Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7623 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Balkrishna Hatcheries
RESPONDENT:
Clarification & Advance Ruling Authority
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/09/2006
BENCH:
Ashok Bhan & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
MARKANDEY KATJU, J.
C.A. No. 7623/2005
This appeal has been filed against the impugned Judgment and Final Order of
the Karnataka High Court dated 16.1.2004 in STA No.74 of 2003 under Section
24(1) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act, 1957.
Heard Shri R.F. Nariman, learned Senior counsel for the appellant and Shri
Sanjay R. Hegde, learned counsel for the respondent.
The appellant is engaged in poultry farming. It sells dressed chicken. The
term "dressed" with reference to chicken means chicken which is bled,
scalded, feathered, boned and freezed. The dressed chicken is sold by the
appellant in polythene bags. The polythene bags are closed either by
stapling or by crimping and fastening. Stapling is done by using ordinary
stapler. Crimping and fastening (by twisting an aluminium wire around the
crimped portion) is done by using a crimping machine. The name and address
of the appellant and the description of the contents are printed on the
polythene bag.
Entry 22 of the Fifth Schedule to the Karnataka Sales Tax Act, 1957
(hereinafter referred to as "the Act") exempts from tax "eggs and meat
including flesh of poultry except when sold in sealed containers."
Correspondingly, Entry 8(viii) of Part-F of Second Schedule subjects "meat
and dressed chicken sold in sealed containers" to tax under Section 5(3)(a)
of the Act, at 9% from 1.6.2003.
The appellant contends that only where a container is hermetically sealed,
that is, made airtight and watertight, can it be said to be a sealed
container. Alternatively, it is submitted that ‘sealed container’ is one
where access to the contents cannot be had without breaking the fastening
on the container or the container itself. The appellant alleges that the
staple or crimp wire used for closing the polythene bag in which it sells
the dressed chicken, can be removed by opening the two closed ends of the
staple/crimp wire, without breaking them and without damaging the polythene
bag which can be opened and the dressed chicken can be taken out without
tearing or damaging the plastic bag. It is contended that stapling or
crimping is done only to facilitate easy carrying and to ensure that the
dressed chicken does not slip out of the plastic bag. Stapling or crimping
does not make the polythene bag airtight or watertight. According to the
appellant, when goods are sold in a polythene bag which is merely stapled
or crimped and where the contents can be removed by merely opening the
staple/crimp wire without tearing the polythene bag and without breaking
the staple/crimp wire, the container cannot be considered to be a sealed
container.
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Since the Department was expressing a view that the sale by appellant
attracted sales tax, the appellant made an application to the Authority for
Clarification and Advance Ruling under Section 4 of the Act. The said
Authority after hearing, passed an order dated 22.9.2003 holding that sale
of ‘dressed chicken’ in polythene bags closed by either stapling/crimping
is covered under Entry 8(viii) of Part-F of Second Schedule as it is ‘sale
of dressed chicken in sealed containers.’
The aforesaid order of the Authority was challenged in the appeal under
Section 24(1) before the Karnataka High Court on which the impugned
judgment was given.
The short question in this case is whether dressed chicken when sold in a
polythene bag which is closed by a staple or closed by crimping and
twisting an aluminium wire around the crimp can be considered to be a sale
in a sealed container. If it is sale in a sealed container, it is not
exempt from Sales Tax, but if it is not, it is exempt.
The term ‘sealed container’ was considered by this Court in Commissioner of
Sales Tax, U.P. v. G.G. Industries, 21 (1968) STC 63. The question that
arose for consideration in that case was whether sale of confectionery
(chocolates, lollipops, etc.) packed in tins and card box and closed by the
use of cellophane paper amounted to sale in a sealed container. The
Allahabad High Court held that the sale was not in a sealed container,
accepting the contention of the assessee that the word "sealed" meant
"bearing the impression of a signet in wax etc. as evidence or guarantee of
authenticity, or fastened with a seal so close that access to the contents
is impossible without breaking the fastening." This Court did not agree.
Reversing the decision of the Allahabd High Court, this Court held thus :
"The learned counsel for the Appellant (Department) contends that
the expression ‘sealed container’ means a container which is so
closed that access (to the contents) is impossible without breaking
the ‘fastening’. This is one of the meanings given to the word
‘sealed’ in the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. We are of the
opinion that his contention must be accepted...... There are four
ways of selling confectionery : (1) in sealed tins; (2) in sealed
card boxes or bottles; (3) in non-sealed card boxes or bottles; and
(4) loose. According to the learned counsel for the respondent the
only category which does not enjoy the exemption given by the
notification is the first category, i.e., sale in sealed tins. But
it is difficult to appreciate why the authority issuing the
notification should distinguish between category one and category
two. In the case of a sealed tin it has to be cut; in the case of a
sealed card box, the covering has to be torn. A sealed tin may or
may not be hermetically sealed. Therefore, the fact that a sealed
tin may be air tight and a sealed card box is never really air
tight does not assist us in deciding the point ............ it
seems to us that this packet would fall within the expression
‘sealed container’ occurring in notification."
This Court in The Martand Dairy & Farm v. The Union of India and Ors.,
[1975] 4 SCC 313, held:
"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"..................
In Commissioner of Sales Tax v. National Chikki Mart, 39 (1977) STC 447,
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the Bombay High Court following the decision in G.G. Industries (supra)
held:
"To determine whether a container is sealed or not, it is not
relevant to consider whether to break the covering any instrument
or knife is needed or whether it could be done with bare hands or
fingers. What is really to be considered is whether the contents of
the container could be got at or whether access could be had to
them without in any manner breaking any portion of the cover. It is
not necessary for a container to be a sealed container that to get
access to its contents the container or cover has to be broken by
removing the fastening although it would be the most common method
of opening a sealed container. All that is necessary for a
container to be a sealed container is that access cannot be had to
its contents without breaking the fastening or some portion of the
container."
In Nanjundeswara Mart v. State of Karnataka, 84 (1992) STC 534, a Division
Bench of Karnataka High Court considered whether sale of Instant Idli Mix,
Instant Vada Mix, Instant Gulab Jamoon Mix packed in polythene bags
stitched at the openings were taxable as food packed in sealed containers.
The Karnataka High Court by applying the definition laid down by this Court
in G.G. Industries (Supra) that container which is "so closed that access
(to the contents) is impossible without breaking the fastening is a sealed
container," held that as the bag in which the goods were sold stitched at
the openings, and as it was impossible to have access to the contents
without breaking the fastening, the goods were to be considered as sold in
sealed containers.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the appellant placed strong reliance
on the decision of the Delhi High Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax, Delhi
v. Pop Corn, 49 (1982) STC 336, wherein the decision in G.G. Industries
(Supra) was distinguished. The Delhi High Court considered the question
whether Pop Corn sold in loosely stapled polythene bags can be considered
as sale in sealed containers. Distinguishing the decision in G.G.
Industries (Supra), the Delhi High Court observed thus :
"In the present case, the finding of the Financial Commissioner is
that the stapling was loose. A polythene bag containing pop corns
loosely stapled was produced before us an example of the type of
stapling that had been done by this dealer during the relevant
period. Mr. Chawla, for the Commissioner of Sales Tax, does not
dispute this sample, but submits that normally a person would break
the stapling even in such a case in order to extract the pop corn
easily.
Mr. Chawla may be correct and it is probable that a person greedily
anxious to get at the contents would break the staples to do so,
yet it is possible to get at the pop corn without breaking the
staples.
As such, in the facts and circumstances of this case, we feel that
the stapled polythene bags are not sealed containers, especially as
the Supreme Court in G.G. Industries (1968) 21 STC 63 SC held that
access should be impossible without breaking the fastening."
From a reading of the aforesaid decisions it appears that the law is well
settled that the container is considered to be a sealed container if it is
closed in a manner that it is not possible to access the contents or remove
the contents without breaking either the container or the fastening if it
is closed.
The Karnataka High Court in para 9 of the impugned judgment has observed :
"Breaking the container or breaking the fastening’ does not
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necessarily mean cutting or breaking the container or the fastening
to pieces. ‘Breaking’ refers to parting, dividing, tearing,
rupturing or severing, either wholly or partially, by applying a
strain or force. For Example, a staple which is ‘fastening’ on the
container is ‘broken’ nor only when it is severed or cut into
pieces, but even when the two closed ends are ‘opened’ or ‘parted’
and it is pulled out. Similarly if a crimped bag is closed by
twisting an aluminium wire or by putting an elastic band over the
crimped portion, the removal of such fastening would amount to
breaking the fastening. Anything done to the fastening which has
the effect of undoing the fastening will be ‘breaking the
fastening’."
We regret we are unable to agree with the view taken by the High Court. In
our opinion, undoing cannot amount to breaking. When a staple is applied,
the wire can be removed by straightening the two bent ends without breaking
the wire or tearing the paper. Hence, we cannot agree that undoing the
fastening amounts to breaking the fastening.
If the view of the Karnataka High Court is accepted then logically it will
have to be accepted that every container will be a sealed container if it
is closed in any manner. Such a view obviously cannot be countenanced.
In our opinion in cases of both stapling and crimping the staples and pins
can be removed by the customer without breaking anything. Hence, in view of
the decision of this Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. v. G.G.
Industries, (Supra), it has to be held that the chicken in question is not
sold in sealed containers. We, therefore, agree with the decision taken by
the Delhi High Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax, Delhi v. Pop Corn
(Supra).
For the reasons given above, this appeal is allowed. Impugned judgment of
the Karnataka High Court as well as the order of the Authority for
Clarification and Advance Ruling dated 22.9.2003 under Section 4 of the Act
are set aside and it is held that the ‘dressed chicken’ in question are
exempt from Sales Tax as they are not sold in sealed containers. No costs.
C.A. No. 7624/2005
This appeal has been filed against the impugned judgment of the Karnataka
High Court dated 7.1.2005 in STA No. 12/2004 under Section 24(1) of the
Karnataka Sales Tax Act, 1957.
Heard learned counsel for the parties.
The facts of this case are similar to the facts in C.A. No. 7623/2005 which
we have allowed hereinabove. The only difference is that in the present
case, the ‘dressed chicken’ in polythene bags is closed by a rubber band,
whereas, ‘dressed chicken’ in polythene bags in CA No. 7623/2005 was closed
by stapling or crimping.
For the reasons given in C.A. No. 7623/2005, this appeal is allowed. The
impugned judgment of the Karnataka High Court dated 7.1.2005 as well as the
order of the Authority for Clarification & Advance Ruling dated 5.3.2004
are set aside and it is held that the ‘dressed chicken’ in question are
exempt from sales tax as they are not sold in sealed containers. No costs.