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State Of Kerala v. Pothen Joseph And Sons

State Of Kerala
v.
Pothen Joseph And Sons

(Supreme Court Of India)

Civil Appeal No. 684 Of 1967 From Tax Revision Case No. 26 Of 1965 Of Kerala High Court | 29-08-1968


GROVER, J.

1. This is an appeal by certificate from a judgment of the Kerala High Court in a tax revision petition.

2. The assessee had been registered as dealer under the Central Sales Tax act, 1956 (74 of 1956), hereinafter called the Act. In respect of the year 1960-61 the assessee claimed a deduction on account of excise duty paid amounting to Rs. 2, 17, 744.20. The assessee also sought a deduction of commission amounting to Rs. 50, 047.66. It further claimed that calculation of Central sales tax at 7% on the turnover of Rs. 27, 382.01 was not correct. The departmental authorities as also the Appellate Tribunal decided against the assessee on all the aforesaid matters. The High Court held that in view of the ratio of the decision of this court in State of Mysore v. Yaddalam Lakshminarasimhiah Setty & Sons ([1965] 16 S.T.C. 231) the turnover represented by the excise duty was liable to be deducted. As regards the matter relating to discount or commission, it was conceded that the decision on the first point must govern that point as well. Counsel on behalf of the department conceded on the third point that the C Form produced would be sufficient to grant the exemption claimed and that tax could be imposed only at the rate of 1% in relation to the turnover covered by the C Form. The High Court therefore allowed the revision petition and directed that such modifications as were necessary should be made in the assessment. The learned Attorney-General for the appellant has canvassed the question relating to deduction of excise duty paid by the assessee from the turnover for the purpose of levy and imposition of sales tax. There is no dispute that for the period of assessment (1960-61) no such deduction could be claimed under the Central Sales tax (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957, hereinafter called the rules, made under section 13(1) of the Act. Clause (b) of section 13(1) enables the Central Government inter alia to make rules providing for the deductions which may be made in the process of determination of the turnover of the sale of any goods under the Act. Section 2(j) of the Act defines "turnover" as meaning the aggregate of the sales price received and receivable by any dealer liable to tax under the Act in respect of sales of any goods in the course of inter-State trade or commerce made during any prescribed period and determined in the prescribed manner. It may be mentioned that rule 11(2) was as substituted by a notification dated June 2, 1961, and gives the amount which shall be deducted from the aggregate of sale price but even that does not include the deduction on account of payment of excise duty. Further the substituted sub-rule (2) is not relevant for our purposes as the controversy, in the present case, relates to a period prior to June 2, 1961.The contention of the learned Attorney-General is that the provisions of the Act where admittedly applicable to inter-State transactions of the nature which were entered into by the assessee and it would be the rules which would equally govern the determination of the taxable turnover and since rule 11(2) did not provide for any deduction on account of payment of excise duty the assessee could not invoke the provisions contained in the general sales tax law of the State or the rules framed thereunder for computation of the turnover and claim deduction.

3. Section 8 of the Act provides for the rates of tax on sales in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
Section 9 deals with levy and collection of tax. Sub-section (1) and (3) of section 9 substituted by the Amending Act 31 of 1958 stood as follows :

"9. (1) The tax payable by any dealer under this Act on sales of goods effected by him in the course of inter-State trade or commerce whether such sales fall within clause (a) or clause (b) of section 3 shall be lived and collected by the Government of India in the manner provided in sub-section (3) in the State from which the movement of the goods commenced : .........

(3) The authorities for the time being empowered to assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax under the general sales tax law of the appropriate State shall, on behalf of the Government of India and subject to any rules made under this Act, assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax, including any penalty, payable by a dealer under this Act in the same manner as the tax on the sale or purchase of goods under the general sales tax law of the State is assessed, paid and collected; and for this purpose they may exercise all or any of the power they have under the general sales tax law of the State; and the provisions of such law, including provisions relating to returns, appeals, reviews, revisions, references, penalties and compounding of offences, shall apply accordingly."The question which came up for decision in Yaddalam L. Settys case ([1965] 16 S.T.C. 231) was the true import and meaning of the expression "in the same manner" in section 9(2) as it stood before the enactment of Amending Act 31 of 1958, and which was in the same terms as sub-section (3) of section 9. This is what was said in the majority judgment in that case :

"The expression in the manner may give rise to two conflicting views, namely, (i) it is concerned only with the calculation of the tax, and (ii) it deals not only with the calculation of the rates but also the manner of levy of the tax. But section 9(1) dispels the ambiguity for it says that the tax payable by any dealer under the Central Act shall be levied and collected in the appropriate State by the Government of India in the manner provided in sub-section (2); and sub-section (2) of section 9 empowers the appropriate State authorities to assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax payable by any dealer under the Central Act in the same manner as the tax on the sale or purchase of goods under the general sales tax law of the State is assessed, paid and collected."

4. Referring to the provisions of section 5(3)(a) of the Mysore Sales Tax Act, 1957, it was observed that under that section tax was to be levied in the case of sale of any of the goods mentioned in column 2 of the Second Schedule by the first or the earliest of successive dealers in the State who was liable to tax under that section. The conclusion was that "when section 9(1) says that under the Central Act tax shall be levied in the same manner as the tax on the sale or purchase of goods under the general sales tax law of the State is assessed, paid and collected, it is reasonable to hold that the expression levied in section 9(1) of the Central Act refers to the expression levied in section 5(3)(a) of the State Act."It is common ground that the assessee was entitled to deduction on account of payment of excise duty etc. under rule 7 of the General Sales Tax Rules, 1950. By virtue of the above decision of this court rule 7 would become applicable because under sub-sections (1) and (3) of section 9 of the Act the tax shall be levied and collected in the same manner as the tax on the sale or purchase of goods under the general sales tax law of the State is so paid and collected. The High Court while referring to the judgment of this court in Yaddalam L. Settys case ([1965] 16 S.T.C. 231) understood the observations in the majority judgment to uphold the contention raised on behalf of the assessee that in all respects the tax must be levied as envisaged by the general sales tax law of the State. The Madras High Court in S. Mariappa Nadar v. State Madras ([1962] 13 S.T.C. 371) had gone elaborately into the question of the applicability of the general sales tax law of the State in such circumstances and had held that the phrase "in the same manner" in section 9(3) did not make applicable all the incidents of the local sales tax law to the assessment under the Act and what was contemplated was that the procedure of making an assessment, collection of tax etc. should be the same as laid down in the general sales tax law. In other words, according to the Madras High Court it was only the machinery of the procedural provisions of the local law which was made applicable by section 9(3) of the Act. In the decision of this court, in the majority judgment, no reference was made to the Madras decision but in the minority judgment the Madras case was discussed. In these circumstances it would be legitimate to conclude that although Mariappa Nadars case ([1962] 13 S.T.C. 371) was cited before this court but in the majority judgment a different view was taken. As we are bound to follow the majority judgment we find no escape from the conclusion, after applying the ratio therein, that the general sales tax law of the State which would include the rules framed thereunder governed the levy and assessment of the tax in the matter of inter-State sales.The learned Attorney-General has greatly stressed the conflict which may arise if we follow the view expressed in the majority judgment; for instance, it is pointed out that if in the rules it is expressly provided that no deduction would be permissible on account of payment of excise duty whereas such a deduction is allowable under the rules framed under the general sales tax law of the State, a question would immediately arise which enactment or set of rules is to prevail. If and when such a situation arises, the matter can be considered but for the purpose of the present case we are satisfied that the decision of the majority of this court in the aforesaid case would govern the determination of the question which was resolved in favour of the assessee by the High Court.

5. The appeal consequently fails and it is dismissed with costs.

6. Appeal dismissed.

Advocates List

C.K. Daphtary, Miss Lily Thomas, Advocates.

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE JUSTICE J.C. SHAH

HON'BLE JUSTICE VAIDYNATHIER RAMASWAMI

HON'BLE JUSTICE A. N. GROVER

Eq Citation

1969 KLT 5

[1970] 25 STC 147

LQ/SC/1968/254

HeadNote

A. Sales Tax and VAT — Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 — S. 9(3) — Levy and collection of tax — Applicability of general sales tax law of State — Held, general sales tax law of State which would include rules framed thereunder governed levy and assessment of tax in the matter of inter-State sales — Deduction of excise duty paid by assessee from turnover for purpose of levy and imposition of sales tax — Relevance of S. 13(1)(b) of 1956 Act — Central Sales tax (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957 — R. 11(2) — No deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Assessee registered under 1956 Act claimed deduction on account of excise duty paid amounting to Rs. 2, 17, 744.20 — Rules which would govern determination of taxable turnover — R. 11(2) was substituted by a notification dated June 2, 1961, and gives the amount which shall be deducted from aggregate of sale price but even that does not include deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Substituted sub-rule (2) is not relevant for our purposes as controversy, in the present case, relates to a period prior to June 2, 1961 — Deduction of excise duty paid by assessee from turnover for purpose of levy and imposition of sales tax — Relevance of S. 13(1)(b) of 1956 Act — Central Sales tax (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957 — R. 11(2) — No deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Assessee registered under 1956 Act claimed deduction on account of excise duty paid amounting to Rs. 2, 17, 744.20 — Rules which would govern determination of taxable turnover — R. 11(2) was substituted by a notification dated June 2, 1961, and gives the amount which shall be deducted from aggregate of sale price but even that does not include deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Substituted sub-rule (2) is not relevant for our purposes as controversy, in the present case, relates to a period prior to June 2, 1961 — Deduction of excise duty paid by assessee from turnover for purpose of levy and imposition of sales tax — Relevance of S. 13(1)(b) of 1956 Act — Central Sales tax (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957 — R. 11(2) — No deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Assessee registered under 1956 Act claimed deduction on account of excise duty paid amounting to Rs. 2, 17, 744.20 — Rules which would govern determination of taxable turnover — R. 11(2) was substituted by a notification dated June 2, 1961, and gives the amount which shall be deducted from aggregate of sale price but even that does not include deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Substituted sub-rule (2) is not relevant for our purposes as controversy, in the present case, relates to a period prior to June 2, 1961 — Deduction of excise duty paid by assessee from turnover for purpose of levy and imposition of sales tax — Relevance of S. 13(1)(b) of 1956 Act — Central Sales tax (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957 — R. 11(2) — No deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Assessee registered under 1956 Act claimed deduction on account of excise duty paid amounting to Rs. 2, 17, 744.20 — Rules which would govern determination of taxable turnover — R. 11(2) was substituted by a notification dated June 2, 1961, and gives the amount which shall be deducted from aggregate of sale price but even that does not include deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Substituted sub-rule (2) is not relevant for our purposes as controversy, in the present case, relates to a period prior to June 2, 1961 — Deduction of excise duty paid by assessee from turnover for purpose of levy and imposition of sales tax — Relevance of S. 13(1)(b) of 1956 Act — Central Sales tax (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957 — R. 11(2) — No deduction on account of payment of excise duty — Assessee registered under 1956 Act claimed deduction on account of excise duty paid amounting to Rs.