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[Cites 11, Cited by 22]

Supreme Court of India

M/S. Sahney Steel And Pressworks Ltd. & ... vs The Commercial Tax Officer & Ors on 10 September, 1985

Equivalent citations: 1985 AIR 1754, 1985 SCR SUPL. (2) 780, AIR 1985 SUPREME COURT 1754, 1984 4 SCC 173, 1986 TAX. L. R. 2168, 1985 TAX. L. R. 2168, (1985) 3 COMLJ 239

Author: R.S. Pathak

Bench: R.S. Pathak, Amarendra Nath Sen

           PETITIONER:
M/S. SAHNEY STEEL AND PRESSWORKS LTD. & ANR.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE COMMERCIAL TAX OFFICER & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/09/1985

BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)

CITATION:
 1985 AIR 1754		  1985 SCR  Supl. (2) 780
 1985 SCC  (4) 173	  1985 SCALE  (2)789


ACT:
     Central Sales  Tax Act,  1g5, section 3(a) - Interstate
Sales -	 Goods manufactured  according to the specifications
received at the registered office at Hyderabad and all other
activities  including	that  of   booking   orders,   sales
despatching, billing and receiving of the sale price carried
out by	the branch  offices situated  outside the  State  of
Andhra Pradesh	- The  transactions  are  inter-State  sales
within the  meaning of section 3(a) of the Central Sales Tax
Act.



HEADNOTE:
     M/s Sahney	 Steel and  Press Works	 Ltd.  is  a  public
limited company	 having its registered office and factory at
Hyderabad. It  is registered  as a  dealer under the Central
Sales Tax  Act, as  well a  under the Andhra Pradesh General
Sale Tax  Act. It has branch offices at Amritsar, Bangalore,
Bombay,	 Calcutta,   Coimbatore	 and  Delhi.  They  are	 all
registered as  dealers under  the Central  Sales Tax Act and
under the  related State Sales Tax Acts. The branches of the
company are  mainly engaged  in effecting  sales and looking
after the  sales promotion  and liaison	 work.	The  company
manufactures (a)   standard goods according to the company's
own  designs  and  specifications,  (b)	 non-standard  goods
according to  the designs  and	specifications	supplied  by
customer.  In	the  course  of	 its  normal  business,	 the
registered office  despatches both standard and non-standard
goods manufactured at the Hyderabad factory to the branches.
The  branch   offices  situate	 at  Bombay,   Calcutta	 and
Coimbatore receive  orders from	 customers within  and	from
outside the  respective	 States	 for  the  supply  of  goods
conforming to  definite specifications	and drawings.  Those
branch	offices	  then	advise	 the  registered  office  at
Hyderabad to  manufacture and  despatch the good. On receipt
of such	 advice from  the branch, the goods are manufactured
at the	Hyderabad factory  and thereafter  despatched by the
registered office  to the  branches by	way of	transfer  of
stock. While  despatching the goods, sometimes intimation is
also  given   by  the  registered  office  to  the  customer
concerned about the despatch of the goods to the destination
indicated by him. Such goods are
781
booked to  'self' and sent by lorries. The goods received by
the branches  from time	 to time,  whether standard goods or
non-standards goods,  are entered  in the  stock accounts of
the branches  and are  kept in	stock by  the  branches	 for
ultimate delivery  to the  customers. On  the goods reaching
the  branches,	they  are  inspected  by  the  customer	 and
accepted by  them where	 the customers	are  local  parties.
Where delivery	has to	be effected  to customers  of  other
States, the  goods are despatched to them by the branch. The
branches raise	bills  and  receive  the  sales	 price.	 The
branches furnish  'F' forms  to the  registered office under
section 6-A  of the  Central Sales  Tax Act  in the  case of
stock transfers to the branches.
     The sale  of non-standard goods was Assessed to State &
sales Tax  under the  Sales Tax	 Acts of  Maharashtra,	West
Bengal and  Tamil Nadu.	 The Commercial Tax Officer, Company
Circle-II, Hyderabad,  however, expressed  the view that the
company was  liable to	Central & sales Tax on the turn over
of non-standard	 goods. For  the assessment  year 1979-80 he
made an	 assessment order dated May 4, 1981 assessing a turn
over of Rs. 1,29,50,248.73 representing what the petitioners
claimed to  be stock transfers from the Hyderabad registered
office to  the branches outside the State of Andhra Pradesh.
By way	of abundant  caution the petitioners had prayed that
in the event of their objection to the imposition of Central
Sales Tax  being overruled  they should	 be allowed  time to
collect 'C'  forms from	 the various  customers to  whom the
branches held  effected sales  and to  submit  them  to	 the
Commercial Tax Officer. The Commercial Tax Officer, however,
did not	 grant the  company the	 further time  it sought for
that purpose.  The Commercial  Tax Officer  has also  issued
notices dated  May 2,  1981 seeking  to reopen	the  Central
sales Tax  Assessments already completed for the years 1977-
78 and	1978-79. In the original assessments for those years
the  Commercial	  Tax  Officer	had  excluded  the  disputed
transactions relating  to transfers  of	 non-standard  goods
from the  registered office  to the  branches. Once the Writ
Petitions under	 Article 32 of the Constitution praying for:
(i) to	quash the  assessment order  dated May	4, 1981 made
under the  Central Sales  Tax Act  for the  assessment	year
1979-80 and  the consequent  demand of tax in respect of the
non-standard goods;  (ii) to  restrain	the  Commercial	 Tax
Officer	 from	reopening  the	 past	assessments;   (iii)
alternatively, in  the event  of the transactions being held
liable	under	the  Central   Sales  Tax   Act,  to  afford
opportunity to	the company  to file 'C' forms to  enable it
to avail  of the  concessional rate  of tax  envisaged under
section 8(1) of the Central Sales Tax Act and (iv) further
782
alternatively to  quash the assessments made under the local
Sales Tax  Acts for  the assessment years 1978-79 onwards in
so far	as the	assessments include  the turn  over  of	 the
aforesaid stock	 transfers  transferred	 by  the  registered
office to its branches.
     Dismissing the petition, the Court
^
     HELD: 1.1	The sale transactions were inter-state sales
in as  much as	they satisfy  the terms	 of  clause  (a)  of
section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act. [790 B]
     1.2 It  cannot be	said that  the Movement of the goods
from   Hyderabad to  the branch	 office	 was  only  for	 the
purpose of  enabling the  sale by  the branch office and was
not in	the course  of fulfillment  of the contract of sale.
Even if the buyer places an order with the branch office and
the branch  office communicates the terms and specifications
of the orders to the registered office and the branch office
itself is  concerned with  the	sales  despatching,  billing
receiving of  the sale	price, the   conclusion must be that
the order  placed by  the buyer	 is an order placed with the
Company, and  for the  purpose of  fulfilling that order the
manufactured  goods   commence	their	journey	  from	 the
registered office  within the State of Andhra Pradesh to the
Branch office outside the State for delivery of the goods to
the buyer.  Further, both  the	registered  office  and	 the
branch office	are offices of the same Company, and what in
effect	does  take  place  is  that  the  Company  from	 its
registered office in Hyderabad takes the goods to its branch
office outside the State and arranges to deliver them to the
buyer. The  registered	office	and  branch  office  do	 not
possess	 separate   juridical  personalities.  The  question
really is  whether  the	 movement  of  the  goods  from	 the
registered office  at Hyderabad	 is occasioned	by the order
placed by  the buyer  or is an incident of the contract. The
answer being  in the affirmative, its movement from the very
beginning from	Hyderabad all  the  way	 until	delivery  is
received by  the buyer	is an  inter-state movement. [787 A-
D,F]
     1.3 The  fact that	 the goods  were despatched  by	 the
branch office  situated outside	 the State of Andhra Pradesh
to the	buyer and  not by the registered office at Hyderabad
makes no  difference at all. The manufacture of the goods at
the Hyderabad  factory and  their movement  thereafter	from
Hyderabad to  the branch  office outside  the State  was  an
incident of the contract entered into with the buyer, for it
was intended  that the same goods should be delivered by the
branch office to the buyer. There was no break
783
in the movement of the goods. The branch office merely acted
as a  conduit through which the goods passed on their way to
the buyer.  It would  have been	 a different  matter if	 the
particular goods  had  been  despatched	 by  the  registered
office at  Hyderabad to	 the branch office outside the State
for sale  in the  open market  and without  reference to any
order placed  by the  buyer. In such a case if the goods are
purchased from	the branch  office, it	is not	a sale under
which the  goods commenced their movement from Hyderabad. It
is a  sale where  the goods  moved merely  from	 the  branch
office to  the buyer.  The movement  of the  goods from	 the
registered office  at Hyderabad to the branch office outside
the State cannot be regarded as an incident of the sale made
to the buyer. [787 F-H, 788 A-C]
     English Electric  Company of  India Ltd.  v. The Deputy
Commercial Tax officer & Ors., [1977] 1 S.C.R. 631; Union of
India and  Another v.  K.G. Khosla  and Co. Ltd. and Others,
[1979] 43  S.T.C. 457;	Tata Engineering  and Locomotive Co.
Ltd. v.	 Assistant Commissioner	 of Commercial Taxes & Anr.,
[1970] 26  S.T.C. 354 =[1970] 3 S.C.R. 862; State of Bihar &
Anr.,v. Tata  Engineering Locomotive  Co.,  Ltd.  [1971;  27
S.T.C. 127  =[1971] 2  S.C.R. 849  and Balabhagas Hulaschand
and another  v.	 State	of  Orissa,  [1976]  37	 S.T.C.	 207
referred to.
     [The Court	 directed: (i) the Commercial Tax Officer to
afford a  reasonable opportunity  to the  Company to collect
'C' Forms and furnish them to the assessing authority before
making an  assessment against the Company in respect of such
transactions;  (ii)  the  petitioner  Company  may  make  an
application to	the assessing  authority  for  deleting	 the
turnover of  sales found  to be	 inter-State sales concerned
for re-opening	the assessments	 made under  the State Sales
Tax Acts  and (iii)  if the  application is  made within two
months from September 10, 1985, the said assessing authority
should entertain the application, notwithstanding any period
of limitation  prescribed for  such  a	proceedings  and  to
dispose of the claim in accordance with law.]



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Write Petition No. 7337 of 1981. (Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India). Y.S. Chitale and D.N. Misra for the Petitioners. N.C. Talukdar, M.C. shandare, Miss A. Subhashici, M.N. Shroff and B. Parthasarthi for the Respondents.

784

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by PATHAK, J. The first petitioner, M/s Sahney Steel and Press Works Ltd.(hereinafter referred to as the Company J, is a public limited company having the registered office and factory at Hyderabad. The second petitioner, Shri Bhupendra Singh Sahney, is a Director and shareholder of that company. The company has branches at Amritsar, Bangalore, Bombay, Calcutta, Coimbatore and Delhi. The registered office of the Company at Hyderabad is registered as a dealer under the Central Sales Tax Act as well as under the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act.

The Company is engaged in the manufacture and sale of stampings and Laminations made out of steel sheets which are utilised as raw material for making electric motors, transformers and similar goods. The branches of the company are mainly engaged in electing sales and looking after the sales promotion and Liaison work. The Company manufactures

(a) standard goods according to the company's own designs and specifications, (b) non-standard goods according to the designs and specifications supplied by customers. In the course of its normal business, the registered office despatches both standard and non-standard goods manufactured at the Hyderabad factory to the branches. Such transfers made by the registered office to the branches at Bombay, Calcutta and Coimbatore of non-standard goods form the subject of The instant controversy.

According to the petitioner, the branch offices situate at Bombay, Calcutta and Coimbatore. which themselves are registered as dealers under the Central Sales Tax Act and under the related State Sales Tax Acts, receive orders from customers within and from outside the respective States for the supply of goods conforming to definite specifications and drawings. Those branch offices then advise the registered office at Hyderabad to manufacture and despatch the goods. On receipt of such advice from branch, the goods are manufactured at the Hyderabad factory and thereafter despatched by the registered office to the branches by way of transfer of stock. Hie despatching the goods, sometimes intimation is also given by the registered office to the customer concerned about the despatch of the goods to the destination indicated by him. Such goods are booked to 'sheaf' and sent by lorries. The goods received by the branches from time to time, whether standard goods or non- standard goods, are entered in the stock accounts of the branches and are kept in stock by the branches for ultimate delivery to the customers. On 785 the goods reaching the branches, they are inspected by the customers and accepted by them where the customers are local parties. Where delivery has to be effected to customers of other States, the goods are despatched to them by the branch. The branches raise bills and receive the sales price. The branches furnish 'F' forms to the registered office under s.6-A of the Central sales Tax Act in the case of stock transfers to the branches. These are the facts set forth in the writ petition.

It appears that (the sale of non-standard goods WAS assessed to State Sales Tax under the Sales Tax Acts o. Maharashtra, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu. The Commercial Tax Officer, Company Circle-II, Hyderabad, however, expressed the view that the company was liable to Central Sales Tax on the turnover of non-standard goods and rejected the contention of the Company that the pertinent turnover was not so liable. For the assessment year 1979-80 he made an assessment order dated May 4, 1981 assessing a turnover of Rs.1,29,50,248.73 representing what the petitioners claimed to be stock transfers from the Hyderabad registered office to the branches outside the State of Andhra Pradesh. By way of abundant caution the petitioner had prayed that in the event of their objection to the imposition of Central Sales Tax being overruled they should be allowed time to collect 'C' forms from the various customers to whom the branches had effected sales and to submit them to the Commercial Tax Officer. The Commercial Tax Officer, however, did not grant the Company the further time it sought for that purpose.

The petitioners states that the Commercial Tax Officer has also issued notices dated May 2, 1981 seeking to reopen the Central Sales Tax assessments already completed for the years 1977-78 and 1978-79. In the original assessments for those years the Commercial Tax Officer had excluded the disputed transactions relating to transfers of non-standard goods from the registered office to the branches.

The petitioners, therefore, pray for the quashing of the assessment order dated May 4, 1981 made under the Central Sales Tax Act for the assessment year 1979-80, and the consequent demand of tax, in so far as the assessment order includes within the assessed turnover the value of non-standard goods transferred to the branches. The petitioners also pray for an order restraining the Commercial Tax Officer from reopening past assessments tor the purpose of including such transfers in the assessable turnover. Alternatively, the petitioners pray that in the event 786 of the transactions being held liable to Central Sales Tax an opportunity should be given to the Company to file 'C' forms to enable it to avail of the concessional rate of tax envisaged under sub-s.(1) of s.8 read with sub-s.(4) of s.8 of the Central Sales Tax Act. A further prayer in the alternatives that the assessment made under the local Sales Tax Acts from the assessment year 1978-79 onwards, in so far as the assessments include the turnover of the aforesaid stock transfers transferred by the registered office to the branches should be quashed.

While making the assessment order for the assessment year 1979-80, the Commercial Tax Officer found that the branch offices of the company, after procuring orders for the supply of goods with definite specifications and drawings advised the registered office at Hyderabad to manufacture and supply the goods in accordance therewith. After the goods were so manufactured in the factory at Hyderabad, the registered office despatched the goods to the branches. The goods were collected by the branch offices and despatched to various customers according to the orders received earlier. The Commercial Tax Officer also found that except for the manufacture of goods according to the specifications received from the customers at the registered office and factory at Hyderabad, also other activities including that of booking orders, sales despatching, billing and receiving of the sale price were being carried on by the branch offices situated outside the State of Andhra Pradesh. In the opinion of the Commercial Tax Officer the movement of the goods from Hyderabad to the stations outside the State was an incident of the contract incorporated in the specific orders procured by the branch offices, and therefore the transactions were inter-state sales within the terms of sub- s.(a) of s.3 of the Central Sales Tax Act.

The petitioners challenge the finding of the Commercial Tax Officer that the transactions in question constitute inter-State sales. The petitioner contend that when the registered office of the company at Hyderabad despatched the manufactured goods to its branch office it was merely a transfer of stock from the registered office to the branch office, and thereafter the movement of the goods started from the branch office to the buyer. It is urged that the registered office and the branch office were separately registered as dealers under the Sales Tax law and transactions effected by the branch office could not be identified with transactions effected by the registered office. The movement of the goods from Hyderabad to the branch office, it is 787 said, was only for the purpose of enabling the sale by the branch A office and was not in the course of fulfillment of the contract of sale. We are unable to agree. Even if, as in the present case, the buyer places an order with the branch office and the branch office communicates the terms and specifications of the orders to the registered office and the branch office itself is concerned with the sales despatching, billing and receiving of the sale price, the conclusions must be that the order placed by the buyer is an order placed with Company, and for the purpose of fulfilling that order the manufactured goods commence their Journey from the registered office within the State of Andhra Pradesh to the branch office outside the State for delivery of the goods to the buyer. We must not forget that both the registered office and the branch office are offices of the same Company, and what in effect does take place is that the Company from its registered office in Hyderabad takes the goods to its branch office outside tile State and arranges to deliver them to the buyer. The registered office and the branch office do not possess separate juridical personalities. The question really is whether the movement of the goods from the registered office at Hyderabad is occasioned by the order placed by the buyer or is an incident of the contract. If it is so, as it appears no doubt to us, its movement from the very beginning from Hyderabad all the way until delivery is received by the buyer is an inter-State movement. In English Electric Company of India Ltd. v. The Deputy Commercial Tax Officer & Ors.[1977] 1 S.C.R. 631 this Court held that when the movement of the goods from one State to another is an incident of the contract it is a sale in the course of inter-State sale, and it does not matter which is the State in which property in the goods passes. What is decisive is whether the sale is one which occasions the movement of goods from one State to another. It was also pointed out that the branches had no independent and separate entity, that they were merely different agencies, and even where a branch office sold the goods to the buyer it was a sale between the Company and the buyer. It is true that in that case the goods, on manufacture at the Madras branch factory, were directly despatched to the Bombay buyer at his risk and all prices were shown F.O.R. Madras, and the goods were delivered to the Bombay buyer at Bhandup through clearing agents In the instant case, the goods were despatched by the branch office situated outside the State of Andhra Pradesh to the buyer and not by the registered office at Hyderabad. In our opinion, that makes no difference at all. The manufacture of the goods at the Hyderabad factory and their movement thereafter from Hyderabad to the branch office outside the State was an incident of the contract 788 entered into with the buyer, for it was intended that the same goods should be delivered by the branch office to the buyer. There was no break in the movement of the goods. The branch office merely acted as a conduit through which the goods passed on their way to the buyer. It would have been a different matter if the particular goods had been despatched by the registered office at Hyderabad to the branch office outside the State for sale in the open market and without reference to any order placed by the buyer. In such a case if the goods are purchased from the branch office, it is not a sale under which the goods commenced their movement from Hyderabad. It is a sale where the goods moved merely from the branch office to the buyer. The movement of the goods from the registered office at Hyderabad to the branch office outside the State cannot be regarded as an incident of the sale made to the buyer.

The law was clarified in Union of India and Another v. K.G. Khosla and Co. Ltd. and Others. (1979) 43 S.T.C. 457, where this Court observed that a sale would be an inter- State sale even if the contract of sale does not itself provide for the movement of goods from one State to another, provided, however, that such movement was the result of a covenant in the contract of sale or was in incident of that contract. Two cases on opposite sides of the line were considered by this Court in K.G. Khosla and Co. Ltd. (supra). In Tata Engineering and Locomotive Co. Ltd. v. Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes Anr. [1970] 26 S.T.C. 354 =[1970] 3 S.C.R. 862, the appellant carried on the business of manufacturing trucks in Jamshedpur in the State of Bihar. The sales office of the appellant in Bombay used to instruct the Jamshedpur factory to transfer stocks of vehicles to the stock-yards in various States after taking into account the production schedule and requirements of customers in different States. The stocks available in the stock-yards were distributed from time to time to dealers. The transfer of the vehicles from the factory to the various stock-yards was a continuous process and was not related to the requirement of any particular customer. Until an appropriation of the vehicle was made by the stock-yard incharge against a contract of sale out of the stocks available with him it was open to the appellant to allot any vehicle to any purchaser or even to transfer the vehicles from the stock-yard in the State to a stock-yard in another State. It was held on the facts that the sale by the appellant to a purchaser from its stock-yard was not an inter-State sale. On the other side of the line is State of Bihar & Anr. v. Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co. Ltd. [1971] 27 S.T.C. 127 = [1971] 2 S.C.R. 849. In that case, the turnover in dispute related to sales made 789 by the company to its dealers of trucks for being sold in the territories assigned to them under the dealership agreements. Each dealer was assigned an exclusive territory and under the agreement between the dealers and the company, they had to place their indents, pay the price of the goods to be purchased and obtain delivery orders from the Bombay office of the company. In pursuance of such delivery orders trucks used to be delivered in the State of Bihar to be taken over to the territories assigned to the dealers. Under the terms of the contracts of sale the purchasers were required to remove the goods from the State of Bihar to other States. The Court observed that if a contract of said contained a stipulation for such movement, the sale would be an inter-State sale.

Considerable reliance has been placed by the petitioner on one of the illustrations given by this Court in Balabhagas Hulaschand and Another v. State of Orissa [1976] 37 S.T.C. 207, where Case No.II was set out as follows:-

Case No.II. - A, who is a dealer in state X, agrees to sell goods to but he books the goods from state X to State Y in his own name and his agent in state Y receives the goods on behalf of A. Thereafter the goods are delivered to B in State Y and if B accepts them a sale takes place. it will be seen that in this case the movement of goods is neither in pursuance of the agreement to sell nor is the movement occasioned by the sale. The seller himself takes the goods of State Y and sells the goods there. This, is, therefore, purely ar. internal sale which takes place in State Y and falls beyond the purview of section 3(a) of the Central Sales Tax Act not being an inter-State sale.
It is not clear from this illustration whether the goods were particular and specific goods earmarked for delivery to the buyer when they commenced their movement from State X. Apparently not, because it is pointed out that the movement of The goods was neither in pursuance of the agreement to sell nor was the movement occasioned by the sale The case is distinguishable from the present one where particular goods were manufactured in Hyderabad in satisfaction of an order placed by one buyer who desired delivery outside the State. The goods moved from the registered office at Hyderabad as the result of a covenant in the contract of sale or an incident of that contract that the goods 790 manufactured at Hyderabad according to the specifications stipulated by the buyer should be the very goods delivered to him outside the State.
Upon all these considerations, we are of opinion that the Commercial Tax Officer is right in holdings that the sale transactions were inter-State sales inasmuch as they satisfy the terms of clause (a) of s.3 of the Central Sales Tax Act.
Having held that the disputed transactions are inter- State sales, it is only appropriate that an opportunity should be give to the Company to collect 'C' Forms from the buyers for the purpose of obtaining relief under sub-s.(l) of s.8 read with sub-s.(4) of s.8 of the Central Sales Tax Act. The question whether the transactions could be described as inter-State sales was in doubt all along, and it is only now that the doubt can be said to have been finally resolved. Accordingly we direct the Commercial Tax Officer to afford a reasonable opportunity to the Company to collect 'C' Forms and furnish them to the assessing authority before making an assessment against the Company in respect of such transactions. We understand that so far as the turnover for the assessment year 1979-80 is concerned, the assessment order has been set aside in appeal and the case has been remanded to the assessing authority for Granting sufficient time to the Company to file the 'C' Forms in order to enable it to avail of the concessional rate of tax.
The petitioners have prayed for the further relief that as the aforesaid transactions have been held to be inter State sales their inclusion in the assessments made under the corresponding State Sales Act should be deleted. We give liberty to the petitioner Company to make an application to the assessing authority concerned for the grant of such relief, and if the application is made within two months from 10.9.85 we direct the said assessing authority to entertain the application, notwithstanding any period of limitation prescribed for such a proceeding and to dispose of the claim in accordance with law.
The writ petition is dismissed subject to the directions set forth above. There is no order as to costs.
S.R.					 Petition dismissed.
791