Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ASSESSING AUTHORITY-CUM-EXCISE & TAXATION OFFICER, GURGAON &
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. EAST INDIA COTTON MFG. CO. LTD.FARIDABAD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/07/1981
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
SEN, A.P. (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1610 1982 SCR (1) 55
1981 SCC (3) 531 1981 SCALE (3)1067
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act 1956, (74 of 1956) Ss. 8(1), (2),
(3)(b), 10, 10-A,& Central Sales Tax (Registration and
Turnover) Rules 1957, Rules 12, 13- Registered Dealer-
Certificates of Registration-Manufacture and sale of
textiles-Purchase of dyeing colours and other chemicals
after issuing ’C’ Forms-User of such goods for third parties
on job contract basis-Whether such use amounts to
manufacture.
Interpretation of Statutes-Taxing Statute-Statute to be
construed according to plain language-Judicial paraphrase
impermissible to Court.
Words & Phrases- "For use by him in the manufacture or
processing of goods for sale "-Meaning of-Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956,S. 8(3) (b).
HEADNOTE:
The Central Sales Tax Act 1956 and the Central Sales
Tax (Registration, and Turnover) Rules 1957, provide that
when a manufacturer who holds a Certificate of Registration
under the Act buys goods for use by him in the manufacture
of goods for sale he would be charged tax at the lower rate
of 3% on his furnishing a declaration in Form C to the
Seller.
The assessee carried on business of manufacturing and
processing textiles. It was registered under the Punjab
General Sales Tax Act, 1948 and held a Certificate of
Registration under section 7 of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956. The business mentioned in the Certificate of
Registration was textile manufacturing, sale. purchase,
wholesale distribution, sales and purchase of yarn waste and
textile machinery; and also specified for the purpose of
sub-section(l) of section 8, dyeing colours and other
chemicals for use in manufacture. The assessee purchased
these goods in the course of inter-state trade and commerce
on the basis of its Certificate of Registration and
furnished to the selling dealers declarations in Form C
stating that these goods were purchased for use by the
assessee in the manufacturing of goods for sale. On the
strength of these declarations the selling dealers were
taxed in respect of the sales effected by them to the
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assessee at the rate of 3 per cent under section 8(1) (b) of
the Act.
The Excise and Taxation Officer-appellant issued a
notice calling upon the assessee to show cause why action
should not be taken under section 10 of the
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Central Act on the ground that the assessee had been
misusing the Certificates of Registration by doing sizing,
bleaching and dyeing for third parties on job basis. The
assessee contended in reply that neither the term and
conditions of the Certificate of Registration nor the
provisions of section 8 (3) (b) of the Central Act required
that the goods purchased by the assessee must be used by it
in manufacture or processing of its own goods intended for
sale by itself and that it would be sufficient compliance
with the requirement of section 8 (3) (b) read with the
Certificate of Registration even if the goods purchased were
used by the assessee in manufacture or processing of goods
for a third party under a job contract so long as the
manufactured or processed goods were intended for sale by
such third party. This contention was not accepted by the
appellant who imposed the penalty under section 10A of the
Act.
The assessee’s writ petition to the High Court was
dismissed holding that the goods purchased by the assessee
against its Certificate of Registration could be used by it
only in manufacture of textiles intended for sale by itself
and if the goods purchased were used in manufacture of
textiles for a third party on the basis of a job contract,
it would amount to user of the goods purchased for a purpose
different from that specified in section 8 (3) (b) and the
assessee would be liable to be proceeded against under
section 10 and 10A.
The assessee’s appeal before the Division Bench of the
High Court was allowed which held that all that section 8(3)
(b) provided was that the goods purchased must be used by
assessee in manufacture of goods for sale and did not
require that the sale must be by the assessee himself. The
prescription of section 8 (3) (b) was that the goods
manufactured must be for sale, without any qualifying
expression that the sale must be by the assessee
manufacturing the goods and therefore even if the goods were
manufactured for a third party, so long as they were
intended for sale by such third party, the case would be
covered by the terms of the section.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD : 1 (i) The Division Bench of the High Court was
right in holding that even if the assessee carried out the
work of sizing, bleaching and dyeing of textiles for a third
party on job contract basis, its case would be covered by
the terms of the second sub-clause of section 8 (3) (b),
provided that the textiles so sized, bleached and dyed by
the assessee were intended for sale by such third party. [67
C]
(ii) If it is proved in any proceeding initiated under
section 10(d) or section 10A that the textiles sized,
bleached or dyed by the assessee for sale by such third
party on job contract basis were not intended for sale by
such third party as would be evident if such textiles were
in fact not sold by the third party but were used for its
own purposes, the assessee would incur the penalty
prescribed in those sections. [67 D]
Commissioner of Sales Tax v. S.R. Sharma, 31 S.T.C, 480
: Navsari Cotton Mills Ltd. v. State of Gujarat 37 S.T.C.
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104 & O. Parmasivan v. State of Kerala 1971 Tax L.R. 1241
overruled.
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2. It is a well-settled rule of interpretation that a
statute must be construed according to its plain language
and neither should anything be added nor subtracted unless
there are adequate grounds to justify the inference that the
legislature clearly so intended. [64E]
Thompson v. Gold and Co. [1910] A.C. 409: Vickers Sons
and Maxim Ltd. v. Evans [1910] A.C. 444 referred to.
3(i) The legislature as also the rule making authority
used the expression "for use.....in the manufacture.....of
goods for sale" without indicating that the sale must be by
any particular individual. The legislature has designedly
abstained from using any words of limitation indicating that
the sale should be by the registered dealer manufacturing
the goods. Where the legislature wanted to restrict the sale
to one by the registered dealer himself. the legislature
used the qualifying words "by him" after the words "for
resale" in the first sub-clause of section 8 (3) (b)
indicating that the resale contemplated by that provision is
resale by the registered dealer purchasing the goods and by
no one else. While enacting the second sub-clause of section
8 (3) (b) the legislature did not qualify the words "for
sale" by adding the words "by him". This deliberate omission
of the words "by him" after the words "for sale" indicates
that the legislature did not intend that the sale of the
manufactured goods should be restricted to the registered
dealer manufacturing the goods. [64 H-65 C]
(ii) The Court must construe the language of section 8
(3) (b) according to its plain words and it cannot write in
the section words which are not there. To read the words "by
him" after the words "for sale" in section 8 (3) (b) would
not be construction but judicial paraphrase which is
impermissible to the Court. [65 E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 756
(NT) of 1973.
From the judgment and order dated the 28th March, 1972
of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in L.P.A. No. 581 of 1970
R.N. Sachdev and Miss A. Subhashini, for the Appellant.
A.K. Sen, K.K. Jain, S.K. Gupta, Bishambar Lal and P.
Dayal, for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. This appeal by special leave raises a
short but interesting question of construction of section 8
(3) (b) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. The
determination of this question has given rise to divergence
of opinion amongst different High Courts but if we have
regard to the well recognised canons of construc-
58
tion of taxing statues and also focus our attention on the
object and intendment of the section, we do not think it
presents much difficulty of solution. The facts giving rise
to the appeal are few and may be briefly stated as follows.
The assessee is a limited company registered under the
Companies Act, 1956 and having its registered office at
Calcutta. The assessee owns a factory in Faridabad where it
carries on business of manufacturing and processing
textiles. The assessee is registered under the Punjab
General Sales Tax Act, 1948 as in force in the State of
Haryana and at material times it also held a Certificate of
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Registration under section 7 of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956 (hereinafter referred to as the Central Act). The
business mentioned in the Certificate of Registration was
Textile manufacturing, sale, purchase, wholesale
distribution; sales and purchase of yarn and waste and
textile machinery and the Certificate of Registration also
specified inter alia the following classes of goods for the
purpose of sub-section (l) of section 8, namely, "dyeing
colours, and other chemicals for use in manufacture." The
assessee purchased these goods in the course of inter-state
trade and commerce on the basis of its Certificate of
Registration and furnished to the selling dealers
declarations in Form C stating that these goods were
purchased for use by the assessee in the manufacturing of
goods for sale. On the strength of these declarations the
selling dealers were taxed in respect of the sales effected
by them to the assessee at the rate of 3 per cent under
section 8 (1) (b) of the Central Act. The goods purchased by
the assessee were used partly for sizing, bleaching and
dyeing of textiles belonging to the assessee and partly for
sizing, bleaching and dyeing of textiles belonging to third
parties on job basis.
On 17th September 1966, the Excise and Taxation
Officer, Gurgaon issued a notice calling upon the assessee
to show cause why action should not be taken against it
under section 10 of the Central Act on the ground that the
assessee had been misusing the certificate of registration
by doing sizing, bleaching and dyeing for third parties on
job basis. This was followed by another notice dated 13th
July 1967 in the same terms by the Excise and Taxation
Officer in regard to the assessment years 1962-63 to 1966-
67. The assessee replied to the notices by its letter dated
21st July 1967 asking for details and circumstances in
which, according to the Excise and Taxation Officer, the
assessee had misused the certificate of registration so that
the assessee could
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satisfy the Excise and Taxation Officer that no such misuse
had, in fact, taken place. In response to this query made by
the assessee, the Excise and Taxation Officer formulated the
case against the assessee in the following words.
"The company purchased goods from outside the
State of Punjab (now Haryana) on submission of ’C’
Forms for the purpose of use in manufacture of
goods for sale. But instead of doing so, the
company used those purchases partly in
manufacturing its own goods for sale and partly
for doing job work for other parties. The Company
could not use the material concessionally
purchased, for the job work as that does not
constitute ’sale’."
The assessee contended in reply that neither the terms and
conditions of the certificate of registration nor the
provisions of section 8 (3) (b) of the Central Act required
that the goods purchased by the assessee must be used by it
in manufacture or processing of its own goods intended for
sale by itself and that it would be sufficient compliance
with the requirement of section 8 (3) (b) read with the
Certificate of Registration even if the goods purchased were
used by assessee in manufacture or processing of goods for a
third party under a job contract, so long as the
manufactured or processed goods were intended for sale by
such third party. This contention was however not accepted
by the Excise and Taxation Officer and he consequently
issued notices to the assessee for the assessment year 1962-
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63 to 1966-67 proposing to impose penalty under section 10A
of the Central Act on the ground that the assessee had
"contravened the provisions of section 10 of the Act ibid by
purchasing goods for the purpose specified in clause (b) of
subsection (3) of section 8" but had failed "without
reasonable excuse to make use of the goods for any such
purpose." The assessee thereupon filed a writ petition in
the High Court of Punjab and Haryana for quashing and
setting aside the various notices issued by the Excise and
Taxation Officer seeking to proceed against the assessee
under sections 10 and 10A of the Central Act.
The writ petition came up for hearing before a single
Judge of the High Court who rejected it on the ground that
on a true interpretation of section 8 (3) (b), the goods
purchased by the assessee against its certificate of
registration could be used by it only in manufacture of
textiles intended for sale by itself and if
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the goods purchased were used in manufacture of textiles for
a third party on the basis of a job contract, it would
amount to user of the goods purchased for a purpose
different from that specified in section 8 (3) (b) and the
assessee would be liable to be proceeded against under
section 10 and 10A and in the circumstances the notices
issued against the assessee must be held to be valid. The
assessee preferred an appeal before a Division Bench of the
High Court and before the Division Bench, two contentions
were advanced on behalf of the Revenue in support of the
decision of the learned single Judge. The first contention
was that the sizing, bleaching and dyeing of textiles did
not amount to manufacture of textiles and the goods
purchased by the assessee could not therefore be said to
have been used by it in manufacture of textiles as specified
in the Certificate of Registration and hence the assessee
had failed to make use of the goods purchased for the
purpose specified in sec. 8 (3) (b) read with the
Certificate of Registration. This contention was negatived
by the Division Bench which held that though sizing
bleaching and dyeing of grey cloth did amount to processing,
it had the effect of converting grey cloth into a
commercially different marketable commodity and it therefore
amounted also to manufacture of a commercially new product
and the user of the goods purchased in sizing, bleaching and
dyeing grey cloth was consequently within the terms of
section 8 (3) (b) read with the Certificate of Registration.
This view taken by the Division Bench was not challenged on
behalf of the Revenue in the appeal before us and hence we
need not say anything more about it. The second contention
urged before the Division Bench was-and that was the only
contention pressed upon us on behalf of the Revenue-that the
interpretation placed on section 8 (3) (b) by the learned
single Judge was correct and in order to come within the
terms of that section, the assessee was required to use the
goods purchased in manufacture of its own goods intended for
sale by itself and if the assessee used the goods purchased
in manufacture of goods for a third party, the user would be
for a purpose different from that specified in section 8 (3)
(b), even though the manufactured goods were intended for
sale by such third party. The Division Bench did not accept
this contention of the Revenue and over-turning the view
taken by the learned single Judge, the Division Bench held
that all that section 8 (3) (b) provided was that the goods
purchased must be used by the assessee in manufacture of
goods for sale and did not require that the sale must be by
the assessee himself. The prescription of section 8 (3) (b)
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was that the goods manufactured must be
61
for sale, without any qualifying expression that the sale
must be by the assessee manufacturing the goods and
therefore even if the goods were manufactured for a third
party, so long as they were intended for sale by such third
party, the case would be covered by the terms of the
section. The Division Bench accordingly allowed the writ
petition and quashed and set aside the notices issued
against the assessee. The Revenue thereupon preferred the
present appeal after obtaining certificate of fitness from
the High Court.
It will be seen from the above statement of facts that
the real controversy between the parties in the present
appeal centres round the true interpretation of section 8
(3) (b). We will presently set out that section but before
we do so, it is necessary to refer to some other provisions
of the Central Act as well, for it is a well-settled rule of
interpretation that no one section should be construed in
isolation but that the statute should be read as a whole
with each part throwing light on the meaning of the other.
Section 6 is the charging section and it levies Sales Tax on
every dealer "on all sales effected by him in the course of
inter state trade or commerce during any year." Section 8,
as its marginal note indicates, provides the rates at which
Sales Tax shall be chargeable on inter-state sales effected
by a dealer. That section and we are setting out here the
section as it stood at the material time provides inter alia
as follows:
"8(1)Every dealer, who in the course of Inter-State
trade or commerce-
(a) sells to the Government any goods; or
(b) sell-to a registered dealer other than the
Government goods of the description referred
to in subsection (3),
shall be liable to pay tax under this Act, which
shall be three per cent of his turnover.
(2) The tax payable by any dealer on his turnover in
so far as the turnover or any part thereof relates
to the sale of goods in the course of inter-state
trade or commerce not falling within sub-section
(1).
(a) In the case of declared goods, shall be
calculated at the rate applicable to the sale
or purchase of such goods inside the
appropriate State; and
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(b) in the case of goods, other than declared
goods shall be calculated at the rate of ten
per cent or at the rate applicable to the
sale or purchase of such goods inside the
appropriate State whichever is higher;
and for the purpose of making any such calculation
any such dealer, shall be deemed to be a dealer
liable to pay tax under the sales tax law of the
appropriate State, notwithstanding that he, in
fact, may not be so liable under that law.
(2-A)
(3) The goods referred to in clause (b) of sub-section
(1)-
(a) ... ... ...
(b) are goods of class or classes specified in
the certificate of the registration of the
registered dealer purchasing the goods as
being intended for resale by him or subject
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to any rules made by the Central Government
in this behalf for use by him in the
manufacture or processing of goods for sale
or in mining or in the generation or
distribution of electricity or any other form
of power;
(4) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall not apply
to any sale in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce unless the dealer selling the goods
furnishes to the prescribed authority in the
prescribed manner-
(a) a declaration duly filled and signed by the
registered dealer to whom the goods are sold
containing the prescribed particulars in a
prescribed form obtained from the prescribed
authority;
or
(b) if the goods are sold to the Government not
being a registered dealer, a certificate in
the prescribed form duly filled and signed by
a duly authorised officer of the Government.
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(5) ... ... ...
This section provides for three different rates of tax, one
in subsection (1) clauses (a) and (b), another in sub-
section (2) clause (a) and the third in sub-section (2)
clause (b). The rate of tax provided in sub-section (1)
clauses (a) and (b) is lower than that provided in clause
(a) or clause (b) of sub-section (2). We are concerned here
with clause (b) of sub-section (1) since it is under that
provision that the sales of dyeing colours and chemicals
made to the assessee were charged to tax by the Sales Tax
Authorities under the Central Act. Sub-section (1) clause
(b) applies to sales to a registered dealer other than the
Government of "goods of the description referred to in sub-
section (3)". Sub-section (3) specifies the goods referred
to in sub-section (1) clause (b) and clause (b) of sub-
section (3) describes these goods as being "goods of the
class or classes specified in the Certificate of
Registration of the registered dealer purchasing the goods
as being intended......for use by him in the
manufacture............of goods for sale.....’.Now the class
of goods specified in the Certificate of Registration of the
assessee in the present case was "dyeing colours and other
chemicals intended for use in the manufacture of textiles
for sale" and therefore on the assessee purchasing dyeing
colour and other chemicals against its Certificate of
Registration for use by it in manufacture of textiles for
sale, the selling dealers were liable to pay tax on the
sales at the lower rate of three per cent under clause (b)
of sub-section (1), provided the assessee furnished
declaration Form C to the selling dealers and the selling
dealers submitted the same to the Prescribed Authority as
required by sub-section (4) clause (a) and plainly and
unquestionably the benefit of this lower rate of tax would
enure to the assessee, since it is common knowledge that the
incidence of Sales Tax is always passed on by the selling
dealer to the purchaser. Rule 12 of the Central Sales Tax
(Registration and Turnover) Rules 1957 made by the Central
Government in exercise of the power conferred under section
13 sub-section (1) provides that the declaration referred to
in sub-section (4) clause (a) shall be in Form C and
accordingly, declarations in Form C duly filled in and
signed were supplied by the assessee to the selling dealers
against the purchases of dyeing colours and chemicals and
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these declaration contained a certificate by the assessee
that the goods purchased were for use in manufacture of
goods for sale. Rule 13 also provides "that the goods
referred to in clause (b) of sub-section (3) which a
registered dealer may purchase shall be goods intended for
use by him as raw materials, processing
materials....stores.......in the manufacture.........of
goods for sale." The assessee was therefore
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clearly bound to use the dyeing colours and other chemical
purchased by it against its Certificate of Registration and
the declarations in Form C in manufacture of textiles for
sale. If the assessee failed without reasonable cause to do
so and used the dyeing colours and other chemicals purchased
by it for a different purpose, then under section 10 clause
(d) the assessee would be liable to punishment with
imprisonment or fine or both and under section 10 A
subsection (1), the assessee would also incur liability to
penalty in a sum not exceeding one-and-a half times, the tax
which have been levied under sub-section (2) in respect of
the sale to him of the goods, if the sale had been a sale
falling within that sub-section.
The question which therefore arises for consideration
is as to what is the scope and meaning of the expression
"for use.......in the manufacture..........of goods for
sale" occurring in section 8 (3) (b) and in the declaration
in Form C and Rule 13. Does it mean that the goods
manufactured by a registered dealer by using the goods
purchased against his Certificate of Registration and the
declaration in Form C must be intended for sale by him or
does it also include a case where goods are manufactured by
a registered dealer for the third party under a job contract
and the manufactured goods are intended for sale by such
third party ? Now it is a well settled rule of
interpretation that a statute must be construed according to
its plain language and neither should anything be added nor
substracted unless there are adequate grounds to justify the
inference that the legislature clearly so intended. It was
said more than seven decades ago by Lord Mersey in Thompson
v. Goold and Company [1910] A.C. 409;
"It is a strong thing to read into an Act of
Parliament words which are not there and in the
absence of clear necessity, it is a wrong thing to
do."
Lord Loreborn L.C. also observed in Vickers, Sons and
Maxim Limited v. Evans [1910] A.C. 444;
"We are not entitled to read words into an Act of
Parliament unless clear reason for it is to be
found within the four corners of the Act itself."
Now here we find that the expression used by the legislature
as also the rule making authority is simpliciter "for use-in
the manufacture-of goods for sale" without any addition of
words indicating
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that the sale must be by any particular individual. The
legislature has designedly abstained from using any words
of limitation indicating that the sale should be by the
registered dealer manufacturing goods. It is significant to
note that where the legislature wanted to restrict the sale
to one by the registered dealer himself, the legislature
used the qualifying words "by him" after the words "for
resale" in the first sub-clause of section 8 (3) (b)
indicating clearly that the resale contemplated by that
provision is resale by the registered dealer purchasing the
goods and by no one else, but while enacting the second sub-
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clause of section 8 (3) (b) the legislature did not qualify
the words "for sale" by adding the words "by him". This
deliberate omission of the words "by him" after the words
"for sale" clearly indicates that the legislature did not
intend that the sale of the manufactured goods should be
restricted to the registered dealer manufacturing the goods.
If the legislature intended that the sale of the
manufactured goods should be by the registered dealer
manufacturing the goods and by no one else, there is no
reason why the words "by him should have been omitted after
the words "for sale" when the legislature considered it
necessary to introduce those words after the words "for
resale" in the first sub-clause of section 8 (3) (b). The
omission of the words "by him" is clearly deliberate and
intentional and it cannot be explained away on any
reasonable hypothesis except that the legislature did not
intend that the sale should be limited to that by the
registered dealer manufacturing the goods. The Court must
construe the language of section 8 (3) (b) according to its
plain words and it cannot write in the section words which
are not there. To read the words "by him" after the words
"for sale" in section 8 (3) (b) would not be construction
but judicial paraphrase which is impermissible to the Court.
It is also important to note that the word ’use’ is followed
by the words "by him" clearly indicating that the use of the
goods purchased in the manufacture of goods for sale must be
by the registered dealer himself but these words are
significantly absent after the words "for sale", On a plain
grammatical construction, these words govern and qualify
only "use" and cannot be projected into the words "for
sale". The goods purchased by the registered dealer must be
used by him in the manufacture of goods which are intended
for sale but such sale need not be by the registered dealer
himself: it may be by any one.
Now ordinarily when the language of a statutory
provision is plain and unambiguous, there is no need to
resort to the object and purpose of the enactment because in
such a case, the language
66
best dealers the intention of the law-giver. But, even if we
look at the object and intendment of section 8 (1) (b), read
with section 8(3) (b), we reach the same conclusion. The
object of providing a lower rate of tax under 8 (1) (b) for
sales of goods described in section 8 (3) (b) clearly is
that when goods are purchased by a registered dealer for
being used by him in the manufacture or processing of goods
which are intended for sale, the goods which are ultimately
sold should not become unduly expensive to the consumer by
addition of a high rate of sales tax on the purchase of
goods which are used in the manufacture or processing of the
goods ultimately sold. Now if this be the object of section
8 (1) (b) read with section 8 (3) (b) it should be
immaterial whether the sale of the manufactured or processed
goods is by the registered dealer manufacturing or
processing goods or by another person for whom the goods are
manufactured or processed by the registered dealer. The
intendment of the statutory provision being that the cost of
the manufactured or processed goods to the consumer should
not be unduly enhanced by reason of higher rate of tax on
the goods used in the manufactured or processing of the
goods sold, it is obvious that if this intendment is to be
fully effectuated, the benefit of the statutory provision
should be available irrespective of whether the manufactured
or processed goods are sold to the consumer by the
registered dealer or by some one else who has got the same
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manufactured by the registered dealer. It was for this
reason that the legislature deliberately omitted to add the
words "by him" after the words "for sale" so as to make it
clear that this sub clause of section 8 (3) (b) would apply
even if the goods manufactured or processed by the
registered dealer were intended for sale by some one else.
The words "for sale" following upon the word ’goods’ clearly
indicate that the goods manufactured or processed by the
registered dealer must be goods for sale or in other words,
they must be goods intended for sale and it is immaterial
whether they are intended for sale by the registered dealer
himself or by anyone else. This sub clause of section 8 (3)
(b) would therefore clearly cover a case where a registered
dealer manufactures or processes goods for a third party on
a job contract and uses in the manufacture or processing of
such goods, materials purchased by him against his
Certificate of Registration and the declarations in Form C,
so long as the manufactured or processed goods are intended
for sale by such third party. It is of course, true that if
proceedings are taken against the registered dealer under
section 10 clause (d) or section 10A, the question would
arise whether the goods manufactured or processed by the
registered
67
dealer for a third party were intended for sale by such
third party and that would have to be decided by the Court
or the competent Authority according to the appropriate and
relevant rules of evidence, but merely because some
difficulty may arise in the determination of this question
by reason of the third party coming into the picture that
would be no ground for refusing to place on the language of
section 8 (3) (b) the only construction which it can
reasonably bear.
We are therefore of the view that the Division Bench of
the High Court was right in holding that even if the
assessee carried out the work of sizing, bleaching and
dyeing of textiles for a third party on job contract basis,
its case would be covered by the terms of the second sub-
clause of section 8 (3) (b), provided that the textiles so
sized, bleached and dyed by the assessee were intended for
sale by such third party. If it is proved in any proceedings
initiated under section 10 (d) or section 10A that the
textiles sized, bleached or dyed by the assessee for a third
party on job contract basis were not intended for sale by
such third party, as would be evident if such textiles were
in fact not sold by the third party but were used for its
own purposes, the assessee would incur the penalty
prescribed in those sections.
We find that there are three decisions of three
different High Court which have taken a view different from
the one taken by us. One is the decision of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax v. S. R.
Sharma 31 Sales Tax Cases, 480, the other is the decision of
the Gujarat High Court in Navsari Cotton Mills Limited v.
State of Gujarat 37 Sales Tax Cases 104 and the third is the
decision of the Kerala High Court in O. Parmasivan v. State
of Kerala 1971 Taxation Law Reports 1241. These three
decisions proceed on an erroneous interpretation of section
8 (3) (b) and must be deemed to be over ruled by the present
decision.
We accordingly quash and set aside the notices which
have been issued against the assessee on the basis that
merely by using dyeing colours and other chemicals purchased
by it in sizing bleaching and dyeing textiles for third
parties on job contract basis, the assessee contravened the
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provisions of section 10 clause (d) and
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rendered itself liable to penalty udder section 10A. The
appeal will in the circumstances stand dismissed with costs
throughout.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed
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