06 May 2008
Supreme Court
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M/S. YASHA OVERSEAS Vs COMNR. OF SALES TAX .

Case number: C.A. No.-002155-002155 / 2000
Diary number: 21151 / 1999
Advocates: PRADEEP MISRA Vs D. S. MAHRA


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CASE NO.: Appeal (civil)  2155 of 2000

PETITIONER: M/s.Yasha Overseas

RESPONDENT: Commissioner of Sales Tax & Ors

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/05/2008

BENCH: B.N.Agrawal & G.S.Singhvi & Aftab Alam

JUDGMENT: JUDGMENT                               1

                                             REPORTABLE                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA                   CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION                   CIVIL APPEAL NO.2155 OF 2000 M/s.Yasha Overseas                             ... Appellant                        Versus Commissioner of Sales Tax & Ors.                ... Respondents                                    WITH                   CIVIL APPEAL NO.6893 OF 2003 M/s.Jindal Drugs Ltd. & Anr.                   ... Appellants                          Versus State of Maharashtra & Anr.                    ... Respondents                                 WITH                   CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4075 OF 2007 M/s.International Creative Foods Ltd.                ... Appellant                          Versus State of Kerala                                ...    Respondent

                               WITH             CIVIL APPEAL NOS.                  OF 2008             [@ SLP(C) Nos.16270/01, 6907/02 & 17894/02]

                        JUDGMENT AFTAB ALAM,J.

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1.    Leave granted in the three Special Leave Petitions in this batch of six cases. 2.    Does the three-Judge Bench decision of this Court in Vikas Sales Corporation Vs. Commnr. of Commercial Taxes [(1996) 4 SCC 433], holding that the transfer/sale of an import licence called Replenishment Licence (REP licence) granted under the 1992-97 Exim Policy was exigible to sales tax stands impliedly overruled by the Constitution Bench decision in Sunrise Associates Vs. Govt. of NCT of Delhi [(2006) 5 SCC 603] that held that lottery tickets were actionable claims and were, therefore, excluded from the definition of ‘goods’ under the Sales Tax Act and, hence, the sale of lottery tickets was not subject to sales tax and the earlier two-Judge Bench decision of the court in H. Anraj Vs. Govt. of Tamil Nadu [1986) 1 SCC 414] holding otherwise, did not lay down the correct legal position? It is to consider this question that this batch of six cases was referred to the three-Judge Bench. 3.    Apparently, lottery tickets are not the same thing as REP licences but on behalf of the appellants it was submitted that the decision in Vikas while upholding the taxability of REP licences, referred approvingly to Anraj which was expressly overruled by Sunrise. Further, the additional reasons given in Vikas for holding that REP licences were ‘goods’ were also disapproved by the Constitution Bench and, therefore, it must be held that the decision in Vikas too stood impliedly overruled. 4.    REP licences were granted under the Import and Export Policy for the period April 1988 to March 1991 issued under the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947. Those were replaced by Duty

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Entitlement Passbook (DEPB) provided for in the Exim Policy 1997- 02 under the Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992. Out of six cases before us only one relates to the sale of REP licences; the other five arise from the sale of DEPB. In those five cases it is contended on behalf of the appellants that DEPB has materially different features than REP and in any event the decision in Vikas shall not apply to the case of DEPB. 5.    We are thus required to consider two questions; whether the decision in Vikas can be said to be impliedly overruled by the Constitution Bench decision in Sunrise? And, if the answer to this question is in the negative and Vikas is still good law, would it also apply to sale of DEPB? 6.    It may also be mentioned here that out of the six cases in the batch, four (including the one relating to REP) arose under the Delhi Sales Tax Act, one under the Kerela General Sales Tax Act and one under the Bombay Sales Tax Act. 7.    In order to consider the first question we propose to examine the three decisions (Anraj, Vikas & Sunrise) in the order in which those came to be delivered. In Anraj the issue before the court was whether the sale of lottery tickets could be subjected to tax under the T. N. General Sales Tax Act and the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act. On behalf of the assesses, dealers in lottery tickets and agents and stockists of various lotteries organised by different states, including the State of West Bengal, it was contended that the sale of a lottery ticket is nothing more than a sale of a chance to win a prize and no transaction of sale of moveable property takes place or is involved in the sale of a lottery ticket, the ticket itself being merely a token of the

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chance purchased. It was alternatively argued that assuming, though not admitting that lottery tickets are a kind of movable property or some kind of merchandise they would be so only in the limited sense but in pith and substance they are ‘actionable claims’ that are expressly excluded from the definition of ‘goods’. A two-Judges’ Bench of this Court repelled both the contentions and in paragraph 27 of the judgment held that :       ".......a sale of a lottery ticket confers on the purchaser       thereof two rights (a) a right to participate in the draw       and (b) a right to claim a prize contingent upon his being       successful in the draw. Both would be beneficial       interests in movable property the former ‘in praesenti’,       the latter ‘in futuro’ depending on a contingency.       Lottery tickets, not as physical articles, but as slips of       paper or memoranda evidence not one but both these       beneficial interests in movable property which are       obviously capable of being transferred, assigned or sold       and on their transfer, assignment or sale both these       beneficial interests are made over to the purchaser for a       price. Counsel for the dealers sought to contend that the       concept of a lottery cannot be sub-divided in two parts,       namely, a right to participate and a right to receive the       prize but the two together constitute one single right. It       is not possible to accept this contention for the simple       reason that the two entitlements which arise on the       purchase of a lottery ticket are of a different character,       inasmuch as the right to participate arises in praesenti,       that is to say it is a choate or perfected right in the       purchaser on the strength of which he can enforce the       holding of the draw, while the other is inchoate right       which is to materialize in future as and when the draw       takes place depending upon his being successful in such       draw. Moreover, on the date of the purchase of the       ticket, the entitlement to participate in the draw can be       said to have been delivered unto the possession of the       purchaser who would be enjoying it from the time he has       purchased the ticket and as such it would be a chose in

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     possession while the other would be an actionable claim       or a chose in action as has been held in Jones v. Carter       [8 QB 134 : 115 ER 825] and King v. Connare [61 CLR       596] on which counsel for the dealers relied."

On the basis of the above the court, in paragraph 33 of the judgment concluded as follows:       "In the light of the aforesaid discussion my conclusions       are that lottery tickets to the extent that they comprise the       entitlement to participate in the draw are "goods"       properly so called, squarely falling with the definition of       that expression as given in the Tamil Nadu Act, 1959       and the Bengal Act, 1941, that to that extent they are not       actionable claims and that in every sale thereof a transfer       of property in the goods is involved."

Ten years later the question of taxability of REP license under the sales tax enactments of Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka came up for consideration before this court in Vikas. Before referring to the decision it will be useful to see what exactly REP license is and how the matter came to this court. 8.   The Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947 (now replaced by the Foreign (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992) empowered the Central Government to prohibit, restrict or otherwise control imports and exports. In exercise of the powers conferred by this Act, the Imports (Control) Order, 1955 was issued. Schedule I to the Order contained the list of articles of which imports were controlled. The import of the scheduled items was prohibited except (i) under and in accordance with a licence or a customs clearance permit issued under that Order, or (ii) if they were covered by an Open General Licence (subject to such conditions as might be stipulated), or (iii) if

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they were covered by the Savings Clause 11 of the Imports (Control) Order. Under the provisions of the 1947 Act and the Control Order 1955, the Government of India issued the Import and Export Policy for the period April, 1988 to March, 1991. The Policy had the definition clauses in Chapter I where ‘Registered Exporter’ was defined to mean a person holding a valid Registration Certificate issued by the specified designated authorities for the purposes of Export Promotion’. Chapter XV of the policy document dealt with the Import Policy for Registered Exporters. Paragraph 164 in that chapter declared that the object of the scheme was to provide to the Registered Exporters by way of import replenishment, the essential inputs required in the manufacture of the products exported and also to allow certain flexibilities to enable diversification of the export products.   Paragraph 165(1) provided that all exports subject to certain specified exception would qualify for the grant of import replenishment and paragraph 166(1), dealing with the extent of replenishment read as follows :       "The extent of import replenishment permissible against       each product enumerated in column 2 of Appendix 17       shall be that set out in column 3 thereof. These       percentages will apply in the case of exports made on or       after 1.4.1988, except for registered contracts, to which       the relevant provisions would apply."

The two special features of REP licence were the flexibility in its

utilisation and its easy transferability (paragraphs 175 & 183(1)

respectively of the policy document). Under the Import and Export

regime in existence at that time all imports against licences or even

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under the Open General Licence were subject to ‘actual user

condition’. A REP licence allowed its holder to import licensed

goods, free from ‘actual user condition’ but a REP licence was freely

transferable and it did not require any approval or endorsement by the

Licensing Authority. The registered importer to whom it was granted

in the first instance could transfer it to anyone else and the transferee

in turn could further transfer it to others. It could be endorsed in

favour of another party by the previous endorsee. Its transfer did not

require any approval or endorsement by the licensing authority and it

was simply governed by the ordinary law of the land. It remained

valid for a period of 18 months from the date of its issue. In a nutshell

during the previous licence-bound import and export regime the REP

licence was a kind of freely transferable, pre-duty paid import licence

not subject to ‘actual user condition’. It was thus a highly attractive

and sought after instrument/means for importing goods. In Vikas this

Court noted that a number of registered exporters who obtained REP

licences sold them to others for profit. In fact those licences were

being traded freely in the market and stock exchanges.

9.    The taxing authorities in some of the states (Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerela) subjected the transfer of REP licences to sales tax. The imposition of tax was challenged before the respective High

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Courts on the plea that REP licence was not ‘goods’ within the meaning of the sales tax laws and its transfer, therefore, was not exigible to sales tax. The Karnataka High Court rejected the plea holding that REP licence did not merely give its holder the right of undertaking a business but it also excluded competition. Hence, it could not be said that it was only a beneficial interest in some moveable property, not in the holder’s possession but it was itself a valuable right and it was undeniably freely transferable. In taking the view that REP licence was not merely actionable claim but it constituted ‘goods’, amenable to sales tax, the Karnataka High Court substantially relied on the earlier decision of this court in Anraj. It pointed out that if a lottery ticket that gave its holder only the right to participate in the lottery draw was ‘goods’ (as held by this court in Anraj) there was no reason why REP licence carrying a far more valuable and tangible right may not be ‘goods’. 10.   The Madras High Court also rejected the challenge to imposition of tax on transfer of REP licences. 11.    The matter finally came to this court in a batch of appeals from the High Courts’ decisions and writ petitions directly filed here, with the leading case being Vikas Sales Corporation and was decided by a Bench of three-Judges. 12.   In Vikas it was noticed at the outset that the High Courts’ judgments were influenced mainly by the decision in Anraj (Paragraphs 2 & 6 of the decision reported in SCC) but then this court went on to examine the matter on its own. It referred to Entry 54 in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution to which the Sales Tax Acts of the different States are referable and also Entry 92-A of

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List I that is the legislative head for the Central Sales Tax Act (Paragraph 10). It then referred to the definition of ‘goods’ as given in clause 12 of Article 366 of the Constitution and the expanded definition of the expression ‘tax on the sale or purchase of goods’ as contained in clause 29-A of that Article after its amendment by the Forty-sixth Amendment Act, 1982 and observed that sub-clauses (c) & (d) of the amended definition were relevant to the controversy before the court. The two clauses are as follows:       "366 (29-A) - "tax on the sale or purchase of goods"       includes -       (a)   xxx          xxx          xxx           xxx       (b)   xxx          xxx          xxx           xxx       (c) a tax on the delivery of goods on hire-purchase or any       system of payment by installments;

     (d) a tax on the transfer of the right to use any goods for       any purpose (whether or not for a specified period) for       cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration.

     (e)   xxx          xxx          xxx           xxx

     (f)   xxx          xxx          xxx           xxx"

The court then examined the definition of ‘goods’ as given in section 2(7) of the Sales of Goods Act and since it means, subject to certain exceptions, every kind of movable property, and since that expression is not defined in any of the Sales Tax enactments, it turned to the meanings of ‘moveable property’ and ‘immoveable property’ under the General Clauses Act. It further noticed that the General Clauses

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Acts of the three States gave identical definition of the two expressions. 13.   The Court then referred to the definition of ‘goods’ in the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 and the sales tax enactments of the three States, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala and found that in all the three states ‘goods’ was defined to mean all kinds of moveable property, subject to certain exceptions like newspapers, actionable claims, stocks, shares, securities etc. 14.   In view of the definition of ‘goods’ it became vital to correctly understand the nature and attributes of moveable property. The Sales Tax Acts had no definition of the expression and the meaning given in the General Clauses Acts of the three States was also found to be not of much help. The court, therefore, proceeded to examine in detail the legal notions of property and moveable property. It referred to Black’s Law Dictionary (6th. Edn. 1990), Dictionary of Commercial Law by A.H. Hudson (published by Butterworths, 1983) and Jowitt’s Dictionary of English Law (Sweet and Maxwell Limited, 1977) and noted that all the commentaries and the referred case law uniformly emphasised the expansive manner in which the expression ‘property’ was understood. The court also referred to the meanings of the term ‘property’ set out in Chapter 13, "The Law of Property" in Salmond’s Jurisprudence (12th. Edn. 1966) cited by the counsel for the assesses and observed that in Salmond’s there was nothing that would militate against the meanings ascribed to the expression in the authorities earlier referred to by the court and as a matter of fact those were consistent with each other.

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15.   The court then examined the features of REP licence and in particular it’s free transferability for consideration and finally recorded its conclusions in paragraph 29 of the judgment as follows:       "The above provisions do establish that REP Licences       have their own value. They are bought and sold as such.       The original licensee or the purchaser is not bound to       import the goods permissible thereunder. He can simply       sell it to another and that another to yet another person.       In other words, these licences/Exim Scrips have an       inherent value of their own and are traded as such. They       are treated and dealt with in the commercial world as       merchandise, as goods. A REP Licence/Exim Scrip is       neither a chose-in-action nor an actionable claim. It is       also not in the nature of a title deed. It has a value of its       own. It is by itself a property - and it is for this reason       that it is freely bought and sold in the market. For all       purposes and intents, it is goods. Unrelated to the goods       which can be imported on its basis, it commands a value       and is traded as such. This is because, it enables its       holder to import goods which he cannot do otherwise.       (With effect from 1.3.1992, of course, the very policy       and system under which these licences/scrips were being       issued, has been discontinued."

Having thus arrived at its conclusion quite independently, the court observed that the Karnataka and Madras High Courts in their respective judgments had placed strong reliance upon the earlier decision in Anraj. The court then briefly examined Anraj and, in paragraph 32 of the judgment, expressed its agreement with the view taken in the earlier decision as follows:       "We are of the opinion that the ratio of the said decision       fully supports the contention of the States herein. As       rightly pointed out by the Karnataka High Court, the       content of REP Licence/Exim Scrip is far more       substantial and real than that of a lottery ticket. If lottery

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     tickets are goods, there is no reason why these       licences/scrips are not goods."

The court also rejected the submission that REP licence was in the nature of an actionable claim and was, therefore, expressly excluded from the definition of ‘goods’ in the Sales Tax Acts. In this regard, in paragraphs 34 and 35 of the judgment the court observed and held as follows :       "We are also of the opinion that these licences/scrips       cannot be treated as actionable claims. "Actionable       claims" is defined in Section 3 of the Transfer of       Property Act in the following words :

        "‘Actionable claims’ means a claim to any          debt, other than a debt secured by mortgage of          immovable property or by hypothecation or          pledge of moveable property, or to any          beneficial interest in moveable property not in          the possession, either actual or constructive, of          the claimant, which the civil courts recognise          as affording grounds for relief, whether such          debt or beneficial interest be existent, accruing,          conditional or contingent."

     When these licences/scrips are being bought and sold       freely in the market as goods and when they have a value       of their own unrelated to the goods which can be       imported thereunder, it is idle to contend that they are in       the nature of actionable claims. Indeed, in Anraj the       main contention of the petitioners was that a lottery       ticket was in the nature of an actionable claim. The said       argument was rejected after an elaborate discussion of       law on the subject. We agree with the said decision and       on that basis hold that the REP Licences/Exim Scrips are       not in the nature of actionable claims."

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The court then considered the decisions relied upon on behalf of the assessees    and   held   those      were   of   no   assistance   to   the appellants/petitioners before the court. Then commenting upon the decision relied upon by the counsel for the State of Tamil Nadu the court made the following observation in paragraph 42 of the judgment:         "....Having regard to the context in which the said         question had arisen, we do not think it necessary to refer         to the observations relied upon since the material         referred to by us on the meaning of the expression         "moveable property" and the decision in Anraj is more to         the point."

The court also rejected the various other ancillary submissions made on behalf of the assessees and finally upheld the levy of tax on the transfer of REP licences under Karnataka and Tamil Nadu Sales Tax Acts. 16.     This was Vikas. 17.     Coming back to the lottery tickets, the decision of this court in Anraj was understood and applied differently by different High Courts. The Karnataka High Court, in Nirmal Agency v. CTO held that according to Anraj a sale of lottery tickets conferred on its purchaser two rights (a) a right to participate in the draw and (b) a right to claim a prize depending upon his being successful in the draw. Further, according to the decision it was the transfer of the first right alone that amounted to sale of goods exigible to tax. The taxing authority would therefore be obliged to determine how much of the consideration was referable to the right to participate in the draw and

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how much to the chance of wining, and thereafter assess the dealer on the first part. 18.    The Delhi High Court, on the other hand, relying upon the same decisions in Anraj and Vikas took the view that in the sale of a lottery ticket the full consideration would be subject to tax because the lottery ticket in itself was ‘goods’, properly so called. 19.    The appeal from the decision of the Delhi High Court in Sunrise Associates v. Govt. of NCT of Delhi came to this court in which the need was felt for reconsideration of the decisions in Anraj and Vikas (insofar as it affirmed the decision in Anraj) and because the decision in Vikas was rendered by a three-Judge Bench the appeal was referred to a Constitution Bench. Here it is important to bear in mind that the decision in Vikas dealing with the question of taxability of REP licences was not the subject of reference and Vikas came under reference only to the extent it approved Anraj.              The Constitution Bench hearing the appeal, as we shall see presently, never lost sight of this aspect of the matter. 20.    The Constitution Bench hearing Sunrise began by making a survey of the provisions of the Constitution and the other laws within the frame work of which the issue arose for consideration. It referred to Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule and Article 246(3) of the Constitution. It also referred to Entry 92-A of List I of that Schedule. It noted that Clause 12 of Article 366 of the Constitution, before its amendment, defined ‘goods’ as including "all materials, commodities and articles" but it did not define the expression ‘sale of goods’. It then referred to the Constitution Bench decision in State of Madras V. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras Limited), [1959 SCR

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379] that held that in the absence of a definition in the Constitution the expression must have the same meaning as given to it in section 4 (1) of the Sales of Goods Act where it is defined as a "contract whereby the seller transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the buyer for a price". The narrow meaning ascribed to the expression by this court was naturally followed by courts all over the country and this led to the amendment of Article 366 by insertion of clause 29A, defining ‘Sale of Goods’ so as to include the six kinds of transactions which, as a result of the Court’s decision in Gannon Dunkerley, were excluded from the expression. It took note of sub- clause (a) of clause 29-A which is as follows:     "29-A "tax on the sale or purchase of goods" includes--

     (a) a tax on the transfer, otherwise than in pursuance of       a contract, of property in any goods for cash, deferred       payment or other valuable consideration;

     and such transfer, delivery or supply of any goods shall       be deemed to be a sale of those goods by the person       making the transfer, delivery or supply and a purchase of       those goods by the person to whom such transfer,       delivery or supply is made."

The Court summed up the legal position emerging from the insertion

of clause 29A in Article 366 of the Constitution in paragraph 7 of the

judgment as follows:

     "Therefore in order to constitute a deemed sale within       the meaning of Article 366(29-A) (a), there has to be (1)       goods (2) a transfer of property in the goods (3) valuable       consideration. The requirement of an agreement for sale       is not necessary for constituting a sale under this sub-

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     clause. The absence of any one of these elements would       mean that the transaction far from being a sale within       Gannon Dunkerley definition, would not even be a       deemed sale within the extended definition of sale under       Article 366(29-A) (a)."

The Court then went on to note that following the insertion of clause

29-A in Article 366 of the Constitution, consequential amendments

were made in the States’ Sales Tax laws to take full benefit of the

expanded meaning given to the expression ‘sale or purchase of

goods’ and observed that in all the States’ Acts the expression

"goods" was given the same meaning as in the Sale of Goods Act and

more importantly, in all those definitions ‘actionable claim’ was

expressly excluded from the definition of ‘goods’. It further noted

that ‘actionable claim’ was defined in Section 3 of the Transfer of

Property Act, 1882 as meaning

     "a claim to any debt, other than a debt secured by       mortgage of immovable property or by hypothecation or       pledge of movable property, or to any beneficial interest       in movable property not in the possession, either actual       or constructive, of the claimant, which the civil courts       recognize as affording grounds for relief, whether such       debt or beneficial interest be existent, accruing,       conditional or contingent."

Having thus laid out the statutory framework the decision in Sunrise

examined the dealers’ contention that a lottery ticket was only a slip

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of paper or memoranda evidencing the right of the holder to share in

the prize or the distributable funds and was merely a convenient mode

for ascertaining the identity of the winner. It then examined the

conclusion arrived at by the Court in Anraj and in paragraph 14 of the

judgment summed up the ratio of the Anraj decision as follows:

     "The Court in H.Anraj came to the conclusion that the       transfer of a lottery ticket upon consideration paid by the       purchaser was not a mere contract creating an obligation       or right in personam between the parties, but was in the       nature of a grant.         The Court noted the various       definitions of the word "lottery" in dictionaries and       authoritative text books and decisions of the courts and       held that a lottery was composed of three essential       elements, namely, (1) chance, (2) consideration; and (3)       prize. As we have mentioned earlier, according to the       learned Judges a sale of a lottery ticket conferred on the       purchaser two rights viz. (a) the right to participate in the       draw, and (b) the right to claim a prize contingent upon       the purchaser being successful in the draw. Both were       held to be beneficial interests in movable property, the       former in praesenti, the latter in futuro depending on the       contingency."

The Sunrise decision then proceeded to note how the decision in Anraj was interpreted by the Karnataka Court (paragraph 19 of the judgment) and quite differently to it by the Delhi High Court (paragraph 23 of the decision).

21.   The Court then noted the plea of the appellants/dealers in the

sale of lottery tickets that Anraj was wrong in drawing a distinction

between the right to participate in the draw and the chance to win the

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prize; that such bifurcation was artificial as both were part of the

same transaction and further that even on the "two rights" theory each

of those rights would be choses-in-action. It also noted the criticism

meted out to the decision in Vikas Sales insofar as it cited the free

transferability of REP licence as an additional reason holding that it

was ‘goods’ within the meaning of the sales tax laws.

22.    Here, it is significant to note that in Sunrise an attempt was

made to address the Court on the question whether the sale of DEPB

would attract sales tax under the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959. On

behalf of the State of Maharashtra it was submitted that considering

the valuable right conferred by the DEPB, it was an item of movable

property and therefore "goods" within the definition of the word in

Section 2(13) of the Act. However, the Court firmly refused to go

into that controversy observing that the validity of the decision in

Vikas was not an issue before it for consideration. In paragraph 29 of

the decision in Sunrise it was clearly stated as follows:

     "It is necessary at this stage to clarify that the order of       reference in Sunrise v. NCT, Delhi is limited to the       question whether lottery tickets are "goods". We have       not been called upon to answer the question whether       REP licences (or the DEPB which has replaced the REP       licences) are "goods". Although we have heard counsel       at length on this, having regard to the limited nature of       the reference, we do not decide the issue. The decision       in Vikas Sales was referred to only because it approved

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     the reasoning in H.Anraj and not because the referring       court disagreed with the conclusion in Vikas Sales that       REP liecenes were goods for the purposes of levy of       sales tax. Indeed REP licences were not the subject-       matter of the appeal before the referring court and could       not have formed part of the reference. The only question       we are called upon to answer it whether the decision in       H.Anraj that lottery tickets are goods for the purposes of       Article 366(29-A) (a) of the Constitution and the State       sales tax laws, was correct."

Having thus identified the issue that came up for consideration before

it, the Court, in view of the apparent divergence in understanding

Anraj, once again analysed the decision and in paragraphs 32 and 33

of the judgment held and found that in Anraj the lottery ticket was

held to be ‘goods’ - not as a physical article but as a slip of paper or

memorandum evidencing (a) the right to participate in the draw, and

(b) the right to claim a prize contingent upon the purchaser being

successful in the draw. Further, for the purpose of levy of sales tax,

lottery ticket could be regarded as ‘goods’ properly so called insofar

as it entitled its holder to take part in the draw. In other words, lottery

ticket, to the extent it evidenced the right to claim the prize, was not

‘goods’ but an actionable claim and, therefore, expressly excluded

from the definition of ‘goods’ under the sales tax laws. A transfer of

it was consequently not a sale. The lottery ticket per se had no innate

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value. The Delhi High Court was, therefore, plainly in error in

interpreting and following Anjar.

23.   Having thus settled the precise ratio of the decision in Anjar,

the Court turned to the meaning of ‘goods’ for the purposes of

imposition of sales tax and in paragraph 35 of the judgment observed

as follows:

     "The word "goods" for the purposes of imposition of       sales tax has been uniformly defined in the various sales       tax laws as meaning all kinds of movable property. The       word "property" may denote the nature of the interest in       goods and when used in this sense means title or       ownership in a thing. The word may also be used to       describe the thing itself. The two concepts are distinct, a       distinction which must be kept in mind when considering       the use of the word in connection with the sale of goods.       In the Dictionary of Commercial Law by A. H. Hudson       (1983 Edn.) the difference is clearly brought out. The       definition reads thus:

           "‘Property’ -- In commercial law this may carry its       ordinary meaning of the subject-matter of ownership.       But elsewhere, as in the sale of goods it may be used as a       synonym for ownership and lesser rights in goods.

     Hence, when used in the definition of "goods" in the       different sales tax statutes, the word "property" means       the subject-matter of ownership. The same word in the       context of a "sale" means the transfer of the ownership       in goods."                                              (Emphasis added)

At this stage the decision in Vikas once again came under reference; it

was pointed out (in paragraphs 38 to 40 of the decision in Sunrise)

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that in Vikas the Court observed that REP licences were being bought

and sold freely in the market as goods and took their saleability as an

additional ground to hold that it would be idle to contend that those

licences were in the nature of actionable claim. In other words,

saleability was a feature of distinction between goods and actionable

claim (which but for its express exclusion from the definition is also a

kind of goods). Goods were saleable but actionable claim was not.

The decision in Sunrise by giving many illustrations showed that

transferability for value was as much an attribute of actionable claim

as any other kind of goods and transferability was not the point of

distinction between actionable claim and other goods that could be

sold.    Hence, to say that an article or right was goods and not

actionable claim because it was saleable was pointless. Commenting

upon this aspect of the decision in Vikas the Constitution Bench in

paragraph 38 of the decision in Sunrise observed as follows:

       "It was assumed that actionable claims are not         transferable for value and that that was the difference         between "actionable claims" and those other goods         which are covered by the definition of "goods" in the         Sale of Goods Act, 1930 and the sales tax laws. The         assumption was fallacious and the conclusion insofar as         it was based on this erroneous perception, equally         wrong."

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The decision in Sunrise then examined the nature of a ticket. It

referred to Webster’s Words and Phrases, Permanent Edn., Vol.25-A

and in paragraph 43 came to hold as follows:

     "The sale of a ticket does not necessarily involve the sale       of goods. For example, the purchase of a railway ticket       gives the right to a person to travel by railway. It is       nothing other than a contract of carriage. The actual       ticket is merely evidence of the right to travel. A contract       is not property, but only a promise supported by       consideration, upon breach of which either a claim for       specific performance or damages would lie (Said v.       Butt) [1920 (3) KB 497]. Like railway tickets, a ticket to       see a cinema or a pawnbroker’s ticket are memoranda or       contracts between the vendors of the ticket and the       purchasers. Cases on whether the terms specified on       such tickets bind the purchaser are legion. It is sufficient       for our purpose to note that tickets are themselves,       normally evidence of and in some cases the contract       between the buyer of the ticket and its seller. Therefore       a lottery ticket can be held to be goods if at all only       because it evidences the transfer of a right."

                                              (Emphasis added)

It further pointed out that the purchaser of lottery ticket simply acquires a claim to a conditional interest in the prize money which was not in the purchaser’s possession. It, therefore, followed that the right would fall squarely within the definition of actionable claim and would therefore be excluded from the definition of ‘goods’ under the Sale of Goods Act and the sales tax statutes. Finally, in paragraph 45 of the decision Sunrise found and held as follows:       "45. The further distinction sought to be drawn in       H.Anraj between the chance to win and the right to       participate in the draw was in our opinion unwarranted.

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     A lottery having been held to be in essence a chance for       a prize, the sale of a lottery ticket can only be a sale of       that chance. There is no other element. Every right can       be sub-divided into lesser rights. When these lesser       rights culminate in a legally recognizable right, it is the       latter which defines the right. The right to participate in       the draw is a part of the composite right of the chance to       win and it does not feature separately in the definition of       the word "lottery". It is an implicit part of the chance to       win. It is not a different right. The separation is       specious since neither of the rights can stand without the       other. A draw without a chance to win is meaningless       and one cannot claim a prize without participating in the       draw. In fact the transfer of the chance to win assumes       participation in the draw."                                                (Emphasis added)

It further held that even if the right to participate in the draw was held

to be a separate right there would be no difference and in paragraph

48 of the decision observed as follows :

     "Even if the right to participate is assumed to be a       separate right, there is no sale of goods within the       meaning of sales tax statutes when that right is       transferred. When H.Anraj said that the right to       participate was a beneficial interest in movable property,       it did not define what that movable property was. The       draw could not and was not suggested to be the movable       property. The only object of the right to participate       would be to win the prize. The transfer of the right       would thus be of a beneficial interest in movable       property not in possession. By this reasoning also a right       to participate in a lottery is an actionable claim."

It thus arrived at the conclusion that the decision in Anraj wrongly

held that sale of lottery ticket is a sale of goods.

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24.   The decision in Sunrise makes two very significant points and to us it appears that the decision mainly turns on those two points. The first is with regard to the two different meanings of ‘property’, as highlighted in paragraph 35 of the judgment and the second is with regard to the distinction between interests in goods and a contract as highlighted in paragraph 43 of the judgment. In paragraph 35 of the decision the court explained that the word ‘property’ occurring both in the definitions of ‘goods’ and ‘sale’ carries different meanings. In the definition of ‘goods’ the word ‘property’ is used to mean the subject matter of ownership, that is to say, the thing itself.    In the definition of ‘sale’ the same word is used to mean the nature of interests in goods, that is, title or ownership. 25.   In paragraphs 42 and 43 of the decision, the court examined the nature of a ticket and by giving illustrations of a railway ticket, a ticket to see a cinema or a pawnbroker’s ticket pointed out that the tickets were normally evidence of and in some cases the contract between the buyer of the ticket and its seller. Being a contract or evidence of a contract, naturally a ticket can not be property either as a thing (of value) in itself or title or ownership to anything. It, therefore, followed that the sale of lottery ticket did not involve transfer of ‘property’ either in the sense of the thing itself (goods) or in the sense of title or ownership (sale). 26.   On purchasing a lottery ticket one merely gets a claim to a conditional interest in the prize money that is not in the purchaser’s possession and the right would, therefore, squarely fall within the definition of actionable claim. The Constitution Bench decision in Sunrise further held that Anraj wrongly split up the right accruing to

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the purchaser of a lottery ticket. The right was one and indivisible. But even assuming the right to participate in the draw to be a separate right there would still be no sale of goods within the meaning of sales tax laws because the draw itself could not be any movable property and the participation in the draw was only with the object to win the prize.    The transfer of the right would thus be of a conditional beneficial interest in movable property that is not in possession, in other words, once again an actionable claim. 27.      Thus on a detailed examination, we are unable to see how the decision in Sunrise can be said to alter the position in regard to the sale of REP licenses as held by the earlier decision in Vikas. It is noted above that the Constitution Bench in Sunrise firmly and expressly declined to go into the question whether REP licences (or DEPB which replaced REP licences) were ‘goods’. It is indeed true that the Constitution Bench in Sunrise did not approve the decision in Vikas insofar as it gave their free marketability as an additional reason to hold that REP licences were not actionable claim but ‘goods’ properly so called.     The Constitution Bench held that the assumption that actionable claims were not transferable for value was quite unfounded and the conclusion drawn on that basis was quite wrong. In paragraphs 39 and 40 of the decision, the Sunrise decision gave illustrations of a number of actionable claims which are transferable.

28.      But to our mind that does not in any way change the position

insofar as REP licenses are concerned. While examining the three-

Judge Bench decision in Vikas earlier in this judgment it is seen that

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the Court first came to hold that REP licence/exim scrip fell within

the definition of goods quite independently. The court found and

held that REP licenses had their own value; they were freely bought

and sold in the market for their intrinsic value and for that reason

alone those were goods. (See paragraph 29 of the decision in Vikas

that is reproduced above). It was only after coming to the conclusion

that the Court proceeded to examine the matter in light of the

observations made in Anraj relating to lottery tickets and that too

because the Karnataka and Madras High Courts had heavily relied

upon the Anraj decision for holding that the sale of REP licences was

exigible to sales tax. On a careful reading of the decision in Vikas it

is apparent that it was the intrinsic value of REP licence that brought

it within the definition of goods.

29.   At this stage we feel obliged to put in a caveat in regard to the

observations made in Sunrise about marketability being a feature of

distinction between ‘goods’ proper and actionable claims. What was

said in Vikas, as we understand it, was that the innate value of REP

licence and its free transferability made it into a market commodity.

The illustrations given in paragraphs 39 and 40 of the decision in

Sunrise, namely, (i) a right on the fulfillment of certain conditions to

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call for delivery of goods mentioned in a contract, (ii) negotiable

instruments, (iii) right to recover insurance money, (iv) a partner’s

right to sue for an account of a dissolved partnership, (v) the right to

claim the benefit of a contract not coupled with any liability, (vi) a

claim for arrears of rent and (vii) a right to the credit in a provident

fund account are all indeed transferable for consideration but none of

these is a market commodity. The holder of any of the above rights

or claims may or may not be able to find a ready buyer at a given

time; conversely a prospective buyer may not find any of the above

rights or claims available for purchase by going to the market at any

time. Contrary to this, REP licenses had always a market, that is to

say, there were people willing to sell and others willing to buy REP

licences at all times. Its innate value coupled with free transferability

made REP licences into a market commodity and it was that aspect of

the matter that Vikas referred to for holding that REP licences could

not be classified as actionable claims. Those were goods properly so-

called having innate value and a ready market. The position becomes

further clear by the completely contrasting findings in Sunrise (in

regard to lottery tickets) and in Vikas (in regard to REP licences). In

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Sunrise after giving illustrations of transferable actionable claims

(paragraphs 39 and 40) paragraph 41 begins as :

     "A lottery ticket has no value itself. It is a mere piece of       paper."

On the contrary, in Vikas paragraph 29 begins as follows:

     "The above provisions do establish that REP licences       have their own value. They are bought and sold as       such."

We thus have not the slightest doubt in our mind that the decision in

Sunrise in no way affects the position insofar as REP licences are

concerned and the legal position in regard to their sale is concluded

by the decision in Vikas.

30.   This takes us to the next question, whether what is said in

Vikas in regard to REP licences would also apply in the case of

DEPB. On behalf of the appellants it is strongly contended that

DEPB has materially different features and hence, the decision in

Vikas will have no application to it. Mr.A.K.Jain, learned counsel

appearing for the appellants in Civil Appeal No.4075/2007 especially

made elaborate arguments to bring out the points of distinction

between REP licence and DEPB. But before proceeding to examine

what is DEPB and how far it is different from REP licence it will be

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useful to take a look at the provisions of law under which the present

cases arise and to establish their similarity with the statutory

provisions that came up for consideration in Vikas and Sunrise. As

noted above, the present appeals arise under the Delhi Sales Tax Act,

1975, the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 and the Bombay Sales

Tax Act, 1959.

31.   In the Delhi Sales Tax Act ‘goods’ is defined in Section 2(g) as

follows:

     ""goods" includes all materials, articles, commodities       and all other kinds of movable property, but does not       include newspapers, actionable claims, stocks, shares,       securities or money."

The expression "sale" is defined in Section 2(l) as follows:

     ""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 ---

     ***           ***         ***          ***

     ***           ***         ***          ***"

In the Kerala General Sales Tax Act "goods" is defined in Section 2

(xii) as follows:

     ""goods" means all kinds of movable property (other       than newspapers, actionable claims, electricity, stocks       and shares and securities) and includes live stock, all

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     materials, commodities and articles (including those to       be used in the construction, fitting out, improvement or       repair of immovable property or used in the fitting out,       improvement or repair of movable property) and every       kind of property (whether as goods or in some other       form) involved in the execution of a works contract, and       all growing crops, grass or things attached to, or forming       part of the land which are agreed to be severed before       sale or under the contract of sale."

"Sale" is defined here in Section 2(xxi) as follows:

     "‘sale’ with all its grammatical variations and cognate       expressions means every transfer [whether in pursuance       of a contract or not] of the property in goods by one       person to another in the course of trade or business for       cash or for deferred payment or other valuable       consideration, but does not include a mortgage,       hypothecation charge or pledge;

     ***          ***          ***          ***

     Explanation (3B) - a transfer of right to use any goods       for any purpose (whether or not for a specified period)       for cash, deferred payment or other valuable       consideration shall be deemed to be a sale.

     ***          ***          ***          ***"

In the Bombay Sales Tax Act "goods" is defined in Section 2(13) as

follows:

     ""goods" means every kind of movable property (not       being newspapers or actionable claims or money, or       stocks, shares or securities), and includes growing crops,       grass, and trees and plants (including the produce       thereof) and all other things attached to or forming part

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     of the land which are agreed to be severed before sale or       under the contract of sale."

"Sale" is defined in Section 2(28) as follows:

     ""sale" means a sale of goods made within the State for       cash or deferred payment or other valuable       consideration, and includes any supply by a society or       club or an association to its members on payment of a       price or of fees or subscription, but does not include a       mortgage, hypothecation, charge or pledge; and the       words "sell", "buy" and "purchase" with all their       grammatical variations, and cognate expressions, shall       be construed accordingly."

Schedule C of the Bombay Act contains a list of ‘Goods, Other Than

Declared Goods, The Sale Or Purchase Of Which Is Subject To Sales

Tax Or Purchase Tax’. At Sl.No.26(6) of the Schedule, ‘credit of

duty entitlement pass book’ is entered with sales tax or purchase tax

leviable at the rate of four per cent.

32.   A perusal of the aforesaid provisions would show that the

definitions of "goods" and "sale" under the Delhi, Bombay and

Kerala Acts are much the same as the definitions of the two

expressions in the Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and West Bengal

enactments. Hence, what is said in Vikas and Sunrise in regard to the

legal provisions fully applies to the cases in hand.

33.   Coming now to DEPB it may be recalled that it was part of the

export and import policy for the period April 1, 1997 to March 31,

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2002 issued under the Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation)

Act, 1992. In order to appreciate the differences between DEPB and

REP licences it needs to be borne in mind that after the regimen of

licences and permits was greatly relaxed it became possible to import

goods free from licencing control apart from a few items which were

under the negative list, requiring a licence for import. In the changed

circumstances the ‘licence’ part of REP licence became useless and

REP licence was, therefore, replaced by DEPB broadly retaining the

other features of REP licence.

34.   The 1997 export and import policy in Chapter 7 dealt with

‘Duty Exemption Scheme’. Paragraph 7.1 under that chapter stated

that the Duty Exemption Scheme would consist of Duty Free Licence

and Duty Entitlement Pass Book (DEPB). Paragraphs 7.2 to 7.7 dealt

with different kinds of duty free licences. Paragraph 7.25 described

Duty Entitlement Pass Book as follows:

     "The objective of Duty Entitlement Passbook Scheme is       to neutralize the incidence of basic customs duty on the       import content of the export product. The neutralization       shall be provided by way of grant of duty credit against       the export product. The duty credit under the scheme       shall be calculated by taking into account the deemed       import content of the said export product as per Standard       Input Output Norms and determine basic customs duty       payable on such deemed imports. The value addition       achieved by export of such product shall also be taken

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        into account while determining the rate of duty credit          under the Scheme.

        Under the Duty Entitlement Pass Book (DEPB) Scheme,          an exporter shall be eligible to claim credit as a specified          percentage of job value of exports made in freely          convertible currency. The credit shall be available          against such export products and at such rate as may be          specified by the Director General of Foreign Trade by a          Public Notice issued in this behalf.

        Any item except those appearing in the Negative List of          Imports shall be allowed for import without payment of          basic customs duty, special duty of customs as well as          additional duty of customs, against the credit under a          Duty Entitlement Pass Book (DEPB). The holder of          Duty Entitlement Pass Book (DEPB) shall have the          option to pay additional customs duty, if any, in cash as          well."

Paragraph 7.26 provided that third party exports would also be

admissible for grant of credit under DEPB. Paragraph 7.29 provided

that DEPB might be issued on (a) Post export basis and (b) Pre export

basis.

35.      Paragraph 7.32 dealt with transferability and provided as

follows:

        "The DEPB on post export basis and/or the items          imported against it are freely transferable. The transfer          of DEPB shall however be for import at the port          specified in the DEPB which shall be the port from          where exports have been made. However, imports from          a different port shall be allowed as per the terms and          conditions of notification issued by Department of          Revenue."

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Paragraph 7.40 stated that pre-export DEPB would be non-

transferable and also subject to actual user condition but in this case

we are not concerned with pre-export DEPB.

36.   It is thus to be seen that in two vital aspects, relevant to the

issue under consideration, DEPB is exactly the same as REP licence.

Like REP license it has an innate value and for which it freely sells in

the market. Much argument was advanced on the point that DEPB,

unlike REP licence was not a licence for import of goods but the

submission is clearly misconceived and unacceptable. DEPB is not a

licence simply because under the liberal import policy no licence is

required to import a very large number of goods and very few items,

placed under the negative list, require a licence for import. We are,

therefore, unable to accept the submission that DEPB is materially

different from REP licence and its transfer by way of sale would not

be exigible to sales tax.

37.   Mr.Soli J. Sorabjee, learned senior advocate, appearing in Civil

Appeal No.6893 of 2003 led the arguments on behalf of the

appellants. Mr. Sorabjee referred to Entry 26(6) in Schedule C of the

Bombay Sales Tax and submitted that what was sought to be taxed

was the transfer of "Credit" in Duty Entitlement Passbook. Learned

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counsel submitted that ‘credit’ could never mean ‘goods’ under the

sales tax laws. Elaborating the point he submitted that credit was

earned on the basis of export(s) made by the assessee and the credit

lying with the Government in favour of the assessee was in the nature

of debt. The credit represented an ascertained sum of money and it

was clearly a debt even though it was not refundable or payable in

cash.     A debt that could be discharged by way of a set-off is

nonetheless a debt. In this case the credit represented a conditional

debt that could be discharged by way of a set-off against the duty

payable on a future import. Being in the nature of debt, the DEPB

credit plainly fell within the first part of the definition of actionable

claim.

38.      Learned counsel alternatively submitted that even if the credit

is seen not as a debt but as movable property, the sale of DEPB only

involved the transfer of the right to claim credit. The credit not being

in possession of the claimant, the right to utilize it against duty

payable on a future import was certainly a beneficial interest in that

movable property. Seen thus the credit would still fall within the

second part of the definition of actionable claim.

39. In support of the submission, Mr. Sorabjee sought to derive

support from the Constitution Bench decision in Sunrise which,

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according to him, laid down that in the sale of a lottery ticket what is

transferred is the conditional right to claim a beneficial interest in the

prize money which was movable property, not in possession of the

purchaser. He also submitted that the saleability of DEPB would not

make any difference because many other actionable claims were

equally saleable.

40.   We are afraid, we find the submission unacceptable. We are

unable to see DEPB either as a debt or as a beneficial interest in

movable property not in possession of the claimant. To us it is plain

that DEPB like REP licence has its own intrinsic value and the

purchaser, on payment of consideration, buys something for its value.

The DEPB credit is thus clearly ‘goods’ within the meaning of sales

tax laws and its sale clearly exigible to tax.

41.   We may observe here, if DEPB (or for that matter REP

license!) has to be compared with a lottery ticket, it can only be

compared with a lottery ticket that has won the prize. The prize-

winning lottery ticket ceases to be a mere piece of paper having no

value itself. It acquires inherent value and becomes itself a thing of

value. Imagine a situation where prize winning lottery tickets are

freely available for sale. (As a matter of fact, clandestine sale of the

prize winning lottery ticket for conversion of black money into white

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is not completely unknown!). In buying the prize winning lottery

ticket the purchaser would pay the consideration for the value that the

piece of paper has acquired and in that situation we fail to see how

that ticket can be described as anything else but ‘goods’.

42.    If any more analogies are to be given one might compare

DEPB with prepaid meal tickets or prepaid petrol coupons or

accumulated flying miles. A meal ticket, a petrol coupon or flying

miles credit has its own intrinsic value. If permitted free

transferability those would soon become market commodities and

would be sold and bought for their value as ‘goods’.

43.   In light of the discussions made above, the two questions

framed at the beginning of the judgment are to be answered as

follows :

     The Constitution Bench decision in Sunrise does not alter the

     position in regard to levy of tax on sale of REP licence and on

     that issue the three-Judge Bench decision in Vikas continues to

     hold the field.

     DEPB has an intrinsic value that makes it a market commodity.

     Therefore, DEPB, like REP licence qualifies as ‘goods’ within

     the meaning of the Sales Tax laws of Delhi, Kerala and

     Mumbai and its sale is exigible to tax.

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44.   We thus find no merit in any of these appeals. All the appeals

are dismissed but with no order as to costs.

                                              ...........................J.

                                              [B.N.Agrawal]

                                              ...........................J.

                                              [G.S.Singhvi]

                                              ...........................J.

                                              [Aftab Alam]

New Delhi, May 6, 2008.