02 May 1961
Supreme Court
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INSTALLMENT SUPPLY (P.) LTD. AND ANOTHER Vs THE UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

Bench: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ),DAS, S.K.,SARKAR, A.K.,AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA,MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 146 of 1958


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PETITIONER: INSTALLMENT SUPPLY (P.) LTD.  AND ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/05/1961

BENCH: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) BENCH: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) DAS, S.K. SARKAR, A.K. AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1962 AIR   53            1962 SCR  (2) 644  CITATOR INFO :  R          1964 SC 318  (9)  R          1974 SC1105  (1,5,8,9,11)

ACT: Sales   Tax-Hire-purchase  agreement-Transaction   on   such agreement, if liable to tax-Bengal Finance (Sales Tax)  Act, 1941, as extended to Delhi State, S. 2(g).

HEADNOTE: Section 2(g) of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, as extended to Delhi State, provided as follows,- "’Sale’ means any transfer of property in goods for cash  or deferred payment or other valuable consideration,  including a transfer of property in goods involved in the execution of a contract, but does not include a mortgage,  hypothecation, charge or pledge. Explanation  I....A  transfer of goods on  hire-purchase  or other  instalment system of payment  shall,  notwithstanding that the seller retains a title to any goods as security for payment of the price, be deemed to be a sale." The  hire-purchase agreement entered into by the  petitioner company provided that after all the monthly instalments  had been paid, "the hiring shall come to an end and the  vehicle shall,  at  the  option of the hirer,  become  his  absolute property;  but  until such payments as aforesaid  have  been made,  the vehicle shall remain the property of the  owners. The  hirer  shall  also have the option  of  purchasing  the vehicle at any time during the currency of this agreement by paying  in  one  lump  sum  the  balance  of  all  the  hire hereinbefore  mentioned and any other expenses  incurred  by the  owners relating to the transaction." The  question  for determination was whether the agreement was a transaction of mere  hiring or one of hire-purchase within the  meaning  of Explanation 1 to s. 2(g) of the Act.                             645 Held,  that the language of Explanation 1 to S. 2(g) of  the Act  was  wide enough to include a mere  transfer  of  goods without the transfer of the title thereto, if such  transfer took place in the course of an agreement of hire-purchase or

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any other instalment system of payment. As  the Act did not define the term ’hire-purchase’, it  had to be construed in its ordinary Common Law sense, i.e., that it  partook of the nature of a contract of bailment with  an element of sale added to it. Lee  v.  Butler, [1893] z Q. B. 318 and Helby  v.  Matthews, [1895] A. C. 471, referred to.  The non obstacle clause in Explanation 1 to S. 2(g) of  the Act  did not govern the main clause of the said  Explanation and  its  sole  purpose was  to  emphasise  the  categorical statement of the law Contained therein.  Since the agreement in  the  instant  case contained not merely  a  contract  of bailment  simpliciter  but  also an  element  of  sale,  the transaction had rightly been subjected to sales tax. There could be no force in the contention that the Act in so far  as it sought to extend the concept of sale to  what  in law was not a real sale, was unconstitutional. Mithan  Lal v. State of Delhi, [1959] S.C.R.  445,  referred to. Nor  was  there  any substance in the  contention  that  the extended definition of the word ’sale’ in the Act  infringed Art. 14 of the Constitution. It is well settled that in matters of taxation there can  be no question of res judicata. Society  of  Medical Officers of Health v.  Hope  (Valuation Officer),  [1960]  A.  C. 551 and  Broken  Hill  Proprietary Company Ltd. v. Municipal Council of Broken Hill, [1925]  A. C. 94, referred to. Installment Supply Ltd., New Delhi v. State of Delhi, A.I.R. 1956 Punj. 177, considered.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 146 of 1958. Petition  under  Art. 32 of the Constitution  of  India  for enforcement of Fundamental Rights. Veda Vyasa, S. K. Kapur and Ganpat Rai, for the petitioners. C.   K.  Daphtary,  Solicitor-General of India,  R.  Gopala- krishnan and D. Gupta, for the respondents. 1961.  May 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SINHA, C. J.-The petitioners have moved this sin Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution for a writ 646 or order in the nature of mandamus and/or prohibition and/or other  suitable writ, order or direction to the  respondents not to levy, charge or collect any sales tax on transactions of  what  the  petitioners  characterised  as  hire-purchase agreements,  a  typical  example of which  is  contained  in Annexure ’A’ to the petition, to be hereinafter examined  in detail. The   first   petitioner  is  a  private   limited   company incorporated  under the Companies Act, with  its  registered office at Janpath, New Delhi.  The second petitioner is  the Managing  Director  and shareholder of that company  and  is directly  interested  in  the result  of  this  application, because  it  is  claimed that his rights  and  property  are directly  involved.   The company has been  carrying  on  in Delhi the business of financing the purchase of new as  well as second-hand motor cars and other kinds of motor vehicles. The  system adopted by the Company for financing a  purchase such  as  aforesaid  is as follows.  A  person  desiring  to purchase a motor vehicle fixes a bargain with the owner  and the  petitioner  Company would then  advance  the  necessary finance  on the terms and conditions appearing in a  printed

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copy of the agreement, marked Annexure ’A’ to the  petition. According to that agreement, the Company charges the ’Hirer’ an initial deposit by way of premium as a consideration  for granting the lease of the vehicle, which deposit becomes the absolute  property  of the Company; the premium  charged  as aforesaid is a substantial amount, being usually 25% of  the price in respect of new vehicles.  The ’Hirer’ undertakes to pay  instalments and when all the instalments are paid,  the vehicle  becomes the property of the ’Hirer’ at his  option, on  payment of rupee one to the Company, as a  consideration for  the option; until all the stipulated  instalments  have been paid and the option exercised as aforesaid, the vehicle remains the property of the Company as owners.  The  ’Hirer’ is  delivered  possession  of the  vehicle  and  he  remains responsible  to  the Company for damage  or  destruction  or loss.   The ’Hirer’ has to pay interest at the rate  of  one per cent. per mensem on all sums overdue.  Until the  option of                             647 purchase  is exercised by the ’Hirer’, he is at  liberty  to return  the  vehicle  and  to put  an  end  to  tile  Hiring Agreement, on certain terms.  Thus, under the agreement, the ’Hirer’  has the use of the vehicle, which is  entrusted  to him  as the property of the Company, and it is open  to  the ’Hirer’ to become the purchaser of the vehicle as aforesaid, but  he is not bound to do so.  The hire-money  received  by the Company, it is contended, is not a part of the price  of the  goods sold and is thus not liable to be taxed  as  sale price.  The Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 (Bengal Act VI of 1941) was extended to the State of Delhi, which is now the   Union  Territory  of  Delhi.   In  pursuance  of   the provisions  of that Act, the Sales Tax  authorities  started demanding  and levying sales tax on all transactions of  the nature aforesaid on the ground that the instalments paid  by the  hirers to the Company were sales-price and,  therefore, liable  to Sales Tax.  The Company challenged the  right  of the Sales Tax authorities to levy any such tax on the ground that  the law was beyond the competence of the  legislature. Ultimately, the Company moved the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench at Delhi) under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution. In  the  Writ Petition, which was registered as  Civil  Writ Application No. 289-D of 1954, the Company prayed for a writ in the nature of prohibition and/or mandamus restraining the respondent from realising or levying any sales tax under the provisions of the Bengal Act, extended to Delhi.  There  was also  a  prayer for a writ of  certiorari  quashing  certain orders passed by the Sales Tax authorities in 1953-54.   The said  application  was  heard by a,  Division  Bench,  which allowed  the petition and issued a mandamus to the State  to forbear from enforcing its notice for the realisation of the Sales  Tax.   It was held by the High Court that  the  State Legislature had not the power to enlarge the meaning of  the words  "Sale of Goods" by going beyond the meaning  attached to  it  by  the  Sale of Goods  Act.   After  tile  judgment aforesaid  of  the  High  Court of  Punjab,  it  is  further alleged,  a settlement was arrived at between the  companies carrying on hire-purchase 648 business  in Delhi and the Commissioner of Sales  Tax,   who issued a circular, being Circular No. 10 of 1956, containing the following decisions of the Department:                "(i) Companies which are exclusively  engaged               in  the  hire purchase business  will  not  be               treated  as dealers and their  certificate  of               registration will be cancelled.

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             (ii)  Companies which are partially engaged in               the business of hire purchase will continue to               be  dealers  as hitherto fore and  their  hire               purchase  transactions will  be  appropriately               examined  in the light of the judgment of  the               Punjab High Court, and will be liable to Sales               Tax at one stage.               (iii) As a result of (i) above, sales made  to               the above Companies by the dealers in vehicles               would  be liable to Sales Tax at the hands  of               the latter.               (iv)  In respect of vehicles, and machineries,               etc., for which tax has been paid, at the time               of purchases thereon from the market, no Sales               Tax would be payable in respect of hire monies               collected   on  them  by  the  hire   purchase               companies   or  on  their  resale  or   rehire               following  repossession or on the exercise  of               the option of purchases by the hirer.               (v)   In  respect  of  second  hand   vehicles               purchased   by  the  companies  from   private               individuals for purposes of hire purchase, the               companies will not be liable to any sales  tax               either  at the time of purchase or in  respect               of   subsequent  transaction   thereon.    The               Companies  will  be  as  other   nonregistered               dealers,  in view of (i),  their  Registration               Certificates  in  respect  of  Hire   purchase               business having been cancelled.               (vi)  The  assessment which are  already  made               will  not  be reopened except in the  case  of               M/s.   Installment Supply Co. Ltd.  for  which               there are specified orders of the High Court.               (vii) In their up-to-date assessment, the hire               purchase Companies should take upon themselves               the responsibility to pay tax which they  have               save by making tax free purchases either  from               dealers  or from non-registered dealers.   The               assessment will, however, be made  accordingly               as before in the normal way."                             649 Thereafter  in the case of Mithan Lal v. State of Delhi  (1) this  Court examined the vires of the Bengal Finance  (Sales Tax)  Act,  1941,  as extended to Delhi, and  came  to  the, conclusion  that  the  law  had  been  validly  promulgated. According  to that decision, the definition of ’sale’  could be legally extended so as to make it permissible to tax sale of  goods involving the supply of materials in pursuance  of building  contracts.  As a result of the decision  aforesaid of  this Court, a press note was issued by the  Commissioner of Sales Tax, Delhi, to the effect that provision  regarding levy of tax on hire-purchase transactions was valid and that all hire-purchase dealers as come within the purview of  ss. 4  and  7 of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax)  Act,  1941,  as extended  to Delhi, are liable to pay sales tax and  to  get themselves  registered  under the Act; that all  such  hire- purchase dealers as were formerly registered with the  Sales Tax Department shall be deemed to be registered with  effect from the first of April, 1958 for the purpose of the Act and that  all hire-purchase dealers who had not  got  themselves registered  so  far should immediately  have  themselves  so registered   in   order  to  avoid   being   penalised   for contravention of the provisions of the Act.  In pursuance of the  aforesaid  circular of the Department,  the  petitioner company was also called upon to comply with the requirements

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of the Act.  The Company made representation to the  Commis- sioner  of  Sales  Tax  that  the  Company  and  other  such companies which deal in hire-purchase were not liable to pay sales  tax,  but the Commissioner of Sales  Tax  refused  to accept   the  Company’s  contention  and  answered  to   the following effect:-               "1.  The  incidence  of  Sales  Tax  on   such               transactions   is  to  be  governed   by   the               provisions of Sections 3 and 4 of the  Central               Sales Tax Act, 1956.  If however, the vehicles               are purchased by a Company having its place of               business in Delhi from a dealer outside  Delhi               on payment of Sales Tax of that State and  the               vehicle is hire-purchased to the party in that               very State, neither Delhi Sales Tax                (1)  [1959] S. C.R. 445.               650               nor Central Sales Tax will be leviable on  the               Delhi      firm irrespective of  the fact that               the Hire-purchase Agreement is entered into at               Delhi.               If, however, vehicle is purchased in State ’A’               but    is hire-purchased to a party  in  State               ’B’, Central Sales Tax will be leviable in the               State according to the rules in force in  that               State.               2.    The   hire-purchase   transactions    of               secondhand    vehicles,   where   the    owner               approaches the Hire Purchase Co. for  finances               against  the  vehicles, will  be  leviable  to               Sales  Tax,  because  according  to  the  Hire               purchase Agreement the property in the vehicle               vests  in  the  Hire  Purchase  Co.  and  this               property is to be transferred to the so-called               owner   by   virtue   of   the   Hire-purchase               transactions.               Secondhand  vehicles purchased  outside  Delhi               and  hire-purchased  to  the  parties  outside               Delhi or hire purchase transactions  conducted               outside  Delhi in which owner  approaches  the               Hire-purchase Co. for finance will be governed               by the clarification given in 1 above.               3.    In the case of vehicles purchased by the               Hire   purchase  Companies  from   the   local               registered dealers, they will not be  required               to pay any Sales Tax because all Hire-purchase               companies  will  be  registered  and  will  be               entitled  to make tax free purchases  of  such               vehicles.  It is, therefore, regretted that it               is not possible to accede to the request  made               in this behalf.               4.    Sales  Tax  will  be  payable  on  total               amounts charged by the Hire-purchase Co.  from               the  hirer  and it is not  possible  to  waive               Sales Tax on the so called incidental charges.               5.    It is regretted that it is not  possible               to  alter the date of liability of  the  Hire-               purchase Co. which has already been fixed with               effect  from 1st of April, 1958, in  pursuance               of  the  Supreme Court Judgment.  It  is  true               that the Press Note was issued in the month of               June and so Hire-purchase Companies have  been               making  purchases  of vehicles on  payment  of               sales  tax.  The Hire-purchase  companies  are               advised to approach the dealers for

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                                  651               refund  of the Sales Tax paid by them on  such               purchases.               If,  however, it is not possible for any  Hire               Purchase Co. to obtain refund of the Sales Tax               so  paid by them, the amounts so paid  may  be               adjusted  towards their liability on the  hire               purchase transactions." On  receipt of the answer of the Department, as set  out  in the  previous paragraphs, the petitioners moved  this  Court under  Art.  32 of the Constitution on the ground  that  the "threatened  action  of  the  respondents  is  illegal   and unconstitutional as the petitioner company is not liable  to pay sales tax on the transactions" described above. In  support  of the petition, the learned  counsel  for  the petitioners has raised the following contentions: (1)  that the  transactions  in respect of which the  petitioners  are sought to be taxed are not covered by the explanation to  s. 2(g)  of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, as extended  to Delhi; (2) alternatively, that is to say, if it is held that the  explanation  covers  the  transactions  of  the  nature aforesaid,  then the explanation, extending the  concept  of ’sale’  is  unconstitutional;  (3) That in any  case  it  is unconstitutional as it infringes Art. 14 of the Constitution in  so  far  as the State of Delhi  has  been  selected  for hostile discrimination; (4) that the judgment of the  Punjab High Court in Installment Supply Ltd., New Delhi v. State of Delhi (1) is final and conclusive as between the parties  to that  judgment; (5) that if it is held that the judgment  of the   Punjab  High  Court,  referred  to  above,  has   been superseded  by  the judgment of this Court in  Mithan  Lal’s case  (2),  that  judgment  cannot  be  given  retrospective operation;  and (6) lastly, that the settlement between  the Department and the Companies transacting business in  "Hire- purchase"  is  binding until the decision of this  Court  in Mithan  Lal’s case (3), aforesaid.  We shall  examine  these arguments in the order in which they have been stated. The most important question in this case is: What (1) A.I.R. 1956 Puaj.  177. (2) [1959] S.C.R- 445. 652 is  the true nature and character of the transaction   which is  the subject matter of the present controversy?   Do  the terms  and conditions of the agreement typified by  Annexure ’A’  to the petition, as described above, constitute a  mere agreement   of  hiring,  as  contended  on  behalf  of   the petitioners,  or  do  they constitute a  contract  of  hire- purchase,  within  the  meaning of explanation  (1)  to  the definition  of ’sale’ contained in the statute in  question, as  contended  on behalf of the respondents?   There  is  no doubt  that  the concept of ’sale’, as it appears  from  the following  words of the definition, along  with  explanation (1),  is  rather extended.  In the definition  of  the  term ’sale’  for  the  purposes  of the Act,  the  words  are  as follows:-               "  ’Sale’  means any transfer of  property  in               goods  for cash or deferred payment  or  other               valuable  consideration, including a  transfer               of property in goods involved in the execution               of   a  contract,  but  does  not  include   a               mortgage, hypothecation, charge or pledge.               Explanation  I.-A transfer of goods  on  hire-               purchase or other instalment system of payment               shall, notwithstanding that the seller retains               a  title to any goods as security for  payment

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             of the price, be deemed to be a sale." It  is clear from the definition that it includes  not  only what may be compendiously described as a sale under the Sale of  Goods  Act,  but  also  transactions,  which,   strictly speaking,  are not sales, not even ’contracts of  sale’  but only  contain  an  element of sale, that is  the  option  to purchase,  and that is the reason why the  explanation  ends with the words "be deemed to be a sale", thereby  indicating that a legal fiction has been introduced into the concept of sale’   as  ordinarily  understood.   The  explanation   has included  within  its  amplitude a mere  transfer  of  goods without the transfer of title to the goods, if it is in  the course of an agreement of the nature of "hire-purchase",  or other  instalment system of payment.  A contract of  hiring, under the Common Law, is one of the species of a contract of bailment and has, during the last 60-70                             653 years,  undergone  a series of refinements as  a  result  of modern  industrial  and commercial developments.   The  term ’hire-purchase’  has not been defined in the Act.  We  have, therefore, to construe the expression in its ordinary Common Law  sense,  which  may best be expressed in  terms  of  the Dictionary  of English Law by Earl Jowitt at pages  913-914, which runs as follows:               "Hire-purchase  a system whereby the owner  of               goods lets them on hire for periodic  payments               by  the  hirer upon an agreement that  when  a               certain   number   of   payments   have   been               completed, the absolute property in the  goods               will pass to the hirer, but so that the  hirer               may  return the goods at any time without  any               obligation to pay any balance of rent accruing               after  return; until the conditions have  been               fulfilled, the property remains in the  owner.               The  instrument by which the hire-purchase  is               effected    does   not   ordinarily    require               registration as a bill of sale (Exp.  Crawcour               (1878)  9 Ch.  D. 419); the hirer is  ’reputed               owner’  within the Bankruptcy Act, 1914  (Exp.               Brooks  (1883) 23 Ch.  D. 261); but the  hirer               does not ’agree to buy’ within the Factors Act               or  the Sale of Goods Act, 1893, so as  to  be               able to sell or pledge the goods as if he were               a  mercantile agent (Helby v. Matthews  (1895)               A.  C. 471; Brooks v. Bernstein (1909) 1  K.B.               98).  Such agreements are to be  distinguished               from  agreements  such  as in  Lee  v.  Butler               (1893)  2 Q.B. 318, which are in fact a  sale,               the  price being paid in instalments with  the               condition  that the property passes  when  all                             the instalments have been paid; here there  is               a binding agreement for the party to purchase,               where in a true hire-purchase agreement  there               is not."               In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Third  Edition,               Volume  19, paragraph 823, at  pages  510-511,               the  nature of a hire-purchase transaction  is               thus expressed:               "The  contract of hire purchase is one of  the               variations of the contract of bailment, but it               is  a modern development of  commercial  life,               and the rules with regard to bailments,  which               were laid down before               83                     654

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             any    contract   of   hire    purchase    was               contemplated,  cannot be applied  simpliciter,               because such a contract has in it not only the               element  of bailment but also the  element  of               sale.  At common law the term ’hire  purchase’               properly  applies  only to contracts  of  hire               conferring  an option to purchase, but  it  is               often used to describe contracts which are  in               reality  agreements  to purchase  chattels  by               instalments,  subject to a condition that  the               property  in  them is not to  pass  until  all               instalments  have been paid.  The  distinction               between  these  two  types  of  hire  purchase               contracts  is, however, a most important  one,               because  under  the latter  type  of  contract               there is a binding obligation on the hirer  to               buy  and the hirer can therefore pass  a  good               title  to a purchaser or pledge  dealing  with               him  in good faith and without notice  of  the               rights of the true owner, whereas in the  case               of  a contract which merely confers an  option               to purchase there is no binding obligation  on               the  hirer to buy, and a purchaser  or  pledge               can obtain no better title than the hirer had,               except in the case of a sale in market  overt,               the  contract  not being an agreement  to  buy               within  the Factors Act, 1889, or the Sale  of               Goods Act, 1893." The  observations  quoted  above are  based  mostly  on  two leading  cases which have come to be regarded as  the  locus classics  upon  the subject, namely, Lee v.  Butler  (1)  in which the transaction was described by Lord Esher, M.R.,  as "Hire and Purchase Agreements" and Helby v. Matthews (2)  in which  the House of Lords distinguished the former  case  on the ground that in that case there was a binding contract to buy and not merely an option to buy, without any  obligation to  buy.  Both these cases were decided in terms of  Factors Act of 1889 (52 & 53 Vict. c. 45, s. 9).  Both the kinds  of agreements  exemplified by the two leading  cases  aforesaid would  now be included in the definition of  ’hire-purchase’ as contained in s. 21 of the Hire Purchase Act, 1938 (1 &  2 Geo., 6, c. 53):-               "’Hire-purchase agreement’ means an  agreement               for  the  bailment of goods  under  which  the               bailer               (1) [1893] 2 Q.B. 318.               (2) [1895] A.C. 471.               655               may buy the goods or under which the  property               in  the goods will or may pass to the  bailee,               and where by virtue of two or more agreements,               none  of which’ by itself constitutes a  hire-               purchase  agreement,  there is a  bailment  of               goods and either the bailee may buy the goods,               or  the property therein will or may  pass  to               the  bailee, the agreements shall  be  treated               for  the  purposes  of this Act  as  a  single               agreement  made at the time when the  last  of               the agreements was made." It is clear that under the Law, as it now stands, which  has now been crystallised into the section of the Hire  Purchase Act, quoted above, the transaction partakes of the nature of a  contract  or  bailment  with  an  element  of  sale,   as aforesaid, added to it.  In such an agreement, the hirer may not be bound to purchase the thing hired; he may or may  not

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be.   But in either case, if there is an obligation to  buy, or an option to buy, the goods delivered to the hirer by the owner  on the terms that the hirer, on payment of a  premium as  also of a number of instalments, shall enjoy the use  of the  goods,  which ultimately may become his  property,  the transaction amounts to one of hire-purchase, even though the title to the goods has remained with the owner and shall not pass  to  the  hirer until a  certain  event  has  happened, namely, that all the stipulated instalments have been  paid, or  that the hirer has exercised his option to finalise  the purchase on payment of a sum, nominal or otherwise. But it has been contended on behalf of the petitioners  that there is no binding agreement to purchase the goods and that title is retained by the owner not as a security for payment of the price but absolutely.  According to third term of the agreement,  on the hirer duly performing and  observing  the terms  of  the agreement, with particular reference  to  the payment  of the monthly instalments, "the hiring shall  come to an end and the vehicle shall, at the option of the hirer, become  his  absolute property; but until such  payments  as aforesaid  have  been  made, the vehicle  shall  remain  the property  of  the  owners.  The hirer shall  also  have  the option of purchasing the vehicle at any 656 time during the currency of this Agreement, by paying in one lump sum the balance of all the hire hereinbefore  mentioned and  any other expenses incurred by the owners  relating  to the transaction." It is clear, therefore, that in addition to the contract  of hiring an option has been given to the hirer to purchase  or not to purchase.  The more serious question on this part  of the  petitioners’  contention is whether  the  non  obstante clause  in the explanation "notwithstanding that the  seller retains a title to any goods as security for payment of  the price"  governs the main clause of the explanation.  In  our opinion,  it  does not.  The non obstante  clause  has  been added only to emphasise the categorical statement of the law contained  in the main clause to the effect that a  transfer of  goods  on hire-purchase, etc., shall be deemed to  be  a sale’  even though there may be a stipulation to the  effect that  in  spite of the transfer of goods to the  hirer,  the owner  retains title to those goods until the  happening  of the  ultimate  event,  namely, completion of  title  at  the option of the hirer. There is, thus, no doubt that the agreement in question does contain not only a contract of bailment simpliciter but also an  element of sale, which element has been seized  upon  by the legislature for the purpose of subjecting a  transaction like that to the Sales Tax. This  leads us to the second ground of attack raised by  the petitioners,  namely,  that the explanation, if it  has  the effect  of extending the concept of ’sale’ to what, in  law, is not a real sale, but only an incipient or inchoate  sale, then  in  so far as the law has extended the  definition  of sale’ it is unconstitutional.  This contention has lost  all its  force, if ever it had any, in view of the  decision  of this Court in Mithan Lal’s case (1). But  then it is argued that Mithan Lal’s case  (1)  requires reconsideration  and that, in any view of the  matter,  this Court  did not consider the further attack based on Art.  14 of  the Constitution.  It is true that in Mithan Lal’s  case (1)  the  contention  that the  enactment  in  question  had infringed Art. 14 of the (1)  [1959] S.C.R. 445.                             657

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Constitution  had not been raised.  This  Court,  therefore, had  no  occasion  to  pronounce  on  that  aspect  of   the controversy  We have, therefore, to consider the  contention under head (3), namely, that though the Parliament may  have had  the  power  to tax something  which  was  not  strictly speaking  a  ’sale’, the law is open to the attack  that  it discriminates  against traders in Delhi inasmuch as,  it  is further  contended, such a law has not been made  applicable to  the  whole  of  India.  In  our  opinion,  there  is  no substance  in this contention because no  proper  foundation was laid in the pleadings for supporting such a  contention. It  has not been averred that other Part II States have  not been  similarly treated.  On the other hand, it does  appear that  under the Central Sales Tax Act (LXXIV of  1956),  the definition  of  ’Sale’  contains  the  extended  definition, without  the non obstante clause, discussed above.   Section 2(g)  of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, has the  following definition:               "’Sale’  with its grammatical  variations  and               cognate  expressions,  means any  transfer  of               property in goods by one person to another for               cash or for deferred payment or for any  other               valuable   consideration,   and   includes   a               transfer  of  goods on the  hire  purchase  or               other  system of payment by  instalments,  but               does  not include a mortgage or  hypothecation               of or a charge or pledge on goods." It would, thus appear ’that hire-purchase transactions  have been included within the definition of sale’ for the purpose of  Central  Sales  Tax,  and  this  definition  has  become applicable  throughout India, and it cannot,  therefore,  be said that the State of Delhi, and now the Union Territory of Delhi, has been selected for hostile discrimination.  In our opinion, therefore, there is no substance in the  contention that the extended definition of ’,sale’ in the main  statute infringes Art. 14 of the Constitution. Now,  the  remaining  contentions raised on  behalf  of  the petitioners  may be disposed of by observing that  what  the Sales Tax Department does, or does not do, cannot change the law.  The Department issued its 658 instructions to the Sales Tax Officers, in conformity   with the  law  as laid down in the judgment of  the  Punjab  High Court in Instalment Supply Ltd., New Delhi v. State of Delhi (1).    This   Court   later  laid   down   the   law   more authoritatively   in  Mithan  Lal’s  s  case  (2)  and   the Department  was bound to take notice of what this Court  had laid  down.   It  cannot,  therefore,  be  argued  that  the Department  had,  in any sense estopped  itself  by  issuing those  instructions, or that this Court, by laying down  the law in Mithan Lal’s case (2) had laid down a new rule of law which  has no application to pending proceedings  for  levy, assessment and realisation of sales tax, either in Delhi  or elsewhere. There is another answer to the point of res judicata  raised on  behalf of the petitioners, relying upon the decision  of the  Punjab High Court in Instalment Supply Ltd., New  Delhi v.  State of Delhi (1).  It is well settled that in  matters of  taxation  there is no question of res  judicata  because each year’s assessment is final only for that year and  does not  govern later years, because it determines only the  tax for  a particular period. (See the decision in the House  of Lords  in  Society  of Medical Officers of  Health  v.  Hope (Valuation Officer) (3) approving and following the decision of  the  Privy Council in Broken  Hill  Proprietary  Company

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Limited v. Municipal Council of Broken Hill (4). As  all the contentions raised on behalf of the  petitioners fail, this petition is dismissed with costs. Petition dismissed. (1)  A I.R. 1956 Punj I77. (2)  [1959] S.C.R. 445. (3)  [1960] A.C. 551. (4)  [1925] A.C. 94. 659