Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MARTAND DAIRY & FARM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/04/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1492 1975 SCR 265
1975 SCC (4) 313
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC 611 (7)
RF 1992 SC 224 (11)
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act 1956-"Sealed Container"-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
A notification issued under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956
allowed exemption to, among others, cream but excluding
"products sold in sealed containers". The appellant sends
cream to Calcutta in sealed container& The sales tax
authorities held that the sales were of cream, that they
were interstate sales but that the exemption extended by the
notification could not be enjoyed by the assessee since he
fell within the area of exclusion contained in the exemption
notification.
The High Court rejected the writ petition of the appellant.
On appeal to this Court it was contended that the containers
were used for bulk mission, that sealing was for preventing
abuse on the way or to avoid pilferage and that the emphasis
should be on the "cream" and the container had no relevance
in the context.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: It is not forthe Court to launch on obscure fiscal
astrology but merely to construe whathas been expressed
in plain words. "Sealed container" merely means acontainer
which is "so closed that access to the contents is
impossible without breaking the fastening. The expression
seal in this context does not involve affixture of the seal
of the seller such as impressing a signet in wax etc., as
evidence or guarantee of authenticity. An article may be
regarded as put in sealed containers if it is closed
securely in any vessel or container by any kind of fastening
or covering that must be broken before access can be
obtained to what is packed inside. This is the popular,
perhaps the literal, meaning of the expressions used in the
notification. Maybe the State thought that sealed
containers would be used only by big manufacturers who were
able to bear the burden of tax; maybe administrative
convenience in assessing quantities sold induced this step.
[269B-D]
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Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P., v. G. G. Industries; 21
S.T.C. 63 followed.
Govindram Ramprasad v. Assessing Authority (Sales Tax) 8
S.T.C. 407, held inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1623 and
1624 of 1971.
From the Judgment add Order dated the 13th October, 1970 of
the Allahabad High Court in O.M. Writ Petition No. 55 and 56
of 1970.
S. T. Desai, Naunit Lal and Miss Lalita Kohli for the
appellant.
G. L. Sanghi, Girish Chandra and R. N. Sachthey for
respondent No. 1.
S. C. Manchanda and O. P. Rana for Respondents Nos. 2-4.
266
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-Mr. S. T. Desai, counsel for the appellants
in both the appeals, correctly assured us that the facts are
not in dispute, although the legal inference bearing on
taxability is very much in controversy.
The appellant, who has arrived in this Court by certificate
under Art. 133(1) (a) of the Constitution, urges before us
that he is not liable to sales tax under the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956 (LXXIV of 1956) (for short, the Act) sought to
be levied from him: Admittedly the appellant is a leading
dairy of Benaras and has been sending cream to Calcutta for
being converted into butter or ghee. The long journey
involved and the considerable quantities despatched
necessarily called for protective receptacles during
transport. So the cream used to be carefully sent in
canisters whose lids were sealed by the seller. The
Calcutta buyers received the cream and paid for it on the
basis of the ghee/butter recovered from the cream supplied.
Although there was some controversy even on the facts,
counsel on both sides proceeded on the factual findings
recorded by the Judge (Revisions) who held that the sales
were of cream, that they we’re inter-State sales and that
the exemption extended by Government notification under the
Act for cream could not be enjoyed by the assessee as he
fell within the area of exclusion contained in the exemption
notification. It is appropriate at this stage to reproduce
the notification, dated May 10, 1956, under which the
exemption is claimed. It reads :
"No. ST-3506/X D/10-5-56
Exemption has been allowed to
Milk and Milk products such as Chhena, Dahi,
kha, Butter and Cream but excluding (i)
products sold in sealed containers (ii) sweet-
meats and (iii) ghee."
This in general terms cream is exempted from payment of
Central Sales Tax by virtue of this notification but it
carves out an exception to the exemption. If the cream were
’sold in sealed containers’ the seller could not come within
the exemption notification. We need not go into the
technique of sealing adopted in this case since it is common
ground now that the cream is put in containers whose lids
are properly soldered. The short question is whether cream
sold in soldered containers in the circumstances set out
above can be described appropriately as ’products sold in
sealed containers’.
Fascinated we were by the imaginative and realistic
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picturisation of the expression ’products sold in sealed
containers’ projected by Shri S. T. Desai, counsel for the
assessee-appellant but, on further reflection, we veered
round to the view presented by Sri Sanghi, for the State,
that after all law is not always logic and taxation
considerations may stem from administrative experience and
other factors of life and not artistic visualisation or neat
logic and so the literal, though pedestrian, interpretation
must prevail.
267
The High Court has negatived the plea of the assessee and
since we are inclined to agree with its reasoning, we
express our grounds only briefly, although we may, in
passing, make reference to two decisions cited, before us,
viz., Govindram Ramprasad v. Assessing Authority (Sales Tax)
(1) and Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. v. G. G.
Industries(2). Govindram(1)-a decision of the Madhya Pra-
desh High Court-is not germane to the question we are
dealing with and therefore we need not discuss it. The
latter-The Commissioner of Sates Tax, U.P.(2)--We shall
discuss as it in some measure, governs the issue before us.
The assessee’s main contention is that cream sold in sealed
containers must bear a ’market’ meaning, if we may say so,
and not be, taken literally. What Shri Desai urges is that
there are many articles which the consumers buy on the
strength of the image projected before them in their packed
state. For instance, a well-secured box of chocolates, car-
ton of dried fruits or a tin of coffee put out with well-
known makings, a sealed bottle of whisky gold in such manner
that its quality, quantity and genuineness are easily
acceptable--these, going by the consumers’ habit of looking
for articles properly packed or tinned and acquiring a
special value as a unit of consumer commodity, may
legitimately be described as items ’sold in sealed
containers’. If we consult our housewives or our village
vendors, there is no doubt that these illustrations may be
borne out as apt and may even be supplement by other like
instances. A thing is bought loose for a price by a buyer
on certain assumptions. But a securely packed or properly
sealed commodity sold by a well-known manufacturer is
purchased by the consumer based on a sort of flavoured
considerations. The assessee’s case is that here no cream
in sealed containers as a unit with an individuality is
sold. On the other hand cream qua cream is bargained for
and despatched. The canister is used because, ex necessitae
large quantities of cream cannot be transported over
distances without being put in some container and its
leakage and spoilage can be prevented only by soldering or
scaling. Items sold in containers are usually so sold for
two reasons : (i) for easy consumption by the retail
consumer who, by mere sight, is able to distinguish the
particular ’patented brand, and picks it off the counter ;
(ii) to prevent adulteration or mixing with spurious stuff.
In the instant case the containers used are for bulk
transmission--like tea chests-and scaling is for preventing
abuse on the way or pilferage. And soldering is a sure
method of sealing. Further, if the item were not a liquid
like cream, but a solid, it could be transported even in
gunny bags-merely stitched and d without any seal. If this
view be sound, certainly the Benaras cream dealer is out of
the liability zone. We do not examine the impact on
taxability had the receptacles been returned by the buyer
since it does not arise on the evidence.
Shri Desai further drew our attention to the fact that the
containers had no particular design nor did they bear any
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special marks or have a uniform size. Thus the sealed
container bad no connection with
(1) 8 S.T.C. 407.
(2) 21 S.T.C. 63.
268
the bargain or the stuff sold. The emphasis was on the
cream and the container had no pertinence in the context.
In this connection, he also referred to s. 8 of the Act
which refers to containers and packing material. There is
force in the argument, certainly. But, as indicated,
judicial adventure in interpretation-particularly in tax
matters,-is severely circumscribed, Mr. Desai posed the
question whether sale in loose quantities and unsealed
containers (in this very case, cream also been sold in milk
cans which were not sealed and had been granted tax
exemption) made any difference from similar sates in old
kerosene tins, the soldering being no sin which attached
tax guilt. Not that we are oblivious to the force of this
argument, but we are influenced by the words whose normal
meaning should ordinarily guide interpretation. All that
the notification states is that products sold in sealed
containers must sail out of the harbour of exemption. The
simple question is this : Was the sale, of cream ? Yes. Was
it, when sold, packaged in containers which were sealed ?
Yes. On these two affirmative answers the exclusion from
the exemption operates. Such is the contention put forward
on behalf of the taxing authority by Shri Sanghi, learned
counsel.
In this connection, he drew our attention to Commissioner
of Sales Tax, U.P. (supra). Sikri, J. (as he then was),
speaking for the Court, considered a somewhat similar
question of exemption where sales,-tax dealers in cooked
food ’other than cooked food sold in sealed containers’ were
conferred exemption, on certain conditions. The commodity
there was confectionery sold in sealed containers and the
High Court upheld the assessee’s case with these words
In commercial world in such trades,,
particularly where food materials are
concerned, it would be seen that the name and
reputation of the manufacturer by itself is a
sufficient evidence or guarantee of the
quality of the contents. The most usual form
or method for furnishing such evidence or gua-
rantee of the quality and quantity of the
contents is by way of putting its seal ’by the
manufacturer in order to secure the goods in
the container in such manner that to have
access to the contents of the container the
seal so put has to be destroyed or broken.
For if it were not so done neither the re-
tailer nor the purchaser would be sure whether
the goods inside the container as to their
quality and quantity are the same as
represented and have not been otherwise
adulterated or mixed up by extraneous elements
is hardly necessary to mention that a dealer
carrying on the business of selling sweetmeats
and confectionery on a comparatively smaller
scale would find it uneconomical commercially
to put the stuff sold or to be sold in sealed
containers; it is only a large scale
manufacturer who manufactures and exports the
confectionery, who would need selling the same
in a container, In our opinion, therefore, it
is only that class of dealers carrying on the
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business of sale of confectionery in sealed
containers as explained above who were not
intended to be exempted," from the liability
to pay sales tax on their turnover.
269
On appeal, this Court,. after noticing the plausibility of
the opposite point of view and guessing the possible
administrative and other reasons for the exclusion from
exemption, held :
"Be that as it may, in the context it is
difficult to give to the expression ’scaled
contained a meaning different from the
ordinary dictionary meaning.’
"Sealed container" merely means a container which is "so
closed that access ’to the contents’ is impossible without
breaking the fastening". The expression ’seal’ in this
context does not involve an affixture of the seal of the
seller such as impressing a signet in wax etc., as evidence
or guarantee of authenticity. An article may be regarded as
put in sealed containers if it is closed securely in any
vessel or container by any kind of fastening or covering
that must be broken before access can be obtained to what is
packed inside. This is the popular, perhaps the literal,
meaning of the expressions used in the notification. Maybe
the State thought that sealed containers would be used only
by big manufacturers who were able to bear the burden of
tax; maybe administrative convenience in assessing quanti-
ties sold induced this step. It is not for the Court to
launch on obscure fiscal astrology but merely to construe
what has been expressed in plain words. We should have been
happier if the State had furnished the reasons prompting the
exclusion from the exemption. An intelligent appreciation
of the reason of the rule is an aid to judicial construction
but the State has not been as alert on this score as we
might have wished. Why should a sale, if generally exempt
from tax, being a milk product, forfeit it merely because
the wholesome step of sealing the container and insulating
the food article from contamination, is taken during
transit? But counsel for the State has expressed his
inability to throw light on this aspect or on the reasons
for the policy. Had the State’s counter-affidavit been more
illuminating on these questions, it would have performed a
service to this Court and to the public and rendered the
task of judicial construction simpler.
With these observations, we dismiss the appeals but there
will be no order as to costs in this Court.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
270