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[Cites 1, Cited by 6]

Supreme Court of India

Ramalingam & Co vs The State Of Madras on 1 February, 1962

Equivalent citations: 1962 AIR 1148, 1962 SCR SUPL. (2) 954, AIR 1962 SUPREME COURT 1148

Author: J.C. Shah

Bench: J.C. Shah, S.K. Das, M. Hidayatullah

           PETITIONER:
RAMALINGAM & CO.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADRAS

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/02/1962

BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.

CITATION:
 1962 AIR 1148		  1962 SCR  Supl. (2) 954


ACT:
     Sales  Tax-Contract  for  sale  of	 goods	by
correspondence-C. I.  F.  or  C.  F.  contracts-of
lading handed over to bankers to part with only on
payment	 Whether   property  in	 goods	passed	in
Madras-Position of  banker.s Vis-a-Vis	seller and
foreign	 buyer-Intermediary  banker  if	 agent	of
seller-Madras general  Sales Tax  Act (Mad.  9	of
1939).



HEADNOTE:
     The assessees were doing business principally
as  exporters	of  vegetable  fibres  to  foreign
countries. The	contracts of  sale were	 C.I.F. or
C.F. and  were made  by correspondence on approval
of samples  sent by  the assessees  to the foreign
buyers. The  price was	payable by draft upon bank
credit to  be opened by the buyer; who opened with
his own bankers
955
an irrevocable	letter of  credit in favour of the
assessees  for	95%  of	 the  net  invoice  value.
Intimation of  the opening of the letter of credit
was then  given to  the	 assessees  by	the  local
bankers in  India  who	were  the  agents  of  the
foreign bankers.  The local  bankers, however, did
not by	intimating the	opening of  the letter	of
credit undertake  any liability, and the assessees
were expressly	informed that  they would  not	be
released from  their liability	under the  Bill of
Exchange  drawn	  by  them.   On  receipt  of  the
information about  opening of the letter of credit
the assessees shipped the goods, obtained bills of
leading in their own names and lodged the shipping
documents endorsed in blank with their own bankers
together with the invoice and Bill of Exchange for
95% of	the invoice  value. Bills  of lading  were
handed over  to the  assessees	bankers	 with  the
definite instructions  to  pass	 on  the  shipping
documents to  the  buyers  only	 on  payment.  The
assessees then	discounted the Bills through their
own bankers. The shipping documents were forwarded
to the	foreign bankers	 who on	 presentation paid
95% of	the invoice amount. The Bill of lading was
then delivered	by the foreign banker to the buyer
and goods were unloaded.
     For  the  year  1945-46  the  Commercial  Tax
officer	 taxed	the  assessees	under  the  Madras
General Sales  Tax Act,	 1930. The  Commercial Tax
officer rejected  the claim  of the assessees that
the amounts  in respect	 of overseas  transactions
was exempt  from liability  to tax, because in his
view the export transactions were sales within the
province of Madras. The Board of Revenue confirmed
the order  and held that the property in the goods
passed to  the buyers  in a  large majority of the
export transaction when the goods were shipped.
     The assessees contended that the export sales
were at	 the material  time  totally  outside  the
provisions of the Madras General Sales Tax Act and
the order  of the  assessment was  ultra vires and
beyond the  powers of  the Authority.  The plea of
the State  of Madras  was that	the  foreign  bank
opening the  letter of	credit is  an agent of the
buyer, and that the bank authorises its own branch
to pay	the price  to  the  shippers  and  by  the
arrangements made by opening the letter of credit,
price is  paid to  the vendor  in his  own country
against the Bill of lading endorsed in blank.
^
     Held, that	 the price in respect of the goods
was not received in the Province of Madras and the
property in  the goods	also did  not pass  to the
buyer  within	the  province.	Therefore  tax	in
respect of  the sale transactions was not exigible
under the Madras General Sales Tax Act 1939.
     The   expansion	of   international   trade
involving   overseas   transactions   has   raised
problems of peculiar difficulty. The
956
parties to  a contract	(which is  as a	 result of
correspondence)	 are  generally	 unknown  to  each
other; often  neither the  seller nor the buyer is
prepared to  trust the	other and  the	seller	is
reluctant to  tie up  his funds	 and the  buyer is
also unwilling to make payment in advance. To tide
over the problem created by this reluctance of the
seller and  the buyer,	bankers	 of  international
repute	and   credit  interpose.  They	for  small
commission undertake  by opening letters of credit
to honour the bill of exchange drawn by the seller
accompanied  by	  the  insurance  policy  and  the
invoice relating  to  goods  forming  the  subject
matter of  the contract.  At the  instance of  the
buyers the bank issues a letter of credit which is
addressed to the world at large or more frequently
to specified  person or	 persons thereby  the bank
undertakes to  honour the  Bills of Exchange drawn
on the	faith of that letter. Invariably the bills
are payable  in future	but the	 exporters as  the
benefit	 ciaries  under	 the  contract,	 have  the
guarantee of  the  banker  that	 payment  will	be
forthcoming and	 are also entitled to discount the
Bills with  any party cognisant of the undertaking
of the original banker.
     The  relation   between  the  buyer  and  his
issuing banker was not of principal and agent, nor
was the	 relation between  the issuing	banker and
the intermediary  banker  that	of  principal  and
agent. The  two bankers	 were interposed  for  the
protection of the seller as well as the buyer. The
issuing banker	did not purport to act as agent of
the buyer  and the  intermediary bankers  accepted
the  general   offer   of   the	  issuing   banker
negotiating the	 draft. By  so accepting the offer
and  by	 taking	 over  the  Bill  of  Lading,  the
insurance  certificate	 and  the   invoice  which
represented title  to the  goods the  intermediary
banker did not act as an agent of the seller.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: C.A No. 10 of 1961.

Appeal from the judgment and decree dated March 5, 1956 of the Madras High Court in A.S. No. 256 of 1951, R. Ramamurthi Aiyar and R. Gopalakrishanan, for the appellants.

R. Ganapathy Iyer and D. Gupta, for the Respondent.

1962. February 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by 957 SHAH, J.-Messrs. Ramalingam & Co.-hereinafter called the assessees-are a firm doing business principally as exporters of vegetable fibres to foreign countries. They have their place of business at Tuticorin in the district of Tirunelveli in the State of Madras.

The contracts of sale are made by correspondence on approval of samples sent by the assessees to the foreign buyers. The contracts are C.I.F. or C.F. and the price is payable by draft upon bank credit to be opened by the buyer. The course of dealing between the assessees and the foreign buyers was as follows:-

After the contract for a quantity of goods was finalised by correspondence and the price ascertained the foreign buyer opened with his own bankers an irrevokable Letter of Credit in favour of the assessees for 95% of the net invoice value. Intimation of the opening of the Letter of Credit was then given to the assessees through a bank operating in the Province of Madras. The assessees then shipped the goods, obtained Bills of Lading in their own names and lodged the shipping documents endorsed in blank with their own bankers together with the invoice and Bill of Exchange for 95% of the invoice value. The assessees then discounted the Bills through their own bankers. The shipping documents were forwarded to the foreign banker who on presentation paid 95% of the invoice amount. The Bill of Lading was then delivered by the foreign banker to the buyer and the goods were unloaded.
For the year 1945-46 the Commercial Tax Officer, Tirunelveli determined for the purpose of computing tax liability under the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, the turnover of the assessees at Rs. 15,61,200/-. The Commercial Tax Officer rejected the claim of the assessees that the amount of Rs. 15,22,000/- in respect of overseas transactions 958 was exempt from liability to tax. He held that the export transactions in respect of which the exemption was claimed were sales within the province of Madras and subject to sales-tax under the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939. The order of the Sales-tax Officer was confirmed by the Board of Revenue, Madras, except as to the amount of freight. The Board of Revenue held that the property in the goods passed to the buyers in a large majority of the export transactions when the goods were shipped. On remand, the commercial Tax Officer recomputed the turnover at Rs. 11,23,603/8/8 inclusive of the local sales of the value of Rs. 75,082/14/0. After paying the tax the assessees sued the Province of Madras in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Tuticorin for a decree for Rs. 10,485/- being the amount of tax paid by them on export sales pursuant to the order of assessment and interest thereon at 6% until realisation. The assessees contended that the export sales were at the material time "totally outside the provisions of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, and the order of assessment was ultra vires and beyond the powers of the authorities". The Subordinate Judge decreed the claim for Rs. 10,323/- with interest at 6% till realization. In appeal, the High Court of Madras reversed the decree and dismissed the suit filed by the assessees. With certificate granted by the High Court this appeal is preferred by the assessees.
It is common ground that in the year 1945-46, under the Madras General Sales Tax Act; 1939, the taxing authorities had no power to levy sales-tax on sales which took place outside the Province. The decision of the appeal, therefore, depends upon the determination of the question whether the export sales took place within the Province. If they took place within the Province, the sales were properly taxed.
We may observe that the plea that a suit for a decree for refund of tax paid in pursuance of 959 an order of assessment passed by the taxing authorities on the basis that the sales took place within the Province did not lie in the civil court, was not raised in the Court of First Instance, nor in the High Court. Counsel for the State of Madras has also stated before us that he does not desire to contend in this case that the suit was, in view of the adjudication by the taxing authorities, not maintainable. We therefore proceed to deal with the only question which was debated before us at the Bar: whether the export sales which are the subject matter of dispute in this appeal were completed within the Province of Madras.
The dispute relates to turnover in respect of seventeen export transactions with merchants in different destinations overseas. As typical of the transactions the files relating to the shipments to Messrs Begbie Philips and Haylay, London and Messrs Hindley and Company, London were tendered in evidence and the case proceeded to trial on the footing that those transactions were typical of all other transactions.
On April 16, 1945, the Mercantile Bank of India wrote a letter in connection with the shipment to Messrs Begbie Philips and Hayley, London about a contract of sale of five tons palmyra fibre. The letter is in the following terms:-
"Dear Sirs, Without any responsibility on the part of this bank we beg to advice receipt of a telegram from our London office reading:- "We open irrevocable credit favour Ramalingam Company, Tuticorin, $400 (four hundred pounds) drafts on Mercantile Bank of India Limited, 60 d/st. invoices, full set shipped bills of lading order bank endorsed certificate of origin insurance covered in London about 5 tons palmyra fibre at $80 (eighty pounds) not per ton C and F. Shipment soonest India to 960 United Kingdom by approved ship. Part shipments allowed expiry 6th October, 1945 a/c Bagbie Phillips Hayley, Limited, licence No. 198281."

When submitting documents under this credit we would emphasise the fact that the goods must be described both in the bill of lading and invoice identically as advised above and the relative bill marked "Drawn under telegraphic credit No. 88-A/36 of 12th April 1945".

We shall furnish you with further particulars on receipt of written confirmation.

Owing to frequent mutiliations in coded telegrams the above message is subject to any necessary corrections on receipt of confirmation by mail.

Kindly note that the negotiation of bills under this credit is entirely optional on our part and this advice does not release you from the liability attaching to the drawer of a Bill of Exchange.

This letter must be produced with all bills drawn under this credit.

Yours faithfully (signed)...

Manager".

On May 28, 1945, the National Bank of India, Tuticorin wrote a letter to the assessees in regard to a sale of a quantity of fibre, which is as follows:-

"Dear Sirs, We beg to inform you that we are in receipt of advice by cable of 24th instant 961 from our London office that they have received from Messrs Hindley and Company, Limited, No. 35, Crutched Friars, London, E. C. 3 an undertaking to honour your bills on Messrs. Hindley and Company, Limited No. 35 Crutched Friars, London E. C. to the extent of $370 (three hundred and seventy pounds) sterling being 95 per cent of invoice value on the following conditions:-
Bill to be drawn payable 90 days after sight and to be accompanied by- Invoices.
Full sets of on board bills of lading made out to order and blank endorsed representing shipments of:- Five tons Tuticorin medium cut and dyed bassine 7 inches and 7-1/2 inches equally at $78 per ton in 1 Cwt. (ballots) C and F United Kingdom post Shipment June/July from Cochin freight paid of deducted and credit reduced accordingly - Freight basis 22nd May, 1945.
Insurance including was risk with unlimited transshipment covered in London. Such shipping documents are to be delivered on payment of the bills which should bear the clause-"Drawn under N.S.I. credit number 83 cabled 24th May 1945".

Bills fulfilling the above-mentioned conditions must be negotiated on or before- Extended till 30th April 1946.

Please note that the bank accepts no liability for the above undertaking and this advice does not release you from the liability attaching to the drawer of a Bill of Exchange.

The above message is continued by us on behalf of the opening bank for your information but without any responsibility on our 962 part except for the correctness of this copy of the telegram as received by us.

When negotiating bills please produce this letter to have the amounts recorded on the back hereof.

I am, Dear Sirs, Yours faithfully (Signed)......

Manager."

On receipt of intimation the assessees shipped the goods and handed over the Bill of Lading and the invoice to their own bankers, accompanied by a Bill of exchange for the amount for which the Letter of Credit was opened by the foreign banker. The assessees then discounted the bills for the amount for which credit was opened. The taxing authorities taxed these transactions, because, in their view, the sales were effected in the Province of Madras and not outside. The assessees in the plaint in paragraph IV cl. (e) stated that one of the salient features of the business was that "The bills of lading are handed over to the Plaintiffs bankers with the clear and definite instructions to pass on the shipping documents to the buyers only on payment. They are what is styled in commercial parlance as D/P bills, i.e., documents to be handed over on payment". This averment in the plaint was not traversed in their written statement by the defendants. The only witness examined at the trial was A.V. Samuel, one of the partners of the assessees' firm. He deposed to the practice which was followed by the assessees. He stated.-

"After shipment we obtain Bill of lading made out in our name as shipper. We draw a bill of Exchange and along with bill of lading and invoice. These documents are deposited with National Bank. We endorse in Bank on the Bill of Lading. It is only after payment of 963 the Bill of exchange by the foreign Bank on behalf of the purchaser, the Bill of Lading is handed over. Till the bill is paid for no title in the goods pass and the goods are at our disposal. If the bill is not honoured the Bank will ask us for directions as regards the disposal of goods. Under instruction from the buyers foreign banks give instruction to any local Bank to give credit up to a certain limit. Inspite of letter of credit as drawers we are responsible under the bill of exchange. We can discount in any bank and not merely in the credit opening bank."

In cross-examination he stated that the "credit opening bank opens credit on behalf of the purchasers. Those banks are not known to us before."

It is clear from the terms of the two letters dated April 16, 1945, and May 28, 1945, that the foreign buyers had opened letters of credit for the benefit of the assessees, for the amounts set out therein. These, it appears, were general credits and intimation thereof was given by the local bankers in India who were agents of the foreign bankers. The local bankers, however, did not undertake any liability by intimating the opening of the letter of credit and the assessees were expressly informed that they (the assessees) would not be released from their liability under the Bills of Exchange drawn by them. The assessees negotiated the Bills through their bankers after receiving an intimation of the opening of credit.

Counsel for the State of Madras submits that the property in the goods which were the subject matter of sale passed in Tuticorin when the assesees received an amount which represented the price the goods against delivery of the Bills of Lading endorsed in blank with authority to complete the endorsement. In substance, the plea is that the oreign bank opening the letter of credit is an agent 964 of the buyer, and that bank authorizes its own branch to pay the price to the shippers and by the arrangements made by opening the letter of credit, price is paid to the vendor in his own country against the bill of Lading endorsed in blank.

It is necessary to appreciate the true nature of the commercial letter of credit extensively used in foreign trade. During the last few decades, expansion of international trade involving overseas transactions has raised problems of peculiar difficulty. The parties to a contract to supply goods are generally unknown to each other and the contract is the result of correspondence between the parties. Often neither the seller nor the buyer is prepared to trust the other. Again, between the delivery of the goods in such trade on board the ship and its ultimate delivery at the destination, the seller is reluctant to tie up his funds. The seller himself in generally a purchaser of goods from the local market and has invested funds in purchasing the goods. The buyer is also unwilling to make payment in advance. To tide over the problem created by this reluctance of the seller and the buyer, bankers of international repute and credit interpose. They for a small commission undertake by opinion letters of credit to honour the Bill of Exchange drawn by the seller accompanied by the insurance policy and the invoice relating to the goods forming the subject matter of the contract. At the instance of the buyer the banker issues a letter of credit which is addressed to the world at large or more frequently to specified person or persons: thereby the banker undertakes to honour the Bills of Exchange drawn on the faith of that letter. Invariably, the Bills are payable in future but the exporters as the beneficiaries under the contract, have the guarantee of the banker that payment will be forthcoming and are also entitled to discount the bills with any party cognisant of the undertaking of the original 965 banker. There are generally four parties to such a transaction-the buyer, the seller, the banker who issues the letter of credit, called the issuing banker and the intermediary or the negotiating banker who allows credit to the seller on the bills lodged with him. Between the buyer and the issuing banker, the contract is that he will pay bills drawn by the seller of the goods against delivery of the Bill of Lading, insurance certificate and invoice. The buyer undertakes to put the banker in funds to enable him to make payment if the documents are presented. The relation between the buyer and the banker is not of pricipal and agent. The contract between the issuing banker and the negotiating banker may be of a dual character. Where the issuing banker's instructions are merely to advise the credit, and the credit calls for bills to be drawn either on the issuing banker or on the buyer, the intermediary banker may negotiate the beneficiary's bills. In such a case he stands qua the issuing banker as principal to principal, for either he succeeds to the rights of the beneficiary under the credit or, if he negotiates relying on the credit alone, as acceptor of the offer it contains. If the instructions call upon the intermediary banker to pay or to negotiate the beneficiary's bills, the intermediary banker is the issuing banker's agent.

Under the terms of the contract between the assessees and the foreign buyer the price was to be paid "by draft after 90 days under bank credit to be opened by the buyer for 95% of the net invoice amount." By the letter of credit the foreign banker guaranteed to pay the amount in London. The issuing bank intimated the opening of the letter of credit, but there is no evidence of any express directions to its agent in India to pay or negotiate the draft. The letter of credit was general; and it was open to any bank on the faith 966 thereof to negotiate the bill issued by the assessees. The payment made by the intermediary bank was not and could not therefore be on behalf of the issuing bank much less on behalf of the buyer. By negotiating the bill, the banker of the assessees became the acceptor of the offer contained in the letter of credit of the issuing bank, and as such acceptor obtained the Bill of Lading, the invoice and the Bill of Exchange and presented them for payment. This arrangement was not an arrangement for payment of price on behalf of the buyer.

It appears clear from the two letters dated April 4, 1945, and May 28, 1945, that the banks accepted no liability by intimating the opening of the letter of credit and the liability attaching to the assessees by drawing Bills of Exchange was not discharged. If the liability of the assessees, as drawers of the Bills of Exchange continued, the arrangement made by the buyer could not be regarded as one to pay the price through his banker in India. As stated hereinbefore, the relation between the buyer and his issuing banker was not of principal and agent, nor was the relation between the issuing bankar and the intermediary banker that of principal and agent. The two bankers were interposed for the protection of the seller as well as the buyer. The issuing banker did not purport to act as agent of the buyer and the intermediary banker accepted the general offer of the issuing banker by negotiating the draft. By so accepting the offer and by taking over the Bill of Lading, the insurance certificate and the invoice which represented title to the goods the intermediary banker did not act as an agent of the seller.

The price in respect of the goods was not received in the Province of Madras, and the property in the goods also did not pass to the buyer 967 within the Province. Tax in respect of the sale of fibre by the assessees under the disputed transactions was therefore not exigible under the Madras General Sales Tax Act.

The appeal is therefore allowed: the decree of the High Court is set aside, and the decree of the trial Court is restored with costs in this Court and the High Court.

Appeal allowed.