection claim were not to be
entertained. All masonry works required before and/or after
erection was to be carried out by the assessee. Payments were to
be made on overall measurements to be checked by the customer
after installation. This Court held that the erection and
installation of rolling shutters was as much the fundamental part
of the contract as the fabrication and supply. The contract was
held to be a contract for work and labour and not a contract for
sale.
In CIMMCOs case (supra) this Court emphasised the need of
looking into the substance and not merely the format of the
contract. Reading the terms and conditions of the contract
before it as a whole this Court concluded that the property in
the materials procured or purchased by the company against 90%
bill of which advance was taken from the railways did not, before
their use in the construction of the wagons, pass to the
railways. With an exception of a relatively small portion of the
components supplied by the railways, the entire wagon including
the material at the time of its completion and delivery was the
property of the company. It was held that the wagons were sold
for a price and the contract was a contract for the sale of
wagons and not a work contract.
In Kailash Engineering Co. (Pvt.) Ltd.s case (supra) and
Variety Body Builders case (supra), bodies were built for the
railways on the underframes supplied by the railways. Upon
analysing the terms and conditions of the contract this Court
concluded that the assessee was not the owner of the ready
coaches and the property in the bodies vested in the railways
even during the process of construction and therefore the
transaction was a works contract not involving any sale.
In Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd.s case, the assessee HAL was to
manufacture MIG engines on behalf of the Government of India for
which the latter had obtained a licence from the U.S.S.R.. For
the imports made from U.S.S.R., all payments under the agreement
were made by HAL on behalf of the Government of India. The
materials imported by HAL, stocks and stores, work-in-progress
etc., were the property of the Air Force. The bills drawn by HAL
against the Government of India indicated a break-up of the
material cost, labour cost and sundry direct charges and further
profit at a percentage. This Court held that at no point of time
before the delivery of MIG engines HAL was the owner of the
property, either in the equipment or in the spares or in the
aircrafts and as such there could not have been any transfer of
property from HAL to the Government of India. The transaction
was held to be a works contract.
Reverting back to the facts of the contract under consideration
before us, a few prominent features of the transaction are
clearly deducible from the several terms and conditions and
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recitals of the contract. The contract is for sale of a
completely manufactured ship to be delivered after successful
trials in all respects and to the satisfaction of the buyer. It
is a contract for sale of made to order goods, that is, ship
for an ascertained price. Although the plans and specifications
for the ship are to be provided by the customer and the work has
to progress under the supervision of the classification surveyor
and representative of the buyer, but the components used in
building ship, all belong to the appellant The price fixed is of
the vessel completely built up although the payment is in a
phased manner or, in other words, at certain percentages
commensurate with the progress of the work. The payment of 15%
of the price is to be made on satisfactory completion of the dock
trials, that is when the vessel is ready to be delivered and
strictly speaking excepting the delivery nothing substantial
remains to be done. 20% of the price is to be paid upon delivery
of the vessel. Thus 65% of the price paid before the trials is
intended to finance the builder and to share a part of the burden
involved in the investments made by the builder towards building
the ship. It is a sort of an advance payment of price. The
title and risk clause quoted as sub-para 14 above is to be
found in 6 out of 8 contracts in question. So far as these 6
contracts are concerned they leave no manner of doubt that
property in goods passes from seller to the buyer only on the
ship having been built fully and delivered to the buyer. In all
the contracts the ultimate conclusion would remain the same. The
ship at the time of delivery has to be a completely built up ship
and also seaworthy whereupon only the owner may accept the
delivery. A full reading of the contract shows that the chattel
comes into existence as a chattel in a deliverable state by
investment of components and labour by the seller and property in
chattel passes to the buyer on delivery of chattel being accepted
by the buyer. Article 15 apparently speaks of property in vessel
passing to the buyer with the payment of first instalment of
price but we are not to be guided by the face value of the
language employed; we have to ascertain intention of the
parties. The property in machines, equipments, engine etc.
purchased by the seller is not agreed upon to pass to the buyer.
The delivery of the ship must be preceded by trial run or runs to
the satisfaction of the owner. All the machinery, materials,
equipment, appurtenances, spare-parts and outfit required for the
construction of the vessel are to be purchased by the builder out
of its own funds. Neither any of the said things nor the hull is
provided by the owner and in none of these the property vests in
the owner. It is not a case where the builder is utilising in
building the ship, the machinery, equipment, spares and material
etc. belonging to the owner, whosoever might have paid for the
same. The builder has thereafter to exert and invest its own
skill and labour to build the ship. Not only the owner does not
supply or make available any of the said things or the hull of
the ship the owner does not also pay for any of the said things
or the hull separately. All the things so made available by the
builder are fastened to the hull belonging to the builder and
become part of it so as to make a vessel. What the owner pays to
the builder in instalments and in a phased manner are all
payments at the specified percentage which go towards the payment
of the contract price i.e. the price appointed for the vessel as
a whole. 65 per cent payment of the price is up to the stage of
the main engine having been lowered in position on board the
vessel i.e. the stage by which the building of the vessel is
complete. 15 per cent payment is to be done on satisfactory
completion of the trial and 20 per cent upon delivery of the
vessel. Giving maximum benefit in the matter of construction and
interpretation of this clause in favour of the appellant it can
be said that it is the property in vessel which starts passing
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gradually to the buyer proportionately with the percentage of
payments made and passes fully with the payment of last
instalment on delivery of vessel having been accepted.
In Reid v. Macbeth [1904] A.C. 223 where a contract for the
construction of a ship provided that the vessel, as she is
constructed and all materials from time to time intended for her
[wherever situated] shall immediately as the same proceeds become
the property of the purchasers, the House of Lords held as a
matter of construction that various iron and steel plates lying
in railway stations, which had been passed by the Lloyds
surveryor and which had been marked with their proposed position
in the ship, were still the property of the seller as they had
not yet become part of the ships structure. (see Benjamin,
ibid, para 5.093).
The marking of hull number on machines, equipments etc. achieves
the object of the same being kept available for use in the ship
concerned so as not to hamper the progress of work for want of
material or the available material having been utilised for
construction of some other ship. Such of the things as are left
unused automatically revert back to the seller. In fact, except
on paper, they were not at all appropriated by the buyer. The
payments made by buyer are not towards any components but towards
the vessel which is yet to come in existence. The built up
vessel, if the contract may fail, is available to be sold to some
one else by the seller. The comparative importance is more of
the hull, machine, equipments, engine, etc. then that of the
labour. Present one is not a case where the materials used are
insignificant or secondary or have been used just incidental to
the skill and labour bestowed.
In the event of the owner committing a default in honouring the
schedule of payment and the belated payment accompanied by
payment of interest not wiping out the default of the owner, the
vessel continues with the builder and the builder may rescind the
contract. All that the builder is required to do is to refund
the instalments already paid by the owner to the builder without
any interest thereon.
Clauses 15, 16 and 17 of the contract confuse the issue to some
extent because of the phraseology employed in drafting these
clauses. Article 15 provides the property in the vessel vesting
in the owner simultaneously with the payment of the first
instalment and the ownership or disposition of the builder
ceasing therewith. The owner also becomes entitled to mortgage
his interest in the vessel to the extent of the payments made by
him. However, the same clause goes on to say that such passing
of the property is subject to Article 17 of the contract and also
subject to the lien of the builder for the unpaid portion of the
price. If the builder may commit a default in fulfilling his
obligations under the contract the owner may take possession of
the vessel in the State in which she is and have the remaining
building of the vessel completed elsewhere out of the price
remaining unpaid and the deficiency, if any, shall be made good
by the builder. Vide Article 17, the insurance cover is to be
obtained by the builder, the policy or policies being taken out
in the joint names of the builder and the owner. What is
pertinent to note is that the loss or damage, if any, occasioned
to the vessel before delivery to the owner is to be suffered by
the builder which would not have been so if the property in the
vessel had already stood passed to the owner. It is the
obligation of the builder to make the loss or destruction good
for which purpose the builder may reimburse itself by claim under
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the policy. In the event of destruction of the vessel the loss
though responsibility of the builder may be partly or fully
satisfied to the owner by refunding the amount of the instalments
of the contract price plus interest at the rate of 5 per cent per
annum for which purpose the builder has to make necessary
endorsements on the policy and the owner may directly receive
payments from the insurer. This clause also shows that interest
of the owner is only to the extent of the percentage of the
contract price paid by the owner to the builder. Else the loss
has to be borne by the builder. The High Court has observed, and
in our opinion rightly, that Article 15 is a piece of artistic
drafting. Though it is said that the things mentioned therein
become the property of the owner simultaneously with the first
payment of the instalment, other clauses of the contract
generally, and Articles 16 and 17 immediately, go to show that
for all practical purposes the property in the vessel, continues
to remain with the builder and passes to the owner only (i) on
satisfactory completion of the work, (ii) the vessel coming into
existence in a deliverable state, and (iii) satisfaction of the
owner as to the vessel being seaworthy also having been built up
to the satisfaction of the owner in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the contract. It is not the meaning of an
individual recital or the inference flowing from any term or
condition of the contract read in isolation but an overview of
the contract wherefrom the nature of the transaction covered
thereby has to be determined.
The recitals of the contract may also be read in the light of the
few provisions of Chapter III of The Sale of Goods Act. In a
contract for the sale of specific or ascertained goods the
property in them is transferred to the buyer at such time as the
parties to the contract intend it to be transferred. Sections 20
to 24 contain rules for ascertaining the intention of the parties
in this regard. When something remains to be done on the date of
the contract to bring the specific goods in a deliverable state
the property does not pass until such thing is done and brought
to the notice of the buyer. The risk in such case remains with
the seller so long as the property therein is not transferred to
the buyer though the delivery may be delayed.
For all the foregoing reasons we are of the opinion that the High
Court and the Tribunal have not erred in taking the view which
they have done. The contracts in question involve sale of the
respective vessels within the meaning of clause (n) of the Andhra
Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 and are not merely works
contract as defined in clause (t) thereof. The transactions have
rightly been held exigible to sales tax.
The appeals are devoid of merit. They are held liable to be
dismissed and are dismissed accordingly. In view of purely legal
controversy arising for decision it is directed that the costs
shall be borne as incurred.