Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THIRU MANICKAM AND CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/10/1976
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
SINGH, JASWANT
CITATION:
1977 AIR 518 1977 SCR (1) 950
1977 SCC (1) 199
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1985 SC1698 (44)
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956--S. 15(b)--Scope of--Assessee
bought declared goods and paid State sales tax--Sale by way
of inter--state Sale--If entitled to refund of state sales
tax.
Interpretation "refund" meaning of--Subsequent amendment
of section--If could be used to interpret earlier ambiguous
provision.
HEADNOTE:
Section 15(a) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 as it
existed at the rele-ant time enacted that tax in respect of
any sale or purchase of declared goods inside the State
shall not be levied at more than one stage. According to
cl. (b) if these goods were subsequently sold, in the course
of inter-state trade, the tax to levied shall be refunded to
such person as prescribed in the State law. The proviso to
s. 4 of the Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act and r. 23 of
the Rules provide for the refund of the sales tax in the
type of cases mentioned in s. 15(b).
The appellant bought cotton yarn from local dealers and sold
it by way of inter_state sale. It paid the State sales tax
and claimed refund under s. 15 (b)of the Central Act. It
succeeded in part at each of the different stages; but on
second appeal for the balance, the Appellate Tribunal re-
jected the appellant’s claim and held that it was not enti-
tled to any refund including the relief granted by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The High Court rejected
its revision petition.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD: (1) The appellant-firm is entitled to be paid the
amount of sales tax levied under the State Act in respect of
the goods sold by it in the course of inter-State trade
provided the appellant has paid the sales tax tinder the
central Act in respect of those sales. [956 E]
(2) The proviso to s. 4 of the State Act read with the
rules leaves no doubt that the amount has to be paid to the
dealer who sells the goods in the course of inter-State
trade and who has paid the tax under the Central Act in
respect of such sale. [955 B]
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(3)(a) There is no anomaly in paying the amount of the
sales tax under the State Act to a dealer who sells declared
goods in the course of inter-State trade even though he did
not himself pay the tax under the State Act in respect of
those goods. The reason for that is the price charged from
such dealer by the person from whom he purchased the goods
would normally take into account the sales tax paid by the
seller. [955 C]
(b) The case of M. A. Khader & Co. v. Deputy Commer-
cial Taxation officer 25 S.T.C. 104 followed by the High
Court is distinguishable on facts. The question of asking
for refund of the sales tax paid under the State Act did
not arise directly in that case. The emphasis in the word
’refunded’ as used in s. 15(b) of the Central Act and the
proviso to s. 4 of the State Act. on repayment of the
amount. [954 G]
(4) (a) A word can have many meanings. To find out the
exact connotaon of a word in a statute, one should look to
the context in which it is used. The context would quite
often provide the key to meaning of the word and the sense
it should carry. Its setting would give. colour to it and
provide due to the intention of the legislature in using it.
In the instant case the context in which the word "refund-
ed" is used shows that such repayment need not be to the
person who initially paid the tax. [954 H]
951
(b) The amended provision makes it plain beyond doubt
that the tax levied under the State Act in respect of
declared goods has to be reimbursed to the person making
sale of those goods in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce in such manner and subject to such conditions as
may be provided in the law in force in that State. Accord-
ing to the notes on clauses appended to the statement of
objects and reasons of the Bill the amendment made in cl.
(b) makes it clear that local sales tax would be reimbursed
to the person making the sale in the course of inter-State
trade and commerce. The amendment made in cl. (b) can thus
be taken to be an exposition by the legislature itself of
its intent contained in the earlier provision. [955 G]
(c) The fact that the amendment of cl. (b) of s. 15 was
not like some other provisions given retrospective effect,
would not materially affect the position. The legislature
as a result of the amendment clarified what was implicit
in the provisions as they existed earlier. An amendment
which is by way of clarification of an earlier ambiguous
provision can be useful aid in construing the earlier provi-
sion even though such amendment is not given retrospective
effect. [956 B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1528 of 1971.
(Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 23-11-1970 of the Madras High Court in Tax case
No. 398/7C (Revision No. 260/70)
S.T. Desai and T.A. Ramachandran, for the ,Appellant.
V.P. Raman, .Addl. Solicitor General for India. A.V.
Rangan and Miss A. Subhashini, for the Respondent.
The, Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHANNA, J. This appeal by special leave is against the
judgment of the Madras High Court Whereby. the High Court
dismissed the petition flied by the appellant under section
38 of the Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (hereinaf-
ter referred to as the State Act).
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The matter relates to the assessment year 1960-61. The
appellant firm is a dealer in cotton yarn. The appellant
bought yarn from local dealers and manufacturers and, in
turn, sold that yarn by way of inter-State sale. Sales tax
under the State Act on the yarn purchased by the appellant
had been paid by those manufacturers and dealers. The
inter-State sales of yarn made by the appellant were as-
sessed to tax under the Central Sales Tax Act (hereinafter
referred to as the Central Act) in the hands of the appel-
lant. The appellant claimed refund of the tax amounting to
Rs. 16,769.96 paid under the State Act in respect of the
yarn sold by it in the course of inter-State trade in ac-
cordance with section 15(b) of the Central Act and the
proviso to section 4 of the State Act read with rule 23 of
the Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Rules, as these provisions
stood at the relevant time. The Additional Commercial
Taxation Officer admitted the claim of the appellant for
refund of the tax only in respect of the sum of Rs. 5,562.59
and rejected the claim in respect of the balance On appeal
the Additional Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed
refund of a further sum of Rs. 3,204.73 and rejected the
claim regarding the balance of Rs. 8,002.64. On second
appeal the
952
Appellate Tribunal relying upon the decision of the Madras
High Court in M.A. Khader & Co. v. Deputy Commercial Taxa-
tion Officer(1), rejected the claim of the appellant for
the balance of Rs. 8,002.64. At the instance of the State
representative, the Tribunal further held that the appellant
was not entitled to get refund of the amount of Rs. 5,562.59
and Rs. 3,240.73 in respect of which relief had been granted
by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The appellant
thereafter preferred revision petition to the Madras High
Court under section 38 of the State Act. The High Court
dismissed the said petition after observing that the princi-
ple laid down in the case of M.A. Khader & Co. (supra) would
apply to the facts of this case. The appellant hereafter
came up in appeal to this Court by special leave.
Before dealing with the point of controversy, it may be
apposite to refer to the material provisions of law, ’as
they stood at the relevant time. A number of goods have
been declared under section 14 of the Central Act to be
of special importance. in inter-State trade or commerce.
Cotton yarn is one of those goods. Section 15 of the cen-
tral Act at the relevant time read as under:
"15. Restrictions and conditions in
regard to tax on sale or purchase of declared
goods within a State.--Every sales tax law of
a State shall, in so far as it imposes or
authorises the imposition of a tax on the sale
or 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 shall not exceed two 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, the tax so levied shall be refunded
to such person in such manner and subject
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to such conditions as may be provided in any
law in force in that State."
Section 4 of the State Act reads as under:
"4. Tax in respect of declared
goods.--Notwithstanding anything contained in
section 3, the tax under this Act shall be
payable by a dealer on 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 turnover in
such goods in each year, whatever be the
quantum of turnover in that year:
Provided that where a tax has been
levied under this section in respect of the
sale or purchase of declared goods and such
goods are sold in the course of inter-State
trade
(1) 25 s.T.c. 104.
953
or commerce the tax so levied shall be refund-
ed to such person in such manner and subject
to such conditions as may be prescribed."
According to the Second Schedule to the Stale Act, the tax
on cotton yarn but excluding cotton yarn waste shall be one
per cent at the point of the first sale in the State.
Clauses (1) to (3) of rule 23 of the
Madras General Sales Tax Rules, 1959 read as
under:
"23. (1) The tax levied under section 4
in respect of the sale or purchase inside the
State of any goods specified therein shall, if
such goods are sold in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce, be refunded in the
manner and subject to the conditions pre-
scribed in this rule to the dealer who has
made the inter-State sale and has paid the
tax under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, in
respect of such sale.
(2) Every ;such dealer who claims a
refund under this rule shall within the time
allowed in sub-rule (3) submit to the assess-
ing authority a statement in Form A-4.
(3) The statement referred to in sub-
rule (4) shall be submitted to the assessing
authority not later than three months. from
the date on which the dealer paid the Central
sales tax due on the transaction in respect
of which he claims refund of the State sales
tax:
Provided that the assessing authority
may condone delays up to a period of fourteen
days in the submission of the statement, if he
is satisfied that the dealer had sufficient
cause for not submitting the statement within
the said period."
In appeal before us, Mr. Desai on behalf of the appel-
lant has assailed the judgment of the High Court and has
urged that in accordance with clause (b) of section 15 of
the Central Act, the proviso to section 4 of the State Act
and rule 23 of the Madras General Sales Tax Rules, the sales
tax under the State Act in respect of yarn which was the
subject-matter of inter-State sale, should have been paid
to the appellant. The High Court, according to the learned
counsel, was in error in holding to the contrary. As
against that learned Additional Solicitor General has can-
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vassed for the correctness of the view taken by the High
Court. There is in our opinion considerable force in the
contention advanced by Mr. Desai.
Section 15 of the Central Act, as it existed at the
relevant time, contemplates that every State law in so far
as it imposes or authorises the imposition of tax on sale or
purchase of declared goods, would be subject to the re-
striction and condition that the tax payable under that law
in respect of any sale of purchase of such goods inside the
State shall not exceed two per cent of the sale or purchase
price thereof and such tax shall not be levied at more than
one stage.
954
Clause (b) of that section has a direct bearing, and accord-
ing to that clause, where tax has been levied under the
State law in respect of sale or purchase of declared goods
which are subsequently sold in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce, the tax so levied shall be refunded to
such person in such manner and subject to such conditions as
may be prescribed in any law in force in that State. Section
4 of the State Act has been cnacted in conformity with
section 15 of the Central Act. The proviso to that section
deals with the refund of the sales tax levied under the
State Act in respect of declared goods when such goods
arc sold in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
According to that proviso, where a tax has been levied under
section 4 in respect of the sale or purchase of declared
goods and such goods are sold in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce, the amount of tax shall bc re-
funded to such person in such manner and subject to such
conditions as may be prescribed. In pursuance of this provi-
so, the State Government has framed rule 23 of the Madras
General Sales Tax Rules, 1959. According to clause (1) of
that rule, the refund of the sales tax has to be made to the
dealer who makes the inter-State sale and who has paid the
sales tax under the Central Act in respect of such sale.
Clause (3) of the rule provides that statement shall be
submitted to the assessing authority by the aforesaid
dealt not later than three months from the date on which the
dealer pays the tax under the Central Act. It may be stated
that the Madras General Sales Tax Rules, 1959 had to be
placed on the table of both the Houses of the State,
legislature under sub-section (5) of section 53 of the State
Act. In the face of clause (b) of section 15 of the Central
Act, the proviso to section 4 of the State Act and rule 23
of the Madras General Sales Tax Rules, we have no doubt in
our mind that it is the appellant who is entitled to get the
refund of the sales tax levied under the State, Act in
respect of the goods in question because it was the appel-
lant who sold the goods in the course of inter-State trade
and paid the sales tax under the Central Act on that ac-
count..
The High Court in turning down the claim of the
appellant relied upon its earlier decision in the case of M.
A. Khader & Co..(supra). Perusal of the facts of that case
would show that the assessee therein sought a writ of certi-
orari to quash the assessment made under the Central Act in
respect of transactions which were admittedly interState
sales. The question of asking for the refund of the sales
tax paid under the State Act did not arise directly in that
case. There were no doubt some observations in the course
of that judgment, according to which refund of the sales tax
can be claimed only by the person who himself has earlier
paid that tax, and not by a person who has not himself paid
such tax. So far as those observations are concerned, we
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are of the opinion that the emphasis in the word "re-
funded" as used in clause (b) of section 15 of the Central
Act and the proviso to section 4 of the State Act is on
repayment of the amount. A word can have many meanings. To
find out the exact connotation of a word in a statute, we
must look to the context in which it is used. The context
would quite often provide the .key to meaning of the word
and the sense it should carry. Its setting would give colour
to it and provide cue to the intention of the legislature
955
in using it. A word, as said by Holmes, is not a crystal,
transparent and unchanged; it is the skin of a living
thought and may vary greatly in colour and content according
to the circumstances and the time in which it is used. The
context in which the word "refunded" is used shows that such
repayment need not be to the person who initially paid the
tax. It is indeed for the State legislature to specify the
person to whom such amount is to be repaid either in the
statute enacted by it or to make a provision for that pur-
pose in the rules. The State legislature has made it Clear
in the proviso to section 4 of the statute that provision in
this respect would be made in the rules. The rules which
have been framed leave no doubt that the amount has to be
paid to the dealer who sells the goods in the course of
inter-State trade and who has paid the tax under the Central
Act in respect of such sale.
There is also no anomaly in paying the amount of the
sales tax under the State ’Act to a dealer who sells de-
clared goods in the course of inter-State trade, even though
he did not himself pay the tax under the State Act in re-
spect of those goods. The reason for that is that the price
charged from such dealer by the person from whom he pur-
chases the goods would normally take into account the sales
tax paid by the seller.
Assuming that there was some ambiguity in the languages of
clause (b) of section 15, as it existed at the relevant
time, the matter is made clear by the amendment made in the
Central Act by the Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1972
(Act No. 61 of 1972). As a result of the amendment, clause
(b) of section 15 of the Central Act reads as under:
"(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
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
in such manner and subject to such conditions
as may be provided in any law in force in that
State."
The amended provision makes it plain beyond any pale of
controversy that the tax levied under the State Act in
respect of declared goods has to be reimbursed to the person
making sale of those goods in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce in such manner and subject to such condi-
tions as may be provided in the law in force in that State.
According to the notes explaining the different clauses
appended to the statement of objects and reasons of the Bill
which emerged as the amending Act, the amendment made in
clause (b) makes it Clear that local sales tax would be
reimbursed to the person making the sale in the course of
inter-State trade and commerce. The amendment made in
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clause (b) can thus be taken to be an exposition by the
legislature itself of its intent contained in the earlier
provision. We are not impressed by the argument of the
learned Additional Solicitor-General
11 -- 13 3 85CI/76
956
that the amendment made in clause (b) was intended to mark a
departure from the position in law as it existed before the
amendment. The fact that the amendment of clause (b) of
section 15 was not like some other provisions given retro-
spective effect, would not materially affect the position.
As-already mentioned above, the legislature as a result of
the amendment, Clarified what was implicit in the provisions
as they existed earlier. An amendment which, is by way of
clarification of an earlier ambiguous provision can be
useful aid in construing the earlier provision, even though
such amendment is not given retrospective effect. We may
refer in this context to observations on page 147 of Craies
on Statute Law (Sixth Ed.) which read as under:
" .... in Cape Brandy Syndicate v.
I.R.C.(1) Lord Sterndale M.R. said: ’I think
it is clearly established in Att. Gen. v.
Clarkson, supra, that subsequent legislation
may be looked at in order to see the proper
construction to be put upon an earlier Act
where that earlier Act is ambiguous. I quite
agree that subsequent legislation if it pro-
ceeded on an erroneous construction of previ-
ous legislation cannot alter that previous
legislation; but if there be any ambiguity in
the earlier legislation, then the subsequent
legislation may fix the proper interpretation
which is to be put upon the earlier’."
Looking to all the facts, we are of the view that the appel-
lant-firm is entitled to be paid the amount of sales tax
levied under the State Act in respect of the goods sold by
it in the course of inter-State trade provided the appellant
has paid the sales tax under the Central Act in respect of
those sales. We accordingly accept the appeal, set aside
the judgment of the High Court and order that the
appellant-firm be paid the amount of sales tax levied under
the State Act in respect of the goods sold by it in the
course of inter-State trade provided the appellant has paid
the sales tax under the Central Act in respect of those
sales. The appellant shall be entitled to recover its
costs both in this Court as well as in the High Court from
the respondent.
P.B.R. Appeal al-
lowed.
(1) [1921] 2 K.B. 403 at P. 156.
1
957