Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOVT. MEDICAL STORE DEPOT, GAUHATI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
The SUPDT. OF TAXES, GAUHATI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1985
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1748 1985 SCR Supl. (2) 739
1985 SCC (4) 239 1985 SCALE (2)600
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1902 (12)
ACT:
Assam Finance (Sales Tax) Act 1956, Central Sales Tax
Act 1956 s.2(b) - Government Medical Store Depot -
Transactions on ’no loss no profit’ basis - Whether ’dealer’
- Liability to & Sales Tax - Whether arises.
HEADNOTE:
The Central Government in the Ministry of Health,
Family Planning and Urban Development set up a Medical Store
Depot at Gauhati for the purpose of procuring and supplying
medical stores to the Government institutions, both Central
and State, as also the Railway establishments located in
Assam, North Eastern Frontier Areas, Nagaland Manipur,
Tripura and other neighbouring places on payment.
The appellant-Depot did not apply for registration on
the ground that it was not a dealer -within the meaning of
section 2(b) of the Central Sales Tax, Act, 1956 and,
therefore, was not liable to tax as the transactions were
without any profit-motive ant on the basis of ’No loss - No
profit’. The Superintendent of Taxes, however, got the
appellant-Depot registered under section 7(1) of the Assam
Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1956 and also treated it to be a
dealer under the Central Sales Tax Act 1956 and on that
basis the Taxing Authority made assessments.
The appellant challenged the demands under Art. 226
contending that it was not a dealer and that the certificate
of registration issued to it without any application should
be cancelled and the demands made should be quashed because
the action of the Taxing Authority in compulsorily
registering it was bad and the assessments were illegal. The
High Court dismissed the Writ Petition and held that the
appellant-Depot is a ’dealer’ within the meaning of sec.
2(d) of the Central Sales Tax Act 1956 and that the
Superintendent of Taxes had jurisdiction to register it and
also to pass the impugned order of assessment.
Allowing the appeals to this Court,
740
^
HELD: l. The High Court, on the materials placed before
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it, went wrong in dismissing the writ petition. The Writ
Petition should have been allowed and the assessment should
have been quashed. [746 E-F]
2. In respect of the pre-amended period when in the
definition of the term ’business’ profit-motive was an
ingredient, in the absence of profit-motive transactions
though satisfying the requirement of volume, frequency,
continuity ant regularity, would not constitute business so
as to make a person carrying on such transactions a dealer.
[744 H, 745-A]
The State of Gujarat v. Raipur Manufacturing Co. Ltd.,
19 S.T.C 1, Hindustan Steel Ltd.v. The State of Orissa a, 25
S.T.C. 211, State of Andhra Pradesh v.Abdul Bakshi & Bros.,
15 S.T.C. 644, State of Tamil Nadu v. Thirumagal Mills Ltd.
etc., 29 S.T.C. 290, and The Joint Director of Food,
Visakhapatnam v. The State of Andhra Pradesh, 38 S.T.C. 329,
relied upon-
Deputy commercial Tax Officer, Saidapet, Madras Anr.
Enfield India Ltd. Co-opertive Canteen Ltd., 21 S.T.C. 317
and Goverment Medical Store Depot v. State of HarYana &
Anr.. 39 S.T.C. 114, in applicable.
In the instant case, the appellant had from the very
beginning taken the stand that its transactions were without
any profit motive. The burden lay on the Revenue to show
that these transactions were carried on with profit motive,
whether profit was actually earned or Dot being of no
material importance, and no investigation had been rade by
the respondent into this aspect when it made the
assessments. Nor was the High court called upon to record
such a finding on the basis of any material placed and
the respondent remained satisfied by pleading a bare denial
to the assertion in the writ petitions supported by the
scheme and its terms. [746 A-C]
The State of Gujarat v. Raipur Manufacturing Co. Ltd.,
l9 S.T.C. l., relied upon.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 1748-
1757 of 1973.
From the Judgment ant Order dated 26.6.1973 of the
Gauhati High Court at Gauhati in Civil Rule Nos. 366-370 &
460-464 of 1969.
741
O.P. Sharma and R.N. Poddar for the Appellant.
B.B. Ahuja and S.K. Nandy for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J. The hort point raised in these
appeals by special leave directed against the judgment of
the Gauhati High Court is as to whether the assessee -
appellant is liable to be taxed under the Assam Finance
(Sales Tax) Act, 1956 (’State Act’ for short), and the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (Central Act). When assessments
were completed under the two Acts in spite of the resistance
of the assessee which took the stand that it was not a
dealer and, therefore was not liable to tax, writ petitions
were filed before the High Court challenging the demands by
contending that the appellant was not a dealer and the
certificate of registration issued to it without any
application on its behalf should be cancelled and the
demands should be quashed. The appellant contended that the
Central Government in the Ministry of Health, Family
Planning and Urban Development had set up a Medical Store
Depot at Gauhati for the purpose of procuring and supplying
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medical stores to the Government institutions, both Central
and State, as also the Railway establishments located in
Assam, North Eastern Frontier Areas, NagaLand, Manipur,
Tripura and other neighbouring places on payment. The Depot
had been set up with a view to facilitating supply of
medical stores to the Government institutions and the motive
in locating the Depot was to function as a distributing
center for the purpose of supply of medical stores. The
appellant contended, inter alia before the High Court.
"That your petitioner does not carry on any
business in medical stores, namely, medicine,
drugs, surgical instruments and appliances,
dressings and hospital equipments, but merely
supplies the said goods to the institutions
mentioned earlier on ’no profit - no loss’ basis.
Your petitioner in recovering the value of the
above-mentioned medical stores from the
institutions mentioned earlier, adds 10 per cent
of the purchase prices of such medical stores as
Depart mental charges to meet the administrative
costs only. That the supply of medical stores by
the petitioner is neither its avocation nor
profession and there is no element or object of
profit making in all its dealings
742
with the institutions mentioned earlier. The
transactions carried on by the petitioner Depot
are not of commercial nature and the Depot
functions only us a distribution center with the
sole object of ensuring the supply of pure drugs
and medicines at lesser prices than available in
the market to the Central and State Government
institutions within the State of Assam and other
neighbouring places."
The appellant did not apply for registration in view of
its stand but the Superintendent of Taxes got the appellant
registered under s. 7(1) of the State Act with effect from
December 1, 1965, and also treated it to be a dealer under
the Central Act. Assessments followed under both the Acts
overruling appellant’s stand whereupon the writ petitions as
indicated were filed.
Before the High Court the appellant reiterated its
stand that as it was not a dealer within the meaning of s. 2
(b) of the Act, the action of the Taxing authority in
compulsorily registering it was bad and the assessments were
illegal. Before the High Court appellant produced a letter
written by it to the Superintendent of Taxes dated September
30, 1966, wherein it had been stated :
"The supply price is fixed on the basis of cost of
acquisition plus departmental charges consistent
with the overheads fixed absolutely on the
principles of ’No loss-No profit The formula of
rate fixation and the levy of departmental charges
are approved by the Government of India, who also
watch and if required, revise such fixations
annually to enforce the ruling principles of ’No
loss-No profit."
It had been the consistent stand of the appellant from the
very beginning that the transactions were without any profit
motive and on the basis of ’No loss-No profit’, and,
therefore, unless the respondent found that the transactions
had been carried on with a view to making profit it would
not constitute business and the appellant cannot be held to
be a dealer liable to tax under the two Acts. The High Court
referred to the definition of dealer in s. 2 (b) which
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requires business of buying or selling of goods to be
carried on. Certain decisions of this Court were placed
before the High Court in support of the appellant’s stand
that without profit motive the transactions would not
constitute business even if there was frequency, volume,
certainty and regularity. The High Court, however, held:
743
"It is difficult to hold that the Government of
India in this case is absolutely regardless of the
question of possibility of profit rather than
loss. The very formula ’No profit-No loss clearly
points to earning of some profit and certainly not
incurring of loss in the course of the
transactions which are organised, systematic and
regular. The very fact the Government keeps a
watch and if required revises the formula of rate
fixation and the levy of departmental charges
would also go to show that the Government never
intended not to earn minimum of profit in these
trans actions of sales,"
and proceeded to dismiss the writ petitions by saying :
"Be that as it may, for the reasons given by us
and in view of the principles of law settled by
the Supreme Court, we are clearly of the opinion
that the petitioner Depot is a ’dealer’ within the
meaning of section 2(b) of the Act and, therefore,
the Superintendent of Taxes had jurisdiction to
register it and also to pass the impugned order of
assessment. We are also clearly of the opinion
that the petitioner is carrying on the business of
selling goods. Both the submissions of the learned
counsel for the petitioner, therefore, fail."
In The State of Gujarat v. Raipur Manufacturiug Co.
Ltd., 19 S.T.C. 1, this Court held :
"Whether a person carries on business in a
particular commodity must depend upon the volume,
frequency, continuity and regularity of
transactions of purchase and sale in a class of
goods and the transactions must ordinarily be
entered into with a profit motive. By the use of
the expression ’profit motive’ it us not intended
that profit must in fact be earned. Nor does the
expression cover a mere desire to make some
monetary gain out of a transaction or even a
series of transactions. It predicates a motive
which pervades the whole series of transactions
effected by the person in the course of his
activity..."
In Hindustan Steel Ltd. v. The State of Orissa,25
S.T.C. 211 the sames. question came up for examination.
Hindustan Steel Ltd., the appellant, was procuring cement,
bricks and iron
744
materials and was supplying the same from its stores to
contractors working under it by recovering the cost price
along with a further sum to cover handling expenses. It took
the stand before the Sales Tax authorities that the supplies
to contractors on recovery of price together with the extra
sum did not constitute business. This Court referred to its
earlier decision in the case of State of Andhra Pradeah v.
Abdul Bakahi & Bros., 15 S.T.C. 644, where it had said:
"The expression ’business’ though extensively used
is a word of indefinite import. In taxing statutes
it is used in the sense of an occupation, or
profession which occupies the time, attention and
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labour of a person, normally with the object of
making profit. To regard an activity as business
there must be a course of dealings, either
actually continued or contemplated to be continued
with a profit-motive, and not for sport or
pleasure
and held :
"If the company agreed to charge a fixed
percentage above the cost price for storage,
insurance and rental charges, it may be reasonably
inferred that the company did not carry on
business of supplying materials as a part of
business activity with a view to making profit."
In Stste of Tamil Nadu v. Thirumagal Mills Ltd. etc.,
29 S.T.C. 290, this Court took a similar view with reference
to the pre-amended definition of ’dealer’ and ’business’
under the Tamil Nadu Sales Tax Act.
In The Joint Director of Foods, Visakhapatnam v. The
State of Andhra Pradesh, 38 S.T.C. 329, this Court again
pointed out:
"We may hasten to mention that the ordinary
concept of business has the element of gain or
profit, whose absence negatives the character of
the activity as business in section 2(b) of the
Central Act. A person becomes a dealer only if he
carries on business and the Central Government can
be designated as ’dealer’ only if there if profit-
motive."
On the basis of these authorities the position is clear
that in respect of the pre-amended period when in the
definition of
745
the term ’business’ profit motive had not been omitted, in
the absense of profit-motive transactions though satisfying
the requirement of volume, frequency, continuity and
regularity, would not constitute business so as to make a
person carrying on such transactions a dealer.
Reliance was placed by counsel for the respondents on
two decisions - one of this Court and other of the Punjab &
Haryana High Court. In Deputy Commercial Tax Officer,
Saidapet, Madras & Narc. v. Enfield India Ltd. Co-operative
Canteen Ltd., 21 S.T.C. 317, the question for consideration
was whether a members’ Co-operative Society supplying
refreshments was a ’dealer’ under the Tamilnadu Sales Tax
Act. In the definition of ’dealer’, the explanation
specifically brought in a co-operative society and expressly
Provided that whether or not in the course of business if it
supplied goods to its members it became a dealer. KEEPING
the said definition in view the decision went in favour of
the Revenue. That would not be an authority relevant for our
present purpose.
In Government Medical Store Depot v. State of Haryana &
Anr., 39 S.T.C. 114, the very appellant was the assessee in
respect of its repot located at Karnal. On the facts placed
before the Court, the following conclusion was reached after
referring to the judgment of this Court in the case of The
Joint Director of Foods, Visakhapatnam:
"The aforesaid observations apply with full vigour
to the instant case and we have no hesitation in
holding that the petitioner Depot was a ’dealer’
within section 2(b) of the Central Sales Tax Act
and also under s. 2(d) of the Act."
Obviously, this was a decision on the facts available on
record and cannot be relied upon for the factual
determination of the question in dispute before us.
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In the Raipur Manufacturing Co.’s case (supra) this
Court had clearly said :
"It may be pointed out that the burden of proving
that the Company was carrying on business of
selling coal lay upon the Sales Tax Authorities
and if they made no investigation and have come to
the conclusion merely because of the frequency and
the volume of the sales, the inference cannot be
sustained."
746
In the instant case, as already shown, the appellant
had from the very beginning taken the stand that its
transactions were-without any profit motive. The burden lay
on the Revenue to show that these transactions were carried
on with profit motive, whether profit was actually earned or
not being of no material importance, and no investigation
had been made by the respondent into this aspect when it
made the assessments. Nor was the High Court called upon to
record such a finding on the basis of any material placed
and the respondent remdined satisfied by pleading a bare
denial to the assertion in the writ petitions supported by
the scheme and its terms. Mr. Ahuja for the respondent
strenuously pleaded that the matters should go back and the
respondents would be given an opportunity of determining the
question as to whether the transactions had been carried on
with any profit motive. We are concerned with the years
1965-68. About two decades have already rolled by. We may
point out that at the instance of Mr. Ahuja we had called
upon the appellant to produce its record and appellant’s
counsel on the subsequent date reported that the record were
not available to be produced. In these circumstances, we do
not think it proper to remand the matters to give the
respondent an opportunity of determining the question of
profit motive.
The High Court, in our view, on the materials placed
before it, went wrong in dismissing the writ petitions. The
legal position being settled as indicated by several
decisions of this Court, the writ petitions should have been
allowed and the assessments should have been quashed. We
accordingly allow the appeals, and while reversing the
decision of the High Court in respect of the periods
specified above, quash the assessments. We make it clear
that quashing of these assessments would not operate as a
bar to respondent going into the matter again in respect of
any subsequent period in accordance with law and our
judgment must be confined to the facts of the case as
available on record for the period in question. Parties are
directed to bear their respective costs throughout.
A.P.J. Appeals allowed.
747