10 April 1967
Supreme Court
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DEVI DAS GOPAL KRISHNAN & ORS. Vs STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.

Bench: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ),SHAH, J.C.,SHELAT, J.M.,BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA,MITTER, G.K.
Case number: Appeal (civil) 526 of 1964


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PETITIONER: DEVI DAS GOPAL KRISHNAN & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/04/1967

BENCH: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) BENCH: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) SHAH, J.C. SHELAT, J.M. BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA MITTER, G.K.

CITATION:  1967 AIR 1895            1967 SCR  (3) 557  CITATOR INFO :  F          1968 SC 331  (6)  RF         1968 SC1232  (20,27,50,88,97)  RF         1971 SC2100  (19,21)  R          1972 SC1168  (7)  RF         1973 SC1374  (10)  R          1974 SC1660  (15,21,34,53)  R          1975 SC1007  (14)  APL        1976 SC 800  (12)  R          1979 SC 321  (10,20)  E          1979 SC1475  (22,30)  RF         1980 SC1789  (36)  R          1981 SC1649  (12,13)  RF         1988 SC1737  (72)  R          1990 SC 560  (13)  RF         1992 SC 422  (3,4)

ACT: Rate   fixation-Delegation--Constitutional   and   Statutory necessity,  if proper guides-East Punjab General  Sales  Tax Act, 1948 (46 of 1948), s. 5. Severability-Charging   section  made  subject  to   section granting power to fix rates-Latter declared void-If charging section  also  void-Efffect  of  subsequent   amendment-East Punjab  General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (46 of 1948), ss. 4,  5, 6-East Punjab General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1952 (19 of 1952). East   Punjab  General  Sales  Tax   Act,   1948-Legislative competence  Section  2  Cl.  (ff)-’Acqisition’  meaning  of- Valuable              consideration, meaning of-Act,  if  in conflict  with  Sale of Goods Act, 1930; Central  Sales  Tax Act, 1956, s. 15.

HEADNOTE: Section  5 of the East Punjab Sales Tax  Act,      1948,  as originally  enacted,  conferred on the Government  power  to levy  tax  at such rates as the Government might  fix.   The section  was amended by Act 18 of 1952,  with  retrospective effect,  fixing the rate of tax at "not exceeding two  piece in a rupee".  Section 2(ff) of the Act as amended by Act  13

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of  1959,  define-, "purchase" as the "acquisition"  of  the goods  "for  use in the manufacture of goods for  sale,  for cash  or deferred payment or other   valuable  consideration otherwise  than  under a mortgage hypothecation,  charge  or pledge".   The  appellants’  petition  in  the  High   Court challenging  the  imposition of purchase tax for  the  years 1958-59  and  1959-60 on the purchase of  oil  seeds,  steel scrap  and  cotton for manufacture of goods for  sale,  were dismissed, and they appealed to this Court. Mean while,  the High Court had considered the validity of the Act in a Sales Tax  Reference  and declared s. 5, as it  originally  stood, void.  In  this Court it was contended : (i) since s.  5  as originally   enacted,  was  declared  void,that  being   the charging  section, the entire act was void and the  Amending Act  of 1952 could not revive an Act which was non est,  and (ii)  section  2(ff)  was invalid for  want  of  legislative competence.      HELD  : (i) Section 5 as it stood before the  amendment was void, but the section as amended by the Amending Act  of 1952 is valid.      An Act conferring a power to fix rates of taxation must lay down  clear  legislative policy or guide-lines  in  that regard and the doctrine of    constitutional  and  statutory needs  would  not  afford  -reasonable  guidelines  in   the fixation of such rates. There was nothing in the  provisions of the Act, including the preamble disclosing any policy  or guidance  to  the State for fixing rates. Section  5  as  it stood  before the Amendment conferred on the  Government  an uncontrolled  power in the matter of fixation of  rates  and was therefore void. [565 G-566 B; 569 F]      Corporation  of  Calcutta v. Liberty Cinema,  [1965]  2 S.C.R. 377, explained.      State  of  Madras, v. Gannon Dunkerlev &  Co.  (Madras) Ltd. [1959] S.C.R. 379, 435, Vasantlal Maganbhai  Sanjanwala v. State of Bombay. 558 [1961]   1 S.C.R. 341 and The Union of India v. M/s.   Bhana Mal Gulzari .Mal, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 627, referred to. Although  s.  5  was  void, the entire  Act  was  not  void. Section 4 is the ’Charging section and Section 5 dealt  only with  the  quantification  of tax,  that  is,  the  charging section  was  intact and what was struck down was  only  the section  providing  for rates.  The fact that s. 4  is  made subject  to  s.  5 does not render the former  void  on  the principle of non-severability, because, under the Act, there is  a  clear  distinction  between  chargeability  and   the quantification  of tax.  Therefore, striking out s.  5  only made s.   4  unenforceable.  The amendment of s. 5  has,  in substance, the effect of amending an existing Act. [567 G-H; 568 F-G; 569 B-C] B. Shama Rao v. The Union Territory of Pondicherry, [1967] 2 S.C.R., distinguished. Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner  of Wealth Tax (Central) Calcutta, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 688, referred to. Conferment  of a reasonable area of discretion by  a  fiscal statute  is permissible and the discretion to fix  the  rate between  1  pice  and 2 pice cannot be said  to  exceed  the permissible limits. [569D-F] Khandige  Sham Bhat v. The Agricultural Income Tax  Officer, [1963] 3 S.C.R. 809, referred to. (ii) Clause (ff) of s. 2 is not void for want of legislative competence. Although the words "acquisition" and "valuable consideration in  -the  definition of "purchase" in s. 2(ff)  of  the  Act

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indicate,  prima  facie, that this definition  is  wider  in scope  than the definition "sale", these expressions in  the context must be given a restricted meaning.  The  expression "acquisition"  in the definition means only  "transfer"  and the  expression "valuable consideration" takes  colour  from the preceding expression "cash or deferred payment" and  can only mean some other monetary payment in the nature of  cash or deferred payment. [571 F-G; 572 B] The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras)  Ltd. [1959] S.C.R. 379, Sales Tax Officer v. Budh Prakash, A.I.R. 1964  S.C. 459 and George Oakes v. State of  Madras,  A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 1039, referred to. Purchase  tax, under the Act is leviable on the purchase  of goods  and  not  in  respect of  manufacture  of  goods  and therefore  is  not an excise duty.  The  purpose  for  which goods are purchased is only relevant for fixing the  taxable event  and the taxable event is fixed before the  goods  are actually manufactured. [572 H-573 B] M/s.   Shinde  Bros. v. The  Deputy  Commissioner,  Raichur, C.As. Nos. 1580-1586 and 1590-1600 of 1955 (decided on 26-9- 1966), referred to. The  Act  does not enable levy of tax on the same  goods  at more than one stage and therefore is not in conflict with s. 15  of the Central Sales Tax Act 1596.  Manufacture  changes the identity and the goods purchased and the goods sold  are not identical and therefore the same goods are not taxed  at two  stages.  Further, cl. (ff) of s. 2 of the  Act  during. the  periods relevant to the present case, in  terms,  fixed the  stage  for taxation, i.e., the stage of purchase  by  a dealer for use in the manufacture of goods. [573 B-C; 576 B] 559 The   fact  that  the  same  goods  when  purchased   by   a manufacturer  would  be taxed but would not  be  taxed  when purchased  by a person other than a manufacturer  would  not violate Art. 14 of the Constitution as s. 2(ff) discloses  a reasonable classification. [572C-E]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 526,527 and 529 of 1964. Appeals from the judgment and order dated December 15, 1959, of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 827, 826 and 823 of 1959 respectively. Civil Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of 1965. Appeals by special leave from the judgments and orders dated March  30, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ  Nos. 467, 473, 476, 474 and 477 of 1960 respectively. Civil Appeal No. 81 of 1965. Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 2, 1963 of  the Punjab High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 155 of 1963. Civil Appeal No. 540 of 1965. Appeal  from the judgment and order dated February 18,  1963 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ No. 206 of 1962. M.   C.  Setalvad,  R. K. Garg and S. C. Agarwala,  for  the appellants (In C.As. No. 526, 527 and 529 of 1964). R.   Ganapathy Iyer and R. N. Sachthey, for the  respondents (in C. A. Nos. 526, 527 and 529 of 1964). Rameshwar  Nath and Mahinder Narain, for the appellants  (in C.As. Nos. 39-43 of 1965). Hardev  Singh  and R. N. Sachthey, for the  respondents  (in C.As. Nos. 39-43 of 1965). S.   T. Desai and O. C. Mathur, for the appellants (in C.As. Nos. 81 and 540 of 1965).

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R.   Ganapathy Iyer and R. N. Sachthey, for the  respondents (in C.A. No. 81 of 1965). O.  P. Malhotra and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents  (in C.A. No. 540 of 1965). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Subba  Rao, C.J. The decision on these appeals depends  upon the interpretation of the relevant provisions of the  Punjab General  Sales  Tax Act, 1948 (Punjab Act 46  of  1948),  as amended    by  Punjab  Act  7 of  1958,  relating  to  three categories of goods, namely, oil-seeds, iron and cotton. The facts may be briefly stated. 560 The  assessees in.  Civil Appeals Nos. 526, 527 and  529  of 1964  carry on business at Moga in Punjab and each  owns  an oil-mill  They  purchase oil-seeds and, after  crushing  the same in their oil mills, sell the oil and the residual  oil- cake.   They  are  registered dealers under  the  Act.   The Amending Act imposed a purchase tax of 2% on the purchase of oil-seeds  "for  the  use in the manufacture  of  goods  for sale." This was in addition to the sales-tax leviable on the sales of oil and oil-cake.  On June 23, 1959, the Excise and Taxation  Officer,  Ferozepore, the 3rd respondent  ill  the said  appeals, issued notices to the 3  appellants-assessees to the effect that they did not submit their returns for the year  ending  1958-59  and failed  to  pay  purchase-tax  in respect thereof and asked them to show cause why they should not  be  prosecuted for the said  default.   The  appellants filed 3 petitions under Art. 226 of the Constitution in  the High  Court  of  Punjab  questioning  the  validity  of  the relevant provisions of the Act and for appropriate  reliefs. A  Division  Bench of the High Court  heard  the  petitions, along  with  other connected petitions,  and  dismissed  the petitions  of  the  appellants so far  as  they  related  to purchase-tax on oil-seeds.  Hence the appeals. Civil  Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of 1965 relate to  purchase-tax on iron.  The appellants carry on business in rolling  steel at  Gobindgarh.  They purchase steel scrap and steel  ingots and convert them into rolled steel sections.  Under the Act, the assessing authority imposed purchase-tax at the rate  of 2%  on the purchase of steel scrap and steel ingots made  by them  during the period April 1, 1958 to March 31, 1959  for making  rolled  steel  section and selling  the  same.   The appellants   filed   petitions  under  Art.   226   of   the Constitution  in  the High Court for appropriate  writs  for quashing  the  orders of the assessing authorities  and  for prohibiting  them  from levying purchase-tax  on  the  goods purchased and for refund of the tax illegally collected from them.   A  Division Bench of the High  Court  dismissed  the petitions.  Hence the appeals. Appeals Nos. 81 of 1965 and 540 of 1965 relate to  purchase- tax  on  cotton.  The appellants in Civil Appeal No.  81  of 1965 are the trustees of Birla Education Trust.  They own  a cotton and textile mill, Bhiwani.  They purchase cotton from various dealers in Punjab and outside for the manufacture of yarn  and  cloth.  By ,in order dated March  11,  1962,  the District  Taxation Officer, Hissar, imposed purchase-tax  on the  appellants in respect of the cotton purchased  by  them for the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60.  The appellant in  Civil  Appeal  No.  540 of 1965  is  a  limited  company carrying on the business of producing and selling yarn.  For the  purpose  of  its  business  it  acquires  cotton   from commission agents.  It is a registered dealer under the Act. The Excise and Taxation Officer, Hissar, by his order  dated November 561

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29,  1961,  assessed the appellant to purchase-tax  for  the assessment  year 1958-59 in respect of the cotton  purchased by  it  and  so  too  on January  27,  1962,  he  had  taken proceedings  for making assessment to purchase-tax  for  the assessment  year 1959-60 in respect of the  same  commodity. The  appellants  in both the appeals filed  petitions  under Art.  226 of the Constitution in the High Court  questioning the  validity of the said orders.  The said  writ  petitions were dismissed by a Division Bench of the High Court.  Hence the appeals. We shall at first take the points raised which are common to all  the  appeals and then proceed to  consider  the  points peculiar to some of the appeals. Mr. M. C. Setalvad, learned counsel appearing for the appel- lants in the batch of appeals relating to tax on purchase of oil  seeds, raised before us the following points which  are common  to other appeals : (1) Section 5 of the East  Punjab General  Sales  Tax Act, 1948, was held to be, void  on  the ground  that it conferred essentially legislative  power  on the  provincial Government and, therefore, the said  section was  stillborn  and  that,,  as the  said  section  was  the charging  section, the entire Act was void, with the  result Act 19 of 1952, which amended s. 5 with retrospective effect could not breathe a new life into the said Act.  A void  Act was non est and, therefore, could not be brought into  force by an amending Act. (2) Clause (ff) of section 2  introduced by  Act  7  of  1958 defining  "purchase",  subject  to  the conditions  mentioned  therein as a taxing event  was  ultra vires  the  State Legislature inasmuch  as  the  transaction defined  therein was not a sale" within the meaning of  that expression  in entry 52 of List 11 of the 7th.  Schedule  to the  Constitution and was in fact an "excise" duty  inasmuch as  it was imposed on the production of oil in the  garb  of purchase tax. (3) The said amendment was also bad in that it made  an  unreasonable  discrimination  in  the  matter   of taxation  between  the same classes of goods  based  on  the character of the purchaser.  If the goods were purchased  by a manufacturer, they were liable to purchase tax; and if the same  goods were purchased by an ordinary dealer, they  were not  liable  to the said tax. (4)  The  amended  ’provision, section  2(ff), was also void because it contravened ss.  14 and 15 of the Central Sales-tax Act, 1956, whereunder sales- tax  was prohibited to be imposed on the declared  goods  at more  than  one  stage, whereas under the Act  it  could  be imposed both at the purchase point and at the sale point  of the  transactions  entered  into by  the  manufacturer.  (5) Purchase-tax was not leviable on oil-seeds, as the assessees did  not manufacture oil out of the seeds but only  produced the oil. We  shall now proceed to consider the points seriatim.   The provisions relevant to the first two points read thus:  C1167-6 562               East Punjab General Sales Tax Act (46 of 1948)               Section  5. Subject to the provisions of  this               Act,  there  shall be levied  on  the  taxable               turnover every year of a dealer a tax at  such               rates  as  the Provincial  Government  may  by               notification direct. East  Punjab General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act,  1952 (Act No. 19 of 1952).               Section  2. Amendment of section 5  of  Punjab               Act 46 of 1948 :               In  sub-section (1) of section 5 of  the  East               Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948, after  the

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             word  " rates" the  following words  shall  be               inserted  and shall be deemed always  to  have               been  so inserted, namely, ’not exceed in  two               pice in a rupee’. The High Court of Punjab held that s. 5 of the Act was  void as  it  gave  an unlimited power to the  executive  to  levy sales-tax at a rate which it thought lit.  But it held  that the  amendment  of section 5 by the Punjab Act  19  of  1952 cured  the  defect  in the said Act and had  the  effect  of giving a new life to it. The  first question, therefore, is whether section 5 of  the East Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (46 of 1948), as  it originally  stood, was void, and the second question is,  if the said section was void, whether the amendment could  give life to it. The  law  on  the subject is  fairly  well  settled,  though difficulties  are met in its application to each  case.   In Corporation  of Calcutta, v. Liberty Cinema(1) on which  Mr. Ganapati  Iyer  relied relates to a levy imposed  on  cinema houses  under  the  Calcutta Municipal  Act  (33  of  1951). There,  the majority held that the levy therein was  a  tax, that  the fixing of a rate of tax was not of the essence  of legislative power, that the fixing of rates might be left to a nonlegislative body and that when it was so left to such a body,  the  Legislature  must  provide  guidance  for   such fixation.   The  majority  he-Id in that case  that  such  a guidance was found in the monetary needs of the Municipality for discharging the functions entrusted to it under the Act. Sarkar I., speaking for the majority &aid thus :               "It (the Municipal Corporation) has to perform               various  statutory  functions.   It  is  often               given power to decide when and in what  manner               the  functions are to be performed.   For  all               this  it needs money and its needs  will  very               from time to time, with the prevailing exigen-               cies.   Its power to collect tax, however,  is               necessarily               (1)   [1965]2 S.C.R.4 7               563               limited by the expenses required to  discharge               those  functions.   It has,  therefore,  where               rates have not been specified in the  statute,               to fix such rates as may be necessary to  meet               its   needs.    That,  we  think,   would   be               sufficient  guidance to make the  exercise  of               its power to fix the rates valid." If  this decision is an authority for the position that  the Legislature can delegate its power to a statutory  authority to  levy  taxes and fix the rates in regard thereto,  it  is equally an authority for the position that the said  statute to  be valid must give a guidance to the said authority  for fixing the said rates and that guidance cannot be judged  by stero typed rules but would depend upon the provisions of  a particular Act.  To that extent this judgment is binding  on us.   But  we  cannot go further and hold,  as  the  learned counsel for the respondents asked us to do, that whenever  a statute  define-,  the  purpose  or  purposes  for  which  a statutory  authority constituted and empowers it to  levy  a tax that statute necessarily contains a guidance to fix  the rates it depends upon the provisions of each statute. Learned counsel for the State argued that under Art. 162  of the  Constitution  the executive power of  the  State  shall extend to: matters with respect to which the Legislature  of a  State  has  power  to make laws : that  is  to  say,  the executive  power of a State extends to matters mentioned  in

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List  11 of the Seventh Schedule to, the Constitution,  that under  Art.  266(1)  of  the  Constitution  all  the   taxes collected  will go to the Consolidated Funds of  the  State, that  the  State has an unlimited power to  raise  funds  by taxation  to  discharge its vast constitutional  duties  and that  necessarily  the amount of tax required  would  depend upon  its needs which can only be known to it.  In the  said circumstances,  the  argument proceeds’..  the  doctrine  of constitutional  and statutory needs would afford  reasonable guidelines  for the Government to fix the rate and that  the principle laid down by this Court in the aforesaid  decision would  equally  apply  to this case.  If  this  argument  be accepted,  it  would mean that every  statute  conferring  a naked power on the Government to impose taxes would be good, for in every case the discharge of the constitutional duties by  the Government would be deemed to be a sufficient  guide for  fixing  the rate.  We cannot accept this  argument  for three  reasons,  namely, (1) the decision of this  Court  in Calcutta Corporation v. Liberty Cinema(1) should he confined only to the provisions of the Calcutta Municipal Act Wherein this  Court  found  a guidance; (2) the  provisions  of  the Sale,; Tax Act, including the preamble, do not disclose  any policy  or guidance to the, State for fixing the rates:  and (3) the general (1)  [1965]2 S.C.R. 477, 564 constitutional  power to impose taxes has no  relevance  for discovering a statutory policy under a particular Act. Nor  does the decision of this Court in The State of  Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co., (Madras) Ltd.(1) lend support  to the  argument  so widely advanced by  the  learned  counsel. That  case has nothing to do with the fixation of  rates  of taxes.   There section 6(1) of the Madras General Sales  Tax Act,  1939,  as amended by Madras Act 25 of  1947,  provided that  no tax will be payable on any sale of goods  specified in the schedule to it.  Section 6(2) ,of that Act authorised the State Government to amend the schedule by  notification. The  amendment of the Schedule by the State  Government  was challenged on the ground that section 6(2) was invalid as it was  a delegation of the essential power of legislation  ,of the  State Government.  Venkatarama Ayyar, J., speaking  for the Court, in rejecting that contention, observed thus :               "Now, the authorities are clear that it is not               unconstitutional for the legislature to  leave               it  to  the  executive  to  determine  details               relating to the working of taxation laws, such               as the selection of persons on whom the tax is               to  be  laid, the rates at which it is  to  be               charged  in  respect of different  classes  of               goods, and the like." It  is not necessary to scrutinize the correctness  of  this statement,  having regard to the decisions relied upon,  for this  Court in Corporation of Calcutta v. Liberty  Cinema(2) accepted it, but made it clear that such a power to fix  the rates  must be supported by some reasonable  guidance  given under the Act whereunder the said power was conferred.   Nor the  observations  of Rajagopala Ayyangar, J., in  the  said decision  speaking  for the minority, lend  support  to  the contentions of the respondents. The decision in Vasantlal Maganbhai Sanjanwala v. The  State of Bombay(3) raised the question whether section 6(2) of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 (Bom. 67 ,of 1948), which enabled the Government to fix the rent  payable by a tenant within the maximum limits prescribed thereunder, was  valid.  When it was argued that it was bad  because  of

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excessive  delegation, this Court sustained it on the  basis of  a legislative policy disclosed by section 12(3)  of  the Act. In The Union of India v. Messrs.  Bhana Mal Gulzari  Mal(4), this  Court rejected the contention that caluse 11B of  Iron and  Steel  (Control of Production  &  Distribution)  Order, 1941,  whereunder the Central Government was  authorised  to issue  notification fixing the maximum price of  steel,  was void  on  the ground of excessive -delegation, as  it  found that  the  said  clause only further  canalized  the  policy disclosed in ss. 3 and 4 of the Act. (1)  [1959] S.C.R 1  S.C.R.379, 435.                       (2) [1965]2  S.C.R. 477. (3) [1961]       341.                            (4)  [1960] 2 S.C.R. 627. 565 Further  citation  is  unnecessary,  for  the  principle  of excessive delegation is well settled and the cases are  only illustrations of the application of the said principle.  The law on the subject may briefly be stated thus :               "The Constitution confers a power and  imposes               a  duty on the legislature to make laws.   The               essential   legislative   function   is    the               determination  of the legislative  policy  and               its  formulation as a rule of conduct.   Obvi-               ously  it  cannot abdicate  its  functions  in               favour   of  another.  But  in  view  of   the               multifarious activities of a welfare State, it               cannot presumably work out all the details  to               suit   the  varying  aspects  of   a   complex               situation.It  must  necessarily  delegate  the               working out of details to the executive or any               other agency.  But there is a danger  inherent               in such a process of delegation.  An  overbur-               dened  legislature  or  one  controlled  by  a               powerful  executive  may unduly  overstep  the               limits of delegation.  It may not lay down any               policy  at all; it may declare its  policy  in               vague  and general terms; it may not set  down               any   standard   for  the  guidance   of   the               executive; it may confer an arbitrary power on               the  executive to change or modify the  policy               laid  down by it without reserving for  itself               any  control  over  subordinate   legislation.               This  self effacement of legislative power  in               favour of another agency either in whole or in               part  is  beyond  the  permissible  limits  of               delegation.   It is for a Court to hold  on  a               fair, generous and liberal construction of  an               impugned statute whether the legislature               exceeded such limits.  But the said liberal on               struction should not be carried by the  Courts               to  the extent of always trying to discover  a               dormaint  or  latent  legislative  policy   to               sustain   an  arbitrary  power  conferred   on               executive authorities.  It is the duty of  the               Court  to strike down without  any  hesitation               any arbitrary power conferred on the executive               by the legislature. See Vasantlal Maganbhai Sanjanwala v. The State of Bombay(1) at pp. 356-357. Under section 5 of the Punjab General Sales Tax Act,  1,948, as it originally stood, an uncontrolled power was  conferred on  the  provincial  Government to levy every  year  on  the

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taxable turnover of a dealer a tax at such rates as the said Government might direct.  Under that section the Legislature practically  effaced  itself in the matter  of  fixation  of rates  and  it did not give any guidance either  under  that section  or under any other provisions of the Act  no  other provision was brought to our notice.  The (1)  [1961] 3 S.C.R. 341. 566 argument of the learned counsel that such a policy could  be gathered  from  the  constitutional  provisions  cannot   be accepted,  for, if accepted,. it would destroy the  doctrine of excessive delegation.  It would also sanction  conferment of power by Legislature on the executive Government  without laying  down  any guide-lines in the Act.   The  minimum  we expect  of  the  Legislature  is to  lay  down  in  the  Act conferring  such a power of fixation of rates  clear  legis- lative policy or guide-lines in that regard.  As the Act did not prescribe any such policy, it must be held that  section 5  of the ,said Act, is it stood before the  amendment,  was void. The next step in the argument of Mr. M. C. Setalvad was that sections  4.  5 and 6 of the Punjab Central Sales  Tax  Act, 1948, together formed a group of charging sections and  they were so integrally connected with each other that if section 5  was void, sections 4 and 6 also fell with it, as one  was not severable from the other.  As the charging sections were the  crux of the Act, the argument proceeded, the whole  Act was void and therefore the Act amending section 5 could  not revive the Act which was still-born. The relevant provisions may now be read.               Section  4 (1).  Subject to the provisions  of               sections  5  and 6, every  dealer  except  one               dealing exclusively in goods declared tax-free               under  section 6 whose gross  turnover  during               the   year  immediately  preceding  the   com-               mencement  of  this Act exceeded  the  taxable               quantum shall be liable to pay tax under  this               Act  on ill sales effected after  coming  into               force of this Act.               Section 5 his already been extracted.               Section, 6(1).  No tax shall be payable on the               sale of goods specified in the first column of               Schedule  B  subject  to  the  conditions  and               exceptions,   if   any,   set   out   in   the               corresponding  entry  in  the  second   column               thereof  and no dealer shall charge sales  tax               on  the sale of goods which are declared  tax-               free from time to time under this section. It  will be seen that section 4 is a charging section,  that section 5 provides for fixation of rates- and that section 6 prescribes  for  exemptions.  Section 4 is made  subject  to sections 5 and 6. IF section 5 is struck out, will section 4 become   void                This  will  depend   upon   two questions,  namely,  (i)  whether section 5  is  a  charging section  ? and (ii) even if section 4 alone is the  charging section.,  as  it is made subject to section 5  and  as  the section subject to which it is made was still born,  whether section 4, on the application of the doctrine of  severance, becomes void. 567 In  the context of Income-tax Act it was held by this  Court in Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd. v.  Commissioner of  Wealth-tax,  (Central), Calcutta(1)  that  the  charging section  for the purpose of income-tax was section 3 of  the Indian  Income-tax  Act, 1922, and the annual  Finance  Acts

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only  gave the rate for quantifying the tax.  Section  3  of the said Income-tax Act read:               "Where any Central Act enacts that  income-tax               shall  be charged for any year at any rate  or               rates,  tax at that rate or those rates  shall               be  charged for that year in accordance  with,               and subject to the provisions of, this Act  in               respect  of the total income of  the  previous               year  of  every  individual,  Hindu  undivided               family,  company and local authority,  and  of               every firm and other association of persons or               the  partners of the firm or tile  members  of               tile association Individually."               Section  2 of tile Finance (No. 2) Act,  1957,               read               "(1) Subject to the provisions of  subsections               (2),  (3), (4) and (5) for the year  beginning               on the 1st day of April, 1957,-               (a)income-tax  shall be charged at  the  rates               specified  in  Part 1 of the  First  Schedule,               and, in the cases to which Paragraphs A, B and               C of that Part apply, shall be increased by  a               surcharge  for  purposes of the  Union  and  a               special   surcharge   on   unearned    income,               calculated  in  either  case  in  the   manner               provided therein;" It  was argued that the liability to tax did not arise  till the  Finance Act was made and the tax  quantified.   Dealing with this question, this Court by majority observed               "A  liability to pay income-tax is  a  present               liability  though it becomes payable after  it               is quantified in accordance with ascertainable               data." The  only difference between Income-tax Act and the  present Act  is that while in the Income-tax Act section  3  thereof does  not  expressly  make, the  liability  subject  to  the provisions  of tile Finance Act which fixes the rate,  under the Sales-tax Act in question section 4 thereof in terms  is made subject to section 5. But under both the Acts there  is a   clear   distinction  between   chargeability   and   the quantification  of  tax.   While, it is true  that  the  tax cannot  be, realised without it being quantified,  the  non- quantification  of  the  liability  will  not  destroy   the liability tinder the clearing section.  The liability has to be  distinguished  from its enforceability.   It  cannot  be said, and indeed it Is not said, that the Income-tax Act has no legal existence till the Finance Act is made, though till the Finance (1)  [1966]2 S.C.R. 688, 7,8. 568 Act  is made it cannot be enforced.  But reliance is  placed on  section  67B  of the Income-tax Act in  support  of  the contention that its existence in the statute book keeps  the Act  alive, for the rate prescribed by the previous  Finance Act  is applicable till the new Finance Act is passed.   But it  will be noticed that the Court’s decision was not  based on  the existence of the said provision but on that  of  the charging  section  itself.   It follows  that  striking  out section  5  does  not make section 4 void,  though  till  an appropriate  section is inserted it  remains  unenforceable. The  decision  of this Court in B. Shama Rao  v.  The  Union Territory  of  Pondicherry(,)  is  clearly  distinguishable. There,  subsection  (1)  of section  2  of  the  Pondicherry General Sales Tax Act, 10 of 1965, provided that :               "The  Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959  (No.

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             1  of  1959) (hereinafter referred to  as  the               Act)  as  in  force in  the  State  of  Madras               immediately  before the commencement  of  this               Act  shall. extend to and come into  force  in               the Union of Territory of Pondicherry  subject               to    the    following    modifications    and               adaptations......... Section  1(2)  of the said Act provided that the  Act  would come   into  force  on  such  date  as  the  Government   by notification  may  appoint.  The effect of the  section  was that  the  Madras  Act  as it stood  on  the  date  (if  the notification issued would be in force in the Union Territory of  Pondicherry.  Indeed it turned out that the  Madras  Act was  ended  before the said notification.  This  Court  held that there was a total surrender in the matter of  sales-tax legislation  by  the Pondicherry Assembly in favour  of  the Madras  legislature  and for that reason the  said  sections were void or stillborn. It  was argued that the Act could not be said to  be  still- born  as it contained certain provisions independent of  the Madras Act, viz., a section which provided for the appellate tribunal and the schedule.  But it was pointed out that  the core  of the taxing statute was in the charging section  and that  the remaining sections bad no  independent  existence. In the present case the charging section was intact and what was struck out was only the section providing for rates.  It cannot,  therefore, be said that when section 5  was  struck out, section 4 or other sections fell with it. It  was  then contended that even if the whole Act  was  not stillborn, section 5 was non est, that the amending Act  did not  insert  a  new section 5 but  purported  to  amend  the earlier section 5 which was not in existence.  Now under the East  Punjab General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act,  1952 (Act  No. 19 of 1952) section 5 of the East  Punjab  General Sales  Tax  Act, 1948 was amended.  Section 2  of  the  said amending Act says: (1)  [1967] 2 S.C.R. 650. 569 .lm15 "In sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the East Punjab  General Sales  Tax Act, 1948, after the word ’rates’  the  following words  shalt be inserted and shall be deemed always to  have been  so  inserted, namely :-’not exceeding two  pice  in  a rupee’." No  doubt  in  terms  the section  inserts  the  words  "not exceeding  two, pice in a rupee" in section 5. If section  5 is  inserted  in the Act by the Amending Act with  the  said words  added,  there cannot possibly be any  objection,  for that  would  be  an amendment of an existing  Act.   But  in substance  the amendment brings about the same effect.   The words  "shall  be deemed always to have  been  so  inserted" indicate  that  in  substance  section  5,  as  amended,  is Inserted in the Act with retrospective effect. Even  so it wits contended that section 5, as amended,  only gave the maximum rate and did not disclose any policy giving guidance  to the executive for fixing any rate  within  that maximum.  Here we are concerned with sales-tax.  If the  Act had  said "2 pice In a rupee" it would be manifest  that  it was  a clear guidance.  But as the Act applies to  sales  or purchases  of different commodities it had become  necessary to  give  some discretion to the Government  in  fixing  the rate.   Conferment  of reasonable area of  discretion  by  a fiscal statute has been approved by this Court in more  than (me  decision : see Khandige Sham Bhat v.  The  Agricultural Income-tax Officer(1).  At the same time a larger  statutory

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discretion  placing a wide gap between the minimum  and  the maximum  rates  and thus enabling the Government to  fix  an arbitrary  rate  may  not be  sustained.   In  the  ultimate analysis, the permissible discretion depends upon the  facts of each case.  The discretion to fix the rate between I pice and  2  pice in a rupee is so insignificant that it  is  not possible to hold that it exceeds the permissible limits.  It follows that section 5 of the Act as amended is valid. The  next  argument is that section 2(ff)  inserted  in  the Punjab  General  Sales  Tax Act, 1948, by  the  East  Punjab General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1958 (Act No. 7 of  1958) Lind  amended by Amending Act 13 of 1959 is void.  The  said clause (ff) as amended by Act 13 of 1959 reads               "  ’Purchase’,  with all  its  grammatical  or                             cognate  expressions, means the acquis ition  of               goods specified in Schedule ’C’ for use in the               manufacture  of  goods for sale  for  cash  or               deferred payment or other valuable  considera-               tion   otherwise   than  under   a   mortgage,               hypothecation, charge or- pledge." The  first  limb of the argument is that the  definition  of "purchase"  is  more comprehensive than  the  definition  of "sale"  under the Indian Sale of Goods Act  and,  therefore, the State Legislature was (1)  [1963] 3 S.C.R. 809. 570 incompetent to make a law under entry "sale or purchase"  in List  11  of  the 7th Schedule  to  the  Constitution.   The constitutional  position is well settled.  Entry 54 of  List II of the 7th Schedule to the Constitution reads :               "Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods  other               than newspapers, subject to the provisions  of               entry 92A of List 1." In  The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley &  Co.  (Madras) Ltd.(1)  Venkatarama  Aiyer,  J., speaking  for  the  Court, observed :               "Thus,  according to the law both  of  England               and India, in order to constitute a sale it is               necessary  that there should be  an  agreement               between   the  parties  for  the  purpose   of               transferring  title to goods which  of  course               presupposes capacity to contract, that it must               be supported by money consideration, and  that               as  a result of the transaction property  must               actually  pass  in the  goods.   Unless  these               elements  are present, there can be  no  sale.               Thus, if merely title to the goods passes  but               not  as a result of any contract  between  the               parties,  express  or  implied,  there  is  no               sale." This  Court  also  held  that  the  State  Legislature,   by enlarging  the  ,definition  of "sale",  could  not  include transactions  which  were not sales according  to  the  well established  concepts of law tinder the Law of  Contract  or the Sale of Goods Act; see Sales-tax Officer v. Budh Prakash (2 ) and George Oakes v. State of Madras(3). Bearing that in mind let us look at clause (ff) in section 2 of the Principal Act in which the said clause was  inserted. The  ingredients  of  the definition of  "purchase"  are  as follows : (i) there shall be acquisition of goods; (ii)  the acquisition shall be for cash ,or deferred payment or  other valuable consideration; (ii) the said valuable consideration shall  not  be other than under a  mortgage,  hypothecation, charge or pledge.  Clause (h) of’ section 2 defines thus

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             "sale" means an transfer of property in  goods               other  than goods specified in Schedule C  for               cash  or  deferred payment or  other  valuable               consideration but does not include a mortgage,               hypothecation, charge or pledge. If  we  turn  to the Sale of Goods Act,  section  4  thereof define contract of sale of goods.  It reads :               "Contract  of  sale  of goods  is  a  contract               whereby  the  seller transfers  or  agrees  to               transfer  the property ill goods to the  buyer               for a price......               (1)      [1959]      S.C.R.       379,397-398.               (2) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 459               (3)   A. 1. R. 1962 S.C. 1037               571 The  essential  requisite of sale are (i) there shall  be  a transfer  of property or agreement to transfer  property  by one party to another; and (ii) it shall be for consideration of  money payment or promise thereof by the buyer.   A  sale and   a   purchase  are  different  aspects  of   the   same transaction.   If  we look at it from the  standpoint  of  a purchaser  it  is  purchase and if we look at  it  from  the standpoint of the seller it is a sale.  Whether purchase  or sale  it shall have the said ingredients both in common  law and under the Indian Contract Act.  ’Price’ has been defined in the Sale of Goods Act to mean money consideration for the sale  of  goods : see s. 2(10) of the Indian Sale  of  Goods Act.   It  will, therefore, be seen that the  definition  of ’purchase’  in  the Act prima facie appears to be  wider  in scope than ’sale’.  While transfer of goods from one  person to  another  is  the ingredient of ’sale’  in  general  law, acquisition  ion  of goods, which may in  its  comprehensive sense take in voluntary as well as involuntary transfers, is an  ingredient of ’purchase’ in clause (ff). While  ’price’, i.e.,  money  consideration, is the  ingredient  of  ’sale’, cash,  deferred payment or any valuable consideration is  an ingredient of ’Purchase’.  But a closer scrutiny compels  us to give a restricted meaning to the expression "acquisition" and  "price".  Acquisition is the act by which a person  ac- quires  property  in a thin-.  "Acquire" is  to  become  the owner  of  the  property.  One  can,  therefore,  acquire  a property  either by voluntary or involuntary transfer.   But the  Sales Tax Act applies only to "sale" as defined in  the Act.  Under clause (h) of section 2 of the Act it is  defied as a transfer of property.  As purchase is only a  differed, aspect  of  sale,  looked at from the  stand  point  of  the purchaser, and as the Act imposes tax at different points in respect of sales, having regard to the purpose of the  ,ale, it   is   unreasonable  to  assume  that   the   Legislature contemplated  different categories of transactions when  the taxable event is it the purchase point.  Whether it is  sale or  purchase  the  transaction is the same.   If  it  was  a transfer inter vivos, in the case of a sale it must  equally be  so in the case of a purchase.  Context, consistency  and avoidance  of anomaly demand a restricted meaning.  That  it must only mean transfer is also made clear by the nature  of the  transactions  excluded from  the  acquisition,  namely, mortgage, hypothecation,charge or pledge-all of them  belong to the species of transfer. We must, therefore,hold that the expression         "acquisition" in clause (ff) of  section2 of the Act means only "transfer". Now.  coming  to  the expression "price".  it  is  no  doubt defined  in the Sale of Goods Act as "money  consideration". Cash or deferred payment in clause (ff) of section 2 of  the Act satisfied the said definition.  The expression "valuable

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consideration"  has  a  wider  connotation,  but  the   said expression  is  also  used in the same  collocation  in  the definition  of "sale" in section 2(h) of the Act.  The  said expression must bear the same meaning, in clause 5 72 (ff) and clause (h) of section 2 of the Act.  It may also be noticed  that in most of the Sales Tax Acts the  same  three expressions  are used.  It has never been argued or  decided that   the  said  expression  means  other   than   monetary consideration.  This consistent legislative practice  cannot be  ignored.  The expression "valuable consideration"  takes colour  from  the  preceding expression  "cash  or  deferred payment".   If  so,  it can only mean  some  other  monetary payment  in  the nature of cash or  deferred  payment.   We, therefore, hold that clause (ff) of section 2 of the Act  is not void for legislative incompetence.  Another argument to invalidate clause (ff) of section 2  of the principal Act may also be noticed.  It is said that that clause  offends  Art. 14 of the Constitution on  the  ground that  by  reason of the said definition the  same  goods  if purchased  by a manufacturer would be taxed but  they  would not  be  taxed  if  purchased  by  a  person  other  than  a manufacturer.   But  a  close scrutiny  of  clause  (ff)  of section  2  discloses  that there is  a  reasonable  classi- fication in the said definition.  The raw goods purchased by a  manufacturer  are transformed on  manufacture  into  some other goods and that is the reason why the Legislature taxes the  goods  before they lose their identity.  But  where  no manufacturer intervenes there is no such metamorphosis  and, therefore,  the  taxable  event  is  the  sale.   There   is certainly  a reasonable relation between the object  of  the statute  and the differences between the two  categories  of transactions. The  next argument turns upon the interpretation  of  clause (ff).   The  argument is, to come Linder the  definition  of "purchase"  it is not enough that the acquisition  of  goods shall be for cash etc. but that the acquisition shall be for use  in the manufacture of goods for sale for cash etc.   On this  construction  it  is argued that the  tax  levied  was excise  duty  and, therefore, beyond the competence  of  the State  Legislature.  The contention is that the tax  on  the purchase  was  in connection with the manufacture  of  goods and,  therefore,  an  excise duty.  There  is  an  essential distinction  between the two imposts : while excise duty  is in  respect of manufacture of goods, the sales-tax  is  upon the sale of the goods.  The question, therefore, is  whether under the Act the purchase tax is imposed on the sale of the goods  or in connection with the manufacture of goods.   The decisions  of this Court establish that "in order to be  ,in excise  duty (a) the levy must be upon ’goods’ and  (b)  the taxable  event  must  be the manufacture  or  production  of goods."  :  see  Messrs.   Shinde  Brothers  v.  The  Deputy Commissioner,  Raichur(1)  The  tax has no  nexus  with  the manufacture  of goods.  The purpose for which the goods  are purchased is only relevant for fixing the (1) Civil Appeals No. 1580-1586, 1588 and 1590-1600 of  1966 (decided on 26-9-1966). 573 taxable event, but the tax is on the purchase of the  goods. That  taxable event is fixed before the goods  are  actually manufactured.   We, therefore, hold that the tax  under  the Act is a purchase tax and not an excise duty. Then  it is contended that while section 15 of  the  Central Sales  Tax Act, 1956 (Act 74 of 1956) imposes a  restriction on the State not to tax at more than one stage, the amending

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Act by introducing the definition of "purchase" enables  the State to tax the same goods at the purchase point and at the sale  point.  But this argument misses the point that  goods purchased  and  the  goods  sold  are  not  identical  ones. Manufacture changes the identity.  Therefore, the same goods are not taxed at two stages. The last argument is that the said definition only takes  in the  purchase of goods for use in the manufacture of  goods, but  tax is imposed on the purchase of goods  for  producing oil.   To state it differently, oil is not manufactured  out of oil seeds but only produced.  Reliance is placed upon the user  of  two  words  in  the  Act,  viz.  manufacturing  or processing  in the proviso to sub-section (2) of  section  4 and sub-section (5) thereof and the expression "edible  oils produced"  in entry 57 of Schedule B to the Act and  a  con- tention  is raised that the Act itself makes  a  distinction between  manufacturing  and processing and  manufacture  and production and, therefore, oil is not manufactured but  only produced  from oil seeds.  Support is sought to  be  derived for  this argument from the decision of this Court in  Union of  India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills(1).  But a  perusal of the judgment shows that this Court only held that refined oil produced out of seeds was only an intermediate stage  in the  manufacture  and was, therefore, not liable  to  excise duty.   On  the  other  band,  the  dictionary  meaning   of "manufacture" is "transform or fashion raw materials into  a changed  form  for use".  When oil is produced  out  of  the seeds  the  process certainly transforms raw  material  into different  article  for use.  We cannot,  therefore,  accept this contention. Now coming to Civil Appeals Nos. 39 to 43 of 1965, the first additional point raised is that when iron scrap is converted into  rolled  steel  it  does not  involve  the  process  of manufacture.  It is contended that the said conversion  does not  involve  any process of manufacture, but the  scrap  is made  into a better marketable commodity.  Before  the  High Court  this  contention was not pressed. That apart,  it  is clear  that scrap iron ingots undergo a vital change in  the process  of manufacture and are converted into  a  different commodity, viz., rolled steel sections.  During the  process the  scrap  iron  loses  its  identity  and  becomes  a  new marketable  commodity.   The  process is  certainly  one  of manufacture. (1)  [1963] Supp.  1 S.C.R. 586. 574 The  next  argument  is that the Act  is  in  conflict  with section  15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, inasmuch  as it enables the levy of sales-tax at more than one stage.  In these  and connected appeals we are concerned only with  two periods-the  first  period  upto October 31,  1958  and  the second  period from November 1, 1958 to March 31, 1960.   It is,  therefore, necessary to notice the relevant  provisions governing the said two periods. The  relevant  part of section 15 of the Central  Sales  Tax Act,  1956  (74 of 1956), as amended by  Central  Sales  Tax (Amendment) Act 16 of 1957, reads thus :               "Every  sales tax law of a State shall, in  so               far as it imposes or authorises the imposition               of a tax on, the ,,ale or purchase of declared               goods,    be   subject   to   the    following               restrictions and conditions, namely               (a)   the  tax  payable  under  that  law   in               respect of any sale or purchase of such  goods               inside  the  State  shall be  levied  only  in               respect  of the last sale or  purchase  inside

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             the State and shall not exceed two per cent of               the sale or purchase price;               (b)   notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               clause (a), no tax shall be levied in  respect               of the last sale or purchase inside the  State               if  the declared goods purchased are  intended               for sale in the course of inter-State trade or               commerce. Explanation.   The expression "last sale or purchase  inside the State means the transaction in which a dealer registered under the sales tax law of the State--               (i)   sells to or purchases from another  such               dealer declared goods for use by the purchaser               in  the manufacture of goods for sale  or  for               use  by the purchaser in the execution of  any               contract; or               (ii)  purchases  declared goods  from  another               such   dealer  for  sale  to  a   dealer   not               registered  under  the sales tax  law  of  the               State or to a consumer in the State." This  section was amended by the Central Sales  Tax  (Amend- ment) Act 31 of 1958 with effect from October 1, 1958.   The relevant part of the amended section reads :               "Every  sales tax law of a State shall, in  so               far as it imposes or authorises the imposition               of  a tax on the sale or purchase of  declared               goods,    be   subject   to   the    following               restrictions and conditions, namely               (a)the  tax payable under that law in  respect               of any               sale  or  purchase of such  goods  inside  the               State shall not               exceed.two  per cent. of the sale or  purchase               price there-               575               of,  and such tax shall not be levied at  more               than one stage;               (b)   Where  a tax has been levied under  that               law in respect of the sale or purchase  inside               the State of any declared goods and such goods               are sold in the course of interstate trade  or               commerce, the tax so levied shall be  refunded               to  such person in such manner and subject  to               such conditions is may be provided in any  law               in force in that State. While  section  15 of the Central Sales Tax Act  before  the amendment described the stage at which the purchase tax  can be levied, section 15 after the amendment only declares that it  cannot be levied at more than one stage.  This Court  in M/s  Modi Spinning & Weaving Mills Co. Ltd. v.  Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab & Anr. (1) observed as follows :               "The meaning or the intention of clause (3) of               Art.  286  is  not  to  destroy  all  charging               sections  in the Sales Tax Acts of the  States               which are discrepant with section  5(a) of the               Central  Sales Tax Act, but to modify them  in               accordance therewith.  The law of the State is               declared to be subject to the restrictions and               conditions  contained  in  the  law  made   by                             Parliament and the rate in the State A ct  would               pro tanto stand modified.  The effect of  Art.               286(3)  is  now  brought  out  by  the  second               proviso  to  s.  5(1).  But  this  proviso  is               enacted  out  of  abundant  caution  and  even

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             without it the result was the same." The  effect  of this judgment is that the  stage  prescribed under  section  15 of the Central Sales Tax Act  before  the amendment and the prohibition against taxation at more  than one   stage   contained  in  the   amended   section   would automatically control the provisions of the Punjab  Genet-at Sales Tax Act, 1948.  With the result upto October 1,  1958, tinder the State Sales Tax Act a tax could be levied only in respect  of purchase of declared goods inside the State  and only  on the purchase made by a dealer of goods for  use  by him  in the manufacture of goods; and from October 1,  1958, the  State can only levy tax at one stage.  For  the  second period  the  Central Act by its own force did  not  fix  the stage. Pursuant  to  the provisions of section 15  of  the  Central Sales  Tax Act, before it was amended, Act 7 of  1958  added clause  (ff)  to section 2 of the Principal Act  fixing  the same stage indicated by section 15 of the Central Act,  i.e. the  stage when the purchase is made by a dealer for use  in the  manufacture of goods.  This section was amended by  Act 13  of 1959 and Act 24 of 1959.  Under the latter  amendment in clause (ff) of section 2 for the words "goods for use  in the manufacture of goods for sale" the (1)  [1965] 1 S.C.R. 592.600. 576 words  "goods  specified  in Schedule ’C’  for  use  in  the manufacture of goods for sale" were substituted; that is  to say,  the  stage  for taxation  prescribed  in  the  earlier definition  was amended.  It may be recalled that under  the Central  Sales Tax Act, as amended, the description  of  the stage  was omitted, but that does not affect  the  question, for  that description is maintained even under  the  amended clause  (ff).  It follows from the said discussion that  the Punjab  General  Sales Tax Act, during  the  crucial  period which is the subject matter of these appeals, in terms fixed a  stage  for  taxation, i.e., the stage of  purchase  by  a dealer  for  use in the manufacture of  goods.   There  are, therefore, no merits in this contention either,. Now coming to Civil Appeals Nos. 81 of 1965 and 540 of 1965, three additional points are raised by Mr. Desai, namely, (i) by   including  in  the  term  "purchase",  read  with   the definition of "dealer", where there is acquisition of cotton through   commission  agents,  the  State  Legislature   has exceeded its legislative power under entry 54 of List 11, of Schedule  7 to the Constitution; (ii) ,during  the  relevant period  tax was leviable on cotton without fixing any  stage and at more than one stage in violation of section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956; and (iii) there is no  rational basis  to single out the three items, namely,  cotton,  oil- seeds  and  resin  for  imposition  of  purchase  tax   and, therefore,  the  relevant provisions offend Art. 14  of  the Constitution. We  have already held in another context that there  are  no merits in the second point. The first point need not detain us, as in the High Court  no specific point was raised in that regard. On  the third point also no adequate material was placed  in the  court  below and, therefore, it does not call  for  our consideration. In  the  result the appeals are dismissed with  costs.   One hearing fee R.K.P.S.                                             Appeals dismissed. 577

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