Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHAW WALLACE & CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/03/1976
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1437 1976 SCR (3) 795
1976 SCC (3) 17
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC 879 (28)
ACT:
Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act, 1959-Sec. 3-First
Schedule Entry 21-Fertilizer mixture prepared by mixing
manually some of chemical fertilizers mentioned in Schedule
whether exempted from tax-Whether same marketable-commodity-
Whether manufacturing process of relevant consideration.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant is a registered dealer under the Tamil
Nadu General Sales Tax Act, 1959. The appellant manufactures
and deals in chemical fertilizers. The appellant paid tax
under the Act on certain chemical fertilizers which are
shown as sub items 1 to 16 of Serial No. 21 of the First
Schedule to the Act. The appellant prepared fertilizer
mixtures by dry-mixing various chemical fertilizers which
had already suffered tax. The appellants claimed exemption
for the turnover in respect of fertilizers mixtures on the
ground that it cannot be said to be a commodity different
from the ingredients composing it which had been purchased
within the State and had suffered tax under item No. 21 of
the First Schedule. The Assessing Officer disallowed the
exemption. On appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
allowed the exemption on the ground that no manufacturing
process was involved at the time of preparing the fertilizer
mixture and that the resultant product is not a product
different from the ingredients constituting it which had
already suffered tax.
In an appeal, the Tribunal reversed the decision of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and refused to grant the
exemption. The Revision Application filed by the appellants
to the Tamil Nadu High Court was dismissed at the stage of
admission on the ground that each of the competent article
and the fertilizer mixture have different chemical
properties of their own and their use also is different and
that, therefore, it is not possible to treat the fertilizer
mixture as the same article as the components themselves.
The appellants contended in appeal by special leave
(1) As s. 3(2) of the Act provides for levy of
sales tax in respect of goods mentioned in
the First Schedule at the rate and only at
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the point specified thereunder and as the
fertilizer mixtures are prepared by mixing
manually by means of shovels some of the
chemical fertilizers mentioned in sub items 1
to 15 in Entry 21 in the Schedule without
admixture of any organic manure, they are not
liable to tax inside the State.
(2) Even if such fertilizer bears a specific
commercial name, for the purpose of the Act,
it has no identity except as a chemical
fertilizer and secondly the mixing of one or
more chemical fertilizers cannot but be the
same article entitled to application of
single point scheme in respect of its
ingredients. This is the natural implication
of the expression ’chemical fertilizers’
followed by the expression ’that is to say’.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD : (1) The principal question for determination in
these appeals is whether the fertilizer mixtures in question
can be treated as the same article as chemical fertilizers
composing them. A plain reading of s. 3 read with item 21 of
the First Schedule shows that it is only when a chemical
fertilizer specified in sub items 1 to 15 of item No. 21 of
the First Schedule is sold in the same condition in which it
is purchased that it is not subject to a
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fresh levy. Fertilizer mixture it would be noted is not the
same article as the ingredients composing it. It is sold as
a different commercial product. The question whether there
is any manufacturing process involved in the preparation of
any fertilizer mixture is wholly irrelevant for the present
purpose. [798A G-H, 799A]
(2) The fertilizer mixture is a marketable commodity
different from its components, it is put to different use
and has different properties. [800-G]
State of Tamil Nadu v. Rallis India, 34 S.T.C. 532 and
State of Tamil Nadu v. Pyarelal Malhotra [1976] 3 S.C.R.
168, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELATE JURISDICTION :
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 5-3-74 of the Madras High Court in Tax Cases Nos.
77 and 78/74.
K. S. Ramamurthi and A. T. M. Sampath for the
Appellant.
S. T. Desai, A. V. Rangam and A. Subhashini; for
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JASWANT SINGH, J.-These appeals by special leave from
the common judgment of the Madras High Court dated March 5,
1974, in Tax Cases Nos. 77 and 78 of 1974 which involve the
interpretation of section 3 and item No. 21 of the First
Schedule to the Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act, 1959
hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’, shall be disposed of
by this judgment.
The appellant, Tvl. Shaw Wallace & Co. Ltd., a public
limited company, is a registered dealer under the Act and is
an assessee on the rolls of the Commercial Tax Officer IV,
Central Assessment Circle-23, Madras. Amongst other things,
the appellant manufactures and deals in chemical
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fertilisers. It also prepares fertiliser mixtures. For the
assessment years 1969-70 and 1970-71, the appellant claimed
exemption on a turnover of Rs. 2,35,01,129.47 and Rs.
2,07,94,490.73 respectively relating to sales of fertiliser
mixtures. The case of the appellant was that as the
fertiliser mixtures were prepared by dry mixing of various
chemical fertilisers (shown as sub-items (1) to (15) of S.
No. 21 of First Schedule to the Act) according tothe
standard formula approved by the Director of Agriculture at
its mixing works manually by means of shovels and as the
resultant product could not be said to be a commodity
different from the ingredients composing it which had been
purchased within the State and had suffered tax under item
No. 21 of the First Schedule to the Act, they could not be
taxed again. The Assessing Officer disallowed the exemption
on the entire turnover for the year 1969-70. He, however,
allowed exemption on a turnover of Rs. 1,65,44,223.73 which
represented the mixture sold after August 6, 1970-the date
when the Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax (Third Amendment) Act
(26 of 1970) amending item 21 of Schedule came into force.
On appeal, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner (CA) 1,
Madras City, found that part of the ingredients which went
into the production of fertiliser mixtures had suffered tax
under the Act. He, therefore, allowed exemption on the
turnover which had suffered tax by following the earlier
decision of the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal dated July 27,
1972 in the case of Rallis India Ltd. T. A. 114 of 1971,
where it was held that there is no manufacture and the
resultant product viz. manure mixture is not a different
product than the ingredients constituting it which have
already suffered tax. The
797
exemption allowed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
for the years 1969-70 and 1970-71 amounted to Rs.
1,20,18,842.80 and Rs. 42,38,182.90 respectively. The
appellant filed further appeals for both the years under
section 36(1) of the Act before the Tamil Nadu Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal against the orders of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner. The State of Tamil Nadu also filed
enhancement petitions. Since the earlier order of the Sales
Tax Appellate Tribunal dated July 27, 1972 in T. A. No. 114
of 1971 (supra) which was the basis of the relief granted by
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was reversed by the
Madras High Court vide its judgment dated September 18,
1973, in T.C. No. 18 of 1973, the Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal by its orders Nos. 1138/1139 of 1972 dated February
21, 1974 cancelled the relief granted to the appellant by
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The appellant
thereupon took the matter in revision to the Madras High
Court under section 38 of the Act but its applications were
dismissed at the stage of admission by that Court on March
5, 1974 in the light of its earlier judgment dated September
18, 1973 in T.C. No. 18 of 1973 (Revision No. 6 of 1973)
where it was observed:-
"Each of the component article and the manure
mixture have different chemical properties of their own
and their use also is different. It is not, therefore,
possible to treat the manure-mixture as the same
article as the components themselves.... Whether the
process adopted (in the preparation of manure mixture)
is manufacture or otherwise, if the resultant product
obtained by mixing the various articles of chemical
fertilisers referred to in item 21 is sold as a
different commercial product and for a different user,
it has to be treated as a different article from the
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components".
In rendering this decision, the Madras High Court
relied on the ratio of the decision of its own Court in
Imperial Fertilisers and Company v. State of Madras,(1) to
the effect that if the mixture sold has different chemical
properties and is tested as a different commodity in
commerce, its sale cannot be taken to be a second sale of
chemical fertiliser merely because the components have
suffered tax at an earlier stage as chemical fertilisers.
After failing to obtain a certificate of fitness for
appeal to this Court, the appellant applied for special
leave to this Court which was granted vide order dated March
15, 1974.
Appearing in support of the appeals, Mr. Desai has
urged that as section 3(2) of the Act provides for levy of
sales tax in respect of goods mentioned in the First
Schedule at the rate and only at the point specified therein
and chemical fertilisers which are specified in sub-items
(1) to (15) of item No. 21 of the First Schedule to the Act
are liable to tax at the point of first sale inside the
State, the sales of fertiliser mixtures which are prepared
by mixing manually by means of shovels, some of the
aforesaid chemical fertilisers mentioned at sub-items 1 to
15 in the Schedule without ad-mixture of any organic manure
are not liable to tax inside the State. Mr. Desai has
further urged that even if each fertilisers bears a
specified commercial name, for the
798
purpose of the Act, it has no identity except as a ’chemical
fertiliser’ and consequently the mixture of one or more
chemical fertilisers cannot but be the same article entitled
to application of single point scheme in respect of its
ingredients. This, according to Mr. Desai, is the natural
implication of the expression ’chemical fertilisers’
followed by the expression "that is to say".
The principal question for determination in these
appeals is whether the fertiliser mixtures in question can
be treated as the same article as chemical fertilisers
composing them.
For a proper determination of the contention raised on
behalf of the appellant, it is necessary to refer to section
3 of the Act and to item No. 21 of the First Schedule to the
Act which run as under:-
"3. Levy of taxes on sales or purchases of goods:-
(1) Every dealer (other than a casual trader or
agent of a non-resident dealer) whose total
turnover for a year is not less than fifteen
thousand rupees and every casual trader or
agent of a non-resident dealer, whatever be
his turnover for the year, shall pay a tax
for each year at the rate of (three per cent)
of his taxable turnover .......
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (1), in the case of goods mentioned
in the first schedule, the tax under this Act
shall be payable by a dealer, at the rate and
only at the point specified therein on the
turnover in a year relating to such goods
whatever be the quantum of turnover in that
year ......."
"Item 21 of the First Schedule : Chemical
fertilisers, that is to say:-
(1) Ammonium sulphate; (2) Ammonium nitrate; (3)
Urea (4) Ammonium Choloride; (5) Sodium
Nitrate; (6) Calcium Ammonium nitrate; (7)
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super phosphate single; (8) super phosphate
triple; (9) Kotka phosphate (10) di-calcium
phosphate; (11) Potassium chloride (nuriate
of potash); (12) sulphate of potash; (13)
mone ammonium phosphate; (14) di-ammonium
phosphate; (15) bone meal; (16) any mixture
of one or more of the articles mentioned in
items (1 to 15) and one or more of the
organic manures. Point of levy is at the
point of first sale in the State, rate of tax
is 31/27."
A plain reading of the above mentioned provisions would
show that it is only when a chemical fertiliser specified in
sub-items 1 to 15 of item No. 21 of the First Schedule is
sold in the same condition in which it is purchased that it
is not subject to a fresh levy. Fertiliser mixture, it would
be noted, is not the same article as the ingredients
composing it. It is sold as a different commercial product.
It is put to a different use and has different chemical
properties. As such, it
799
has to be treated as a different article from its component
parts. The question whether there is any manufacturing
process involved in the preparation of any fertiliser,
mixture or whether shovel mixing of the chemical fertilisers
amounts to manufacture or not is wholly irrelevant for the
purpose of the determination of the question before us.
The decision of the Bombay High Court in Nilgiri Ceylon
Tea Supplying Co. v. The State of Bombay,(1) on which
reliance is placed by counsel for the appellant in support
of his contention has no bearing on the question before us
as the language of the proviso to section. (8a) of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953 which fell for consideration in
that case is not the same as section 3 and item 21 of the
First Schedule to the Act before us. It has also to be borne
in mind that we are not called upon in the instant appeals
to consider as to whether the chemical fertilisers which had
been purchased by the assessee had been processed as in the
case of Nilgiri Ceylon Tea Supplying Co. (supra). The only
question before us, as already indicated, is as to whether
there was any mixture of one or more of the articles shown
as sub-items (1) to (15) of item No. 21. It is admitted by
the appellant in the statement of the case that the
fertiliser mixture is prepared by mixing various chemical
fertilisers and fillers like china clay, gypsom etc. by a
shovel. It cannot also be disputed that the fertiliser
mixture is a marketable commodity different from its
components, is put to different use and has different
properties.
In the case of Imperial Fertiliser and Co. (supra)
where the assessee purchased various items of chemical
manure referred to in item 21 of the First Schedule to the
Act and brought about a new product by mixing one or more of
the said articles with one or more of the organic manure,
the resultant product, it was held, could not be said to be
the same chemical manure or fertiliser which the assessee
had purchased, as the mixture would have different
properties of its own and it could not be said that it
retained the same characteristics or properties of any of
the chemical manures or organic manures which went to make
up the resultant mixture. It was further held in that case
that for getting an exemption on the ground that the sale of
an article is a second or subsequent sale, it must be
established that there has been a sale of the same goods at
an anterior point of time and if there is no identity
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between the product purchased and the product sold, it is
not possible to treat the sales of the product by an
assessee as second sales.
In State of Tamil Nadu v. Rallis India Ltd.(2) it was
held that as manure mixture prepared from one or more of the
articles mentioned in sub-items (1) to (15) of item No. 21
of the First Schedule has chemical properties different from
its components and its use is also different, it is not
possible to treat the manure mixture as the same article as
the components themselves. The following observations made
in this decision are pertinent:-
"If the product obtained by mixing the various
chemical fertilisers referred to in item 21 is sold as
a different commercial product and for a different
user, it has to be
800
treated as a different aritcle from the components,
whether the process of such mixture is one of
manufacture or not".
In State of Tamil Nadu v. M/s Pyari Lal Malhotra
etc.(1) a bench of four judges of this Court, to which one
of us, namely, My Lord the Hon’ble Chief Justice was a
party, had occasion to consider the meaning of the
expression "that is to say" and the tests to be applied in
determining whether the sale of a certain class of goods is
subject to the levy of single point sales tax. With regard
to the expression "that is to say", our learned brother,
Beg, J. who spoke for the Court observed:-
"We think that the precise meaning of the words
"that is to say" must vary with the context...... 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 a separate class for a series
of sales. Otherwise, the listing itself loses all
meaing and would very naturally, be to indicate thet
ypes of goods each of be without any purpose behind
it".
In regard to the test for determining the taxable
events in relation to the sales tax, same learned brother
observed as follows:-
"The mere fact that the substance or raw material
out of which it is made has also been taxed in some
other form, when it was sold as a separate "commercial
commodity, would make no 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 soon as
separate commercial commodities change or come into
existence, they become separately taxable goods or
entitles for purposes of sales tax.... The law of sales
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".
As in the instant cases, the mixtures produced by the
appellant are different from their component parts, their
properties and uses are also different and they are sold as
different commercial products, the appellant was not
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entitled to the exemption claimed by it. The appeals
accordingly fail and are dismissed with costs.
P.H.P. Appeals dismissed.
801