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[Cites 8, Cited by 71]

Supreme Court of India

Alladi Venkateswarlu & Ors vs Govt. Of Andhra Pradesh & Anr on 21 February, 1978

Equivalent citations: 1978 AIR 945, 1978 SCR (2) 190, AIR 1978 SUPREME COURT 945, 1978 2 SCC 552, 1978 TAX. L. R. 2049, 1978 2 SCWR 116, 1978 41 STC 394, 1978 SCC (TAX) 112, (1978) 3 SCR 190, 1978 U J (SC) 212, 1978 STI 27 (SC)

Author: M. Hameedullah Beg

Bench: M. Hameedullah Beg, N.L. Untwalia

           PETITIONER:
ALLADI VENKATESWARLU & ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
GOVT.  OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT21/02/1978

BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
UNTWALIA, N.L.

CITATION:
 1978 AIR  945		  1978 SCR  (2) 190
 1978 SCC  (2) 552


ACT:
Interpretation of taxing statute--If the language is  clear,
it will be unfair to interpret against the assessee.
Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 S. 5 r/w Entry 66
of  Schedule  I to the Act--When "Paddy" was  already  taxed
under  item 8 Schedule II, Whether "Atukulu" (Parched  Rice)
and  "muramuralu" (Puffed rice) are exigible to tax for	 the
second	time  as rice falling under Item 66(a)	of  Schedule
I--Whether "Atukulu" (Parched rice) and "muramuralu" (Puffed
rice)  are  "rice"  within the meaning	of  entry  66(b)  of
Schedule I.
Andhra	 Pradesh  General  Sales  Tax  Act,  1957,   Section
5(2)--Difference between taxation u/s 5(2)(a) and 5(2)(b).



HEADNOTE:
Section 5 of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act,	1957
regulates the levy of tax on sales or purchase of goods.  S.
5(1)  enjoins that every dealer (other than a casual  trader
and an agent of a non-resident dealer) whose total  turnover
is  Rs. 25,000 and upwards and every agent of a	 nonresident
dealer irrespective of his turnover shall pay a tax for each
year  at  the  rate  of four paise on  every  rupee  of	 his
turnover.  "Paddy" is subjected to sales tax under item 8 of
the  2nd schedule @ the rate of five paise in the  rupee  at
the  point of first purchase in the State.  A rebate,  of  2
paise  in the rupee shall be allowed on the paddy  purchased
and  consumed in the State.  Under s. 5(2)(a) r/entry 66  of
Schedule  I to the Act, rice is subject to sales tax at	 the
rates  specified  at the point of the sale effected  by	 the
dealer	selling them.  "Paddy" is either parched  or  heated
and sold as Atukulu (parched rice) and "muramuralu"  (puffed
rice).	 When the sales tax authorities sought to levy	once
over again on the sale of paddy which has already been taxed
at the purchase point, after making it edible in the form of
"atukulu"  and "Muramuralu" the appellants challenged	 the
said  action.	 ' The Andhra Pradesh High Court  held	that
parched	 rice  and  puffed rice not    being  rice  at	all,
falling	 within	 either of the two parts of  entry  66	were
taxable	 as separate kinds of goods altogether u/s  5,	sub-
section 1 of the Act.
Allowing the appeals by special leave the Court,
HELD.  1.  Where  two interpretations  of  a  provision	 are
possible,  courts  should  apply  the  principle  that	 the
interpretations	  which	 favours  the  assessee	 should	  be
preferred.   Unless the language of the taxing	statute	 was
absolutely clear, it should not be given an obviously unfair
interpretation against the assessee. [195-G-H]
2.   Commonly  accepted	 sense of a term should	 prevail  in
construing the description of an article of food. [195D]
Kalyani	 &  Co.	 v. Commissioner of Sales  Tax,	 [1953]	 (4)
S.T.C. 387 @ 390' (Hyd.) referred to.
3.   Court  must give a broad enough interpretation  to	 the
term  '.rice"  in accordance with the common sense  rule  of
interpretation	laid down by this Court in  M/s	 Tungabhadra
Industries Ltd. v. Commercial Tax Officer, Kurnool, [1961] 2
S.C.R. 14 @ 23. [196 C-D]
4.   The  term	rice is wide enough to include rice  in	 its
various forms whether edible or unedible.  Rice in the	form
of  grain is not edible.  Parched rice an& puffed  rice	 are
edible.	  But the entry rice covers both forms of rice.	  At
any rate it is wide enough to cover them. [194H, 195A]
191
5.   There is a distinction between "paddy" as found in item
8 of the 2nd schedule and "rice" as mentioned under item  66
of  the	 first schedule.  The view that, if paddy  has	been
taxed  in  the hands of the purchaser, who is a	 dealer	 the
same  individual  was made to pay tax on it  again  as	rice
falling	 within item 66(a) and not as "rice"  falling  under
item 66(b) cannot be accepted because such a view would	 run
counter to the express provisions of item 66(b).  If what is
taxed  is "rice", it would obviously fall under	 item  66(b)
because it has already been taxed in the form of paddy.	  It
could  certainly  not  fall under item 66(a)  which  is	 for
"rice" not so taxed.  To urge that it falls under item 66(a)
is to concede that it is "rice". [194A]
6.   On a parity of reasoning the term 'rice' as  ordinarily
understood  in English language would include  both  parched
and  Puffed rice.  Atukulu (parched rice)  and	"muramuralu"
(puffed rice) are "rice." within the meaning of entry  66(b)
of  Schedule 1 of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax	Act,
1957. [197 A-B]
7.   The difference between taxation under the	 schedule u/s
5(2)(a)	 and  under the 11 schedule u/s 5 (2)  (b)  is	that
whereas the first is a tax at the point of sale, the  second
is a tax at the point of purchase.  The II schedule is meant
for goods in respect of which a single point tax is leviable
u/s 5 (2) (b) of the Act.  The dealer's turnover may include
purchases as well as sales.  In the instant case the  dealer
has paid a tax at the time of purchase of rice under item  8
of the 11 schedule when it was paddy. [193F-G]
8.   It	 is not the intention of the legislature to tax	 u/s
5(1)   as   well  as  under  section  5(2)   of	  the	Act.
Simultaneously	s.  5(2) does not say that a  "further"	 tax
would  be  levied u/s 5(2).  It only talks of  levying	'the
tax' in accordance with s. 5(2) of the Act in cases  falling
within	the ambit of the 2nd schedule to which reference  is
made in s. 5(2) of the Act.  It is not fair to so  interpret
a  taxing  statute,  as	 to  impute  an	 intention  to	 the
legislature  to	 go  on taxing what is	virtually  the	same
product	 in  different forms over and over  again.   Such  a
result wouId be contrary to basic axioms of taxation. [194B-
D]
9.   Keeping  in  view the various provisions  of  the	Act,
together  with	the  history of exemption  of  "palalu"	 and
"muramuralu" and its cancellations it was not the  intention
of the State Govt. suddenly to make the incidence of tax  so
heavy. [196C]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 391 and 392 of 1977.

(Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated the 24-8-1976 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in W.A. Nos. 1/75 & 61/76).

S. C. Manchanda and B. Kanta Rao for the appellants. P. Parameshwara Rao and T. V S. Narasimhachari for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BEG, C.J.-The question before us in these appeals by special leave was framed as follows :

"Whether 'Atukulu' (parched rice), and 'Muramuralu (puffed rice) are 'rice' within the meaning of Entry 66(b) of Schedule 1 to the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act.

1957"

192
This question arose before the Andhra Pradesh high Court in appeals from single Judge decisions of the High Court, out of provisions of Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act').
Section 5 (1 ) of the Act provides "5.Levy of Tax on Sales or Purchases of Goods : (1) Every dealer (other than a casual trader and an agent of a non-resident dealer) whose total turnover for a year is not less than Rs. 25,000 and every agent of a non-resident dealer whatever be his turnover for the year, shall pay a tax for each year, at the rate of four paise on every rupee of his turnover."

Section 5(2) enacts "Notwithstanding anything contained in sub- section (1) the tax under this Act shall be levied-

(a) in the case of the goods mentioned in the first Schedule, at the rates and only at the point of the sale specified as applicable thereof effected in the State by the dealer selling them, on his turnover of sales in each year relating to such goods irrespective of the quantum of turnover,
(b) in the case of the goods mentioned in the Second Schedule, at the rates and only at the point of the purchase specified as applicable thereto, effected in the State by the dealer purchasing them, on his turnover of the purchase in each year relating to such goods irrespective of the quantum of turnover."

The first Schedule to the Act dealing with matters provided by S. 5 (2) (a) contains the entry 66 which runs as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------ Description of goods point of levy Rate of tax
------------------------------------------------------------
66. Rice :(a) not Covered by At the point of sale by
(b) below the first wholesale dealer in the state effecting the sale 6 Paise in the rupee Provided that a rebate of two paise in the rupee shall be allowed on the rice sold and consumed in the State in accordance with such rules as may be prescribed.

-------------------------------------------------------------

(b) Rice obtained from At the point of sale by the first wholesale dealer in the state effecting the sale.

1 Paise in the rupee It seems that tax on paddy which was converted into 'Atukulu' (parched rice), and 'Muramaralu' (puffed rice) had already been

------------------------------------------------------------

193

levied in the form in which it comes to the market as a crop. The Division Bench of the High Court in the judgment under appeal before us stated "It is common case that the paddy out of which these commodities have been made in all the three cases has been subjected to tax".

On this assumption, the only question before us is whether the parched rice and the puffed rice are covered by item 66(b) which reads : "rice obtained from paddy that has met tax under the Act". 'Paddy' is defined in the dictionary as "rice in the husk". The question is : Does it cease to be even "rice" when it is converted into parched rice and puffed rice ? It is true that it is no longer rice grain as it emerges from the husk. To make it edible as parched rice and puffed rice it has to go through further processes. These are only products obtained by converting rice grain into a different form of it by heating or parching. if such rice is still rice, even if we confine the term rice" to grain, is it by going through these processes of heating or parching converted into separate items for the purposes of entry 66 in the 1st Schedule of the Act ?

We find that considerable argument was advanced in the High Court on the question whether if parched rice and puffed rice are not covered at all by entry 66 of the 1st Schedule it would still be taxable. We find that the answer given by the High Court was that, in any case, such rice would be taxable under Section 5,_ sub-section (1) of the Act set out above.

It was also pointed out before us that paddy out of which the products in question become available, had already been taxed, as admitted by both sides, under item 8 of the 2nd Schedule which imposes a tax of 5 paise in the rupee on paddy at the point of first purchase in the State. The entry also says :

"Provided that a rebate of 2 paise in the rupee shall be allowed on the paddy purchased and consumed in the State in accordance with such rules as may be prescribed'.
The 2nd schedule is meant for goods in respect of which a single point tax is leviable under section 5(2) (b) of the Act. The difference between taxation under the 1st schedule under section 5(2)(a) and under the 2nd schedule under section 5(2) (b) appears to be that whereas the first is a tax at the point of sale the second is a tax at the point of purchase. The dealer's turnover may include purchases as well as safes. Therefore, as is assumed in the instant case, the dealer had paid a tax at the time of purchase of rice under item 8 of the 2nd schedule, when it was "paddy", could it be contemplated that he must pay a tax again on the- same item as "rice" not covered by item 66(b), that is to say, as "rice" falling under item 66(a)? It Is impossible to accept the view that, if paddy has been taxed in the hands of the purchaser, who is a dealer, the same individual was made to pay tax on it again as rice falling within item 66(a) and not 194 as "rice" falling under item 66(b) because such a view would run counter to the express provisions of item 66(b). If what is taxed is 'rice', it would obviously fall under item 66(b) because it has already been taxed in the form of paddy. It could certainly not fall under item 66(a) which is for "rice" not so taxed. To urge that it falls under item 66(a) is to concede that it is "rice".

We find that the High Court had come to the conclusion that parched rice and puffed rice, not being rice at all, falling within either of the two parts of item 66 were taxable as separate kinds of goods altogether. This meant that, although, the dealer had paid a tax of five paise per rupee on paddy as item 8 in schedule 2 he will have to pay again a tax at the rate of 4 paise on every rupee of his turnover under section 5(1) if his total turnover was not less than Rs. 25,000/- per year. We do not think that the intention of the legislatures could be to tax under section 5(1) as well as under section 5 (2) of the Act simultaneously. Section 5(2) does not say that a "further" tax would be levied under section 5(2). It only talks of levying "the tax" in accordance with section 5(2) of the Act in cases falling within the ambit of the 2nd schedule to which refer- ence is made in section 5(2) of the Act. We do not think that it is fair to so interpret a taxing statute as to impute an intention to, the legislature to go on taxing what is virtually the same product in different forms over and over again. Such a result would be contrary to basic axioms of taxation. Unless the language of the taxing statute was absolutely clear, it should not be given an obviously unfair interpretation against the assessee.

It may be that an item may be taxed once as raw material, and, after it is manufactured and converted into separately taxable goods, taxed again as another taxable item altogether. But, in such cases, the identity of the goods sold would be deemed to be different even though the raw materials may have been taxed already in a different form earlier. The question, therefore, before us is whether "rice", which obtained from paddy, already taxed under item 8 of the 2nd schedule, ceases to be "rice" falling "prima facie" under item 66(b) as rice on which a tax was already paid when it was in the form of paddy ? Does heating or parching only to make it edible have that effect ? It is clear that there is a distinction between "paddy", as found in item 8 of the 2nd schedule, and "rice", as mentioned under item 66 of the first schedule. Apparently, the removal of the husk makes this difference. It is true that the 1st schedule, which contains as many as 136 items, includes a number of separate fairly detailed entries. Entry 58 is for bran or husk of "rice;', and entry 59 is for "deviled bran of rice". It appears, therefore, that "rice in husk" is "paddy". When it is removed from husk, the husk and rice become separately taxable. But, there are no separate entries for rice and rice reduced into an edible form by heating or parching without any addition of ingredients or appreciable changes in chemical composition. The term "rice" is wide enough to include rice in its various forms whether edible or unedible. Rice in the form of grain is not.

195

edible. Parched rice and puffed rice are edible. But, the entry "rice" seems to us to cover both forms of nice. At any rate, it is wide enough to cover them The High Court bad relied on a judgment of the Division Bench of the Hyderabad High Court in Kalyani & Co. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax(1), where it was held, inter alia (at p. 390) that :

"Rice in all forms would mean all kinds or variety of rice or species of rice such as broken rice, kichidi rice, pichodi rice or rice flour, etc. In this view of the matter we find no justification in holding that "rice" in item No. 1 of the exempted articles in Schedule I of the, Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act dealing with cereals should be interpreted as meaning cooked rice or biriyani or pulao".

But, in that very case, Jaganmohan Reddy, J., delivering the judgment of the Division Bench, had held in dealing with the term bread".

"When the Legislature uses a term relating.... to a particular kind, such as 'double roti' ".

The judgment in Kalyani & Co.'s case (supra) related to items in a different schedule of a different enactment. The only principle deducible from it is that the commonly accepted sense of a term should prevail in construing the description of an article of food. While dealing with an item meant for rice, as a cereal, the Court had accepted a more limited meaning of the term "rice" so, as to exclude cooked rice in all its forms. Of course, the case before us is not a case of rice, cooked and prepared in the form of "pulao" or "biryani" or any (Aber type of cooked rice which may have undergone changes of character by additions or chemical transformation which may convert it into a food product with a substantially different identity. It was only converted from unedible grain into an edible form by parching or puffing through a heating process. Even if parched rice and puffed rice could be looked upon as separate in commercial character from rice as grain offered for sale in a market, yet, keeping in view the other matters mentioned above, it could not be presumed that it was intended to exclude from entry 66 ,.rice", which at any rate, bad not so changed its identity as not to be describable as "rice" at all. 'Muramaralu' was after all rice even though it was puffed. 'Atukulu' even though parched was still called rice. We must also remember that the schedule which we have to interpret is in the English language where the term rice is still found in the rendering or description of 'palalu' as well as that of 'muramamlu' in the English language. And, in any case, if two interpretations of a provision are possible, we think that we ought to, in such a case, apply the principle that the interpretation which favours the assessee should be preferred.

(1) [1953] (4) S.T.C. 387 @ 3290.

196

It was possible for the Government to lay down a separate category for parched rice and puffed rice, but it has not done so. Section 40 of the Act lays down the power of the State Government to modify, to alter or to cancel any item in the Schedule.. It can also notify, under section 9 of the Act, exemptions and reductions of tax. In this connection, it is worth remembering that both "palalu" and "muramuralu" were previously exempted completely from tax under a notification of the State Government probably because they are largely consumed by the poorer sections of the public. But, the exemption had been withdrawn before the assessment years under consideration. If that be so, it. could not be the intention to suddenly put these items in a category where they will become unusually or doubly taxed items in substance. We, therefore, think that, keeping in view the various provisions of the Act, together with the history of exemption of "palalu" and "muramuralu" and its cancellation, it could not be the intention of the State Government suddenly to, make the incidence of tax so heavy as it would be if the view of the High Court is allowed to stand. Keeping in view all the matters mentioned above, we think that we must give a broad enough interpretation to the term "rice", in accordance with what may perhaps be best described as the "commonsense" rule of interpretation, laid down by this court in M/s. Tungabhadra Industries Ltd. v. the Commercial Tax Officer, Kurnool.(1) That was a case of taxation of ground nut oil. A question arose whether dehydrogenated oil called Vanaspati was still ground nut oil or a product of ground nut oil. This Court held inter alia :

"To be ground nut oil two conditions had to be satisfied-it must be from groundnut and it must be "oil". That the hydrogenated oil sold by the appellants was out of the groundnut not being in dispute, the only point is whether it continues to be oil even after hydrogenation. Oil is a chemical compound of glycerine with fatty acids or rather a glycerine of a mixture of fatty acids principally oloic, linoleic, stearic and palmitic, the proportion of the particular fat varying in the case of the oil from different oilseeds and it remains a glyceride of fatty acids even after the hardening process, though the relative proportion of the different types of acids undergoes a slight change. In its essential nature therefore no change has occurred and it remains an oil--a glyceride of fatty acids- that it was when it issued out of the press".

In Tungabhadra Industries case (supra) this Court rejected the argument, based on an analysis of chemical changes produced by the absorption of hydrogen atoms in the process of hardening and on the consequent intermolecular changes in the oil. It said :

"But neither mere absorption of other matter nor intermolecular changes necessarily affect the identity of a substance as ordinarily understood".
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 14 at 23. 197

We think that, on a parity of reasoning the term "rice" as ordinarily 'understood in English language would include both parched and puffed rice.

For the reasons given above, we set aside the judgment of the High, Court and we answer the question framed above as follows : 'Atukulu parched rice, and 'muramaralu' (puffed rice) are rice within the meaning of entry 66(b) of Schedule 1 of the Andhra Pradesh Central Sales Tax Act, 1957. Parties will bear their own costs.

Appeal allowed.

198