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[Cites 12, Cited by 96]

Supreme Court of India

K. G. Khosla & Co vs Deputy Commissioner Of Commercial ... on 18 January, 1966

Equivalent citations: 1966 AIR 1216, 1966 SCR (3) 352, AIR 1966 SUPREME COURT 1216, 1966 2 MADLJ(CRI) 81, 1966 (17) STC 473, 1966 SCD 1140, 3 SCWR 352, 2 SCWR 672, 1966 2 SCJ 703

Author: S.M. Sikri

Bench: S.M. Sikri, P.B. Gajendragadkar, J.C. Shah, V. Ramaswami

           PETITIONER:
K. G. KHOSLA & CO.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF COMMERCIAL TAXIES

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/01/1966

BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.

CITATION:
 1966 AIR 1216		  1966 SCR  (3) 352
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1971 SC 477	 (11)
 RF	    1971 SC 870	 (24,45)
 R	    1973 SC2491	 (6,7,8)
 RF	    1974 SC1510	 (5,3,11,13)
 RF	    1975 SC1564	 (23,24,52,61,66)
 R	    1979 SC1160	 (15)
 F	    1985 SC1689	 (2,6)
 RF	    1992 SC1952	 (8)


ACT:
Central Sales Tar Act, 1956 (64 of 1956), s. 5(2)-Scales  in
the course of import Meaning of.



HEADNOTE:
The  appellant	entered into a contract with  the  Director-
General of Civil Supplies, New Delhi for the supply of	axle
bodies manufactured by its principals in Belgium.  The goods
were inspected on behalf of the buyers in Belgium but  under
the  contract  they were liable to rejection  after  further
inspection  in	India.	 In pursuance of  the  contract	 the
appellant  supplied axle-bodies to the Southern	 Railway  at
Perambur  and  Mysore.	 The Joint  Commercial	Tax  Officer
Madras	rejected  the contention of the appellant  that	 the
sales  were in the course of import.  He held that the	said
sales  were  intra-State sales because the  seller  was	 the
consignee of the goods and the buyer had reserved the  right
to  reject the goods even after their arrival in India.	  He
made an assessment under the Madras General Sales Tax Act in
respect	 of the supplies at Perambur and another  assessment
under  the Central Sales Tax Act in respect of the  supplies
at   Mysore.   The  appellant  filed  appeals  against	 the
assessments   but  the	Appellant   Assistant	Commissioner
rejected  them.	  The Tribunal held that part of  the  goods
were  sold in the course of import.  Against the  Tribunal's
orders	both  parties filed two revisions each in  the	High
Court.	The  High Court allowed the petitions filed  by	 the
State  and  rejected those filed by the assessee.   It	held
that  "before  a  sale can be said to  have  occasioned	 the
impart	it is necessary that the sale should  have  preceded
the  import" and as the sale had not taken place at  Belgium
there was no question of sale occasioning the impart of	 the
goods.	 The  appellant then came to this Court	 by  special
leave.	 On  behalf  of	 the  respondents  two	 preliminary
objections were raised : (1) The appellant had not  complied
with  O.Xlll  r. 2 of the Supreme Court Rules,	1950  before
coming	to this Court; (2) The appellant had filed only	 two
appeals	 in  this  Court while	the  High  Court's  judgment
covered four revision petitions.
HELD  :	 (i)  The appellant had not  filed  a  petition	 for
certificate  before  the Madras High Court  as	required  by
O.XIII	r. 2 because of the view of that High Court that  no
such  petition	lay  in	 Revenue  matters.   Therefore	non-
compliance with O.XIII r. 2 could be condoned.
(ii)Two	 revisions  were  filed in the High  Court  by	the
appellant and two by the State in respect of two  assessment
orders and they were disposed of by a common judgment.	 The
subject	 matter of the four revisions were two	assessments,
one  under  the Madras General Sales Tax Act and  the  other
under  the Central Sales Tax Act.  The appellant  was  quite
right in filing two appeals before this Court. [356 B-D]
(iii)Section 5(2) of the Central Sales Tax Act does not
lay  down any condition that before a sale could be said  to
have occasioned import it is
			    353
necessary  that	 the sale should have preceded	the  import.
The High Court wrongly held so. [358 D-E]
Tata  Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. S. R. Sarkar, [1961] 1 S.  C.
R. 379, relied on.
The Cement Marketing Co. of India v. State of Mysore, [1963]
3 S.C.R. 777 State Trading Corporation of India v. State  of
Mysore, [1963] 3 S.C.R. 792 and Singareni Collieries Co.  v.
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Hyderabad, [1966] 2 S.C.R.
190, referred to.
(iv)In	the  present  case  it was  quite  clear  from	the
contract  that	it was incidental to the contract  that	 the
axle-box bodies would be manufactured in Belgium,  inspected
there, and imported into India for the consignee.   Movement
of  goods  from	 Belgium to India was in  pursuance  of	 the
conditions  of	the contract between the  assessee  and	 the
Director-General  of Supplies.	There was no possibility  of
those  goods  being diverted by the assessee for  any  other
purpose.  Consequently the sales took place in the course of
import of goods within s. 5(2) of the Act and were therefore
exempt from taxation. [358 F]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 143 and 144 of 1965.

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order date August 16, 1963 of the Madras High Court in Tax Cases Nos. 100, 219, 220 and 225 of 1962.

Veda Vyasa and K. K. Jain, for the appellant. A.Ranganadham Chetty and A. V. Rangam, for the respon-- dent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Sikri, J. These two appeals by special leave are directed against the judgment of the Madras High Court in Tax Cases Nos. 100, 219, 220 and 225 of 1962, and involve the interpretation of s. 5(2) of the Central Sales Tax Act (64 of 1956)-hereinafter referred to as the Act. The relevant facts are these. The appellant K. G. Khosla & Co., hereinafter referred to as the assessee entered into a contract with the Director-General of Supplies and Disposal, New Delhi, for the supply of axle-box bodies. According to the contract the goods were to be manufactured in Belgium, and the D.G.I.S.D., London, or his representative, was to inspect the goods at the works of the manufacturers. He was to issue an inspection certificate. Another inspection by the Deputy Director of Inspections, Ministry of W.H. & S., Madras, was provided for in the contract. It was his duty to issue inspection notes on Form No. WSB.65 on receipt of a copy of the Inspection Certificate from the D.G.I.S.D. London and after verification and visual inspection. The goods were to be manufactured according to specifications by M/s La Brugeoies. ET. Nivelles, Belgium. The 354 assessee was entitled to be paid 90% after inspection- and delivery of the stores to the consignee and the balance of IO % was payable on final acceptance by the consignee. In the case of deliveries on F.O.R. basis, the assessee was entitled to 90% payment after inspection on proof of despatch and balance 10% after receipt of stores by the consignees in good condition. The date of delivery was "in 8 months ex-your principal's works from the date of receipt of order and the approved working drawings, i.e. delivery in India by 31-7-1957, or earlier." The assessee was entirely responsible for the execution of the contract. Clause 17(1) of the Contract provides:

"The Contractor is entirely responsible for the execution of the contract in all respects in accordance with the terms and conditions as specified in the A/T and the schedule annexed thereto. Any approval which the Inspector may have given in respect of the stores, materials or other particulars and the work or workmanship involved in the contract (whether with or without test carried out by the contractor's Inspector) shall not bind the purchaser .and notwithstanding any approval or acceptance given by the Inspector, it shall be lawful for the consignee of the stores on behalf of the Purchaser to reject the stores ,,on arrival at the destination, if it is found that the stores supplied by the contractor are not in conformity with the terms and conditions of the Contract in all respects,"

Further, the assessee was responsible for the safe arrival of the goods at the destination. By an endorsement the D.G.I.S.D., London, was requested to issue pre-inspection delay reports regularly to all concerned, including the Railway Liaison Officer, C/o D.G.S. & D. Shahjahan Road, New Delhi. He was also requested to endorse copies of the Inspection Certificates to the Director of Inspection, Ministry of W.H. & S. Bombay. It is further found by the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal that "the Belgian manufac- turers, after manufacture, consigned the goods to the appellants by ship under bills of lading in which the consignee was the appellants themselves. The goods were consigned to Madras Harbour, cleared by the appellant's own clearing agents and despatched for delivery to the buyers thereafter."

In pursuance of this contract, the assessee supplied axle- box bodies of the value of Rs. 1,74,029.50 to the Southern Railway at Perambur Works and of the value of Rs. 1,32,987.75 to Southern Railway, Mysore. The Joint Commercial Tax Officer held that the former sales were liable to tax under the Madras General Sales Tax Act and the latter under the Central Sales Tax Act. He rejected the contention of the assessee that the sales were in the ,,,course of import. He held that "there was no privity of contract 355 between the foreign seller and the Government for the goods., The goods were shipped only as the goods of the seller and intended for them. They were cleared as their own and delivered after clearance. The transaction is therefore one of intrastate sales and not one in the course of import. The sale is completed only when the goods are delivered in this state and so it is not occasioning the im- port. It is also seen from the contract of sale that the terms of delivery are F.O.R. Madras. Again Cl. (1) of the contract says that any approval where the Inspector may have given in respect of stores materials or other particulars and the work or workmanship involved in the contract shall not bind the purchaser and notwithstanding any approval or acceptance given by the Inspector it shall be lawful for the consignee of the stores on behalf of the purchaser to reject the stores on arrival at the destination. It will be seen from the words underlined by me that the purchaser has reserved the right to reject the goods even though an inspection of the goods might have been made. So there is no force in the argument of the dealer that the goods were appropriated to the contract of sale."

The assessee filed two appeals but the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, agreeing with the Joint Commercial Tax Officer, rejected the appeals. The Appellate Tribunal on appeal held that the property in the goods had not passed on to the buyers even while the goods were with the Belgian manufacturers and that the sale by the appellants had not occasioned the imports. The Tribunal, however, accepted the contention of the assessee that sales to the extent of Rs. 22,983.75 and Rs. 10,987.50 had taken place in the course of import as the goods had been appropriated to the contract while the goods were on the high seas.

The assessee then filed two revisions before the High Court and the Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Madras, filed two revisions challenging the deductions of the two sums of Rs. 22,983.75 and Rs. 10,987.50. The High Court allowed the petitions filed by the State and dismissed the petitions filed by the assessee. It rejected the contention of the assessee that the property in the goods must be deemed to have passed at the stage when the goods were approved by the representative in the factory of the manufacturers at Balgium. The High Court further rejected the contention of the assessee that the sale by the assessee to the Government Department had occasioned the import on the ground that "before a sale can be said to have occasioned the import, it is. necessary that the sale should have preceded the import", and as the sale had not taken place at Belgium there was no question of the sale occasioning the import of the goods.

Before we deal with the merits of the appeals, we must dispose of two preliminary objections raised by Mr. Ranganadham Chetty, 356 on behalf of the respondents. Basing himself on Management of Hindusthan Commercial Bank Ltd. v. Bhagwan Dass (1) he urged that ,the assessee should have filed an application for leave to appeal before the High Court before applying for special leave. We see no force in this objection. It is common ground that the Madras High Court had at the relevant time consistently taken the view that no application for leave to appeal to Supreme Court Jay before the High Court in matters involving revenue. In these circumstances we dispense with the requirement of Order XIII, r. 2 of the Supreme Court Rules, and overrule the objection. The second preliminary objection raised by him was that the assessee should have filed four appeals and not two appeals because there were four revision petitions before the High Court. We see no force in this objection also. Two revisions were filed by the assessee and two by the State in respect of two assessment orders and they were disposed of by one common judgment. The subject matter of the four revisions were two assessments, one under the Madras General Sales Tax Act and the other under the Central Sales Tax Act. In our opinion, the assessee was quite right in filing two appeals before this Court.

The learned counsel for the assessee Mr. Ved Vyasa, raised two points before us : First that the sales were in the course of import within the meaning of s. 5(2) of the Act; and secondly that the property in the goods passed in Belgium and consequently the sales were outside the State within the meaning of art. 286(1) (a) ,of the Constitution. As we are of the opinion that the assessee must succeed on the first point it will not be necessary to deal with ,,the second point.

Section 5(2) of the Central Sales Tax Act provides "5(2) A sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in the course of the import of the goods into the territory of India only if the sale or purchase either occasions such import or is effected by a transfer of documents of title to the goods before the goods have crossed the customs frontiers of India."

Section 3 of the Act, which deals with inter- state trade and commerce may also be set out as it employs the same terminology and has been interpreted by this Court. S. 3 reads :

"A sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce if the sale or purchase--
(a)occasions the movement of goods from one State to another; or (1) [1965] 2 S.C.R. 265.
357
(b)is effected by a transfer of documents of title to the goods during their movement from one State to another."

It is not necessary to set out the two Explanations to s. 3.

It seems to us that the expression "occasions the movement of goods" occurring in s. 3(a) and s. 5(2) must have the same meaning. In Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. Bombay v. S. R. Sarkar,(1) Shah, J. speaking for the majority, interpreted s. 3 as follows:

"In our view, therefore, within clause (b) of section 3 are included sales in which property in the goods passes during the movement of the goods from one State to another by transfer of documents of title thereto: clause (a) of section 3 covers sales, other than those included in clause (b), in which the movement of goods from one State to another is the result of a covenant or incident of the contract of sale, and property in the goods passes in either State."

These observations of Shah, J., were cited with approval by this Court in The Cement Marketing Co. of India v. The State of Mysore(2). This case, it is true, was not dealing with the Central Sales Tax Act, but the Court was dealing with a similar question arising under art. 286 of the Constitution, before its amendment. But the same Bench, in dealing with a case arising under the Act (The State Trading Corporation of India v. The State of Mysore(3) again approved of the observations in Tata Iron and Steel Co. case(1). Sarkar, J., observed thus:

"The question then is, did the sales occasion the movement of cement from another State into Mysore within the meaning of the definition? In Tata Iron and Steel Co., Ltd. v. S. R. Sarkar(1) it was held that a sale occasions the movement of goods from one State to another within section 3(a) of the Central Sales Tax Act, when the movement "is the result of a covenant or incident of the contract of sale." That the cement concerned in the disputed sales was actually moved from another State into Mysore is not denied. The respondents only contend that the movement was not the result of a covenant in or an incident of the contract of sale."

This Court then, on the facts of the case, found that the movement of cement from another State into Mysore was the result of a covenant in the contract of sale or incident of such contract. This Court did not go into the question as to whether the property had (1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 379: 11 S.T.C. 655. (2) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 777:14 S.T.C. 175.

(3) [1963]3 S.C.R. 792: 14 S.T.C. 188.

358

passed before the movement of the goods or not, and this was because according to the decision in Tata Iron and Steel Co. v. S. R. Sarkar(1) it did not matter whether the property passed in one State or the other. Tata Iron & Steel Co.(1) case was again followed by this Court in Singareni Collieries Co. v. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Hyderabad(2).

The learned counsel for the respondent, Mr. A. Ranganadham Chetty, invited us to hold that the observations of Shah, J., in Tata Iron and Steel Co. (1) case were obiter, and to consider the question afresh. We are unable to reopen the question at this stage. Shah, J., was interpreting s. 3 of the Act, and although the Court was principally concerned with the interpretation of s. 3(b), it was necessary to consider the interpretation of s. 3(a) in order to arrive at the correct interpretation of s. 3(b). Further these observations were approved in The Cement Marketing Co. of India v. The State of Mysore(3), The State Trading Corporation of India, v. The State of Mysore(4) and Singareni Collieries Co. v. Commissioner of Commercial Tax, Hyderabad(2). In the State Trading Corporation(4) case, in so far as the assessment for the assessment year 1957-58 was concerned, this Court applied the principles laid down in Tata Iron and Steel Co.(1) case. Accordingly we hold that the High Court was wrong in holding that before a sale could be said to have occasioned import it is necessary that the sale should have preceded the import.

The next question that arises is whether the movement of axle-box bodies from Belgium into Madras was the result of a covenant in the contract of sale or an incident of such contract. It seems to us that it is quite clear from the contract that it was incidental to the contract that the axle-box bodies would be manufactured in Belgium, inspected there and imported into India for the consignee. A Movement of goods from Belgium to India was in pursuance of the conditions of the contract between the assessee and the Director-General of Supplies. There was no possibility of these goods being diverted by the assessee for any other purpose. Consequently we hold that the sales took place in the course of import of goods within s. 5(2) of the Act, and are, therefore, exempt from taxation. A In the result the appeals are allowed, the judgment of the High Court reversed and the assessment orders quashed. The appellant will have his costs here and in the High Court. One set of hearing fee.

Appeals allowed.

(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 379: 11 S.T.C. 655. (2) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 190.

(3) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 777: 14 S.T.C. 175. (4) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 792: 14 S.T.C. 188.

359