23 September 1985
Supreme Court
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ONKARLAL NANDLAL Vs STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ANR.

Bench: BHAGWATI,P.N. (CJ)
Case number: Appeal Civil 207 of 1983


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PETITIONER: ONKARLAL NANDLAL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT23/09/1985

BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ) BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ) PATHAK, R.S. SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)

CITATION:  1986 AIR 2146            1985 SCR  Supl. (2)1075  1985 SCC  (4) 404        1985 SCALE  (2)1217

ACT:      Rajasthan Sales  Tax Act, 1954, s.2(o) Explanation II - Interpretation of - Effect of incorporating sub-s.(2) of s.4 of Central Sales Tax Act 1956 in the Explanation - Resale of goods in  the course  of inter-State  trade  of  commerce  - Whether it can still be regarded as resale within the State.      Interpretation of  Statutes -  Rule of  incorporation - Explained.      Practice & Procedure - Appeal directly against an order by an  Officer in  the hierarchy - When can be entertained - Art. 136, Constitution of India.

HEADNOTE:      The Rajasthan  Sales Tax  Act 1954  (State Act) by Sub- section (o)  of section  2 defines "sale" to mean inter alia "any transfer  of property in goods for cash or for deferred payment or for any other valuable consideration. Explanation (ii) of  section 2(o)  provides that "a transfer of property in goods  shall be deemed to have been made within the State if it  fulfils the  requirements of  sub-sec. (2) of s. 4 of the Central  Sales Tax Act, 1956 (Central Act). Sub-s.(s) of sec.2 defines  "taxable turn  over" to  mean "that  part" of turn  over  which  remains  after  deducting  therefrom  the aggregate amount  of the  proceeds of  sale of  goods, which have been  sold to persons outside the State for consumption outside the  State. Sub-s.(1)  of sec.4  of the  Central Act provides that  subject to the provisions contained in sec.3, when a  sale or  purchase is  determined in  accordance with sub-s.2 to  take place inside a State, such sale or purchase shall be  deemed to  have  taken  place  outside  all  other States. Sub-s.(2) lays down that a sale or purchase of goods shall be  deemed to  take place inside a State, if the goods are within the State in the case of specified or ascertained goods, at the time the contract of sale is made.      The appellant-assessee,  a registered dealer both under the provisions  of  the  State  Act  and  the  Central  Act, purchased poppy  seeds  against  Declarations  in  Form  No. S.T.17 furnished to the 1076 selling dealers.  In the  Declarations in Form No. S.T.17 it was stated  that the assessee was purchasing the poppy seeds

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for the  purpose of "resale within the State". The assessee, resold the  poppy seeds  to different buyers under contracts executed by  and between  the assessee  and  the  buyers  at Bhawani Mandi.  Admittedly, when  these contracts  were made between the assessee and the buyers, the poppy seeds forming subject matter  of the  contracts  were  specific  goods  in deliverable condition  situate  in  Bhawani  Mandi  and  the property in the poppy seeds accordingly passed to the buyers under the  contracts in  Bhawani Mandi. While completing the assessment of  the assessee  to sales tax for the assessment years  1975-76  and  1976-77,  the  Commercial  Tax  Officer included the  purchase price  paid by  the assessee  for the poppy seeds in his taxable turn over under the provisions of second proviso  to cl.4 of sub-s.(s) of s.2 of the State Act on the  ground that  the resales of the poppy seeds effected by the  assessee were  sales in  the course  of  inter-State trade and  commerce and  were therefore not sales within the State and  hence the  poppy seeds  purchased by the assessee were used  for a  purposed other  than that mentioned in the Declarations.      Aggrieved  by   the  aforesaid   order,  the   assessee preferred civil  appeals Nos. 207 and 208 of 1983 by special leave directly  to Supreme Court. The facts of these appeals are broadly  similar to  the  facts  of  the  other  appeals comprised in  this group. Counsel on behalf of the appellant contended (i)  that thought  it was  true that  the  resales effected by  it were sales in course of inter-State trade or commerce as  defined in  sub-s.(3) of  the Central Act, they were still  sales within  the State  in accordance  with the principles formulated  in sub-s.(2)  of sec.4 of the Central Act; (ii) that the resale by it being sales in the course of inter-State trade  or commerce,  were not liable to be taxed by the  State  and  could  be  taxed  only  by  the  Central Government under  the Central  Act but  that did not deprive the resales  of their  character of  sales within  the State which character  attached to  them by reason of sub-s.(2) of sec.4 which was incorporated in the State Act by Explanation II to  sub-s.(o) of  sec.2 of  the State  Act and (iii) that what was  incorporated in  Explanation II  to  sub-s.(o)  of sec.2 of  the State  Act was  only sub-s.(o) of sec.2 of the State Act  and not sub-s.(1) of sec.4 of the Central Act and therefore the  opening words  in sub-s.(1)  of sec.4  had no impact on  the provisions enacted in the Explanation. On the other hand,  counsel for  the respondent  Revenue argued (1) that if on an application of the principles set out in sec.3 of the  Central Act,  a sale  was a  sale in  the course  of inter-State trade  or Commerce,  it could  not  possibly  be regarded as a sale within the 1077 State and  (2)  that  since  the  resales  effected  by  the appellant-assessee were  admittedly sales  in the  course of inter-State admittedly  sales in  the course  of inter-State trade or  commerce, they  could not  be said  to be  resales within the  State as  envisaged in  the Declarations in From No.ST 17.      Allowing the appeals, ^      HELD :  1. It cannot be said that the assessee used the goods for  a  purpose  other  than  that  mentioned  in  the Declarations. The assessee resold the goods within the State as mentioned in the Declarations in Form No. ST.17 furnished by him  to be  selling dealers. The assessments made on each assessee to  the  extent  that  the  assessments  sought  to include in  the taxable  turnover the purchase price paid by the assessee  in respect  of  the  goods  purchased  against

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Declarations in  Form No.  ST.17 furnished  to  the  selling dealers are set aside. [1090 D-E]      2. There is, no antithesis between a sale in the course of inter-State  trade or  commerce and  a  sale  inside  the State. Even  an inter-State  sale must  have a situs and the situs may  be in  one State  or another. It does not involve any contradiction  in saying  that an  inter-state  sale  or purchase is  inside a  State or  outside it.  The situs of a sale may  fall for consideration from more than one point of view. It  may require  to be  considered for  the purpose of determining  its  exigibility  to  tax  as  also  for  other purposes such  as the  one arising  in the present cases. Of course, a  sale which  is in the course of inter-State trade or commerce  cannot be  taxed by a State Legislature even if its situs is within the State, because the State Legislature has no  legislative competence  to impose tax on sale in the course of  inter-State trade  or commerce.  That can be done only by Parliament. If therefore a question arises whether a sale is  exigible to  tax by  the State  Legislature, it may have to  be considered whether it is a sale in the course of inter-State trade  or commerce.  The same  sale  in  another context may  have to  be examined  from a different point of view for  determining where its situs lies and whether it is a sale  inside the  State or  outside the  State.  There  is therefore no  incompatibility in  the same sale being both a sale in  the course  of inter-State trade or commerce within the meaning  of sec.3  of the  Central Act  as also  a  sale inside the State in accordance with the principles laid down in sub-s. 2 of sec.4 of the Central Act. [1086 D-H; 1087 A]      3. It  is a  recognised cannon  of construction that an expression used  in a  rule,  bye  law  or  form  issued  in exercise of 1078 power conferred  by a statute must, unless there is anything repugnant in  the subject  or context, have the same meaning as is  assigned to  it under  the  statute.  The  expression "resale within the State" in Form No. ST17 must therefore be read in  the light  of Explanation II to sub-s. (o) of sec.2 of the  State Act which lays down as to when a sale shall be deemed to have been made within the State and this provision in the  Explanation must govern the determination of what is "resalw  within  the  State"  within  the  meaning  of  that expression as used in Forom No. ST17. [1087 C-E]      3.(ii) Explanation  II to  sub-s.(o) of  sec.2  of  the State Act,  enacts as to when a sale shall be deemed to be a sale within  the State by reference to sub-s.(2) of sec.4 of the Central  Act. It  is only  sub-s.(o) of  sec.2 which  is incorporated in  Explanation II to sub-s.(o) of sec.2 of the State Act  and the  Court is  called upon  to consider as to what is  the effect  of such incorporation. The Court is not concerned with  the interpretation of sub-s.(1) or sub-s.(2) of s.4  in the  context of s.3 of the Central Act. The State Legislature could  have  very  well  reproduced  the  entire language of  sub-s.(2) of  sec.4 bodily in Explanation II to sub-s.(o) of  sec.2 but  it preferred  to employ  a  simplar device by  incorporating by reference the provisions of sub- s.(2) of  sec.4 in Explanation II to sub-s.(o) of sec.2. The rule of  incorporation is  that when a subsequent Act amends an earlier  one in such a way as to incorporate itself, or a part of  itself, into the earlier, then the earlier Act must thereafter be  read and  construed (except  where that would lead to  a repugnancy, inconsistency or absurdity) as if the altered words had been written into the earlier Act with pen and ink  and the  old words  scored out  so that  thereafter there is  no need  to refer  to the  amending  Act  at  all.

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Therefore, Explanation  II to  sub-s.(o) of  sec.2  must  be interpreted as  if  sub-s.(2)  of  sec.4  were  written  out verbatim in  the Explanation  and once sub-s.(2) of sec.4 is written out in the Explanation, there is no occasion or need to refer to the Central Act from which this incorporation is made or  to its  purpose or context. [1087 E-F; 1088 H; 1089 A-C; 1089 C-D]      In re  Wood’s Estate  (1886) 31 Ch. D. 607 & Shamrao v. Parulekar, District  Magistrate, Thana A.I.R. 1952 S.C. 324, relied upon.      Craies on  Statute Law, 5th Edition, page 207, Crawford on Statutory Construction page 110, referred to.      Commissioner of  Sales tax  v. Godrej Soap Private Ltd. 23 S.T.C.  489, State  of Orissa  v. Johri Mal 37 S.T.C. 157 and Georgopoulos  v. State  of Maharashtra  37  S.T.C.  187, approved. 1079      M/s.  Polestar   Electronic  (Pvt.)   Ltd.   v.   Addl. Commissioner  Sales  Tax  and  Anr.  [1978]  1  S.C.C.  636, referred to.      In the  instant case, at the time when the contracts of resale were  made by  the assessee,  the goods were specific ascertained goods  lying at  Bhawani Mandi  inside the State and if that be so, the resales affected by the assessee must be deemed  to have  taken place  inside  the  State  on  the principles laid  down in  sub-s.(2) of  sec.4 of the Central Act as  incorporated in Explanation II to sub-s.(o) of sec.2 of the  State Act.  It did  not make  any difference to this position that the resales were sales in the course of inter- State trade or commerce. The only consequence of the resales being sales  in the  course of inter-State trade or commerce was that  they were not taxable under the State Legislation. [1089 F-G]      Ordinarily the  Supreme Court  does  not  entertain  an appeal directly  against an  order made by an officer in the hierarchy, when there are other remedies by way of appeal or revision provided to an assessee under the statute. However, it would be futile to drive the assessee to the procedure of appeal and  revision and  then a  Writ Petition  to the High Court when  the High Court in another case has already taken the view  that when a resale is made by an assessee which is in the course of inter-State trade or commerce, it cannot be regarded as  a resale within the State and hence such resale would constitute  a breach  of the  Declaration given by the assessee to  the selling  dealer so  as to  attract  of  the applicability and  the purchase  price paid  by the assessee would consequently  be liable  to be included in the taxable turnover of the assessee. [1081 C-G]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 207-08 Of 1983 etc.      From the  Judgment and  Order dated  22.9.1982  of  the Commercial Taxes  Officer, Jhalawar  for Tax Assessment Year (1) 1982-83.      Soli J.  Sorabjee, F.S.  Nariman, R.L.  Ghieya and S.K. Jain for the Appellant.      Dr. L.M. Singhvi and B.D. Sharma for the Respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by 1080      BHAGWATI, C.J.  These appeals  by special leave raise a short question  of construction of certain provisions of the Rajasthan Sales Tax Act 1954 (hereinafter referred to as the

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State Act). It is a pure question of law and does not depend for its  determination  on  the  distinctive  facts  of  any particular case out of this group of appeals but in order to arrive  at  a  proper  determination,  it  is  necessary  to consider  this   question  in  its  proper  perspective  and therefore the  broad constellation  of facts  in  which  the question arises may be briefly stated.      We will  confine ourselves  only to  the facts of Civil Appeal Nos. 207-208 of 1983 for the facts of this appeal are broadly similar  to the facts of the other appeals comprised in this  group. The  assessee is  a partnership  firm  which carries on  business in grains, oil seeds, poppy seeds etc., in Bhawani  Mandi in  District  Jhalawar  in  the  State  of Rajasthan. The  assessee is  a registered  dealer under  the provisions of  the State  Act and  is also  registered as  a dealer under  the provisions  of the  Central Sales  Tax Act 1956 (hereinafter  referred to  Central Act). The assessment year  with  which  we  are  concerned  in  this  appeal  are assessment years  1975-76  and  1976-77.  During  these  two assessment years, the assessee purchased poppy seeds against Declarations in  Form No.  S.T. 17  furnished to the selling dealers. These  Declarations in Form No. S.T. 17 stated that the assessee  was purchasing the poppy seeds for the purpose of resale  within the  State. The assessee, after purchasing the poppy  seeds against these Declarations, resold the same to different  buyers under contracts executed by and between the assessee  and the  buyers at  Bhawani Mandi.  It was not disputed that  at the  date when  these contracts  were made between the assessee and the buyers, the poppy seeds forming subject matter  of the  contracts  were  specific  goods  in deliverable condition  situate  in  Bhawani  Mandi  and  the property in the poppy seeds accordingly passed to the buyers under the  contracts in  Bhawani Mandi.  The resale of poppy seeds  to  the  buyers  were  therefore,  according  to  the assessee, sales  within the  State and  it could not be said that the  poppy seeds purchased by the assessee were used by it for  any purpose  other than  the one  mentioned  in  the Declarations  furnished  by  the  assessee  to  the  selling dealers. But while completing the assessment of the assessee to sale  tax for  the assessment  years 1975-76 and 1976-77, the Commercial Tax Officers took the view that the resale of the poppy  seeds effected  by assessee  were  sales  in  the course of  inter-State trade and commerce and were therefore not sales  within  the  State  and  hence  the  poppy  seeds purchased by the assessee were used for a purpose 1081 other than  that mentioned  in the Declarations furnished by the assessee  to the  selling dealers  and consequently  the purchase price  of the poppy seeds was liable to be included in the taxable turn over of the assessee. The Commercial Tax Officer accordingly  passed two  assessment orders  on  22nd September 1982,  one for the assessment year 1975-76 and the other for  the assessment  year  1976-77  and  included  the purchase price  paid by  the assessee for the poppy seeds in the taxable  turn over  of the  assessee. The assessee there upon preferred  the present appeal by special leave directly to this Court.      Now at  the outset we should like to make it clear that ordinarily we do not entertain an appeal directly against an order made  by an  officer in  the hierarchy, when there are other remedies  by way  of appeal or revision provided to an assessee under  the statute.  Here the  assessee could  have preferred an  appeal against the order of assessment made by the Commercial  Tax Officer  and he  could have then gone in revision to  the Board of Revenue and thereafter to the High

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Court under article 226 or 227 of the Constitution and then, if he  was aggrieved  by the order passed by the High Court, he could come to this Court under Article 136. We would have ordinarily insisted  on  the  assessee  going  through  this hierarchy of  judicial process and declined to entertain the petition for  special leave  directly against  the order  of assessment made  by the  Commercial Tax Officer. But we were informed by  the learned Advocate appearing on behalf of the assessee, and  this was  not  controverted  by  the  learned advocate appearing  on behalf  of the  Department, that  the High Court  in another  case has already taken the view that when a  resale is made by an assessee which is in the course of inter-State trade or commerce, it cannot be regarded as a resale  within   the  State  and  hence  such  resale  would constitute a breach of the Declaration given by the assessee to the  selling dealer so as to attract of the applicability and  the   purchase  price   paid  by   the  assessee  would consequently  be  liable  to  be  included  in  the  taxable turnover of  the assessee.  It would  therefore, argued  the learned counsel  for the  assessee, be  futile to  drive the assessee to  the procedure of appeal and revision and then a Writ Petition  to the  High Court.  This contention urged on behalf of  the assessee had force and we accordingly granted special leave  and entertained  this  appeal.  Similarly  we granted special  leave in  the other cases as well and hence those appeals are placed before us alongwith this appeal.      The short  but interesting  question  that  arises  for consideration on these facts is : when an assessee Purchases 1082 goods from  a selling  dealer against  a Declaration in Form No. ST 17 starting that the goods are being purchased by him for resale  within the  State and he then proceeds to resell the goods  and such  resale is  in the course of inter-State trade or  commerce,  would  such  resale  be  liable  to  be regarded as  a sale  not within the State for the purpose of the Declaration  in Form  No. ST  17, merely because it is a sale in  the course  of inter-State trade or commerce. Would the character  of such  resale, namely, that it is a sale in the course  of inter-State trade or commerce be inconsistent with its  being also a sale within the State as contemplated in the  Declaration in  Form No. ST 17. The determination of this question  depends on  the true  interpretation of a few relevant provisions  of the  State Act.  Section  2  is  the definition Section  and it defines various terms used in the State Act. Sub-section (o) of Section 2 defines sale to mean inter alia  "any transfer  of property  in goods for cash or for   deferred   payment   or   for   any   other   valuable consideration". There are two Explanations to Section 2 sub- section (o).  We need  not refer  to the  first  Explanation since it  has no  bearing on  the issues  arising  in  these appeals but the second Explanation is material and it may be reproduced as follows :           "A transfer  of property  in goods shall be deemed           to have  been made  within the State if it fulfils           the requirements  of sub-section  (2) of Section 4           of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (Central Act 74           of 1956.)" "Sale Price" is defined in Section 2 sub-section (p) to mean inter alia  "the amount payable to a dealer as consideration for the  sale of  any goods,  less any  sum allowed  as cash discount". Then  there is  the definition  of "turn over" in sub-section  (t)   of  Section   2  and  according  to  this definition, "turn  over" means  "the aggregate of the amount of sale  price received or receivable by a dealer in respect of the  sale or  supply of  goods in the carrying out of any

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contract." The  expression "taxable turn over" is defined in sub-section (s) of Section 2 and it provides inter alia that "taxable turn  over" means  "that part  of turn  over  which remains after  deducting therefrom  the aggregate  amount of the proceeds  of sale  of goods,  which have  been  sold  to persons  outside  the  State  for  consumption  outside  the State".  It   is  clear  on  a  combined  reading  of  these definitions that  "taxable turn  over" means  the  aggregate amount of  sale price  received or receivable by a dealer in respect of sales of goods within the State. It is only sales of goods  within the  State which  can be taxed by the State Legislature Clause (i) of Article 286 of the 1083 Constitution provides  inter alia  that no  law of  a  State shall impose  or authorise  the imposition  of a  tax on the sale or  purchase of goods where such sale or purchase takes place outside  the State  and Clause  (ii) of  that  Article empowers Parliament  to formulate principles for determining when a  sale or  purchase of goods can be said to have taken place  outside   the  State.   These  principles  have  been formulated by  Parliament in  Section 4  of the  Central Act which reads :           "4. When  is a  sale or  purchase of goods said to           take place  outside a  State -  (1) Subject to the           provisions contained  in Section 3, when a sale or           purchase is  determined in  accordance  with  sub-           section (2)  to take  place inside  a State,  such           sale or  purchase shall  be deemed  to have  taken           place outside all other States.           (2) A sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to           take place inside a State, if the goods are within           the State           (a) in  the case of specific or ascertained goods,           at the time the contract of sale is made; and           (b) in  the case of unascertained or future goods,           at the time of their appropriation to the contract           of sale  by the  seller or  by the  buyer, whether           assent of  the other  party is prior or subsequent           to such appropriation." Sub-section (2)  of Section  4 lays  down the principles for determining when a sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take  place inside  the State. Once on the application of these principles set out in sub-section (2) of Section 4, it is determined  that a  sale or  purchase of  goods has taken place inside  a particular  State, both according to general principles as  also by  the express words of sub-section (1) of Section  4 it  must be deemed to have taken place outside all other  States. Such  sale or  purchase can then be fixed only by  the State  in which it must be deemed to have taken place on  the application  of the principles set out in sub- section (2)  of Section  4 and no other State can impose tax on such  sale or purchase by reason of Clause (i) of Article 286. Parliament  has also  in Section  3 of  the Central Act formulated  principles   for  determining  when  a  sale  or purchase of goods can be said to take place in the course of inter-State trade  or commerce  and  in  Section  5  of  the Central Act 1084 principles have  been formulated for determining when a sale or purchase of goods can be said to take place in the course of import  or export.  These principles were necessary to be formulated because a sale or purchase of goods in the course of inter-State  trade or commerce cannot be taxed by a State on account of Entry 92A in List I of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution  which sets out the topic of tax on sale or

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purchase of  goods in  the course  of inter-State  trade  or commerce within  the  exclusive  legislative  competence  of Parliament and  so far  as sale  or purchase of goods in the course of  import or  export is  concerned it  is  also  not taxable by  a State  by reason of Clause (i) of Article 286. It is  necessary to  mention here  that sub-section  (1)  of Section 4  opens with  the words  "Subject to the provisions contained in  Section 3", but when we turn to Explanation II to sub-section  (o) of  Section 2  of the  State Act we find that what  is incorporated  in that sub-section is only sub- section (2)  of Section 4 and not sub-section (1) of Section 4 nor Section 3 or Section 5 of the Central Act.      Now the Declarations in Form No. ST 17 furnished by the assessee to  the selling dealers uniformally stated that the goods were  purchased by  the assessee  for the  purpose  of resale within  the State.  The  advantage  of  furnishing  a Declaration in  Form No.  ST 17  is that  the selling dealer would not be liable to pay sales-tax on the sale effected by him against  the Declaration  and  the  assessee  would  not therefore have  to pay  to the  selling dealer  sales-tax as part of  the purchase price nor would the assessee be liable to pay  any purchase  tax on  the purchase  made by  him  on account of  the saving  enacted in  Section 5A  of the State Act. But  the second  proviso to  clause (iv) of sub-section (s) of  Section 2 of the State Act provides as to what would be the  consequence if  an assessee  purchases goods without paying any tax on the strength of a Declaration furnished by him and  the goods  are then used by him for a purpose other than the  one mentioned  in the  Declaration. It  enacts the following provision  with a  view to  penalising an assessee who commits  a breach  of the  statement made  by him in the Declaration:           "Provided  further   that  when   any  dealer  has           purchased any  goods without paying any tax on the           strength of  any declaration  furnished by him and           the said  goods are  used by  him for  any purpose           other than  the one  mentioned in the declaration,           the purchase price of such goods shall be included           in his taxable turn over." 1085 It was  on the basis of this proviso that the Commercial Tax Officer sought  to tax  the assessee  on the  purchase price paid by  it to  the selling  dealers on  the ground that the assessee had  not resold  the goods within the State but had resold them  in the  course of inter-State trade or commerce and thus  use the  goods  for  a  purpose  other  than  that mentioned in  the, Declarations  in  Form  No.  ST  17.  The question is  whether this  view taken  by the Commercial Tax Officer is right.      The  principal  argument  advanced  on  behalf  of  the Department was  that  since  the  resales  effected  by  the assessee were  admittedly sales in the course of inter-State trade or  commerce they  could not  be said  to  be  resales within the  State as  envisaged in  the Declarations in Form No. ST  17 and the goods were therefore used by the assessee for a purpose other than that mentioned in the Declarations. The Department  contended that  if on  an application of the principles set  out in  Section 3 of the Central Act, a sale was a  sale in  the course of inter-State trade or commerce, it could not possibly be regarded as a sale within the State and in  support of  this conention  the Department relied on the opening  words "Subject  to the  provisions contained in Section 3"  in sub-section  (1) of  Section 4 of the Central Act. The assessee on the other hand contended that though it was true  that the  resales effected by it were sales in the

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course of  inter-State trade  or commerce as defined in sub- section (3) of the Central Act, they were still sales within the State  in accordance  with the  principles formulated in sub-section (2)  of  section  4  of  the  Central  Act.  The argument of  the asessee was that the resales effected by it being sales  in the  course of inter-State trade or commerce were not  liable to be taxed by the State and could be taxed only by  the Central  Government under  the Central  Act but that did not deprive the resales of their character of sales within the  State which character attached to them by reason of sub-section  (2) of  Section 4  which was incorporated in the State  Act by  Explanation  II  to  sub-section  (o)  of Section 2 of the State Act. The answer given by the assessee to the argument of the Department based on the opening words of sub-section  (1) of Section 4 of the Central Act was that what was  incorporated in  Explanation II to sub-section (o) of Section  2 of  the State  Act was only sub-section (2) of Section 4  and not  sub-section (1)  of  Section  4  of  the Central Act  and therefore  the opening words in sub-section (1) of  Section 4 had no impact on the provisions enacted in Explanation. These  rival arguments  raised  an  interesting question of  interpretation and  though it is res integra so far as this Court is concerned we find that there 1086 are a large number of decisions of various High Courts which have accepted  the construction  contended for  on behalf of the assessee.  We may refer only to a few of these decisions namely, Commissioner  of Sales  Tax v.  Godrej Soap  Private Limited 23  S.T.C 489, State of Orissa v. Johri Mal 37 S.T.C 157 and Georgopoulos v. State of Maharashtra 37 S.T.C 187.      We may  first clear  the ground  by stating facts which were not  in dispute  between the  parties. There  were  two basic facts  on which there was no dispute. One was that the resales effected by the assessee were sales in the course of inter-State trade  or commerce within the meaning of section 3 of  the Central  Act. The  assessee did  not  dispute  the correctness of  this position.  The second  was that  at the time when the contracts of resale were made by the assessee, the goods were specific ascertained goods situate in Bhawani Mandi, that  is, within  the State  and  on  the  principles formulated in  sub-section (2)  of section  4 of the Central Act, the resale effected by the assessee were deemed to take place inside  the State.  The only  question is  whether  by reason of  the resale  being sales  in the  course of inter- State trade  or commerce, they ceased to be sales inside the State. We do not think the answer to this question admits to any serious  doubt. There  is, in our opinion, no antithesis between a  sale  in  the  course  of  inter-State  trade  or commerce and  a sale  inside the  State. Even an inter-State sale must  have a situs and the situs may be in one State or another. It  does not  involve any  contradiction in  saying that an  inter-State sale  or purchase  is inside a State or outside it.  The situs  of a sale may fall for consideration from  more  than  point  of  view.  It  may  require  to  be considered for the purpose of determining its exigibility to tax as  also for  other purposes  such as the one arising in the present case. Of course a sale which is in the course of inter-state trade  or commerce  cannot be  taxed by  a State Legislature even  if its  situs is within the State, because the State  Legislature  has  no  legislative  competence  to impose tax  on sale  in the  course of  inter-State trade or commerce. That  can be done only by Parliament. If therefore a question  arises whether  a sale is exigible to tax by the State Legislature,  it may  have to be considered whether it is a  sale in  the course of inter-State trade or comemerce.

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The same  sale in  another context  may have  to be examined from a  different point  of view  for determining  where its situs lies  and whether  it is  a sale  inside the  State or outside the  State. There is therefore no incompatibility in the same sale being both a sale in the course of inter-state trade or  commerce within  the meaning  of Section  3 of the Central Act as also a sale 1087 inside the State in accordance with the principles laid down in sub-section (2) of Section 4 of the Central Act.      Now let  us turn  to consider  the purpose mentioned in the Declarations in Form No. ST 17 furnished by the assessee to the selling dealers. The purpose for which the goods were purchased by  the assessee was stated in the Declarations to be "resale  within  the  State".  Obviously  the  expression "resale within  the State"  in Form  No. ST 17 must bear the same meaning  it has  in the  State Act.  Form No. ST 17 has been prescribed  by the  State Government in exercise of the power conferred  under Section 26 of the State Act and it is a recognised  cannon of construction that an expression used in a  rule, by  law or  form issued  in  exercise  of  power conferred by  a  statute  must,  unless  there  is  anything repugnant in  the subject  or context, have the same meaning as is  assigned to  it under  the  statute.  The  expression "resale within  the State"  in Form No. ST 17 must therefore be read in the light of Explanation II to sub-section (o) of section 2 of the State Act which lays down as to when a sale shall be  deemed to have been made within the State and this provision in  the Explanation  must govern the determination of what  is "resale  within the State" within the meaning of that expression as used in Form No. ST 17.      That takes  us to  a consideration of Explanation II to sub-section  (o)  of  Section  2  of  the  State  Act.  This Explanation enacts as to when a sale shall be deemed to be a sale within  the State  by reference  to sub-section  (2) of Section 4  of  the  Central  Act.  If  a  sale  fulfils  the requirements of  sub-section (2) of Section 4 of the Central Act, it shall be deemed to be a sale within the State and it will be  so also  for the purpose of the Declaration in Form No. ST  17. It is with reference to the requirements of sub- section (2) of Section 4 that we shall have to judge whether the resales  effected by  the assessee were sales within the State. But  before we  do so, it would be convenient at this stage to  refer to  the argument  of the Department based on the opening  words "Subject  to the  provisions contained in section 3"  in sub-section  (1) of  Section 4 of the Central Act. The  Department argued that since the enactment in sub- section (1)  of Section  4 is  expressly made subject to the provision contained  in Section 3, the latter provision must over-ride the  former and  therefore, once it is found on an application of the principles formulated in Section 3 that a sale is  in the  course of interstate trade or commerce, the provision enacted in Section 4 would have no application and it cannot be said of such a sale that it 1088 is a  sale inside the State. This argument of the Department suffers from  an obvious  fallacy. In  the first  place, all that the  opening words "Subject to the provisions contained in Section  3" intend to convey is that even where a sale is determined in  accordance with  sub-section (2) of Section 4 to take place inside a State and therefore outside all other States, it  would not exclude the applicability of Section 3 and if  it satisfies  the requirements  of that  section, it would still  be a sale in the course of inter-state trade or commerce taxable  under the  provisions of  the Central Act.

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Secondly, we  are not concerned here with the interpretation of sub-section  (1) or  sub-section (2)  of section 4 in the context of  Section 3  of the  Central Act. We are concerned only with  Explanation II to sub-section (o) of Section 2 of the State  Act and  that Explanation  refers  only  to  sub- section (2)  of section 4 and not to sub-section (1) of that section or  to section  3. It  is only  sub-section  (2)  of Section 4  which is  incorporated in  Explanation II to sub- section (o)  of section 2 of the State Act and we are called upon  to   consider  as  to  what  is  the  effect  of  such incorporation. The  State Legislature  could have  very well reproduced the entire language of sub-section (2) of section 4 bodily  in Explanation  II to sub-section (o) of Section 2 but it preferred to employ a simpler device by incorporating by reference  the provisions of sub-section (2) of Section 4 in Explanation  II to  sub-section (o)  of  section  2.  The doctrine of  incorporation by  reference has  been succintly explained by  Lord Esher, M.R. in In re Wood’s Estate (1886) 31 Ch. D. 607 in the following words :           "It is  to put  them into the Act of 1855, just as           if they  had been  written into  it for  the first           time. If  a subsequent  Act brings  into itself by           reference some of the clauses of a former Act, the           legal effect  of that,  as has often been held, is           to write  those sections  into the new Act just as           if they  had been  actually written in it with the           pen, or  printed in  it, and,  the moment you have           those clauses  in  the  later  Act,  you  have  no           occasion to refer to the former Act at all." This Court  also explained  the doctrine of incorporation by reference in  similar terms  in  Shamrao  v.  Parulekar,  v. District Magistrate,  Thana A.I.R. 1952 S,C. 324, when Court observed :           "The rule  is that when a subsequent Act amends an           earlier one  in  such  a  way  as  to  incorporate           itself, or  a part  itself, into the earlier, then           the earlier Act 1089           must thereafter  be  read  and  construed  (except           where   that   would   lead   to   a   repugnancy,           inconsistency or  absurdity)  as  if  the  altered           words had  been written  into the earlier Act with           pen and  ink and  the old words scored out so that           thereafter there  is  no  need  to  refer  to  the           amending Act at all. This is the rule in England :           see Craies  on Statute Law, 5th Edition, page 207;           it  is   the  law  in  America:  see  Crawford  on           Statutory Construction,  page 110;  and it  is the           law which  the Privy  Council applied  to India in           Keshors Poddar v. Nandulal Mallick." We must  therefore proceed  to interpret  Explanation II  to sub-section (o)  of Section  2  as  if  sub-section  (2)  of section 4  were written  out verbatim in the Explanation and once sub-section  (2) of  Section 4  is written  out in  the Explanation, there  is no  occasion or  need to refer to the Central Act  from which this incorporation is made or to its purpose or context. We need not therefore allow ourselves to be oppressed by the opening words "Subject to the provisions contained in  Section 3"  in sub-section (1) of Section 4 or by the context in which Section 4 occurs in the Central Act.      We must  accordingly read Explanation II to sub-section (o) of  Section 2  of the State Act as if sub-section (2) of section 4  of the  Central Act were written into it and then proceed to apply the Explanation to the facts of the present case in  order to  determine whether the resales effected by

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the assessee  were sales inside the State within the meaning of the Explanation. Now it was not disputed on behalf of the Department that  at the  time when  the contracts  of resale were  made   by  the   assessee,  the  goods  were  specific ascertained goods  lying at  Bhawani Mandi  inside the State and if that be so, the resales effected by the assessee must be deemed  to have  taken place  inside  the  State  on  the principles laid  down in sub-section (2) of Section 4 of the Central Act as incorporated in Explanation II to sub-section (o) of  Section 2  of the  State Act.  It did  not make  any difference to  this position  that the resales were sales in the course  of  inter-State  trade  or  commerce.  The  only consequence of  the resales  being sales  in the  course  of inter-State trade or commerce was that they were not taxable under the  State Legislation.  But there  is no provision in the State  Act which requires that in order that an assessee may be  exempt from  purchase tax  in respect of purchase of goods made  by him  against a Declaration in Form No. ST 17, he must resell the goods within the State in such a manner 1090 that such  resale becomes  exigible to  tax under  the State Legislation. We  had occasion to consider a similar question in  M/s   Polestar   Electronic   (Pvt.)   Ltd.   v.   Addl. Commissioner, Sales Tax and Anr., [1978] 1 S.C.C. 636, where we pointed out in relation to the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act 1941  as applicable  in Delhi that the words "for resale by him"  included not  only resale in Delhi but also outside Delhi even  if no tax was exigible under that legislation on sale outside Delhi. But apart from the fact that it makes no difference that  the resales  offected by  the assessee were not exigible  to tax  under the State Legislation, it may be possible to contend that such resales were taxable under the Central Act and if that be so, a substantial part of the tax recovered under  the Central  Act would  go to  the State to agument its revenues.      We are  therefore of  the view that the assessee resold the goods  within the State as mentioned in the Declarations in Form  No. ST  17 furnished by the assessee to the selling dealers and  it cannot  be said  that the  assessee used the goods for  a  purpose  other  than  that  mentioned  in  the Declarations. We  must therefore allow these appeals and set aside the  assessments made  on each  assessee to the extent that the  assessments  sought  to  include  in  the  taxable turnover the  purchase price paid by the assessee in respect of the  goods purchased  against Declarations in Form No. ST 17 furnished  to the  selling dealers.  The respondents will pay  to   the  assessee  in  each  appeal  costs  throughout including the costs of the appeal. M.L.A.                                      Appeals allowed.