10 April 1986
Supreme Court
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COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX, U.P. Vs AURIAYA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, ALLAHABAD.

Bench: MUKHARJI,SABYASACHI (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 874 of 1974


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PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX, U.P.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: AURIAYA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, ALLAHABAD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/04/1986

BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) SINGH, K.N. (J)

CITATION:  1986 AIR 1556            1986 SCR  (2) 430  1986 SCC  (3)  50        1986 SCALE  (1)1068  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1990 SC 313  (23)  R          1992 SC  96  (14)

ACT:      Uttar Pradesh  Sales Tax Act, 1948, s. 2(h), 7-F and 29 Sales Tax  - Refund  of -  Tax paid  under provision  of law subsequently held  unconstitutional -  Liability of State to refund tax - Limitation period for claiming such refund.      Indian Contract  Act 1872,  s. 72  - Money  paid  under mistake of law - Liability to return/refund.

HEADNOTE:      The proviso  to s.  29 of  the U.P.  Sales Tax Act 1948 provides that  no claim  to the  refund of  any tax or other amount paid  under the  Act shall  be allowed  unless it was made within  24 months  from the date on which the order for assessment was passed or within 12 months of the final order passed in  appeal, revision  or reference  in respect of the order of assessment whichever Period is later.      The respondent-assessee  had been taxed on the basis of sale of  forward contracts  for the  assessment year 1949-50 and for  subsequent years.  After  coming  to  know  of  the decision of the Supreme Court in Sales Tar officer, Pilibhit v. M/s.  Budh Prakash  Jai Prakash, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243 that the provision  for taxation of sales tax on forward contract was ultra vires, the respondent-assessee filed a Revision in 1955 for quashing the assessment order for the relevant year 1955 i.e. within a year of the assessment order. me revision was dismissed  in September  1958 on  the ground that it had been filed  after a long delay and was barred by limitation. m e  assessee there  after made  a formal application before the Sales  Tax Officer  for refund of the amounts which were deposited in accordance with various assessment orders under mistake. The Sales Tax Officer dismissed that application as barred by  period of  limitation prescribed under Article 96 of the First Schedule of the Indian Limitation Act 1908. The assessee then  filed a  revision to  the court of Additional Judge (Revision)  Sales Tax,  U.P. against  the order of the Sales Tax Officer. Relying 431 upon the  decision of  the Allahabad High Court in Sales Tax Commissioner, U.P. v. Sada Sukh Veopar Mandal, 1959 S.T.C.

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57, the  Additional Judge  (Revision) held that there was no period of  limitation and  ordered refund  of sales  tax  of Rs.3535.3 for  1948-49, Rs.9,205.12  for 1949-50, Rs.3,653.8 for 1950-51 and Rs.5,014.3.3 for 1951-52. me High Court also upheld the  order of  the Additional  Judge (Revision)  in a reference at  the instance of the revenue. It held: (a) that the period  of limitation under Article 96 of the Limitation Act could  not be  taken into consideration by the Sales Tax Authorities in  refusing to  allow refund;  and (b) that the Additional Judge  (Revisions) Sales  Tax, U.P.  was  legally justified in entertaining the revision application after the lapse of several years from the date of the assessment order and that  the sums  deposited by  respondent-company towards sales tax  for the  year 1949-50 and onwards were refundable to the company.      Dismissing the  appeal of  the appellant-revenue,  this Court, ^      HELD: 1.(i)  Article 265  of the  Constitution  enjoins that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law.  Therefore, when  moneys are paid to the State which the State  has no  legal right  to receive, it is ordinarily the duty  of the  State subject to any special provisions of any particular statute or special facts and circumstances of the case, to refund the tax of the amount paid. [437 D-H]      1.(ii) Where  indubitably there  is in the dealer legal title to  get the money refunded and where the dealer is not guilty of  any  latches  and  where  there  is  no  specific prohibition against  refund, one should not get entangled in the cobweb of procedures but do substantial justice. [445 F- G]      Suresh Chandra  Bose v. State of West Bengal, 38 S.T.C. 99 and State of West Bengal and Ors. v. Suresh Chandra Bose, 45 S.T.C. 118, approved.      2.(i) The  rights and  the obligations  of the  parties must be  found within  the four  corners of  the Act and the Supreme Court  in an  appeal under an Act must act under the four corners  of  law,  but  in  interpreting  the  relevant procedural provisions,  fairness and  justice should  be the approach and 432 even in  a fiscal  statute, equity  should prevail  wherever language permits. [438 H; 493 A]      2.(ii) Section  7-F of  the Act  is significant  in the sense that  it proceeds  on the  basis that refund had to be made  in   certain   cases.   The   section   enjoins   that notwithstanding anything  contained in the Act, no tax, fee, interest or  penalty under the Act shall be recovered and no refund shall  be allowed  if the  amount  involved  for  any assessment year  was less  than five  rupees. It  recognises liability and the obligation of refund if the amount is more than rupees  five. Sub-section  (5) of  section 9 stipulates that if  the amount  of tax  assessed, fee levied or penalty imposed was  reduced by  the appellate  authority under sub- section (3), he shall order the excess amount of tax, fee or penalty, if  realised to  be refunded. Section 29 stipulates that  the   assessing  authority   shall,  in   the   manner prescribed, refund  to a  dealer any  amount of tax, fees or other dues  paid in  excess of the amount due from him under the Act.  Sub-section (3)  of section  29  provides  certain embargo against  refund in  certain cases.  Therefore, it is apparent that  the obligation  to refund  in cases of excess realisation or excess payment by the Taxing Authority of the dues from  the seller  as  well  as  from  the  assessee  is recognised in the scheme of the Act. [439 G-H; 440 A-B; E-F]

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    3.(i) Section  72 of  the  Indian  Contract  Act,  1872 recognises that  a person  to whom  money has  been paid, or anything delivered  by mistake or under coercion, must repay or return it. Money paid under a mistake of law comes within ’mistake’ in  section 72  of the  Indian Contract  Act,  and there is  no question of estoppel when the mistake of law is common to  both the  assessee and the taxing authority. [440 G; 443 D]      3.(ii) If  law of limitation is applicable then section 5 of  the Limitation  Act  is  also  applicable  and  it  is apparent that  the application  originally was  made  within time before  two years  as contained in the proviso. Article 96 of  the  First  Schedule  of  the  Limitation  Act,  1908 prescribes a  period of  limitation of  three years from the date when  the mistake  becomes known  for filing a suit. If that principle  is also  kept in mind, the assessee had made the application  in 1955,  and it was not beyond time, since the judgment came to be known in May. 1954. [445 D-F] 433      In the instant case, the mistake indubitably was there. There was  no dispute  that the tax was not due and had been collected wrongly.  There is no dispute that the assessee is entitled to  the same.  There is no dispute that the assesee made application  within a  year of  the  knowledge  of  the mistake. There  is no dispute therefore that had a suit been filed under  Article 96  of the  Limitation Act,  1908 or an application made  under section  29 of  the Act,  the  claim would have  been allowed  but the  revision was dismissed on the  ground  that  it  was  belated.  The  revision  of  The assessment order  was wrong  but the consequential relief of refund could  have been granted. The order of the Additional Judge (Revision)  was correct  and the assessee was entitled to refund. [443 G-H; 444 A-B]      Gannon Dunkerley  and Co.’s  case, 9 S.T.C. 353 and The State of Kerala v. Aluminium Industries Ltd., 16 S.T.C. 689, relied upon.      Sales  Tax  Commissioner,  U.P.  v.  Sada  Sukh  Veopar Mandal, 1959 S.T.C. 57; Raja Jagdamba Pratap Narain Singh v. Central Board  of Direct  Taxes and  Ors.., 100  I.T.R. 698; Hindustan Sugar  Mills Etc.  v. State  of Rajasthan  & ors., [1979] 1  S.C.R.276 at 297; Commissioner, Sales Tax, Lucknow v. Auraiya  Chambers of Commerce, 30 S.T.C. 41; The State of Madhya   Pradesh (Now  Maharashtra) v.  Haji Hasan  Dada, 17 S.T.C. 343;  Commissioner of  Income  Tax,  West  Punjab  v. Tribune Trust,  Lahore, 16  I.T.R. 214;  K.S. Venkatara  and Co. (P)  Ltd. v.  The State of Madras, 17 S.T.C. 418; Gannon Dunkerley &  Co. v.  The State  of  Madras,  5  S.T.C.  216; Raleigh Investment  Co. Ltd. v. Governor-General in Council, 74 I.A. 50 = 15 I.T.R. 332; The Sales Tax Officer, Banaras & ors. v.  Kanhaiya Lal and Lal Saraf & ors., 9 S.T.C. 747 and Bharat  Kala   Bhandar  (P)  Ltd.  v.  Municipal  Committee, Dhamangaon, 59 I.T.R. 73, referred to.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION :  Civil Appeal Nos. 874- 876 of 1974.      From the  Judgment and  Order dated  19.1.1973  of  the Allahabad High Court in Sales Tax Reference No. 763, 764 and 765 of 1970.      R.A. Gupta for the Appellant. 434      A.K. Verma and D.N. Mishra for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by

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    SABYASACHI MUKHARJI,  J. These appeals by special leave arise from  the decision  of the  High Court  of  Allahabad. Under Section  11(3) of  the U.P.  Sales Tax  Act,  1948  as amended from  time to  time  the  following  questions  were referred to  the High  Court for  opinion at the instance of the Commissioner  of Sales Tax and statement of the case was submitted.           "1. Whether,  the observations  (subject, however,           to the question of estoppel, waiver, limitation or           the like)  made by  their Lordships of the Hon’ble           Supreme Court  in the  case of  Sales Tax Officer,           Banaras v. Kanhaiya Lal Mukundlal Saraf, (1958 STC           p. 747),  imply that  the provisions of the Indian           Limitation Act  are applicable  to cases under the           U.P. Sales  Tax Act and whether these observations           are  inconsistent  with  the  view  taken  by  the           Hon’ble High  Court  in  the  case  of  Sales  Tax           Commissioner,  U.P.  v.  Sadasukh  Veopar  Mandal,           (1959 STC p. 57) ?           2. Whether,  in these  cases in  which refund  was           claimed on  the principle  of section  72  of  the           Indian Contract Act the period of limitation under           Article 96  of the  Limitation Act  could be taken           into consideration by the Sales Tax authorities in           refusing to allow refund?           3. Whether under the circumstances of this case as           stated above,  the Addl.  Judge (Revisions)  Sales           Tax was legally justified in holding that the sums           deposited by the Company towards sales tax for the           year 1949-50, was refundable to the company?           4. Whether,  the Addl. Judge (Revisions) Sales Tax           was legally justified in entertaining the revision           application in question of the aforesaid Company -           after the  lapse of several years from the date of           the assessment  order particularly when the appeal           and the  revision application  of the  Company  in           respect of the assessment year were dismissed? 435      The questions relate to the assessment year 1949-50 and for subsequent  years.  In  view  of  the  decision  of  the Allahabad High  Court in  Commissioner of  Sales  Tax,  U.P. Lucknow v.  Aurlsya Chamber of Commerce which was in respect of the  assessment year  1948-49 reported in 30 STC page 41, the High  Court was  of the  opinion  that  question  No.  1 aforesaid need  not be  answered,  question  No.2  aforesaid should be  answered in the negative, question No.3 aforesaid in the  affirmative  and  question  No.4  aforesaid  in  the affirmative.      The main question involved is the question of refund of sales tax paid in respect of forward contract.      In The  Sales Tax  Officer, Pilibhit  v.  Messrs.  Budh Prakash Jai Prakash, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243 = 5 S.T.C. 193 this Court held  on 3rd  May, 1954 that section 2(h) of the Uttar Pradesh Sales  Tax Act, XV of 1948, enlarging the definition of "sale"  so as  to include forward contracts must, to that extent, be  declared ultra  vires. A  bench of  five learned judges of  this Court held that there was a well-defined and well-established distinction between a sale and an agreement to sell.  m e  words ’Taxes  on the  sale of goods’ in entry No.  48, List  II, Schedule  VII of  the Government of India Act, 1935,  conferred power on the Provincial Legislature to impose a  tax only  when there had been a completed sale and not when  there was  only an agreement to sell. For the same reason explanation III to section 2(h) of the said Act which provided that forward contract ’shall be deemed to have been

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completed on  the date  originally agreed upon for delivery’ and section  3B of  the Act  also must  be held  to be ultra vires.      As a  consequence, the  assessee in  this case  filed a revision in  1955 for  quashing the  order for this year. It may be  mentioned that  the assessee  had been  taxed on the basis of  sale of  such forward  contracts. The revision was dismissed in  September, 1958 on the ground that it had been filed after a long delay and was barred by limitation.      The assessee  subsequently filed  an application before the Sales-tax  Officer for  refund of  the amount  which was deposited in  accordance with  the assessment  order for the year and  the subsequent  years under mistake. This claim of refund was  again made  on 24th  May,  1959.  The  Sales-tax Officer dismissed that 436 application as  barred by  period of  limitation  prescribed under Article  96  of  the  First  Schedule  of  the  Indian Limitation Act, 1908. m e assessee thereafter filed revision to the  Court of  Additional Judge (Revision) Sales Tax U.P. against the  order of  the Sales-tax  Officer rejecting  the claim for refund.      The Court  of Additional  Judge  (Revision)  Sales  Tax U.P. directed refund of sales-tax of Rs.3,535.3 for 1948-49, Rs.9,205.12 for 1949-50, Rs.3,653.8 for 1950-51 and Rs. 5,014.3.3 for 1951-52. It may be mentioned that prior to 1st April, 1959, there was no section dealing with any period of limitation for  refund. Section  29 was  added by U.P. Sales Tax (Amendment)  Act VII  of 1959  and came  into force with effect from 1st April, 1959. The first proviso to section 29 is as follows :-           "Provided that  no claim  to the refund of any tax           or other  amount paid  under  this  Act  shall  be           allowed unless  it was  made within 24 months from           the date  on which  the order  for assessment  was           passed or  within 12  months of  the  final  order           passed in appeal, revision or reference in respect           of the  order of  assessment whichever  period  is           later."      It appears  that the  claim for  refund in  the instant case was  made after  1st April,  1959. At the time when the taxes were  paid and  the assessment  was made, there was no limitation. m e Additional Judge (Revision) Sales Tax U.P. held that  there was  no period  of limitation  and  ordered refund as  mentioned hereinbefore. The said Additional Judge placed reliance  upon the  decision of  the  Allahabad  High Court in  Sales Tax  Commissioner U.P.  v. Sada  Sukh Veopar 1959 S.T.C. 57      The  said  officer  at  the  instance  of  the  revenue referred the  four questions indicated above for the opinion of the High Court under section 11(3) of the Act.      The main  question therefore  is :  are  these  diverse amounts refundable to the assessee?      It is undisputed that the tax was collected from the 437 assessee and  the assessee  paid the  tax on the belief that tax was  due and payable. It was subsequently found that the provision for  taxation of sales-tax on forward contract was ultra vires.  Therefore the levy and collection of sales tax on forward  contracts was  ultra vires.  In other words, the State had  no right  to that  money. The  assessee  was  not liable to  pay that  money. This position in law came to the knowledge of the parties only on this Court’s decision being rendered on  3rd May, 1954. The assessee filed a revision as appears  from   the  statement  of  case  for  quashing  the

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assessment for  the relevant year in 1955 i.e. within a year which was  dismissed in  1958 on the ground that it had been filed after  a long  delay and was barred by limitation. The assessee thereafter  made a formal application for refund on 24th May,  1959. That  was dismissed  on the ground of claim being barred  by limitation  on the principles of article 96 of First Schedule of Indian Limitation Act, 1908.      Article 265  of the  Constitution enjoins  that on  tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law. Tax in this  case indubitably  has  been  collected  and  levied without the  authority of law. It is therefore refundable to the assessee.  The question  is : is there any machinery for refund of  that tax  to the assessee and if so, is there any limitation for  refund of  the  tax  collected  without  the authority of  law? If  State collects  because of its powers moneys not  due to  it, can it be directed to refund? If so, then is there any period of limitation?      Though not  in this context but in a different context, the question  whether tax  collected by  the  State  without authority of  law can be directed to be refunded without any period of limitation was considered in a writ application by the Calcutta  High Court in Suresh Chandra Bose v. The State of West  Bengal, 38  S.T.C. 99.  This decision of the single judge of  the  Calcutta  High  Court  was  approved  by  the Division Bench  of that High Court in State of West Bengal & Ors. v.  Suresh Chandra  Bose, 45 S.T.C. 118. me court under Article 226  of the  Constitution directed  refund  in  that case. The  court emphasised that when moneys are paid to the State which  the State  has no legal right to receive, it is ordinarily the  duty of  the State  subject to  any  special provisions of  any particular  statute or  special facts and circumstances of  the case,  to refund the tax of the amount paid. 438      This Court in Raja Jagdambika Pratap Narain Singh v. Central Board  of Direct Taxes & ors., 100 I.T.R. 698 had to consider from  the point  of view of the Income-tax Act this aspect.  This   court  was  dealing  with  the  question  of limitation in  granting relief  in the background of Article 226 of  the Constitution  of India.  But this Court observed that  any   legal  system,  especially  one  evolving  in  a developing country,  might Permit  judges to play a creative role and  innovate to  ensure justice without doing violence to the  norms set  by legislation.  But to  invoke  judicial activism to set at nought legislative judgment is subversive of   the    constitutional    harmony    and    comity    of instrumentalities.      Here in  the instance  case we  have to find out within the four  corners of  the provisions  of U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948  whether  there  is  any  prohibition  prohibiting  the assessee from  getting the  refund as  claimed for.  If  the original claim  of 1955  is  accepted  as  sum  claimed  for refund, then  it cannot be Disputed that there was denial of a rightful claim.      We  might   in  this   case  bear   in   mind   certain observations, though  we are  conscious that  the same  were rendered in a different context, of this Court in Hindustran Sugar Mills  Etc. v.  State of  Rajasthan &  Ors., [1979]  1 S.C.R. 276  at 297  Where directing payment of certain sales tax collected  from the  assessee, this  Court observed that though  there   was  no   legal  liability  on  the  Central Government but  as we  are living  in a  democratic  society governed by  the rule  of law  and  every  Government  which claims to  be inspired  by ethical  and moral values must do what is  fair and  just to  the citizen, regardless of legal

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technicalities,  this  Court  hoped  and  trusted  that  the Central Government  would not  seek to defeat the legitimate claim of the assessee for reimbursement of sales tax in that case on  the amount  of freight  by  adopting  a  legalistic attitude but would do what fairness and justice demanded.      It is  true that  this is  an appeal  from a  reference under section  11(3) of  the U.P.  Sales Tax  Act, 1948. The rights and  the obligations  of the  parties must  be  found within the  four corners  of the  Act and  this Court  in an appeal under  an Act  must act under the four corners of law but in  interpreting  the  Relevant  procedural  provisions, fairness and justice should be 439 the approach  and even  in  fiscal  statutes  equity  should prevail A  wherever language  permits. With this background, let us examine the actual provisions of the Act.      As mentioned  in the order of the High Court, the order under appeal  was passed  by the  High Court  relying on the order of  the Special  Bench of  that  High  Court  for  the assessment year  1948-49 in Commissioner, Sales Tax, Lucknow v.  Auriaya   Chamber  of  Commerce,  30  S.T.C.  41.  On  a difference of  opinion between  the two  learned judges, the matter was  disposed of  by the  opinion  of  third  learned judge. m  e year  involved was  the assessment year 1948-49. Four identical  questions were  referred to  the High Court. Pathak, J.  (as his  Lordship then was of the Allahabad High Court) expressed  the view  that the first question had been framed in the abstract without relevance to the facts of the present case  and therefore  need not be answered. With this view the  other learned judge, Gulati J. agreed. We are also of the  same opinion.  The facts  before the High Court were identical with the facts of the present case.      In order  to appreciate  the contentions raised in this case,  it   is  necessary  to  bear  in  mind  the  relevant provisions of  the U.P.  Sales Tax  Act,  1948  (hereinafter called the ’Act’). Section 3 of the Act enjoins that subject to the  provisions of  the Act, every dealer shall, for each assessment year, pay a tax at the rates provided by or under section 3-A  or section  3-D on  his turnover  of  sales  or purchases or  both as  may be  which shall  be determined in such manner  as may  be prescribed.  It is not necessary for the  present  purpose  to  deal  in  detail  with  the  said provisions.      Various sections  of the  Act  deal  with  the  various stages of  taxation. It  is not necessary to deal with these in detail.      Section 7-F  deals with  recovery or  refund  of  petty amounts to  be ignored.  The section  is significant  in the sense that  it proceeds  on the  basis that refund had to be made  in   G  certain   cases.  The   section  enjoins  that notwithstanding anything  contained in the Act, no tax, fee, interest or  penalty under the Act shall be recovered and no refund shall  be allowed  if the  amount  involved  for  any assessment year  was less  than five  rupees. It  recognises liability and the 440 obligation of refund if the amount is more than rupees five. Section 8 deals with payment and recovery of tax. Section 8- A deals  with registration of dealers and realisation of tax by dealers.  The other sections are not very material except that section  9 deals  with appeal  and sub-section  (5)  of section 9 stipulates that if the amount of tax assessed, fee levied or  penalty imposed  was  reduced  by  the  appellate authority under  sub-section (3),  he shall order the excess amount of  tax, fee or penalty, if realised, to be refunded.

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Section 10  is not material for our present purpose. Section 11 deals  with revision  by the High Court in special cases, and section  11(8) enjoins  that the High Court shall, after hearing the parties to the revision, decide the questions of law  involved  therein,  and  where  as  a  result  of  such decision, the  amount of  tax, fee or penalty is required to be determined  afresh, the High Court may send a copy of the decision to  the Tribunal  for fresh  determination  of  the amount and  the Tribunal shall thereupon pass such orders as are necessary  to dispose  of the case inconfirmity with the said decision.        Section  5  of  the  Limitation  Act  has  been  made applicable. The  other  material  section  for  our  present purpose is  section 29  which was  added in  the Act  on 1st April, 1959  provided for refund. Section 29 stipulates that the assessing  authority shall,  in the  manner  prescribed, refund to  dealer any amount of tax, fees or other dues paid in excess  of the  amount due  from him  under the Act. Then there is provision for payment of interest if there is delay in refund  with which  we are not concerned. Sub-section (3) of section  29 provides  certain embargo  against refund  in certain cases.  In the  instant case,  we are  not concerned with the same. Therefore, it is apparent that the obligation to refund in case of excess realisation or excess payment by the taxing  authority of the dues from the seller as well as from the assessee is recognised in the scheme of the Act.       Section 72 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 recognises that a  person to  whom money  has been  paid,  or  anything delivered, by  mistake or  under  coercion,  must  repay  or return it.  In this  case it is not disputed that mistake of law is  also a  mistake covered by the provisions of section 72 of  the Indian  Contract Act. If the law declared by this court in Budh Prakash Jai Prakash’s case (supra) is correct, as it must be, 441 then the  payment of  tax  by  the  dealer,  the  respondent herein, was  under a  mistake of  law and realisation by the revenue authorities was also under a mistake. Therefore such sum should be refunded. This is recognised in the provisions of the Act as we have noted before. The principle of section 72 of the Indian Contract Act has been recognised.      This was  the view  expressed by  Pathak,  J.  on  this aspect. We  are in  respectful agreement.  But  the  learned judge was  unable to  find in  the provisions of the Act any authority for  directing the  refund  without  a  suit.  The question therefore arises whether in a case where assessment order determining  the liability  was void, but the same was not set aside, can the sales tax authorities grant refund of the tax  assessed thereunder?  The learned  judge posed this question and  answered it  by saying  that if the assessment could be  said to  have been  under the  Act, no  such power could be exercised by the sales tax authorities. The learned Judge relied  on the observations of this Court in The State of Madhya  Pradesh (now  Maharashtra) v. Haji Hasan Dada, 17 S.T.C. 343.  There this Court was dealing with section 13 of the C.P.  and Berar  Sales  Tax  Act,  1947  (prior  to  its amendment by  Act 20  of 1953)  and the  Court said that the refund might  be granted  only of  the amount  which was not lawfully due,  and whether a certain amount was lawfully due or not must be determined by the officer in making the order of  assessment   or  re-assessment.   Until  the   order  of assessment was  set aside  by appropriate  proceedings under the Act full effect must be given to the order even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law. It was held by a  bench of  three learned judges that an application for

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refund of  sales tax  paid under an order of assessment made by the  Assistant Commissioner  of Sales  Tax could  not  be entertained by  that officer  on the plea that the order was made on  an erroneous  view of  the law unless the order was set aside in appropriate proceedings. There the assessee had paid that  amount of  tax assessed  on him  by the Assistant Commissioner of  Sales Tax on his turnover from his business in yarn for the period 13th November, 1947, to 1st November, 1948, and  then applied to that officer under section 13 for an order  refunding an  amount  on  the  plea  that  in  the turnover  were   included  dyeing  charges  which  were  not taxable.  It   was  held   that  the   application  was  not maintainable under  section 13 (as originally passed). There this Court after referring to 442 the Judicial Committee’s decision in Commissioner of Income- tax, West  Punjab v.  Tribune Trust,  Lahore, 16  I.T.R. 214 held that  such an  order by  the taxing  authority was  not possible but  it has  to be  borne in mind that in this case the imposition  of the  tax was  really without authority of law as  contemplated under  Article 265 of the Constitution. Therefore from the beginning the realisation was illegal and a right of refund was embedded in the fact of payment.      In K.S.  Venkataraman and  Co. (P) Ltd. v. The State of Madras, 17  S.T.C. 418  this Court had occasion to deal with the problem similar to this. The appellant company there was carrying on  the business  of building  contractors and  was assessed to  sales tax  under the  Madras General  Sales Tax Act, 1939,  during the years 1948-49 to 1952-53 on the basis that the contracts executed by them were works contracts. On 5th April,  1954, the  Madras  High  Court  held  in  Gannon Dunkerley &  Co. v.  The State  of Madras, 5 S.T.C. 216 that the relevant  provisions of  the Act empowering the State of Madras to assess indivisible building contracts to sales tax were ultra  vires the  powers of  the State Legislature. The appellant issued  a notice  to the  State  of  Madras  under section 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure claiming refund of the amounts  collected from them, and, as the demand was not complied with,  filed a suit in the City Civil Court on 23rd March, 1955,  for recovery  of the amount of taxes illegally levied and  collected from  them. The relevant provisions of the Act empowering the Sales Tax Authorities to impose sales tax on  indivisible building contracts were unconstitutional and void  and the Sales Tax Authorities had not jurisdiction to assess  the appellant  in respect of the transactions and the appellant having paid the amounts under a mistake of law was entitled to a refund of the same. Following the decision of the  Privy Council  in Raleigh  Investment  Co.  Ltd.  v. Governor-General in  Council, 74 I.A. 50 = 15 I.T.R. 332 the City Civil  Court held  inter alia  that the  suit  was  not maintainable under  section 18-A  of the Act, and the Madras High Court  upheld that  decision. On appeal this Court by a majority held  that on  the facts, that the assessments were made on  the  appellant  in  respect  of  indivisible  works contracts, and that this Court in Gannon Dunkerley and Co.’s case 9 S.T.C. 353 had held that the provisions of the Act in so far as they enabled the imposition of tax on the turnover of indivisible building contract were ultra vires the 443 powers of  the State  Legislature, and, therefore, void, the Sales Tax  Authorities had  acted outside  the Act  and  not under it  in making  the assessment  on the appellant on the basis of the relevant part of the charging section which was declared ultra vires by this Court and therefore it was held that  section  18-A  of  the  Act  was  not  a  bar  to  the

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maintainability  of  the  suit.  Shah  and  Ramaswami,  JJ., however, took  a different  view. But  if the realisation of the tax and the collection of tax on forward contract was an act beyond the authority and ultra vires then money retained by the  taxing authority  should be  refunded to the citizen concerned. There  is no  express  prohibition  against  that refund.      In The State of Kerala v. Aluminium Industries Ltd., 16 S.T.C. 689  this Court  reiterated that  money paid  under a mistake of  law comes  within ’mistake’ in section 72 of the Indian Contract  Act, and  there was no question of estoppel when the  mistake of law was common to both the assessee and the taxing  authority. Where  the assessee did not raise the question that  the relevant  sales were  outside the  taxing State and  were therefore  exempt under Article 286(1)(a) of the Constitution (as it then was), the Sales Tax Officer had no occasion  to consider  it, and  sales tax  was levied  by mistake of  law, it  was ordinarily  the duty  of the State, subject to  any provision  of law  relating to sales tax, to refund the  tax. If  the refund was not made, remedy through court was  open, subject to the same restriction and also to the bar  of limitation  under Article  96 of  the Limitation Act, 1908.  But this Court reiterated that it is the duty of the State  to investigate  the facts  when the  mistake  was brought to  its notice  and to  make a refund if the mistake was proved  and the  claim was  made within  the  period  of limitation. In  the instant  case before us as we have noted mistake indubitably was there. There was no dispute that the tax was  not due and had been collected wrongly. There is no dispute that  the assessee is entitled to the same. There is no dispute  that the  assessee made  an application within a year of  the knowledge  of the  mistake. There is no dispute therefore that had a suit been filed under Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1908 or an application made under section 29 of the  Act, the  claim would  have  been  allowed  but  the revision was  dismissed on  the ground  that it was belated. The revision of the assesment order was 444 wrong but the consequential relief of refund could have been granted. In  that view  of the matter we should construe the provisions in  such manner  as there is no contra indication which will  ensure justice to the party and not denied to it and hold  that the  order of the Additional Judge (Revision) was correct and the assessee was entitled to refund.      In The  Sales Tax  Officer, Banaras, & Ors. v. Kanhaiya Lal Mukund Lal Saraf & Ors., 9 S.T.C. 747 the contention was raised on  behalf of  the Sales Tax Authorities to urge that the procedure  laid down  in U.P.  Sales Tax  Act by  way of appeal and revision against the assessment order in question ought to  have been followed by a dealer and not having done so, the  dealer was  debarred in  Civil Court from obtaining refund  of  tax  paid  by  it.  This  Court  overruled  that contention by  reason of  the categorical  statement made by the Advocate-General  before  the  High  Court.  This  Court clearly laid  down that when an amount has been recovered as tax by  an authority  in exercise  of  the  constitutionally permissible  amount,   a  suit  of  such  amount  would  lie notwithstanding the provisions in the statute barring a suit in respect  of the order made. This decision was rendered in Bharat Kala  Bhandar (Private)  Ltd. v. Municipal Committee, Dhamangaon., 59 I.T.R. 73.      As we  read this  order in  the instant  case, when the assessee or  dealer made  an application  for revision,  the Additional Judge  (Revision)  could  direct  refund  because money was  being  illegally  retained  by  the  revenue.  If

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mistake either  of  law  or  of  fact  is  established,  the assessee is  entitled to  recover the  money and  the  party receiving these  is bound to return the same irrespective of any other  consideration. In  this case there is no delay in making the  application for  claiming the  refund as set out hereinbefore. It  is apparent  that the assessment order and the realisation  of the  money was  based on the ultra vires provisions of  the Act.  This should  have been and ought to have been ignored. On that basis the present application was made.      It is  true that  except special  provisions  indicated before, there  is no  specific provision  which prescribes a procedure for  applying for  refund in  such a case. But the rules or  procedures  are  hand-maids  of  justice  not  its mistress. It is apparent in the scheme of the Act that sales 445 tax is  leviable only on valid transaction. If excess amount is realised,  refund is  also contemplated  by the scheme of the Act  In this  case  undoubtedly  sales  tax  on  forward contracts have  been illegally  recovered on a mistaken view of law.  The same is lying with the Government. The assessee or the dealer has claimed refund in the revision. In certain circumstances refund  specifically has been mentioned. There is no  prohibition against  refund except the prohibition of two years under the proviso of section 29. In this case that two years  prohibition is not applicable because the law was declared by this Court in Budh Prakash Jai Prakash’s case on 3rd May,  1954 and the revision was filed in 1955 and it was dismissed in 1958 on the ground that it had been filed after a  long   delay.  Thereafter   the  assessee  had  filed  an application before  the Sales  Tax Officer  for refund.  The refund was claimed for the first time on 24th May, 1959. The Sales Tax Officer had dismissed the application as barred by limitation under  Article 96  of the  First Schedule  of the Indian Limitation Act, 1908.      The  assessee   filed  revision  before  the  court  of Additional Judge (Revisions) rejecting the claim for refund. If law  of limitation  is applicable  then section  5 of the Limitation Act  is also  applicable and  it is apparent that the application  originally was  made within time before two years as  contained in the provisio. Article 96 of the First Schedule of  the Limitation Act, 1908 prescribes a period of limitation of  three years  from the  date when  the mistake becomes known  for filing  a suit. If that principle is also kept in  mind, then  when the  judgment came  to be known in May, 1954,  then in  our opinion, when the assessee had made an application in 1955, it was not beyond the time.      Where indubitably there is in the dealer legal title to get the money refunded and where the dealer is not guilty of any latches  and where  there  is  no  specific  prohibition against refund,  one should  not get entangled in the cobweb of  procedures   but  do   substantial  justice.  The  above requirements  in  this  Case,  in  our  opinion,  have  been satisfied and  therefore we  affirm  the  direction  of  the Additional Judge  (Revisions), Sales  Tax for  refund of the amount to the dealer and affirm the High Court’s judgment on this basis.      In the view we have taken, we are of the opinion that 446 question No.  1 need not be answered. So far as question no. 2 is  concerend, we  are of  the opinion that in the view we have taken on question No. 3, this question also need not be specifically answered. We are in agreement with the majority view of  the learned  judges that  question No.  3 should be answered in  the affirmative and that really disposes of the

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controversy between the parties. So far as question No. 4 is concerned, in the way we read the facts of this case, we are of the  opinion that there has not been any lapse of several years from  the date  of the  assessment order  and  we  are further of  the opinion  that in the facts of this case, the Additional Judge  (Revision), Sales  Tax  was  justified  in entertaining the  application in  question. The  question is answered accordingly.      The appeals  accordingly fail  and are  dismissed  with costs. M.L.A.                                    Appeals dismissed. 447