Karnataka High Court
Builders Association Of India vs State Of Karnataka And Others on 27 July, 1990
Equivalent citations: [1990]79STC442(KAR)
Author: S. Mohan
Bench: S. Mohan
JUDGMENT
1. All these writ petitions can be dealt with under a common judgment since they question the validity of section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act, 1957, introduced by the Amendment Act No. 27 of 1985, with effect from 1st April, 1986.
2. We propose to note the facts in Writ Petitions Nos. 2064 to 2067 of 1988 :
The petitioners are civil engineering contractors engaged in civil construction work in the State of Karnataka. In order to bring the activity of works contract within the purview of power to levy sales tax by the respective State, amendments were introduced extending the definition of "sale" under article 366(29-A) of the Constitution of India. Following the constitutional amendment, the Karnataka Sales Tax Act was amended by the Amendment Act No. 27 of 1985. In pursuance of the amendment, the Karnataka Sales Tax Rules were also amended by the Karnataka Sales Tax (Amendment) Rules, 1986.
As a result of the aforesaid amendments, the activity of the petitioner in the nature of works contract in the State, has been brought within the scope of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act.
The petitioners challenge the constitutionality of the Forty-Sixth amendment, as well as the amendments made to the Karnataka Sales Tax Act. The challenge is in three stages :
(i) the constitutional amendment of procedural and substantive aspect;
(ii) the power of the respective State Legislature to levy and determine tax on works contract without a law made under article 286(3)(b) of the Constitution; and
(iii) the Karnataka Amending Act 27 of 1985 on various grounds of illegality.
By the Forty-sixth Amendment, the definition of "sale" under article 366(29-A) is not an enabling amendment. The power to levy sales tax can only be traced to entry 54 of List II in the State List of the Seventh Schedule. That entry has not been amended by the Forth-sixth amendment. Therefore, merely because clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution was amended, that will not enable the State Government to levy sales tax on works contract. This is because the said article cannot be taken as a source of power, for the simple reason that the connected definitions of "goods" under the Sales of Goods Act, 1930, and "sale" under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 have not been amended. Even assuming it is deemed to amend entry 54 of List II, there is no ratification by not less than one half of the State Legislatures as required under article 368 of the Constitution.
The Forty-sixth amendment is also violative of the concept of basic structure doctrine. Though article 286 has been amended, till date the Parliament does not come out with any law fixing the rate of sales tax on works contract. Therefore, the State law will be unconstitutional.
Coming to the definition of "sale" under section 2(1)(t)(ii), it is not only vague and arbitrary but the explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t) is a clear violation of the Sale of Goods Act. Hence it is repugnant to the State law. Therefore it violates article 254 of the Constitution.
The definition of "works contract" under sub-clause (v-i) of section 2(1) is wider and ultra vires of the definition of "sale" under the Amendment Act No. 27 of 1985.
Section 5B, the charging section on works contract, is ultra vires of section 5(4) of the Act because of the non obstante clause. As a result, the said section contradicts section 5(4) of the Act. In levying the tax, it is arbitrary and without any nexus.
The Rules are ambiguous and contradictory to various clauses provided in it. The nature of the civil contract is such that it is highly impossible to determine and calculate as any other transfer of property in goods the actual quantum of the works carried over every month and to maintain stock books. Clauses (m) and (n) of rule 6, while granting exemption have imposed unreasonable restrictions which are violative of article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution.
The Rules have unnecessarily classified a section scheme of tax structure, one for ascertainable labour charges under the Sixth Schedule and another for unascertainable labour charges under rule 6(n). It is arbitrary because the Sixth Schedule provides 18 categories of works contracts while rule 6 provides only 6 categories. Therefore, there is not only discrimination but there is no nexus, hence violative of article 14 of the Constitution.
On the above averments, a writ of declaration is prayed for to declare the provisions of sections 2(1)(k)(viii), 2(1)(t)(ii) and explanation (3)(c), 2(1)(v-i), 5B, 6B and Sixth Schedule of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act as amended by the amending Act No. 27 of 1985, and the Rules made relating to the levy of sales tax on works contract, as illegal, unconstitutional and violative of articles 14, 19(1)(g), 38, 39, 246, 254, 265 and 301 to 304 of the Constitution of India, in so far as the petitioners are concerned.
3. Mr. K. K. Venugopal, Senior Advocate, learned counsel for the petitioners, submits in support of the above grounds raised in the writ petitions after drawing our attention to the relevant provisions, that the amending Act No. 27 of 1985 was passed at a time when the supreme Court had not delivered the judgment in Builders Association of India v. Union of India . The Supreme Court evolved the concept of transfer of goods in a works contract similar to transfer of goods by sale to a customer the result being the constitutional restrictions and provisions of the Central Sales tax Act were made applicable. The Supreme Court ruled that the transfer of gods in a works contract will be a fictional sale. It had further ruled that those sales are subject to the same constitutional limitations. Therefore, one cannot get away from them. Unfortunately, explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t) lays down a different principle than what is contemplated under article 286(2) of the Constitution. The said explanation (3)(c) speaks of situs while dealing with the transfer of goods. The situs has been fixed as the place of delivery of goods. This is without regard to article 286(2) of the Constitution and section 4 and 5 of the Central Sales ax Act. Therefore it is bad.
The provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act, particularly sections 3, 4 and 5, deal with computation of the various transactions. If that be so, neither the situs nor the transfer of property would be relevant. If therefore, they are irrelevant for actual sales it should be so for fictional sale or a deemed sale as well.
The situs was fixed under section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act without reference to transfer of property. Since the existing laws would cover all sales, any attempt by the State Legislature to have a different concept in the State would be contrary to section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act. Hence it is unconstitutional. Even if explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act is struck down, clauses (a) and (b) of the said explanation will take care of fictional sales as well, leave alone they being covered by the actual sale.
Coming to section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act, to deprive the contractor of single point is clearly discriminatory. The said section is void in so far as it refers to the Sixth Schedule because the said Schedule itself refers to the nature of works done by a contractor and not the goods.
Secondly, the same item of goods used in the works contract is taxed differently. The end user is irrelevant. As a mater of fact, this is the dictum of the judgment (Builders Association case) (at page 400 of STC; para 36 at page 1390 of AIR).
In view of the above submissions, the question that may arise will be, if the Schedule is bad, the taxing provision cannot be worked out. Where therefore it is possible to sever section 5B removing the non obstante clause even then the rest of the section can remain by the application of doctrine of severability as was held in R. M. D. Chamarbaugwalla v. Union of India .
Under article 286 of the Constitution, Parliament alone has been conferred with the power to levy the tax. If the fictional sales are brought in so as to enable the State Legislature to tax, it would be clearly violative of the said article. Therefore, it is the Parliament which has to determine what is sale or purchase under clause (29-A) of article 366.
Though article 286(2) says that Parliament may by law formulate the principle for determining as to when a sale or purchase takes place "may" in this context must mean "shall". In support of this submission, the learned counsel cites Principles of Statutory Interpretation by Justice G. P. Singh, IV Edition, page 244.
Further, explanation (3)(c) to section 2 is violative of article 286. Therefore this explanation has to be struck down as otherwise the State may claim immunity and proceed to levy tax even though such striking down does not advance the case of the petitioners.
4. Mr. K. Srinivasan, supporting the arguments of Mr. Venugopal, submits that article 286(1)(a) of the Constitution talks of sale outside the State. This is what is contemplated under section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act. Therefore, explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act is directly opposed to section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act.
The Forty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution says that even in case of works contract it has to be treated as a sale, the rate of taxation on transfer of goods involved, it is different in a labour contract or contract of service in comparison to ordinary sale, it would be discriminatory in nature and, therefore, must be held to be bad.
While construing section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act, it must be subject to section 5, 3 and 4. The non obstante clause at the opening of the section will have to be struck down. The learned counsel draws our attention to rule 6; a similar provision in Bihar Sales Tax Rules was struck down as seen from Jamshedpur Contractor's Association v. State of Bihar [1989] 75 STC 132 (Pat).
Mr. Vijayan, learned counsel, supplementing his arguments, would say that in the absence of a situs of sale being demarcated in article 286(2) or article 269(3) of the Constitution, the State law is premature. Therefore, section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act is violative of these provisions.
The next submission of the learned counsel is that explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t)(ii) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act prescribes a peculiar test which is violative of article 286 of the Constitution. This is precisely what is criticised in (Builders Association case) (a page 396 and 397 of STC; para 32 at page 1388 of AIR). The learned counsel further cites Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana and particularly the passages occurring at pages 85 and 86, and submits that there is no legislative authority for enacting section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act. Section 5B will have to go since it proposes to tax the conglomerate.
5. The learned counsel appearing in Writ Petition No. 4070 of 1987 cites (Builders Association of India v. Union of India) and draws our attention to the facts in that writ petition. He also adopts the arguments advanced by the other learned counsel.
6. Mr. M. R. Achar, learned Government Advocate, appearing for the State of Karnataka, meets these points in the following manner :
Nowhere does the Supreme Court in (Builders Association of India v. Union of India) say that the State has no power to fix the situs. That ruling merely held that the State while proposing the tax on fictional sales must conform to the constitutional provisions and also the limitations contained in the Constitution as well as the Central Sales Tax Act. The same question as is advanced by the petitioners, came up for consideration in Ranjit Kumar v. Commercial Tax Officer . It was rejected as is seen from the passage occurring in pages 504 and 505. It is incorrect to contend that the State has no power in the absence of a law made by the Parliament under article 286(2) of the Constitution. It should be carefully noted that the said article used the word "may" likewise article 286(3). Only when a law is made by the Parliament should the State law be repugnant to such Parliamentary enactment, it would be, to the extent of repugnancy, bad, but no otherwise. There is no possibility of construing this word "may" as "shall". In other words clauses (2) and (3) of article 286 of the Constitution are enabling provisions conferring power on the Parliament.
The argument of the petitioners that explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t)(ii) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act lays down a different principle and speaks of situs with reference to delivery of goods disregardful of article 286 of the Constitution and section 4 and 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act, is fallacious. The explanation uses the same words as occurring in sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution. This is precisely what was held by the Supreme Court in Builders Association of India v. Union of India of STC; paras 32 and 33 at pages 1388 and 1389 of AIR), which he would press into service for the purpose of this case.
In more or less identical circumstances in 20th Century Finance Corporation Limited v. State of Maharashtra [1989] 75 STC 217 (Bom) at pages 226 and 227, a similar argument came to be repelled. The ratio of the judgment squarely applies to the facts of this case. Therefore, the question of inter-State sale does not arise here. Only when the declared goods go into the contract of service as declared goods the limitations will apply, but not if they change their character.
The contention that different rates of taxation have been prescribed for transfer of goods in a works contract or contract of service than the actual sale, is factually wrong. On a comparison of the Second Schedule and the Sixth Schedule it would be seen that the rates are same excepting item 6 of the Second Schedule, Part P prescribing 8 per cent and item 20 of the Sixth Schedule prescribing 15 per cent. On that score it cannot be urged that there is any discrimination because it is one of the fundamental postulates of law of taxation that the Legislature has a wide discretion in choosing the objects of taxation. There can be difference in rates. This is very clear if Twyford Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Kerala is referred to.
The entire argument about the vires of section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act or that it is opposed to other sections proceeds on a misapprehension. This section contemplates a separate kind of transaction. Therefore, it has so proceeded with reference to such of those transactions which are taken within it, viz., what were not sales earlier. In order to fix the taxable turnover of transfer of property in goods in the execution of works contract, it is this section alone which has to be looked at. The rules only enable the fixation of such a turnover. Rule 6 deals with determination of total and taxable turnover. While arriving at the taxable turnover, clause (m) of rule 6 speaks of certain categories of works contract mentioned in the Sixth Schedule while clause (n) takes care of other cases of works contract specified in items 18 and 20 of the Sixth Schedule. This is merely a method and the working out as to what should be deducted would depend upon the facts of a particular case. Clause (m) speaks of actual incurring of labour charges. The excess of labour charges is an integral part of the sale price. As to how the reasonableness of classification must be approached can be gathered from Kerala Hotel & Restaurant Association v. State of Kerala . Therefore, there is nothing axiomatic about these matters. That case helps the State greatly.
7. Mr. Srinivasan, in his reply, would submit that the ruling of 20th Century Finance Corporation Limited v. State of Maharashtra [1989] 75 STC. 217 (Bom) will have a bearing only on section 5(1) and hence cannot be applied to a case arising under section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act.
With regard to the applicability of section 4 to transfer of goods in a contract of service one must have regard to the principles laid down in Kerala Hotel's case .
The reply of the other counsel is that the judgment of the Supreme Court in Builders Association case would apply only prospectively as laid down in Rajah D. V. Seetharamayya Bahadur v. Assistant Commissioner (1985) 98 Mad LW 896 and an unreported judgment in Writ Appeal No. 826 of 1988.
8. Having regard to the above arguments, the following points arise for our determination :
(i) Scope of the constitutional provisions;
(ii) Scope of the Central Sales Tax Act, particularly section 3, 4 and 5;
(iii) Section 5B of the Karnataka Sales tax Act whether violative of the Constitution or is repugnant to the provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act;
(iv) Validity of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act;
(v) Prescription of different rates of taxation, whether valid ?
9. Article 269(3) of the Constitution says that Parliament may by law formulate principles for determining when a sale or purchase of, or consignment of, goods takes place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce. In exercise of this power the Parliament has enacted section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. That lays down the principles for determining when a sale or purchase of goods takes place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
The powder to impose tax on such sales has been given exclusively to the Parliament in view of article 269(1)(g) of the Constitution read with entry 92-A of List I. This clause also confers upon the Parliament the power to lay down the principles for determining when a sale or purchase of goods takes place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce so as to be liable to the Central sales tax.
10. The next important article to be looked at is article 286 of the Constitution. We would rather do well to extract the entire article because it has undergone important changes by the Forty-sixth amendment :
"286. Restrictions as to imposition of ax on the sale or purchase of goods.- (1) No law of a State shall impose, or authorise the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of goods where such sale or purchase takes place -
(a) outside the State; or
(b) in the course of the import of the goods into, or export of the goods out of, the territory of India.
(2) Parliament may by law formulate principles for determining when a sale or purchase of goods takes place in any of the ways mentioned in clause (1).
(3) Any law of a State shall, in so far as it imposes, or authorises the imposition of, -
(a) a tax on the sale or purchase of goods declared by Parliament by law to be of special importance in inter-State trade or commerce; or
(b) a tax on the sale or purchase of goods, being a tax of the nature referred to in sub-clause (b), sub-clause (c) or sub-clause (d) of clause (29-A) of article 366, be subject to such restrictions and conditions in regard to the system of levy, rates and other incidents of the tax as Parliament may by law specify."
Clause (3) has been substituted by the Forty-sixth amendment of 1982. The object of the amendment is to create a legal fiction to determine the situs of the sale. Since the law remained somewhat confusing that came to be settled by the Parliament enacting the Central Sales Tax Act in 1956. Section 4 of that Act provides a simple test of physical location of the goods by determining the situs of a sale as between more than one State. It should be noticed that clause (2) did not take away the legislative competence of the State to impose a tax on sales taking place in the course of inter-state trade or commerce. But it merely subjected it to a legislation by Parliament. After introduction of entry 92-A of List I by the Sixth amendment the legislative power to tax sales taking place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce has been vested exclusively in the Parliament.
In so far as article 286 lays down such limitations upon the power of the State to enact legislation for purposes of taxing sales it is required on our part to find out as to what those limitations are. In our view, the limitations can be stated as follows :
(i) In view of clause (1)(a) no tax shall be imposed on a sale or purchase which takes place outside the State.
(ii) In view of clause (1)(b) equally no tax shall be imposed on a sale or purchase which takes place in the course of import into, or export out of, India.
Even with regard to inter-State trade or commerce there are two other limitations :
(i) The power to tax sales taking place in the course of inter-State trade or-commerce is within the exclusive competence of parliament and this is because of article 269(1)(g) read with entry 92-A of List I.
(ii) Even though the sale does not take place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce, if the sale were to relate to goods declared by Parliament to be of special importance in inter-State trade or commerce or if it were to come under article 366(29-A)(a), (b), (c) and (d), such a State taxation would be subject to the restrictions and conditions imposed by Parliament.
Therefore, it will follow that so long as these limitations are not transgressed, should it be a case of intra-State sale that could be the subject-matter of State sales tax.
Clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution speaks of tax on the sale or purchase of goods. It reads :
"(29-A) 'tax on the sale or purchase of goods' includes -
(a) a tax on the transfer, otherwise than in pursuance of a contract, of property in any goods for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration;
(b) a tax on the transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of a works contract;
(c) a tax on the delivery of goods on hire purchase or any system of payment by instalments;
(d) a tax on the transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose (whether or not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration;
(e) a tax on the supply of goods by any unincorporated association or body of persons to a member thereof for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration;
(f) a tax on the supply, by way of or as part of any service or in any other manner whatsoever, of goods, being food or any other article for human consumption or any drink (whether or not intoxicating), where such supply or service, is for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration, and such transfer, delivery or supply of any goods shall be deemed to be a sale of those goods by the person making the transfer, delivery or supply and a purchase of those goods by the person to whom such transfer, delivery or supply is made."
By this clause, the concept of sale had come to be enlarged. It is no longer confined to the sale as understood under the Sales of Goods Act.
11. The validity of the Forty-sixth amendment of the Constitution came directly before the Supreme Court in Builders Association of India v. Union of India because, on the passing of the Forty-sixth amendment the State Governments commenced to levy sales tax on the turnover of works contract entered into by the building contractors for constructing houses, factories, bridges, etc. Two points were urged before the Supreme Court, viz.;
(i) the Forty-sixth amendment was unconstitutional because it had not been ratified by the Legislatures of not less than one-half of the States; and
(ii) it was not open to the States to ignore the provisions contained in article 286 of the Constitution and the provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 while making assessments under the sales tax laws passed by the various States.
On the first point it was held at page 392 of STC (paragraph 29 of AIR) that there has been due compliance of the provisions contained in the proviso to article 368(2) of the Constitution in that resolutions had been passed by the Legislatures of 12 states concerning which evidence was produced before the court. As regards the second point, it was held that the object of the Forty-sixth Amendment is to convert what is not a sale into a sale. Originally, a transfer of property in goods involved in the execution of works contract was held to be not a sale as in seen from State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras) Ltd. . Such a sale is deemed by fiction of law to be a sale and is made taxable. In no other respect does the Forty-sixth amendment enlarge the power of the State to levy sales tax. In deciding the correctness of the submissions, at page 396 of STC (paragrah 32 of AIR) the Supreme Court has stated as under :
"Before proceeding further it is necessary to understand what sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution means. Article 366 is the definition clause of the Constitution. It says that in the Constitution unless the context otherwise requires, the expressions defined in that article have the meanings respectively assigned to them in that article. The expression 'goods' is defined in clause (12) of article 366 of the Constitution as including all materials commodities and articles. It is true that in State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras) Ltd. , this Court held that a works contract was an indivisible contract and the turnover of the goods used in the execution of the works contract could not, therefore of the goods used in the execution of the works contract could not therefore, become exigible to sales tax. It was in order to overcome the effect of the said decision Parliament amended article 366 by introducing sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A). Sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) states that 'tax on the sale or purchase of goods' includes amoung other things a tax on the transfer of property in the goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of a works contract. It does not say that a tax on the sale or purchase of goods included a tax on the amount paid for the execution of a works contract. It refers to a tax on the transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of a work contract. The emphasis is on the transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form). The latter part of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution makes the position very clear. While referring to the transfer, delivery or supply of any goods that takes place as per sub-clauses (a) to (f) of clause (29-A), the latter part of clause (29-A) says that 'such transfer, delivery or supply of any goods' shall be deemed to be a sale of those goods by the person making the transfer, delivery or supply and a purchase of those goods by the person to whom such transfer, delivery or supply and a purchase of those goods by the person to whom such transfer, deliver or supply is made. Hence, a transfer of property in goods under sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) is deemed to be a sale of goods involved in the execution of works contract by the person making the transfer and a purchase of those goods by the person to whom such transfer is made. The object of the new definition introduced in clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution is, therefore, to enlarge the scope of 'tax on sale or purchase of goods' wherever it occurs in the Constitution so that it may include within its scope the transfer delivery or supply of goods that may take place under any of the transactions referred to in sub-clauses (a) to (f) thereof wherever such transfer, delivery or supply becomes subject to levy of sales tax. So construed the expression 'tax on the sale or purchase of goods' in entry 54 of the State List therefore, includes a tax on the transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of a works contract also. The tax leviable by virtue of sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution thus becomes subject to the same discipline to which any levy under entry 54 of the State List is made subject to under the Constitution. The position is the same when we look a article 286 of the Constitution. Clause (1) of article 286 says that no law of a State shall impose or authorise the imposition of, of tax on the sale or purchase of goods where such sale or purchase takes place - (a) outside the State; or (b) in the course of the import of the goods into, or export of the goods out of, the territory of India. Here again we have to read the expression 'a tax on the sale or purchase of goods' found in article 286 as including the transfer of goods referred to in sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) or article 366 which is deemed to be a sale of goods and the tax leviable thereon would be subject to the terms of clause (1)of article 286. Similarly, the restrictions mentioned in clause (2) of article 286 of the Constitution which says that Particular may be law formulate principles for determining when a sale or purchase of goods takes place in any of the ways mentioned in clause (1) of article 286 would also be attracted to a transfer of goods contemplated under article 366(29-A)(b). Similarly, clause (3) of article 286 is also applicable to a tax on a transfer of property referred to in sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) of article 366. Clause (3) of article 286 consists of two pars. Sub-clause (a) of clause (a) of clause (3) of article 286 deals with a tax on the sale or purchase of goods declared by Parliament by law to be a special importance in inter-State trade or commerce, which is generally applicable to all sales including the transfer, supply or delivery of goods which are deemed to be sales under clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution. If any declared goods which are referred to in section 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act 1956 are involved in such transfer, supply or delivery which is referred to in clause (29-A) of article 366, the sales tax law of a State which provides for levy of sales tax thereon will have to comply with the restrictions mentioned in section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. Clause (b) is an additional provision which empowers Parliament to impose any additional restrictions or conditions in regard to the levy of sales tax on transactions which will be deemed to be sales under sub-clause (b) or sub-clause (c) or sub-clause (d) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution. We do not find much substance in the contention urged on behalf of the States that since sub-clause (b) of clause (3) of article 286 of the Constitution refers only to the transactions referred to in sub-clause (b), (c) and (d) of cause (29-A) of article 366, the transaction referred to under those three sub-clause would not be subject to any other restrictions set out in clause (1) or clause (2) or sub-clause (a) of clause (3) or article 286 of the Constitution. It may be that by virtue of sub-clause (b) of clause (3) of article 286 it is open to Parliament to impose some other restrictions or conditions which are not generally applicable to all kinds of sales. That however cannot make the other parts of article 286 inapplicable to the transactions which are deemed to be sales under article 366(29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution. We are of the view that all transfers, deliveries and supplies of goods referred to in clauses (a) to (f) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution are subject to the restrictions and conditions mentioned in clause (1), clause (2) and sub-clause (a) of clause (3) of article 286 of the Constitution and the transfers and deliveries that take place under sub-clauses (b), (c) and (d) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution are subject to an additional restriction mentioned in sub-clause (b) of article 286(3) of the Constitution."
At page 400 and 403 of STC; (paragraphs 36 and 40 of AIR), it is further observed thus :
".......... After the 46th Amendment the works contract which was an indivisible one is by a legal fiction altered into a contract which is divisible into one for sale of goods and the other for supply of labour and services. After the 46h Amendment, it has become possible for the States to levy sales tax on the value of goods involved in a works contract in the same way in which the sales tax was leviable on the price of the goods and materials supplied in a building contract which has been entered into in two distinct and separate parts as stated above ....... When the law creates a legal fiction such fiction should be carried to is logical end. There should no be any hesitation in giving full effect to it. If the power to tax a sale in an ordinary sense is subject to certain conditions and restrictions imposed by the Constitution, the power to tax a transaction which is deemed to be a sale under article 366(29-A) of the Constitution should be subject to the same restrictions and conditions.
....... We do no accept the argument that sub-clause (b) of article 366(29-A) should be read as being equivalent to a separate entry in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution enabling the State to levy tax on sales and purchase independent of entry 54 thereof. As the Constitution exists today the power of the States to levy taxes on sales and purchases of goods including the 'deemed' sales and purchases of goods under clause (29-A) of article 366 is to be found only in entry 54 and no outside it .............."
Thus the resultant position is the works contract as referred to in sub-clause (b) of clause (29-A) in article 366 of the Constitution is subject to tax and is subject to the same restrictions had it been a sale in the ordinary sense.
Secondly, what were originally considered to be an inseverable contract could now be separated into two-one for sale of goods and the other for supply of labour and services.
12. With this background, we pass on to the relevant provisions of section 4 and 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act. After stating in the opening words of section 4 that it is subject to the provisions contained in section 3, in sub-section (2) an intra-State sale is defined. It is an inside sale in terms of certain tests for its situs. A sale or purchase of goods is deemed to take place inside the State if the goods are within the State, in the case of specific or asertained goods at the time when the contract of sale is made, and in the case of unascertained or future goods at the time of their appropriation to the contract of sale by the seller or by the buyer whether assent of the other party is prior or subsequent to such appropriation. The explanation to sun-section (2) says, where there is a single contract of sale or purchase of goods situated at more places than one, the provisions of sub-section (2) shall apply as if there were separate contracts in respect of the goods at each of such places. Thus, in the case of ascertained goods, the place where the goods are situated at the time of the contract of sale fixes the situs. In the case of unascertained goods, when the appropriation is made files the situs. Once, therefore, the sale is so fixed inside the State with reference to the above it should be deemed to have taken place outside all other States.
In order to determine whether a particular transactions is a sale in the course if inter-State trade or commerce, what is really decisive is whether the sale is one which has occasioned the movement of the goods from one State to another. It does not depend upon the circumstance as to in which State the property in the goods passes. It may pass in either State and yet the sale can be an inter-State sale.
In cases of inter-State sales falling under clause (a) or clause (b) of section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act it is not material, for the purpose of the tax levy, to consider the situs of the sale or the State in which the property in the goods happens to pass. Neither territorial nexus nor titular rights to the goods nor the theory of origin of the goods nor the theory of outside consumption can be taken to override "the course of inter-State trade or commerce" when the sale itself occasions the movement of the goods from one State to another. The rates and levy, etc., follow the provisions of the Act independently of the situs.
There is no antithesis between a sale in the course of inter-State trade or commerce and a sale inside the State. Even an inter-State sale must have a situs and the situs may be in one State or another. It does not involve any contradiction in saying that an inter-State sale or purchase is inside a State or outside it. A sale which is in the course of inter-State trade or commerce cannot be taxed by a State Legislature even if its situs is within the State because the State Legislature has no legislative competence to impose tax on sale in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
In answering the question whether section 4 fixes the situs of sale, the majority held in Tata Iron & Steel Co, Ltd. v. S. R. Sarkar that sub-section (2) defines what sales or purchase shall be deemed to take place inside a State. The terms of sub-section (2) are quite general, and Parliament has thereby attempted to locate the place where a sale takes place. The clause does not deal with the conditions which "effect"a sale : nor is there any warrant for the view that sub-section (2) of section 4 only seeks to locate the place of sales which are not in course of inter-State trade or commerce. In enacting section 4, sub-section (1), Parliament has sough to formulate principles for determining when a sale takes place outside a State. By sub-section (2), Parliament has attempted to define when a sale shall be deemed to take place inside a State and then, sub-section (1) provides that when a sale or purchase of goods was determined in accordance with sub-section (2) to take place inside a State, such sale or purchase shall be deemed to have taken place outside all other States.
In other words, the terms of the section disclose that the purpose was to formulate the principles for determining when a sale takes place outside the State. This section was enacted by Parliament in exercise if authority under article 286(2) of the Constitution read with clause (1)(a) of article 286. It is needless to say that clause (1)(a) deals with sale outside the State. The object of section 4 was to locate the place where the sale took place. Sub-section (2) merely seeks to locate the place of sales which are in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
Now we come to the question, under section 4 what tests are adopted to determine the situs. No concept of inter-State trade can be comprehensive without knowing what is an outside sale and, therefore an inside sale. An inside sale or an outside sale is related to its situs and if the situs of an inside sale is fixed on certain, what is not an inside sale will be an outside sale provided there is a competed there is a completed contract of sale of goods. Section 4(2) defines an inside sale in terms tests for is situs. A sale or purchase of foods is deemed to take place inside a State if the goods are within the State in the case of specific or ascertained goods, at the time and contract of sale is made; and in the case of unasertained or future goods at the time the contract of sale by the seller or by the buyer whether assent of the other party is prior or subsequent to such appropriation. An explanation to sub-section (2) says that where there is a single contract of sale or purchase of goods situated at more places than one the provisions of the sub-section shall apply as if there were separate contracts in respect of the goods at each of such places. The place where the goods situated at the time when the contract of sale is made in the case of ascertained goods or when appropriation is made in the case of unascertained goods determines both the situs of such a sale as well as its character as an inside sale. Once a sale is fixed as having taken place inside a State with reference to such tests, it should be deemed to have taken place outside all other States. Even an inter-State sale or purchase or a sale in the course of export of goods our of the territory of India must have a situs. To fix the situs of a sale is a wholly different matter from taxing that transaction. The situs of a sale may fall to be determined both from the point of view of its exigibility to tax as also its exemption from tax either under the Constitution or under the taxing statute itself. The bans prescribed by article 286 operate only for the purpose of curtailing the taxing powers of the State and not for any other purpose. They would not alter the situs of a sale of purchase and its situs would continue to be inside a particular State a determined by the principles formulated by section 4.
13. With the above legal background we go on to section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act which is under challenge in these writ petitions. That section may be quoted in full :
"5B. Levy of tax on transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of works contracts. - Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) or sub-secttion (3) of section 5 but subject to sub-sections (5) and (6) of the said section, every dealer shall pay for each year, a tax under this Act on his taxable turnover of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of works contract mentioned in column (2) of the Sixth Schedule at the rates specified in the corresponding entries in column (3) of the said Schedule."
It opens with a non obstante clause. Therefore wherever there is a transfer of goods in a works contract one is obliged to look a this section alone. It has already been seen that these works contracts could not have been taxed prior to the Forty-sixth amendment of the Constitution and now these transactions have become taxable. Section 5B came to be introduced by Karnataka Act No. 27 of 1985 with effect from 1st April 1986. The object and reasons behind this amendment are as follows :
"It is proposed in the Budget speech for the year 1985-86 to levy tax on the transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of works contract on the transfer of the right to use goods, on the delivery of goods on hire-purchase or any other kind of payment by instalments; for payment of interest for belated refunds; to prescribe time-limit for concluding assessment; to simplify summary assessments; and to give certain concessions and reliefs."
Therefore the definition of "sale had also to be enlarged. Section 2(1)(t)(ii) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act reads :
"2. Definitions. - (1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, -
* * *
(t) 'sale' with all its grammatical variation and cognate expressions means every transfer of the property in goods other than by way of a mortgage, hypothecation charge or pledge by one person to another in the course of trade or business for cash or for deferred payment or other valuable consideration and includes, -
(i) a transfer otherwise than in pursuance of a contract of property in any goods for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration;
(ii) a transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of a works contract;
(iii) a delivery of goods on hire-purchase or any system of payment by instalments;
(iv) a transfer of the right to use any goods for purpose (whether or not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration;
Explanation. - (1) A transfer of property involved in the supply or distribution of goods by a society (including a co-operative society), club firm or any association to its members, for cash or for deferred payment or other valuable consideration, whether or not in the course of business, shall be deemed to be a sale for the purpose of this Act.
(2) .................... (omitted).
(3)(a) The sale or purchase of goods other than in the course of inter-State trade or commerce or in the course of import or export, shall be deemed, for the purpose of this Act, to have taken place in the State wherever the contract of sale or purchase might have been made, if the goods are within the State, -
(i) in the case of specific or ascertained goods, at the time the contract of sale or purchase is made; and
(ii) in the case of unascertained or future goods, a the time of their appropriation to the contract of sale or purchase by the seller or by the purchaser, whether the assent of the other party is prior or subsequent to such appropriation.
(b) Where there is a single contract of sale or purchase of goods situated at more places than one the provisions of clause (a) shall apply as if there were separate contracts in respect of the goods at each of such places.
(c) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (Central Act 3 of 1930), for the purpose of this Act, the transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form) involved in the execution of a works contract shall be deemed to have taken place in the State, if the goods are within the State at the time of such transfer, irrespective of the place where the agreement for works contract is made, whether the assent of the other party is prior or subsequent to such transfer.
(d) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (Central Act 3 of 1930) for the purpose of this Act, the transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose (whether or not for a specified period) shall be deemed to have taken place in the State, if such goods are for use within the State, irrespective of the place where the contract of transfer of the right to use the goods is made.
(3A) Every transaction of supply by way of or as a part of any service or in other manner whatsoever, of goods being food or any other article for human consumption or any drink (whether or not intoxicating) where such supply or service is for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration, shall be deemed to be a sale of those goods by the person making the supply and purchase of those goods by the person to whom such supply is made;
............"
At this stage it is necessary for us to note that explanation (3) extracted above is a verbatim reproduction of section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act.
In the present case we are concerned with transfer of property in goods, whether quo goods or in some other form, involved in the execution of works contract. The argument of Mr. Venugopal is that sections 3, 4 and 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act cover all transactions of sale. Both the situs and the transfer of property are irrelevant for the purpose of taxation under those provisions. If that be so for the actual sales, it should be a fortiori for a deemed sale as well. The learned draws inspiration because inspiration because in paragraph 32 of the judgment in (Builders Association case) the Supreme Court held that all transfers, deliveries and supplies of goods referred to in clauses (a) and (b) of clause (29-A) of article 366 of the Constitution are subject to the same restrictions. Therefore, according to him, the situs was fixed under section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act, and if the existing laws would cover all sales any attempt by Legislature to add something different to its own State contrary to section 4 of the Central sales Tax Act is unconstitutional.
In opposing this stand Mr. Achar, learned Government Advocate, would say that the State has the power to tax on such transfer of right to use the goods irrespective of where the contract has taken place or not. In support of this submission reliance is placed on 20th Century Finance Corporation Limited v. State of Maharastra [1989] 75 STC 217 (Bom). In that case, the validity of the Maharashtra Sales Tax on the Transfer of the Right to use any goods for any purpose Act, 1985, came up for consideration. The object of that Act was to levy and collect sales tax upon the transfer of the right to use any goods for the purposes of cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration within the State. In upholding the constitutional validity of that Act it was held as follows (at pages 226 and 227) :
"By reason of the said explanation, transfer of the right to use any goods shall be deemed to have taken place in the State of Maharashtra, irrespective of the place where the agreement for such transfer of the right to use took place, if the goods are in the State of Maharashtra at the time of their use. In other words, the situs or the location of the goods at the time of there use has been chosen as the basis of taxability under the Act. Thus, in view of the amended explanation to section 2(10) of the impugned Act, the place where an agreement is made for transfer of the right to use goods is irrelevant and under the impugned Act, the State of Maharashtra has assumed power to levy tax on such transfer of the right to use goods which are located in the State of Maharashtra at the time of their use. In our view, the said provisions contained in the explanation to section 2(10) does not result in bringing inter-State sales or sales taking place outside the State of Maharashtra within the scope of the impugned Act. The reported decisions upon which the learned counsel had relied were rendered in the context of sale transactions which then only meant transfer of property in goods. We have already pointed out that after clause (29-A) was inserted in article 366, tax on sale or purchase of goods included inter alia, tax on transfer of the right to use for any purpose goods for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration. Therefore, the validity of a tax on such transfer of right to use ought not to be tested by applying these reported decisions regarding the meaning of sale. It would not be also appropriate to apply the tests applicable for deciding when property in goods passes in case of transfers of the right to use goods for any purpose. The legal concepts of transfer of the right to use goods are quite different."
No doubt an attempt was made by Mr. Srinivasan that this decisions may apply to section 5C but not to section 5B. But, we are of the opinion that the ratio of that judgment would squarely apply because at pages 230 and 231 it is stated as follows :
"Only when the said goods are transferred by the petitioners for use by the lessees, the transfer becomes taxable. In other words, the impugned Act levies tax only when the lessee is put in possession for using the goods. According to the claim made by the petitioners themselves therefore, the movement, if any, of goods pursuant to the orders placed by the 1st petitioner upon the manufactures and suppliers precedes the transfer of the right to use in favour of the lessee. The impugned Act levies tax upon transfer of the right to use goods which are within Maharashtra at the time of their use."
Accordingly, should the goods involved in the execution of the works contract be within the State of Karnataka at the time of transfer the value of such goods would become taxable. Certainly should the declared goods go in as declared goods, the limitations contained in the other Acts would apply, but not if hey change their character.
When section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act opens with a non obstante clause the intention of the Legislature is clear that the sales as understood generally are not to be tagged on to these deemed sales. It also requires to be noted here that the language used here is the same as in article 366(29-A), sub-clause (b). If, therefore with reference to goods that are available within the State of Karnataka in a works contract, the State were to proceed to tax in exercise of its competence under entry 54 of List II, we are unable to say as to how it could be held violative of either the Constitution or the Central Sales Tax Act.
We are equally unable to accept the argument that unless the Parliament makes the law under article 286 of the Constitution, power to tax cannot arise. Article 286 only lays down certain restriction. As to what those restrictions are, have already been noted. To our mind it is clear that there is no infringement of any one of those restrictions. If, therefore, section 5B of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act is an independent provision with regard to taxing the value of the goods involved in works contract, we cannot accept this argument.
We are also of the view that there is no scope for striking down explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t)(ii) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act. The said clause clearly states that if the goods are within the State at the time of transfer it would be taxable. It has already been noted that the ratio of the decision in [1989] 75 STC 217 (Bom) (20th Century Finance Corporation Limited v. State of Maharashtra), though with reference to the user of the goods would apply to the works contract as well. In such a case, therefore, we see no scope for an argument of this character.
For the same reason the argument of Mr. Vijayan that in the absence of situs of sale being demarcated in article 286(2) or 269(3) of the Constitution the State law is premature, does not appear to us to be tenable.
In (Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana) it was held that the mere despatch of goods by a manufacturer to his own branches outside the State does not amount to sale or disposal of goods as such; the consignment or despatch of goods is neither a sale nor a purchase. In so far as section 9(1)(b) of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973 provides for taxable event which is closely related to the despatch, it cannot be held to be a tax on sale or purchase. But the position here is different. In finding out the true nature of the goods under that Act it was found that the section itself does not provide for the imposition of tax on the transaction of purchase of taxable goods, and when further the said taxable goods are used up and turned into independent goods losing their original identity and thereafter when the manufactured goods are despatched outside the State of Haryana, only then tax is levied and liability to pay tax is created. In contradistinction to this, under section 5B read with section 2(1)(t)(ii), explanation (3)(c) of the Karnataka Sales Tax, if the goods involved in the execution of the works contract are within the State at the time of such transfer, the State could levy the tax. Therefore, the levy has direct connection with the transaction of transfer of goods involved in the execution of works contract. Hence the decision in (Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana) has no application to the facts of this case.
It is also incorrect to contend that section 5B proposes to tax the conglomerate. On the contrary it merely seeks to tax the value of the property in goods, either as goods or in some other form, involved in the execution of works contract mentioned in column (2) of the Sixth Schedule. If this test could be adopted for purposes of local taxation, it is not necessary that section 4 of the Central Sales Tax Act must be amended for the working of explanation (3)(c) of section 2(1)(t)(ii) of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act.
The contention of Mr. Venugopal is that section 5B is void in so far as it refers to the Sixth Schedule because that Schedule refers to the nature of works done by the contractor and not the goods. In other words, according to him, the same item of goods used in the works contract is taxed differently; the end user is irrelevant. This argument ignores the power of the Legislature to treat the works contract alone as a separate entity and on that basis with regard to the value of the property involved in the execution of works contract to levy the tax depending upon the nature of the works contract. The petitioners cannot compare this with an ordinary sale and contend that the end user is irrelevant. What is taxed is only the value of the goods involved in the works contract which has resulted in the end product.
Only when we find any portion of the section is opposed to the constitutional provision or the Central Tax Act that part of the section becoming ultra vires, the doctrine of severability can be pressed into service. But in this case was see no scope for application of the doctrine and consequently (R. M. D. Chamarbaugwalla v. Union of India) will have no application in the instant case.
We are also unable to accept the argument that though in clauses (2) and (3) of article 286 of the Constitution the word "may" is used it must be construed as "shall". We have already set down the scope of this article. Section 5B does not in any way infringe the article.
Accordingly we hold that section 5B of the Karnataka Sales tax Act is valid. Likewise, explanation (3)(c) to section 2(1)(t)(ii) does not violate either article 286 or any other constitutional provisions, nor again is there any repugnancy between the provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act and those sections of the Karnataka Sales Tax Act.
14. Now we come to the Karnataka Sales Tax Rules. Part II of the Rules deals with turnover and assessment. Rule 6 occurring in that Part speaks of determination of total and taxable turnover. While so determining concerning the works contract, sub-rule (4) states that in determining the turnover the amounts specified in clauses (a) to (p) shall subject to the conditions specified therein be deducted from the total turnover as determined under clauses (a) to (e) of sub-rule (1). Clause (m) of sub-rule (4) reads as follows :
"(m) in the case of works contracts specified in serial numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 17 of the Sixth Schedule;
(i) all amounts for which any goods specified in the said serial numbers and falling under Second Schedule are purchased from registered dealers liable to pay tax under the Act,
(ii) all amounts actually expended towards 'labour charges' for erection, installation, fixing, fitting out, or commissioning of the goods specified in the said serial numbers,
(iii) all amounts paid to sub-contractors as the consideration for execution of works contract whether wholly or partly :
Provided that, no such deduction shall be allowed unless the dealer claiming deduction produces proof that the sub-contractor is a registered dealer liable to tax under the Act and that the turnover of such amounts is included in the monthly statement or return of turnover as the case may be, filed by such sub-contractor;"
The complaint before us is that while the second sub-clause of clause (m) would take note of actual amounts expended towards labour charges, in clause (n) sub-clauses (iv) and (v) a different treatment is accorded. We will now quote clause (n), sub-clauses (iv) and (v) :
"(n) in the case of works contracts specified in serial numbers 6, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 18 of the Sixth Schedule;
* * *
(iv) such amounts towards 'labour charges and other like charges' not involving any transfer of property in goods actually incurred in connection with the execution of works contract, or
(v) such amounts calculated at the rate prescribed in column (3) of the Table below, if they are actually incurred towards 'labour charges' and other like charges and are not ascertainable from the books of accounts maintained and produced by a dealer before the assessing authority.
TABLE
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Sl. Type of contract Labour or other charges
No. as a percentage of the
value of the contract
------------------------------------------------------------------
1 2 3------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Civil works like construction of buildings, bridges, roads etc. Thirty per cent
2. Construction or railway coaches on undercarriages supplied by railways. Thirty per cent.
3. Ship and boat building including construction of barges, ferries tugs, trawlers and dredgers. Twenty per cent
4. Sanitary fitting for plumbing for drainage, etc. Fifteen per cent
5. Painting and polishing. Twenty per cent
6. Construction of bodies of motor vehicle and construction of trucks. Twenty per cent
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Provides that where the turnover of a dealer claiming deduction under clauses (m) and (n) in any year is not sufficient to cover the deduction, it shall be allowed to the extent of the turnover of the dealer in that year and the balance shall be carried forward to the year following next and so on."
A careful reading of the above rule shows that in cases where the actual expenditure is incurred in the case of works contract specified under clause (m) the deduction could be claimed. In the case of other contracts, as per clause (n), the labour charges and the other like charges actually incurred, could be deducted, then again if they are not ascertainable from the books of account. This could depend upon the nature of contract and also how the accounts are maintained, that too for the purposes of deduction. Those are details to be established before the taxing authority and it cannot be argued in an abstract way. Therefore, heaving open that remedy in that this aspect could be decided in individual cases depending upon the nature of the contract and the method of keeping accounts, we hold that rule 6 is not ultra vires.
It is the contention of Mr. Srinivasan that a rule similar to sub-clauses (iv) and (v) of clause (n) of rule 6(4) under the Bihar Sales Tax Rules 1983, came to be struck down in Jamshedpur Contractors' Association v. State of Bihar [1989] 75 STC 132 (Pat). We are unable to agree. That rule (rule 13-A of Bihar Sales Tax Rules) stated that while providing for deduction in case of works contract, on account of labour charges depending upon different types of contract a percentage would be deducted. Therefore it was held in paragraph 9 as follows :
"Thus it will be noticed that the rule provides that for different types of works in works contract, different percentage of labour shall be presumed to have been used and amount spent to that extent shall be deducted from the gross turnover. Tax is payable on labour charges under this rule. Under this rule even if the contractor might have spent more on labour charges than the prescribed percentage stated in the rule the contractor shall no be entitled to claim deduction beyond what has been provided. In other words tax is levied on labour charge. Neither sale nor purchase of any goods is involved when a contractor spends on account of labour. "Labour' cannot be said to be a goods even within the definition of 'goods' in the Act. From the gross turnover, the total amount spent by the contractor as labour charges in execution of the works contract shall have to be excluded. Rule 13-A cannot be sustained and must be held to be ultra vires."
But, here it is not so. On the contrary the actual charges incurred is deducted and what is sought to be taxed is only the value of the goods in the execution of works contract after such deduction as is permitted under sub-clauses (iv) and (v) of clause (n). Therefore, rule 6 is intra vires.
15. The next question is whether the prescription of different rates of taxes is violative of article 14 of the Constitution. The arguments of the learned counsel for the petitioners proceed on a wrong hypothesis as though different rates have been prescribed. The rates under the Second Schedule and the Sixth Schedule are the same, expect with regard to item No. 6 of the Second Schedule, Part-P where for pipes, tubes and fittings of iron not falling under the Fourth Schedule, cement and asbestos the rate of taxation is 8 per cent whole for the corresponding item No. 20 of the Sixth Schedule the rate of taxation is 10 per cent. To the extent of this discrimination it may be bad. As a mater of fact Mr. Achar, learned Government Advocate, does not seriously dispute this discrimination. Therefore, that alone has to be struck down. But, as a general principle, can it be said the prescription of different rates is bad ? We do not think so, because it is one of the well-Settled principles that the Legislature has freedom to choose the object of taxation. In Twyford Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Kerala , the Supreme Court has observed thus :
"15. We may now state the principles on which the present case must be decided. These principles have been stated earlier but are often ignored when the question of the application of article 14 arises. One principle on which our Courts (as indeed the Supreme Court in the United States) have always acted, is nowhere better stated than by Willis in his "Constitutional Law', page 587. This is how the put it :
'A State dos not have to tax everything in order to tax something. It is allowed to pick and choose districts, objects, persons, methods and even rates for taxation if it does so reasonably ....... The Supreme Court has been practical and has permitted a very wide latitude in classification for taxation.' This principle was approved by this Court in East India Tobacco Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh . Applying it, the Court observed :
"If a State can validly pick and choose one commodity for taxation and that is not open to attack under article 14, the same result must follow when the State picks out one category of goods and subjects it to taxation."
This indicates a wide range of selection and freedom in appraisal not only in the objects of taxation and the manner of taxation but also in the determination of the rate or rates applicable. If production must always be taken into account there will have to be a settlement for every year and the tax would become a kind of income-tax.
16. The next principle is that burden of proving discrimination is always heavy and heavier still when a taxing statute is under attack. This was also observed in the same case of this Court at page 534 of STC (at page 41 of SCR; at page 1735 of AIR) approving the dictum of the Supreme Court of the United States in Madden v. Kentucky [1940] 309 US 83; 84 Law Ed 590 :
'In taxation even more than in other fields, Legislatures possess the greatest freedom in classification. The burden is on the one attacking the legislative arrangement to negative every conceivable basis which might support it.' As Rottschaefer said in his Constitutional Law at page 668 :
' "A statute providing for the assessment of one type of intangible a its actual value while other intangibles are assessed at their face value does not deny equal protection even when both are subject to the same rate of tax." The decisions of the Supreme Court in this field have permitted a State Legislature to exercise "an extremely wide discretion" in classifying property for tax purposes "so long as it refrained from clear and hostile discrimination against particular persons or classes".' The burden is on a person complaining of discrimination. The burden is proving not possible 'inequality' but hostile 'unequal' treatment. This is more so when uniform taxes are levied. It is not proved to us how the different plantations can be said to be 'hostilely or unequally' treated. A uniform wheel tax on cars does not take into account the value of the car, the mileage it runs, or in the case of taxis, the profits it makes and the miles per gallon it delivers. An Ambassador taxi and a Fiat taxi give different outturns in terms of money and mileage. Cinemas pay the same show fee. We do not take a doctrinaire view of equality. The Legislature has obviously thought of equalising the tax through a method which is inherent in the tax scheme. Nothing has been said to show that there is inequality much less 'hostile treatment'. All that is said is that the State must demonstrate equality. That is not the approach. At this rate nothing can ever be proved to be equal to another."
This fully supports the stand of the State that there is a wide discretion to pick and choose the objects for purposes of taxation. here cannot be any uniformity about the same. Therefore, except the discrimination pointed out with regard to item No. 6 of the Second Schedule and item No. 20 of the Sixth Schedule, the rates of taxation with regard to other items of the Second Schedule are to be upheld.
17. One more question posed before us is as to from what date our judgment is to be effective ? The complaint of the petitioners is that they had not charged their customers the sales tax and they are obliged to pay from their pockets. On this aspect of the matter, when we put it to the learned Government Advocate a memo was filed with regard to composition for the years 1986-87 to 1989-90 (i.e. up to 31s March, 1990). We passed a separate order on 19th July, 1990, in respect of the dealers who had agreed for the composition and other dealers in terms of the memo. This means that our judgment would be effective from 1st April, 1990, onwards.
18. Subject to the above, we dismiss all these writ petitions with costs. Counsel's fee Rs. 250 in each petition.
19. Writ Petitions dismissed.