Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS MOHANLAL HARGOVIND DAS,BIDI MERCHANTS, JABALPUR (M.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/09/1955
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1955 AIR 786 1955 SCR (2) 509
ACT:
Constitution of India-Art. 286(2)-Central Provinces and
Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (X of 1947), s.4(6)-Petitioners-
Bidi merchants of Madhya Pradesh-Importing tobacco from the
State of Bombay-Whether such transactions of sales of goods-
Affected by the ban under Art. 286(2) of the Constitution-
Petitioners registered as "dealers" under Central Provinces
and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and dealers in Bombay selling
or supplying tobacco to the petitioners also registered as
"dealers" under Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act,
1947-Whether makes the transactions as intrastate trans-
actions between two registered dealers in the State of
Madhya Pradesh.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners are carrying on business on a very large
scale of making and selling bidis having their head office
in Jabalpur in the State of Madhya Pradesh and are
registered as "dealer" for the purposes of the Central
Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947. In the course of
their said business, the petitioners import tobacco from the
State of Bombay in very large quantities after it is blended
in that State by the vendors with various other types of
indigenous tobacco by an elaborate process.
This finished tobacco, after its import within the State of
Madhya Pradesh is rolled into bidis which are exported to
various other States, largely to the State of Uttar Pradesh.
The dealers in the State of Uttar Pradesh and such other
States who buy bidis from the petitioners sell the same to
various other dealers and consumers in those States.
The Sales Tax authorities in the State of Madhya Pradesh
required the petitioners under threat of criminal
prosecution to file a statement of return of the total
purchases of tobacco made by them out of Madhya Pradesh and
delivered to them in Madhya Pradesh with a view to assess
and levy purchase tax on the transactions of purchases made
by the petitioners as stated above. Held, that the State of
Madhya Pradesh had no authority to impose or to authorise
the imposition of such a tax and that the action of the
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State authorities contravened the provisions of Art. 286(2)
of the Constitution inasmuch as the transactions in question
were in the course of inter-State trade or commerce as the
finished tobacco which was supplied to the petitioners moved
from the State of Bombay to the State of Madhya Pradesh.
510
The contention that not only the petitioners were the
registered dealers under Rule 8 of the Central Provinces and
Berar-Sales Tax Rules, 1947 but the dealers in Bombay who
sell or supply tobacco to them were registered as "dealers"
for the purpose of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax
Act, 1947 and therefore the transactions were between two
registered dealers in the State of Madhya Pradesh and thus
constituted purely internal sales of the goods was without
force because what one has to look at is the real nature of
the transactions and not the outside form and as the trans-
actions in dispute involved movement of the goods across the
border they were clearly transactions of sales of goods in
the course of interState trade or commerce and were hit by
the ban under Art. 286(2) of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 67 of 1955.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, C. K. Daphtary,
Solicitor-General of India, G. S. Pathak, (J. B.
Dadachanji, A. P. Sen, Rameshwar Nath and Rajinder Narain,
with them), for the petitioners.
T. L. Shevde, Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh
(M. Adhikari and 1, N. Shroff, with him) for the State of
Madhya Pradesh.
1955. September, 20. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
BHAGWATI J.-The petitioners are a firm carrying on business
on a very large scale of making and selling bidis having
their head office in Jabalpur in the State of Madhya
Pradesh. They are registered as "dealer" for the purpose of
the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947.
In the course of their said business, the petitioners
import tobacco from the State of Bombay in very large
quantities after it is blended in that State by the vendors
with various other types of indigenous tobacco by an
elaborate process. This finished tobacco, after its import
within the State of Madhya Pradesh is rolled into bidis
which are exported to various other States, largely to the
State of Uttar Pradesh. The dealers in the State of Uttar
Pradesh
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and such other States who buy bidis from the petitioners
sell the same to various other dealers and consumers in
those States.
The Sales Tax authorities in the State of Madhya Pradesh
required the petitioners under threat of criminal
prosecution to file a statement of return of the total
purchases of tobacco made by them out of Madhya Pradesh and
delivered to them in Madhya Pradesh with a vie* to assess
and levy purchase tax on the transactions of purchases made
by the petitioners as above. The petitioners filed under
protest two returns dated the 11th September 1954 and 3rd
December 1954 for the periods 3rd May 1954 to 29th July 1954
and 30th July 1954 to 26th October 1954 respectively but
without prejudice to their right to challenge the validity
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of the assessment and levy of the said tax on the aforesaid
transactions. The Sales Tax authorities further called upon
the petitioners to deposit the alleged purchase tax which
amounts to thousands of rupees in every quarter of the year.
The petitioners thereupon filed this petition under
article 32 of the Constitution for a writ of mandamus or any
appropriate direction or order seeking to restrain the State
of Madhya Pradesh and the Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya
Pradesh, from enforcing the said Act and its provisions
against the petitioners and for consequential reliefs.
The petitioners averred that the imposition of tax on sale
or purchase of tobacco rolled into bidis exported out of
Madhya Pradesh in the manner described was in contravention
of article 286 (1) (a) of the Constitution, that the tobacco
purchased by them for the purpose of making bidis exported
outside Madhya Pradesh was never intended for use as raw
material for the making of bidis for the purpose of consump-
tion in Madhya Pradesh and section 4, sub-section (6) of the
Act had no application to the tobacco so used and there was
no liability to pay the alleged tax and that to the best of
the petitioners’ information tobacco bad not been notified
by the State Government in the Gazette for the purpose of
section 12(A) of the Act
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512
and that the Sales Tax authorities, under the Act, were,
0therefore, not entitled to levy any tax on the petitioners.
The petitioners also submitted that the transactions in
question had taken place in the course of inter-State
commerce, that the State of Madhya Pradesh had no authority
to impose or to authorise -the imposition of such a tax and
that the action of the State authorities contravened the
provisions of article 286(2) of the Constitution-.
The Respondents filed a return denying the contentions of
the petitioners and submitted that the petitioners by
purchasing tobacco which was entered in their registration
certificate as raw material for the manufacture of bidis for
sale by actual delivery in Madhya Pradesh for consumption in
that State made themselves liable to pay the tax by
exporting bidis to other States and thus utilising it for a
different purpose under section 4(6) of the Act. They
admitted that the petitioners imported tobacco from the
State of Bombay in large quantities but stated that the
tobacco, after its arrival in the petitioners’ bidi fac-
tories, was cleaned, sieved and blended.
A few more facts relevant for the decision of this
petition may be stated in this context. Not only the
petitioners but also the dealers in Bombay who sell or
supply tobacco to the petitioners are registered as
"dealers" for the -purpose of the Central Provinces and
Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947. The petitioners are the holders
of a certificate of registration, No. LDG/ 53 obtained by
them under Rule 8 of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales
Tax Rules, 1947. When making purchases of the tobacco in
question they also made declarations in the form required by
Rule 26(II) declaring that they had purchased the said goods
from Shri Shah Chhaganlal Ugarchand Nipani, a dealer holding
registration certificate No. BMY/93/ MP and from Shri
Maniklal Chunanlal Baroda, a dealer holding registration
certificate No. BMY/341MP on different dates therein
mentioned for use as raw material in the manufacture of
goods for sale by actual delivery in Madhya Pradesh for the
purpose of consumption in that State. in the return which
513
was filed by the petitioners for the quarter beginning from
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3rd May 1954 and ending with 29th July 1954, the petitioners
mentioned Rs. 16,47,567-3-3 as the purchase price of goods
purchased on declaration as being goods specified in the
registration certificate as intended for use as raw material
in the manufacture of goods for sale by actual delivery in
Madhya Pradesh for the purpose of consumption in that State
but utilised for any other purpose. In the return which was
filed by them for the quarter beginning from 27th July 1954
and ending with 26th October 1954, they did not fill in any
figure but showed the above item as blank contending that
the Sales Tax authorities were not entitled to levy any
purchase tax against them in respect of the same.
The learned Attorney-General appearing for the petitioners
before us contended (1) that the transactions in question
were in the course of inter-State commerce and were,
therefore, within the ban of article 286(2) and the State of
Madhya Pradesh had no authority to impose or to authorise
imposition of tax on these transactions, (2) that in any
event the goods were delivered for consumption in the State
of Uttar Pradesh and were not liable to a levy of tax at the
instance of the State of Madhya Pradesh, (3) that section
4(6) of the Act was invalid inasmuch as it offended against
the provisions of article 286(1) (a), and lastly (4) that
even if the above contentions were negatived, section 4(6)
of the Act had, on its true construction, no application to
the facts of the present case. He, however, urged that if
the Court was with him on his first contention, viz... that
the transactions in question took place in the course of
interState commerce it was not necessary to go into the
other contentions.
We are of the opinion that this contention of the learned
Attorney-General is sound. It was in fact admitted by the
Respondents in their return that the petitioners imported
tobacco from the State of Bombay in large quantities. The
Bombay suppliers processed tobacco in their godowns situated
within the State of Bombay and supplied the finished tobacco
514
to the petitioners in Madhya Pradesh. The petitioners
imported this finished tobacco into Madhya Pradesh from
these suppliers who were carrying on business in the State
of Bombay and there was of necessity, as a result of these
transactions, the movement of the goods across the border.
As a result of the transactions entered into by the
petitioners with these suppliers the finished tobacco -which
was supplied to the petitioners moved from the State of Bom-
bay to the State of Madhya Pradesh and these transactions
were, therefore, in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce.
The only answer which was made by the learned Advocate-
General of Madhya Pradesh was that Shri Shah Chhaganial
Ugarchand Nipani and Shri Maniklal Chunanlal Baroda were
themselves dealers holding registration certificates Nos.
BMY/93/MP and BMY/ 341-MP being registered as such under the
provisions of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act,
1947, and that, therefore. the transactions were between two
registered dealers in the State of Madhya Pradesh and
therefore constituted purely internal sales of the goods.
If they were thus internal sales there was no question of
their being transactions in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce and therefore they were not subject to the ban
imposed under article 286(2).
This answer suffers from over-simplification. No doubt,
the dealers who supplied the finished tobacco to the
petitioners were registered dealers under the Central
Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947, but that fact by
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itself would not be sufficient to invest the transactions
which otherwise were in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce with the character of intra-state transactions or
internal sales or purchases. What one has got to look at is
the real nature of the transactions and not the outside
form. A person who carries on business of selling or
supplying goods in Madhya Pradesh and who comes within the
definition of "dealer" given in section 2(c) of the Act has,
under pain of penalty visited upon him under section 24 of
the Act, to register himself as a dealer
515
and possess a registration certificate under section 8 (1)
of the Act. Merely because he got himself registered as
such to avoid the penalty which would otherwise be visited
upon him by the State it cannot be stated that ’Whatever
transactions he entered into with other dealers in the State
of Madhya Pradesh were all intraState transactions or
internal sales or purchases irrespective of the fact that
the transactions involved movement of the goods across the
border and were clearly transactions of sale of goods in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce. We were taken by
the learned Attorney-General through the several provisions
of the Act and we are confirmed in our opinion that these
transactions sought to be taxed by the Sales Tax authorities
of the State of Madhya Pradesh were transactions in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce. The activities of
selling or ’supplying goods in Madhya Pradesh if carried on
habitually would amount to a carrying on of the business of
selling or supplying goods in the State of Madhya Pradesh
and even an outside merchant who indulged in such activities
may in such event be said to be carrying on business in
Madhya Pradesh and would come within the definition of
"dealer" given in section 2(c) of the Act. When we come,
however, to section 8 which deals with the registration of
dealers, that section requires that a dealer while being
liable to pay tax under the Act shall not carry on business
as a dealer unless he has been registered as such and pos-
sesses a registration certificate. The liability to pay tax
under the Act is thus postulated and unless and until a
person is liability to pay such tax he need not get himself
registered as a dealer. All the transactions entered into
by a registered dealer, however, do not necessarily import a
liability to pay tax under the Act because, whenever the
question arises in regard to his liability to pay any tax
under the Act, such liability would have to be determined in
spite of his being a registered dealer with reference, inter
alia, to the provisions of section 27-A of the Act which in-
corporates within its terms the bans which have been imposed
on the powers of the State Legislatures to
516
tax under article 286 (1)(a) and (2) of the Constitution.
If, therefore, a dealer who has got himself registered as
dealer under the provisions of section 8(1) of the Act is
sought to be made liable in respect of transactions of sale
effected, by him he could claim exemption from such
liability if the transactions of sale or purchase took place
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce after the
31st March, 1951, except in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide. In the case before us there was no such
provision made by Parliament and the transactions in
question were all after the 31st March, 1951, with the
result that the ban imposed by article 286(2) was in opera-
tion and if the transactions took place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce not only were Shri Chhaganlal
Ugarchand Nipani and Shri Maniklal Chunanlal Baroda exempt
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from the liability to pay the tax on these transactions but
the petitioners also were similarly exempt. No liability,
therefore, could be imposed either for Sales Tax or for
Purchase Tax within the terms of the Act on these
transactions which as above stated took place in the course
of interState trade or commerce.
It was, however, urged that the petitioners had made
declarations at the time of making the purchases of this
finished tobacco that they had purchased the said goods for
use as raw materials in the manufacture of goods for sale
for actual delivery in Madhya Pradesh for the purpose of
consumption in that State and that by virtue of the
provisions of section 4(6) of the Act they were liable to
pay the purchase tax on the purchase price of goods which
had been utilised for any other purpose. Whatever steps the
State of Madhya Pradesh may be able to take in regard to
non-compliance with the terms of the declarations by the
petitioners, we are clearly of opinion that the State -of
Madhya Pradesh is restrained from imposing any tax on the
transactions of purchase or sale which take place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce and no question of
liability of the petitioners by virtue of such declarations
survives because even initially Shri Shah Chhaganlal Ugar-
517
chand Nipani and Shri Maniklal Chunanlal Baroda were not
liable to pay any tax on these transactions nor could any
such liability for tax be transferred to the petitioners by
virtue of such declarations. If, therefore, there was no
basis for any such liability, the declarations by themselves
cannot create any’ new liability and the petitioners cannot
be held liable to tax even by the operation of section 4(6)
of the Act, the very basis of the liability sought to be im.
posed therein having disappeared.
The result, therefore, is that the Respondents will be
restrained from enforcing the Central Provinces and Berar
Sales Tax Act, 1947, and its provisions against the
petitioners and from imposing a tax in respect of the
transactions in question and in particular from imposing a
tax on the purchase price of goods purchased on the
declarations under Rule 26 being goods specified in the
registration certificate as intended for use as raw material
in the manufacture of goods for sale by actual delivery in
Madhya Pradesh for the purpose of consumption in that State
but utilised for any other purpose tinder the provisions of
section 4(6) of the Act. The Respondents will pay the peti-
tioners’ costs of this petition.