14 September 1971
Supreme Court
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KHEDUT SAHAKARI GINNING & PRESSING SOCIETYLTD. Vs STATE OF GUJARAT

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2418 of 1968


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PETITIONER: KHEDUT SAHAKARI GINNING & PRESSING SOCIETYLTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF GUJARAT

DATE OF JUDGMENT14/09/1971

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. GROVER, A.N.

CITATION:  1972 AIR 1786            1972 SCR  (1) 714  1971 SCC  (3) 480

ACT: Bombay  Cooperative Societies Act,  1925-Producers’  Society pooling  members goods consisting of cotton &  cotton  seeds and  selling  them  with or  without  ginning-Whether  goods purchased  from members-Bye-laws of society showed  that  it way  agent of members and did not purchase goods of  members for purpose of selling-Not liable to pay purchase tax  under Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959.

HEADNOTE: The appellant was a cooperative society registered under the Bombay   Cooperative  Societies  Act,  1925.    During   the assessment  period November 1, 1960 to October 31, 1961  the Society  received large quantity of cotton from its  members and  the  same  was  sold by it  either  after  ginning  and pressing or without ginning and pressing.  The Society was a registered dealer under the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959.  The Sales  Tax Officer accepted the return filed by the  society and  did  not  levy any purchase tax  on  it.   However  the Assistant  Commissioner issued a notice under s. 57  of  the Act  on  the basis that it had purchased cotton  and  cotton seeds  from its members and these purchases were  liable  to purchase  tax.   The Tribunal, relying  on  bye-laws  37(7), 37(18), 37(19), 48, 49, 52, 53 and 55 of the Society, upheld the  view of the Assistant Commissioner and  dismissed  the- Society’s revision petition.  It rejected the contention  of the  Society that it was functioning merely as the agent  of its  members.   The  High Court in  reference  also  decided against  the  Society.  In appeal to this Court  by  special leave. HELD : In considering whether a transaction is a sale or not what the court has to consider is whether as a result of the transaction,  the  property  in  the  goods  passed  to  the assessee  ’for a price and whether the assessee  sold  those goods as its own. [717 B-C] Being  a  producer’s society as defined in s.  3(h)  of  the Cooperative   Societies  Act  the  appellant   Society   was evidently  formed primarily with the object of  selling  the produce  of  the members as their collective  produce.   The preamble  to  the  Act showed that  two  of  the  objectives intended to be achieved by the Act were to provide for  self help by the members of the society and for mutual aid  among

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them.   The  bye-laws  of the Act must be  examined  in  the background  of  the  preamble  to the Act  as  well  as  the definition  of Producers’ Society., So examined none of  the bye-laws  including those relied on by the Tribunals  showed that the society had purchased either cotton or cotton seeds from its members. [717 E-H] From  bye-law 2 it was clear that the object of the  society was  not to purchase or sell any cotton or cotton  seeds  on its own behalf. aauses (7), (14), (16) and 18 of bye-law  37 indicated that the Society was selling the produce of others and  not its own goods.  Bye-law 45(1) under which loans  on interest  could  be  advanced to  the  members  against  the security  of  the goods clearly showed that the  goods  were entrusted  to the Society and not sold to it.   The  society could  not advance money on the security of its  own  goods. If the transactions were sales in favour of them 715 Society then the amounts to be paid by the society would  be purchase  price.   Such  a payment cannot  be  made  on  the security of goods, nor can that payment carry any  interest. [718 B- 720 A] Bye-law 48 refers to the goods of the members of the society and  not to the goods of the Society.  Because of that  bye- law  the members of the Society, who are bound by that  bye- law  must be deemed to have authorised the Society  to  pool their  goods, grade them if necessary and sell  them  either after  ginning  or  without  ginning.   That  bye-law   also prescribed  the  mode in which the price fetched  should  be distributed  amongst the persons whose goods are sold.   The society is the agent of all its members.  Its principals are many.    Because  of  the  various  bye-laws,  the   several principals must be deemed to have appointed a common  agent- the So-ciety-for disposing of their goods in the manner most advantageous  to them.  To achieve that object they must  be held  to  have empowered the Society to  pool  their  goods, grade them if necessary, and sell them either after  ginning or without ginning.  Such an authority does not violate  the laws of agency.  A person can be an agent for more than  one principal and if all his principals jointly authorise him to pool  their  goods and sell them and pay the sale  price  to them in the manner prescribed by them,. he does not cease to be an agent. [720 G-721 B] Accordingly  the appeal must be allowed and the judgment  of the High Court set aside. Rohtas Industries Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 12 S.T.C. 615  and Hafiz  Din Mohd.  Haji Abdulla v. State of  Maharashtra,  12 S.T.C. 292, distinguished. S.   Kanaru, Mangalore & Anr., 14 S.T.C. 4, approved. Ramachandra  Rathore & Bros. v. Commissioner of  Sales  Tax, Madhya  Pradesh,  8  S.T.C. 845 and  Versova  Koli  Sahakari Vahatuk  Singh Ltd. v. Slate of Maharashtra, 22 S.T.C.  116, held inapplicable.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  2418  of 1968. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated July  1,  1968  of  the  Gujarat  High  Court  in  Sales-tax Reference No. 1 of 1966. M. C. Chagla and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant. Urmila Kapoor and B. D. Sharma, for the respondent. S. T. Desai and P. H. Parekh, for the intervener. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by

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Hegde,  J. This is an appeal by special appeal.   It  arises from  the  decision  of  the High  Court  of  Gujarat  in  a Reference under s. 61(1) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act,  1959. That Reference was made by the Gujarat Sales Tax Tribunal at Ahmedabad.   After stating the case, the Tribunal  submitted the question 716 "whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the  case, the transactions are purchases of cotton by the Society from its members" to the High Court for its opinion. The   High   Court  has  answered  that  question   in   the affirmative.   Aggrieved by that decision, the assessee  has brought this appeal. The material facts are these :- The assessee is a Co-operative society registered under  the Bombay-Co-operative  Societies Act, 1925 (to be  hereinafter referred  to as the Act.  The assessee will  hereinafter  be referred to as the ’Society’.  It carries on the business of ginning and pressing cotton brought by its members.   During the assessment period viz.  November 1, 1960 to October  31, 1961,  the assessee received large quantity of  cotton  from its members and the same was sold by it either after ginning and  pressing or without ginning and pressing.  The  Society is a registered dealer under the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959. It filed its return for sales tax for the year in  question. But  therein  it did not show any  purchase  turnover.   The Sales  Tax Officer accepted the return submitted by it,  ink assessed  it on the basis of that return, as per  his  order dated  May ,31, 1963.  He did not levy any purchase  tax  on the  Society.   The Assistant Commissioner  of  Sales  ’Fax, Range 111, Baroda, however, issued a notice dated August  6, 1963  under  s.  57  of ,the  Bombay  Sales  Tax  Act,  1959 proposing to revise the assessment of the Society by levying purchase  tax in respect of 200 bales of cotton sent by  the society to Bombay for sale and also in respect of cotton and cotton seeds worth Rs. 3,56,105, sold after six months  from the date on which the cotton was received by the Society  on the  ground that the Society purchased the said cotton  from its members. Aggrieved  by  that ordered the Society  moved  the  Gujarat Sales  Tax  Tribunal  in  revision.   The  Tribunal  by  its judgment   dated  July  1,  1964,  dismissed  the   revision petition.    Relying   on  the  bye-laws  of   the   Society particularly on bye-laws Nos. 37(7), 37(18) 37(19), 48,  49, 52, 53 and 55, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that  the Society  had  purchased  the cottton  and  cotton  seeds  in question  from its members.  It rejected the  contention  of the  Society that it was merely functioning as the agent  of its  mebers  while  selling  the  cotton  and  cotton  seeds referred  to earlier.  At the instance of the  Society,  the Tribunal  submitted the question referred to earlier to  the High Court for its opinion. Whether a particular agreement is an agency aggrement or  an agreement  of sale depends upon the terms of the  agreement. For deciding that question, the terms of the agreement  have got to be 717 examined.  The true nature, of a transaction evidenced by  a written  agreement has to be ascertained from the  covenants and not merely from what the parties choose to call it.  The terms of the agreement must be carefully scrutinised in  the light  of the surrounding circumstances-see the decision  of this  Court in Rohtas Industries Ltd. v. State of  Bihar(1). In   that  decision,  this  Court  further  held  that   for

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considering  whether a particular transaction is a  sale  or not,  what the court has to consider is whether as a  result of the transaction, the property in the goods passed to  the assessee  in return for price and whether the assessee  sold those  goods as its own.  Bearing in mind these  principles, we shall now proceed to examine the provisions of the Act as well  as  the  relevant bye-laws which  take  the  place  of agreement  between the parties.  It is not the case  of  the State   that  the  Society  had  in  any  manner  acted   in contravention  of the bye-laws.  Therefore all that we  have to find out is the true effect of the bye-laws. In this case we are dealing with a case of a "producers  so- ciety".   "Producers Society" is defined in s. 3 (h) (2)  of the Act.  That definition reads:               "Producers’  Society" means a  society  formed               with the object of producing and disposing  of               goods  as  ’the  collective  property  of  its               members and includes a society formed with the               object  of  the  collective  disposal  of  the               labour of the members of such society." The  Society  with which we are concerned in this  case  was evidently  formed primarily with the object of  selling  the produce  of  its members as their collective  Produce.   The preamble  to that Act says "Whereas it is expedient  further to  facilitate  the formation and  working  of  co-operative societies for the promotion of thrift, self-help and  mutual aid  among  agriculturists  and other  persons  with  common economic  needs so as to bring about better  living,  better business  and  better  methods of production  and  for  that purpose to consolidate and amend the law relating to co-ope- rative  socities in the Presidency of Bombay " Hence  to  of the  objectives intended to be achieved by the Act  were  to provide  for self help by the members of the society  &  for mutual aid amongst its members. We must examine the bye-laws in this case in the  background of  the  preamble to the Act as well as  the  definition  of "Producers’ Society". We shall now refer to the relevant bye-laws of the Society. Those   bye-laws  are  in  Gujarath.   They  had  been   got translated (1)  12 S.T.C. 615. 718 into  English by the High Court.  But as the  appellant  did not agree with that translation in respect of bye-laws 45 to 49,  it  got those bye-laws translated  officially  in  this Court.   Counsel for the respondent has not  challenged  the correctness of that translation. The Society is known as Khedut Sahakari Ginning and Pressing Society Ltd., Etola.  From this it is clear that the Society is   a  co-operative  Society  of  the   farmers   primarily constituted for the purpose of Ginning and Pressing  cotton. The objects of the Society are mentioned in bye-law 2.  That bye-law reads:               "The objects of the Society are as under :               1.    To  Gin and get Ginned unginned  cotton,               to  press  ,or get pressed cotton  into  bales               within the area of work of the society for the               society  and  individual  members  and   other               customers  and to use machinery for  any  work               useful to other members.               2.    To  advance money against goods come  in               the possession of the society, to get unginned               cotton,  cotton  and  cotton  seeds  sold,  to               supply  goods  and if possible  to  get  other               agricultural  produce sold and if required  to

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             make    arrangements   for    storing    other               agricultural produce.               5.    To   make  arrangement   for   advancing               amounts to its members for necessary  capital,               to raise agricultural produce to come for sale               through the society and I for manure and seeds               etc.               6.    To  distribute profit to its members  in               proportion  to the amount paid by its  members               for  ginning  and  pressing  of  their   goods               according to the bye-laws and to use the whole               portion  or certain portion of the profit  for               works   of   social  interest   according   to               conditions laid down in bye-laws. From  the above provisions, it is clear that the  object  of the ’Society is not to purchase or sell any cotton or cotton seeds on its ,own behalf.  The membership of the Society  is confined  to farmers of the villages mentioned in bye-law  7 (a)  and to co-operative societies of the  Taluks  mentioned therein.   Bye-law 37 deals with the powers of the  managing committee.  For our present purpose only cls. 7, 14, 16  and 18 of that bye-law are relevant. 719 CI. (7) says: "To  fix the rates for ginning pressing and for  other  work that  may  be carried out according to the  regulations  and resolutions and to sell, purchase and get baled goods  other than unginned cotton according to the instructions that  may be given and to give facilities of every other kind." Cl. ( 14) reads: "To  lend  money  against  the security  of  goods  come  in possession  of the society according to the convenience  and if possible subject to the rules." CI. (16) reads "To get goods managed through the society and the machinery, building etc. of the society insured." Cl. (18) says               "To arrange to sell agricultural produce other               than  cotton unginned cotton and cotton  seeds               of   the  members  and  produce   of   village               industries  which  may have been  brought  for               sale   through   the  society  and   to   make               arrangements  to purchase goods  according  to               the  requirements of the members on a  request               being made by the members." These provisions clearly go to indicate that the Society was selling  the produce of others and not its own  goods.   Its duty  is to arrange to sell the agricultural produce of  its members. Bye-law  45(1) to the extent necessary for our present  pur- pose reads thus :               "An  amount not more than 75 per cent  of  the               estimated  value at the market rate from  time               to time of the goods insured and entrusted  to               the society will be advanced against  security               of  goods if it will be convenient to  do  so.               Ile  rate  of interest on advance will  be  as               fixed  by the managing committee from time  to               time...." This  bye-law  clearly  indicates that the  members  of  the Society are merely entrusting their goods to the Society and not selling them to the Society.  That is made further clear by  the fact that the Society may advance loans upto 75  per cent of the estimated value of the goods entrusted to it  on the  security of those goods and those advances  will  carry

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interest.  If those goods are sold to the Society then there can  be no question of any entrustment nor can  the  Society advance any money on the security of its own goods.  If  the transactions are sales in favour of the Society then 720 the  amounts  to be paid by the Society  would  be  purchase price.   Such  a payment cannot be made on the  security  of goods nor can that payment carry any interest. Some  reliance was placed on behalf of the State on  bye-law 45(2) which says :               "This  society shall have authority to  borrow               money  against  the goods which  come  in  its               hands  for sale or for its management  through               the society by pledging them with a bank." We  fail to see how this bye-law can lend any assistance  in support  of  the case pleaded by the  State.   That  bye-law makes  it  clear that the goods in question  come  into  the hands  of  the  Society for sale  or  for  their  management through  the  Society.  But the person  who  entrusts  those goods  because of this bye-law is deemed to  have  empowered the  society to pledge the same.  Now we come to bye-law  49 which reads:--               "The unginned cotton, cotton and cotton  seeds               to be sold through the society shall be graded               in  the manner fixed by the general  body  and               the society will get the same insured." This bye-law refers to goods to be sold through the  Society and not to sale of Society’s goods. Bye-law 48 is extremely important.  That bye-law says               "The goods of all the members will be gathered               together  either by grading according  to  the               grades  fixed by the general body  or  without               grading   and  then  sold  either  ginned   or               unginned.   At  the end of  the  season  after               making up the accounts the society will pay in               full to all the members according to  average,               rates  gradeor  if grades are  not  made  then               generally  after  deducting the  dues  of  the               society and the charges for ginning,  pressing               the goods and expenses for sale etc." This  bye-law  refers  to the goods of the  members  of  the Society  and  not to the goods of the Society.   Because  of that  bye-law the members of the Society, who are  bound  by that  bye-law must be deemed to have authorised the  Society to pool their goods, grade them, if necessary and sell  them either after ginning or without ginning.  That bye-law  also prescribes  the  mode in which the price fetched  should  be distributed  amongst the persons whose goods are sold.   The Society is the agent of all its members.  Its principals are many.    Because  of  the  various  bye-laws,  the   several principals must be deemed to have appointed a common  agent- the Society-for disposing of their goods in the manner most 721 advantageous  to them.  To achieve that object they must  be held  to  have empowered the Society to  pool  their  goods, grade them if necessary, and sell them either after  ginning or  without ginning.  Such an authority in our opinion  does not violate the law  of agency. A person can be an agent for more than one principal and  if all his principals jointly authorise him to pool their goods and  sell them and pay the sale price to them in the  manner prescribed  by them, he does not cease to be an agent.   The question  whether  when an agent with the authority  of  his principals pools together the goods of its principals grades them  and  sells them, ceases to be an agent and  becomes  a

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purchaser was considered by the Mysore High Court in Sherule Fazle and Co. v. Commercial Tax Officer, Additional  Circle, S.  Kanara,  Mangalore and anr.(1). Therein the  High  Court held  that he does not cease to be an agent.  We agree  with the ratio of that decision.               By-law 52 says:               "When it will be found proper to sell goods in               other  market or at other places  outside  the               local market the manager will do the said work               according   to  the  order  of  the   managing               committee  through the agent selected  by               the  society or the union.  A regular  writing               to  the  effect  that the agent  may  get  the               possession of the goods thus sent for sale  to               other  markets or _at other places  should  be               kept in the record of the society." Because  of  this  bye-law, authority is  conferred  on  the Society  by  its  members to sell  their  goods  in  outside markets  as well.  Bye-law 54 empowers the society to  hedge goods by making forward sales against the balance goods that may have remained to be sold out of the goods that may  have come in its possession.  This power again must be deemed  to have been conferred on the Society by its members.  The only other  bye-laws to which reference has been made at the  bar are 72 and 73.  Bye-law 72 prescribes :               "The  gross profit made in the last year  will               be  declared  in the annual  meeting  and  the               amounts   as  mentioned  hereunder   will   be               deducted therefrom               (1)   Interest  to  be paid on  borrowing  and               deposits.               (2)   Expenses  of the working of the  society               including the amount of honorarium.               (3)   The amounts not less than five per  cent               of the total amount spent on building and  not               less than               (1) 14 S.T.C. 4.               -L 3 Sup.  C. I./72               722               ton  per cent on machinery and not  less  than               five  per cent on other depreciating  Property               will be carried to depreciation fund.               (4)   If  there be no balance in  profit  fund               then  the written off dues sanctioned  by  the               managing committee.               (5)   Loss.               The amount remaining over after deducting  all               the above mentioned amounts will be considered               as net profit. Bye-law 73 provides for the distribution of the net profits. Both bye-laws 72 and 73 deal with the profits of the Society and  not any profits arising by the sale of goods  entrusted to  it by its members.  Society has got its own  sources  of income.   It charges for ginning and pressing.  It has  also other  sources of income.  It is that income that  is  dealt with in bye-laws 72 and 73. Our  attention has not been drawn to any other bye-law  from which  we  could  conclude that the  Society  had  purchased either cotton or cotton seeds from its members. We  have earlier seen that the Tribunal had placed  reliance on bye-laws 37(7), 37(18), 37(19) 48, 49, 52, 53 and 55  for arriving  at the conclusion that the society  had  purchased cotton ,and cotton seeds from its members.  We have  already examined  bye-laws 37(7), 37(18), 48, and 52.  We  have  not been able to see how those bye-laws lend any support to  the

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conclusion reached by the Tribunal and the High Court. Bye-law  37(19)  empowers the Society to  levy  ’Haksai’  on unginned cotton received from members upto Rs. 2/- per  Bhar (Load).  This bye-law merely provides for the collection  of ginning charges.  Bye-law 49 authorises the Society to grade the unginned cotton and cotton seeds in the manner specified by the general body.  It also authorises the Society to  get the  goods  insured.   This bye-law again does  not  in  any manner  indicate  that the cotton or cotton seeds  had  been purchased by the Society.  Bye-law 53 says that :               "If  there may be some time for the season  to               start the managing committee can estimate  the               produce and make forward sale of the goods not               more  than I portion of it before  the  season               starts." This again is an authority given by the members to the Society. 723 Bye-law 55 provides               "If  it is found necessary and  beneficial  to               sell goods which may be in stock by only other               system which may be having connection with the               forward   market  except  the   hedge   system               described  in  the above clause  the  managing               committee can sell goods by the said system by               making  discussion  with the  officer  of  the               union effecting the sale." This  is  also  an authority given to  the  Society  by  its members to deal with their goods in a specified manner. It  must  be remembered that by and large  the  farmers  are illiterate.   They  do not know the ways of  business.   The general belief is that taking advantage of the ignorance and illiteracy  of  the farmers, businessmen exploit  them.   To avoid such exploitation, the Act authorised the formation of co-operative societies of the farmers through which they can sell their goods.  Those Societies merely function as agents for the farmers who are their members.  By becoming  members of  those Societies and subscribing to their bye-laws,  they had given large powers to their agents so that their produce may  be sold in the best possible manner.  None of the  bye- laws  of  the  Society goes to show  that  the  society  had purchased the goods entrusted to it by its members. The  High  Court has referred to a number of  decisions  for coming  to  the conclusion that under the  bye-laws  of  the Society,  the  Society must be held to  have  purchased  the cotton  and  cotton seeds sold by it.  We see no  basis  for that   conclusion.   The  question  whether   a   particular agreement is an agreement of sale or an agreement of  agency has  to  be  decided  on the basis  of  the  terms  of  that agreement.   Decisions  rendered  on  the  basis  of   other agreements  may be useful for finding out the principles  to be applied in finding out the true character of an agreement but those decisions cannot conclude the question before  the court  as no two agreements are likely to be  similar.   The nature of each agreement has to be decided on its own terms. The Tribunal, the High Court as well as the Counsel for  the State have placed great deal of reliance on the decision  of this  Court  in  Rohtas  Industries  Ltd.’s  case   (supra). Therein  the  assessee  was  a  limited  liability   company manufacturing  cement.  The assessee and some  other  cement manufacturing  companies entered into an agreement with  the Cement Market* Company of India Ltd., whereby the  marketing company  was  appointed  as the ’sole  and  exclusive  sales manager’  for  the  sale  of  cement  manufactured  by   the manufacturing companies and the manufacturing

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724 companies  agreed  not to sell directly  or  indirectly  any cement  to any person save and except through the  marketing company.   The manufacturing companies were entitled  to  be paid a certain sum per ton of cement supplied by them or  at such other rate as might be decided upon by the directors of the marketing company.  The marketing company was authorised to  sell cement at such price or prices andon such terms  as it  might in its sole discretion think fit and it agreed  to distribute to the manufacturing companies, in proportion  to the  number  of  tons of cement of every  variety  and  kind supplied  by the manufacturing companies, the whole  of  its net  profit  less 6 per cent, on its paid up  capital.   The question  was whether the transactions between the  assessee and  the marketing company were sales or their  relationship was  that of agent and principal.  The court held  that  the cement delivered, despatched or consigned by the assessee to the marketing company or to its orders or in accordance with its  directions  was sold by the assessee to  the  marketing company and the same was therefore liable to be taxed  under the  Bihar  Sales Tax Act, 1944.  This Court  came  to  that conclusion  on  the  basis of the  various  clauses  in  the agreement.  One of the clauses in the agreement relied on by this  Court for coming to the conclusion that the  agreement in question was an agreement of sale was that the  marketing company had to pay certain price for the cement supplied  to it and that price was ordinarily required to be fixed having regard  to  the cost of production.  Further  the  marketing company was entitled to fix price at which the cement was to be  sold and such price could be even less than the cost  of manufacture.   It is true that some of the clauses  in  that agreement  are similar to those we are considering  in  this case  yet  no clause in that agreement  mentioned  that  the cement manufacturing companies were merely entrusting  their cement to the marketing company nor was there any  provision in that agreement for the marketing company to advance loans to the manufacturers on the security of the cement entrusted to  it.   Further  the  manufacturing  companies  were   not required  to pay any interest on the amount paid to them  by the  marketing company.  Hence we are unable to  agree  with the  High  Court  and the Tribunal that the  ratio  of,  the decision  in  Rohtas Industries Ltd.’s case(1)  governs  the facts of this case. . The decision of this Court in Hafiz Din Mohd.  Haji  Abdulla v. State of Maharashtra(2), does not support the  contention of  the  State.   Therein this Court on  an  examination  of various clauses in the agreement held that the  relationship between  the  assessee and its representatives was  that  of agent  and  principal  and not of  vendors  and  purchasers. Therefore  the  State  can  seek  no  assistance  from  that decision. (1)  12 S.T.C. 615. (2)  12 S.T.C. 292 725 Counsel  for  the State relied on the decision of  the  High Court of Madhya Pradesh in Ramachandra Rathore and Bros.  v. Commissioner  of  Sales  Tax,  Madhya  Pradesh(1)  and   the decision  of the Bombay High Court in Varsova Koli  Sahakari Vahatuk Sangh Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra(2) in support  of the State’s case.  In our opinion the agreements  considered in  those decisions are wholly different in nature than  the bye-laws with which we are concerned in this case. For the reasons mentioned, above, we allow this appeal,  set aside  the  judgment  of the High Court  and  discharge  the answer  given  by  the High Court and  answer  the  question

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referred to the  High Court in the negative and in favour of the  assessee.   The appellant-assessee is entitled  to  its costs both in this Court as well as in the High Court. G.C.                                                  Appeal allowed. 726