Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PYARE LAL MALHOTRA ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/01/1976
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
SHINGAL, P.N.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 800 1976 SCR (2) 168
1976 SCC (1) 834
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC1437 (12)
R 1981 SC1649 (13,14)
R 1982 SC 149 (245)
R 1991 SC 354 (4)
RF 1992 SC 422 (3)
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act-Secs. 14-15-Tamil Nadu Sales Tax
Act Sec. 2(j)- Prohibition against imposing tax at more than
one stage-Whether all categories and sub items of iron and
steel to be treated as one commodity -Words and Phrases-
Meaning of "that is to say."
HEADNOTE:
The respondents are dealers under the Tamil Nadu Sales
Tax Act. Section 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act declares
certain goods enumerated therein of ‘’ special importance in
inter-state trade or commerce. The list of goods given at
serial No. IV reads as under:
(IV) Iron and Steel, that is to say-
(a) pig iron and iron scrap .
(b) iron plates sold in the same form in which
they are directly produced by the rolling
mill;
(c) steel scrap, steel ingots, steel billets,
steel bars and rods,
(d) (i) steel plates
(ii) steel sheets,
(iii) sheet bars and tin bars,
(iv) rolled steel sections, I mill.
(v) tool alloy steel, J
sole in the same from in which they are directly
produced by the rolling mill.
The said clause IV was amended by the Central Sales Tax
Amendment Act, Act 61 of 1972 by which certain more entries
were added.
Section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act provides that
the tax payable under a State Law on sale or purchase of
declared goods shall not be levied at more than one stage.
Respondents used to purchase iron scrap and thereafter
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used to convert them into steel rounds, flats, plates etc.
The scrap was already subject to tax once. The respondents
contended that the entry Iron & Steel was wide enough to -
include scrap as well as the steel rounds, flats, plates,
etc. made out of the scrap which was subject to tax once and
that, therefore, the sale of the steel rounds, flats,
plates, etc., cannot be subjected to tax again under the
Tamil Nadu Sales Tax Act. The High Court accepted the
contention of the respondents.
Allowing an appeal by certificate,
^
HELD: 1. The intention was to consider each sub-item in
clause IV as a separate taxable commodity for purposes of
sales tax. The object was not to lay down that all the
categories or sub-items of goods specified separately were
to be viewed as a single saleable commodity called iron and
steel for purposes j of determining a starting point for a
series of sales. The note against sub division of Clause IV
makes it clear that even each sub-category of a sub-item
retains its identity as a commercially separate item for
purposes of sales tax so long as it retains the sub-
division. [171Gm, 172B-C]
2. The expression ’that is to say’ is employed to make
it clear and fix the meaning of words to be explained or
defined. Such words are not used, as a rule, to amplify a
meaning while removing a possible doubt for which purpose
the word ’includes’ is generally employed. The precise
meaning of the words
169
that is to say’ must vary with the context. The purpose of
the expression in a sales A lax law would be to indicate the
types of goods each of which would constitute separate class
for a series of sales. [172F-H, 173B]
3. The chemical composition of iron and steel cannot
afford a clue to the meaning of iron and steel. Sales Tax
Law taxes sales of goods and is not a taxation on sales of
substance out of which goods are made. We prefer to follow
the more natural and normal interpretation which follows
plainly from the fact of separate specification numbering of
each item. State of Madhya Pradesh v. Hira Lal; (1966) 17
STC 313-315 distinguished. The case cf Devidas applied.
[173C. E-F]
4. It has not been shown to, us that any provision of
the Tamilnadu Sales Tax Act violates section 15 of the
Central Sales Tax Act enacted in accordance with Article
286(3) of the Constitution. Section 2(j) of the Tamil Nadu
Act defines goods and section 4 imposes charge in respect of
tax on declared goods. The Tamilnadu Act borrows clause (IV)
of section 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act. [176 C-H] C
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 58-59
and 880-883 of 1971.
From the Judgment and order dated 10-4-1970 of the
Madras High Court in Writ Petition Nos. 437/67 and 520/68
and Tax Cases Nos. 135-138 of 1970 respectively.
P. Ram Reddy, A. V. Rangam and Miss A. Subhashini, for
the Appellant in C.As. 58-59/71.
Sachin Chandra Chaudhury and Mrs. S. Gopalakrishnan for
Respondent.
Gobind Das. P. H. Parekh and Miss Manju Jetley for the
Intervener (M/s Durga Steel)
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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BEG, J.-The two Civil Appeals Nos. 58-59 of 1971 arise
out of a judgment of a Division Bench of the Madras High
Court dismissing two Writ Petitions filed against notices
issued by a Commercial Tax officer showing institution of
Sales tax assessment proceedings in respect of certain iron
and steel goods for the assessment year 1965-66 in Writ
Petition No. 437 of 1967 and for the assessment year 1966-67
in Writ Petition No. 520 of 1968. The High Court of Madras
had certified the cases as fit for appeal to this Court
under Article 132 and 133(1)(a) and (c) of the Constitution.
Although, the Writ Petitions had been dismissed on the
ground that they involve an investigation into the-question
of fact whether the iron and steel scrap, out of which the
manufactured goods, sought to be subjected to Sales tax, had
been made, were already taxed or not, yet, the State of
Tamil Nadu was aggrieved by the decision of the Madras High
Court holding that the manufactured goods, said to consist
of "steel rounds, flats, angles, plates, bars" or similar
goods in other forms and shapes, could not be taxed again if
the material out of which they were made had already been
subjected to sales’ tax once an iron and steel scrap as both
were "Iron and steel". It was possible to leave the
assessing authorities free to decide all the questions which
they had jurisdiction to consider. But, it appears that the
Madras High Court thought it proper to decide the question
as the Sales’ tax
170
authorities had already adopted the view, in other cases,
that such goods, though covered by the broad genus "Iron and
Steel", were separately taxable commodities because each
kind of "Iron and Steel" goods was a commercially different
and separately taxable species or category. Moreover, this
very question was also before the High Court in regular
revision petitions under the Tamil Nadu Sales Tax Act
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Tamil Nadu Act’).
Civil Appeals Nos. 880-883 of 1971 arise out of four
petitions for revision under the provisions of the Tamil
Nadu Act for the years 1964-65 and 1965-66, which were
allowed by the Madras High Court 4 setting aside assessment
orders by following its judgment and decision mentioned
above given on 24-6-1970 on Writ Petitions Nos. 437 of 1967
and 520 of 1968. The Madras High Court had also granted
Certificates of fitness for appeal to this Court under
Article 132 read " with Article 133(1)(a)(c) in the four
cases before it on revision petitions. Hence, six cases were
connected and heard together by us. The same question of
law, decided by the Madras High Court on grounds contained
in one judgment, under appeal in Civil Appeals Nos. 58-59 of
1971 before this Court, arise in all of them.
All the six cases before us relate to what are known as
"declared goods" under Section 14 of the Central Sales Tax
Act (hereinafter referred to as ’the Central Act’). It was
claimed, on behalf of the r dealers, sought to be assessed
in each case, that, by reason of the restrictions imposed by
Section 15 of the Central Act, the levy of tax under the
Tamil Nadu Act was not permissible.
Section 14 of the Central Act declares certain goods
enumerated there to be "of special importance in inter-State
trade or commerce". The list of goods given there at No.
(iv), as it stood in 1968, was:
"(IV) Iron and Steel, that it to say-
(a) ’pig iron and iron scrap
(b) iron plates sold in the same form in which they
are directly Produced by the rolling mill;
(C) steel scrap, steel ingots, steel billets, steel
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bars and rods;
(d) (i) steel plates
(ii) steel sheets,
(iii) sheet bars and tin bars, sold in the same
form in which they are
(iv) rolled steel sections, directly produced by
the rolling mill;"
(v) tool alloy steel, ,
sole in the same from in which they are directly
produced by the rolling mil;"
By the Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act 61 of 1972, clause
(iv) r was redrafted. It now reads as follows:
"(iv) iron and steel, that is to say-
(i) pig iron and cast iron including ingot,
moulds, bottom plates, iron scrap, cast iron
scrap, runner scrap andiron skull scrap;
(ii) steel semis (ingots, slabs, blooms and
billets of all qualities, shapes and sizes);
(iii)skelp bars, tin bars, sheet bars, heebars and
sleeper bars;
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(iv) steel bars (rounds, rods, squares, flats,
octagone and A hexagone, plain and ribbed or
twister, in coil from as well as straight
lengths):
(v) steel structurals (angles, joints, channels,
tees, sheet piling sections, sections or any
other rolled sections);
(vi) sheets, hoops, strips and skelp, both black
and galvanised, hot and cold rolled, plain
and corrugated, in all qualities, in straight
lengths and in coil form, as rolled and in
rivetted condition;
(vii)plates both plain and chequered in all
qualities;
(viii)discs, rings, forgings and steel castings;
(ix) tool, alloy and special steels of any of the
above categories;
(x) steel melting scrap in all forms including
steel kull, turnings and borings;
(xi) steel cubes, both welded and seamless, of all
diameters and lengths, including tube
fittings;
(xii)tin-plates, both hot dipped and electrolytic
and tin-free plates;
(xiii)fish plate bars, bearing plate bars,
crossing sleeper bars, fish plates, bearing
plates, crossing sleepers and pressed steel
sleepers, rails-heavy and crane rails;
(xiv)wheels, tyres, axles and wheel sets;
(xv) wire rods and wires-rolled, drawn,
galvanised, alumanised, tinned or coated such
as by copper;
(xvi)defectives, rejects, cuttings or end pieces
of any of the above categories";
It will be seen that "Iron and Steel" is now divided
into 16 categories which clearly embrace widely different
commercial commodities, from mere scrap iron and left overs
of processes of manufacturing to "wires" and "wheels, tyres,
axles, and wheel sets". Some of the enumerated items like
"melting scrap" or "tool alloys" and "special steels" could
serve as raw material out of which other goods are made and
others are definitely varieties of manufactured goods. If
the subsequent amendment only clarifies the original
intentions of Parliament, it would appear that heading 4 in
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Section 14, as originally worded, was also meant to
enumerate separately taxable goods and not just to
illustrate what is just one taxable substance, "Iron and
Steel". The G reason given, in the statement of objects and
reasons of the 1972 Act, for an elucidation of the
"definition" of iron and steel, was that the "definition"
had led to varying interpretations by assessing authorities
and the courts so that a comprehensive list of specified
declared iron and steel goods would remove ambiguity. The
Select Committee, which recommended the amendment, called
each specified category "a sub-item" falling under "Iron and
Steer’. Apparently, the intention was to consider each "sub-
item" as a separate taxable commodity for purposes of Sales’
tax. Perhaps some items could overlap, but no difficultly
arises in cases before us due to this feature. As we have
172
pointed out, the statement of reasons for amendment spoke of
Section 14(iv) as a "definition" of "Iron and Steel". A
definition is expected to be exhaustive. Its very terms may,
however, show that it is not meant to be exhaustive. For
example, a purported definition may say that the term sought
to be defined "includes" what it specifies, but, in ‘that
case, the definition itself is not complete.
Although, we have looked at the subsequent amendment of
1972 in order to find an indication of the original
intention, because subsequent history of legislation is not
irrelevant, yet, we think that, even if we confine our
attention to Section 14 as it originally stood at the
relevant time, with which we are concerned in the cases
before us, the object was not to lay down that all the
categories or sub-items of goods, as specified separately
even before the amendment of 1972, were to b viewed as a
single saleable commodity called "Iron and Steel" for
purposes of determining a starting point for a series of
sales. On the other hand, the note against the brackets in
front of the five smaller sub divisions of (d) makes it
clear that even each sub-category of a sub-item retains its
identity as a commercially separate item for purpose of
sales tax so long as it retains the subdivision. The more
natural and normal meaning of such a mode of listing special
or declared kinds of goods seems to us to be that the object
of specification was to enumerate only those categories of
items, each of which was to serve as a new starting point
for a series of sales, which were to be classed as
"declared" goods. If one were to state the meaning in
different words, it would seem to us to be: "Iron and Steel
goods of various types enumerated below".
What we have inferred above also appears to us to be
the significance and effect of the use of words "that is to
say" in accordance with their normal connotation and effect.
Thus, in Stroud’s Judicial Dictionary, 4th Edn. Vol. 5, at
page 2753, we find:
"THAT IS TO SAY. (1) ’That is to say’ is the
commencement of an ancillary clause which explains the
meaning of the principal clause. It has the following
properties: (1) it must not be contrary to the
principal clause: (2) it must neither increase nor
diminish it; (3) but where the principal clause is
general in terms it may restrict it: see this explained
with many examples, Stukeloy v. Butler Hob. 171";
The quotation, given above, from Stroud’s Judicial
Dictionary shows that, ordinarily, the expression "that is
to say" is employed to make clear and fix the meaning of
what is to be explained or defined. Such words are not used,
as a rule, to amplify a meaning while removing a possible
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doubt for which purpose the word "includes" is generally
employed. In unusual cases, depending upon the context of
the words "that is to say", this expression may be followed
by illustrative in stances. In Megh Raj & Anr. v. Allah
Rakhia & Ors.(1) the words "that is to say.", with reference
to a general category "land" were held to introduce "the
most general concept" when followed, inter alia, by the
words: "Rights in or over land." We think that the precise
meaning of the words "that is to say" must vary with the
context, where,
(1) A.I.R. 1947 P.C. 72.
173
as in Megh Raj’s case (supra), the amplitude of legislative
power to enact provisions with regard to "land and rights
over it was meant to be indicated, the expression was given
a wide scope because it came after the word "land" and then
followed "rights over land" as an explanation on "land".
Both were wide classes. The object of using them or
subject-matter of legislation was, obviously, to lay down a
wide power to legislate. But, in the context of single point
sales’ tax, subject to special conditions when imposed on
separate categories of specified goods, the expression was
apparently employed to specifically enumerate separate
categories of goods on a given list. The purpose of such
specification and enumeration in a statute dealing with
sales’ tax at a single point in a series of sales would,
very naturally, be to indicate the types of goods each of
which would constitute at separate class for a series of
sales. Otherwise, the listing itself loses all meaning and
would be without any purpose behind it.
Learned Counsel appearing for an intervener argued that
the chemical position of iron and steel affords a clue to
the meaning of "Iron and Steel" as used in Section 14 of the
Central Act. We are unable to agree that this could be what
Parliament or any legislature would be thinking of when
enumerating items to be taxed as commercial goods. The
ordinary meaning to be assigned to a taxable item in a list
of specified items is that each item so specified is
considered as a separately taxable item for purposes of
single point taxation in a series of sales unless the
contrary is shown. Some confusion has arisen because the
separate items are all listed under one heading "Iron and
Steel".
If the object was to make iron and steel taxable as a
substance, the entry could have been: "Goods of Iron and
Steel." Perhaps even this would not have been clear enough.
The entry to clearly have that meaning would have to be:
"Iron and Steel irrespective of change of form shape or
character of goods made out of them". This is the very
unusual meaning which the respondents would like us to
adopt. If that was the meaning, sales’ tax law itself would
undergo a change from being a law which normally taxes sales
of "goods" to a law which taxes sales of substances out of
which goods are made. We, however, prefer the more natural
and normal interpretation which follows plainly from the
fact of separate specification and numbering of each item.
This means that each item so specified forms a separate
species for each series of sales although they may all
belong to the genus: ’’Iron and Steel." Hence, if iron and
steel "plates" are melted t and converted into "wire" and
then sold in the market, such wire would only be taxable
once so long as it retains its identity as a commercial
goods belonging to the category "wire" made of either iron
or steel. The mere fact that the substance or raw material
out of which it is made has also been taxed in some other
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form, when it was sold as a separate commercial commodity,
would make up difference for purposes of the law of sales’
tax. The object appears to us to be to tax sales of. goods
of each variety and not the sale of the substance. Out of
which they are made.
As we all know, sales’ tax law is intended to tax sales
of different commercial commodities and not to tax the
production or manufacture of particular substances out of
which these commodities may have
174
been made. As soon as separate commercial commodities emerge
or come into existence, they become separately taxable goods
or entities for purposes of sales’ tax. Where commercial
goods, without change of their identity as such goods, are
merely subjected to some processing or finishing or
are‘merely jointed together, they may remain commercially
the same goods which cannot be taxed again, in a series
sales, so long as they retain their identity as goods of a
particular type.
In State of Madhya Bharat v. Hiralal(1) this Court held
that a dealer, who bought some scrap iron locally and
imported some iron plates from outside and then converted
the material into bars, flats and plates, by rolling them in
his mills, and then sold them, was still entitled to
exemption given to iron and steel from sales tax. But, in
that case, the language of the provision giving the
exemption justified this interpretation. The exemption was
given to a sale by either an importer or a purchaser of
"goods prepared from any metal other than gold or silver."
In other words, the question was whether exemption was given
to the substance out of which goods were made. In that .
context, it had become necessary to examine whether the
exemption from sales’ tax was meant for all goods made out
of a particular sub stance, or for goods as separate
commercial commodities. This Court held that the raw
material from which the goods were made was decisive for the
purposes of the exemption given. This Court said (at p 315):
"A comparison of the said two Notifications brings
out the distinction between raw materials of iron and
steel and the goods prepared from iron and steel while
the former is exempted from tax, the latter is taxed.
Therefore, iron and steel used as raw material for
manufacturing other goods are exempted from taxation.
So long as iron and steel continue to be raw materials,
they enjoy the exemption. Scrap iron purchased by the
respondent was merely re-rolled into bars, flats and
plates. They were processed for convenience of sale.
The raw materials were only re-rolled to give them
attractive and acceptable forms. They did not in the
process lose their character as iron and steel. The
dealer sold ’Iron and steel’ in the shape of bars,‘
flats and plates and the customer purchased ’iron and
steel’ in that shape. We, therefore, hold that the
bars, flats and plates sold by the assessee are iron
and steel exempted under the Notification."
The law to be interpreted in Hiralal’s case (supra) was
entirely different. In interpreting it, this Court did
observe that a mere change of the form of a substance
excepted from sales’ tax did not matter. The language of the
notifications involved there made it clear that the
exemption was for the metal used. In the cases before us now
the object of single point taxation is the commercial
commodity and not the sub stance out of which it is made.
each commercial commodity here becomes a separate object of
taxation in series of sales of that commercial commodity so
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long as it retains its identity as that commodity.
We think that the correct rule to apply in the cases
before us is the one laid down by this Court in Devi Dass
Gopal Krishan & Ors. v.
(1) [1966] 17 S.T.C. 313, 315.
175
The State of Punjab & ors.(1) where Subba Rao, C.J.
speaking for a Constitution Bench of this Court, said at
(p. 447).
"Now coming to Civil Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of
1965, the first additional point raised is that when
iron scrap is converted into rolled steel it‘does not
involve the process of manufacture. It is contended
that the said conversion does not involve any process
of manufacture, but the scarp is made into a better
marketable commodity. Before the High Court this
contention was not pressed. That apart, it is clear
that scrap iron ingots undergo a vital change in the
process of manufacture and are converted into a
different commodity, viz, rolled steer sections. During
the process the scarp iron loses its identity and
becomes a new marketable commodity." The process is
certainly one of manufacture.
It is true that the question whether goods to be taxed
have been subjected to a manufacturing process so as to
produce a new market able commodity, is the decisive test in
determining whether an excise duty is leviable or not on
certain goods. No doubt, in the law dealing with the sales
tax, the taxable event is the sale and not the manufacture
of goods. Nevertheless, if the question is whether a new
commercial commodity has come into existence or not, so that
its sale is a new taxable event, in the Sales’ Tax law, it
may also become necessary to consider whether a
manufacturing process, which has altered the identity of the
commercial commodity, has taken place. The law of sale tax
is also concerned with "goods" of various descriptions. It,
therefore, becomes necessary to determine when they cease to
be goods of one taxable description and become those of a
commercially different category and description.
It appears to us that the position has been simplified
by the amendment of the law, as indicated above, so that
each of the categories falling under "Iron and Steel"
constitutes a new species of commercial commodity more
clearly new. It follows that when one commercial commodity
is transformed into another, it becomes a separate commodity
for purposes of sales tax.
We think that the Madras High Court had committed an
error in applying Hiralal’s case (supra) to the decision of
cases now before us which turns really on a correct
interpretation of Section 14 of the Central Act. On the
question now before us, we approve of the reasoning adopted
by a Division Bench of the Punjab High Court in Devgun Iron
& Steel Rolling Mills v. State of PunJab(2).
Section 15 of the Central Act places certain
restrictions and conditions upon State enactments imposing
Sales tax. It says:
Every sales tax law of a State shall, in so for as it
imposes or authorises the imposition of a tax on the sale or
(1) (1967) 20 S.T.C. 430 at 447. (2) (1961) 12 S.T.C.
p. 590
176
purchase of declared goods, be subject to the following
restrictions and conditions, namely:
(a) the tax payable under that law in respect of
any sale or purchase of such goods inside the State
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shall not exceed three per cent of the sale or purchase
price thereof,. and such tax shall not be levied at
more than one stage;
(b) where a tax has been levied under that law in
respect of the sale or purchase inside the State of any
declared goods and such goods are sold in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce, and tax has been
paid under this Act in respect of the sale of such
goods in the course of inter State trade or commerce,
the tax levied under such law shall be reimbursed to
the person making such sale ill the course of inter-
State trade or commerce in-such manner and subject to
such condition as may be provided in any law in force
in that State".
It has not been shown to us that any provision of the
Tamil Nadu Sales Tax Act violates Section 15 of the Central
Act enacted in accordance with Article 266(3) of the
Constitution. Section 3 of the Tamil Nadu Act levies. taxes
on sales and purchases of "goods" as defined in Section 2(j)
of the Act:
"(j) ’goods, means all kinds of movable property
(other than newspapers, actionable claims, stocks and
shares and securities) and includes all materials,
commodities, and articles (including these to be used
in the fitting out, improvement or repair of movable
property), and all growing crops grass or things
attached to, or forming part of, the land which are
agree to be severed before sale or under the contract
of sale,"
Section 4 of the Tamil Nadu Act lays down:
"4. Tax in respect of declared goods.
Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 3, the
tax under this Act shall be payable by a dealer or the
sale or purchase inside the State of declared goods at
the rate and only at the point specified against each
in the Second Schedule on the turn over in such goods
in each year, whatever be the quantum of turnover in
that year".
Item 4 of the second schedule specifies the rates of tax in
accordance with the Central Act. It reproduces Section
14(iv) of the Central Act. On an amendment of Section 14(iv)
of the Central Act, serial No. 4 of the second schedule of
the Tamil Nadu Act was also correspondingly amended so as to
reproduce the sixteen items found in Section 14(iv) of the
Central Act. Hence, the decision of these cases really
depends on an interpretation of Section 14 of the Central
Act which we have already given above. Other provisions only
fortify our conclusion.
177
The result is that we allow these appeals. We set aside
the orders of the High Court and restore the orders of the
assessing authorities in cases giving rise to Civil Appeals
Nos. 880-883 of 1971. In cases but of which Civil Appeals
Nos. 58-59 of 1971 arise, we set aside the judgment of the
High Court but maintain its order dismissing the Writ
Petitions and order that the assessing authorities will now
proceed to determine such question of fact and law as still
survive for determination after the decision given above of
the question considered by us. The parties will bear their
own costs.
P.H.P. Appeals allowed.
178