09 May 1980
Supreme Court
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DEPUTY COMMISSIONER, SALES TAX (LAW) BOARD OF REVENUE(TAXES Vs PIO FOOD PACKERS

Bench: PATHAK,R.S.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2398 of 1978


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PETITIONER: DEPUTY COMMISSIONER, SALES TAX (LAW) BOARD OF REVENUE(TAXES)

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: PIO FOOD PACKERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT09/05/1980

BENCH: PATHAK, R.S. BENCH: PATHAK, R.S. BHAGWATI, P.N. TULZAPURKAR, V.D.

CITATION:  1980 AIR 1227            1980 SCR  (3)1271  CITATOR INFO :  R          1981 SC 976  (1)  RF         1981 SC1014  (5)  R          1986 SC 662  (31)  R          1986 SC1809  (5)  D          1987 SC1885  (8)  RF         1988 SC 113  (5)  R          1988 SC 992  (5)  RF         1988 SC 997  (7,11)  R          1988 SC1133  (2,3,5)  R          1988 SC2237  (6)  RF         1989 SC 516  (17,18)  RF         1991 SC2222  (22)

ACT:      Kerala  General   Sales  Tax   Act,  Section  5-A(1)(a) "consumes such  goods in  the manufacture of other goods for sale  or   otherwise",  meaning  of-Exigibility  to  tax  of pineapple fruit.  when processed into slices for the purpose of being sold in sealed cans.

HEADNOTE:      The respondent  assessee, Pio  Food Packers  carries on the business  of  manufacturing  and  selling  canned  fruit besides other  products.  The  Pineapple  purchased  by  the assessee is  washed and  then the  inedible portion, the end crown, skin and inner core are removed, thereafter the fruit is sliced  and the slices are filled in cans, sugar is added as a preservative, the cans are sealed under temperature and then put in boiling water for sterilisation.      In its  return for  the year  1973-74 under  the Kerala General Sales  Tax Act,  1963 the  assessee claimed  that  a turnover of  Rs. 3,84,138-89  representing the  purchase  of pineapple fruit  was not covered by Section 5-A(1)(b) of the Act. It  was asserted  that the pineapple was converted into pineapple  slices,   pineapple  jam,  pineapple  squash  and pineapple  juice.   The  assessee  maintained  that  by  the conversion of  pineapple fruit  into  its  products  no  new commodity was created and it was erroneous to say that there was a consumption of pineapple fruit "in the manufacture of" these goods.  The Sales  Tax  Officer  did  not  accept  the contention and  completed the assessment on the finding that a manufacturing  process was  involved and  that, therefore,

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the case  fell within s. 5-A (1) (a). In revision before the Sales Tax  Appellate Tribunal,  the assessee  conceded  that pineapple jam and pineapple squash would be covered by s. 5- A(1)(a), and in regard to pineapple juice the Tribunal found that s.  5-1(a)  was  attracted.  The  only  question  which remained was  whether the  preparation of  pineapple  slices fall within  s. 5-A(1)(a).  On that  question two members of the Tribunal  found in favour of the assessee, and the third member found  in favour  of the  Revenue. The  Revenue  then applied in  revision to  the High  Court and the High Court, has by its judgment dated 24th January, 1978, maintained the order of the Tribunal.      Dismissing the appeal, by special leave, the court ^      HELD :  1.  When  pineapple  fruit  is  processed  into pineapple slices  for the  purpose of  being sold  in sealed cans, there  is no  consumption of  the  original  pineapple fruit for  the purpose  of manufacture within the meaning of Section 5A(1)(a)  of the  Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 [1277 E-F]      2. Section  5-A(1)(a) of  the Kerala  General Sales Tax Act  envisages   the  consumption  of  a  commodity  in  the manufacture of another commodity. The goods purchased should be consumed,  the consumption  should be  in the  process of manufacture, and the result must be the manufacture of other goods. 1272 There  are   several  criteria  for  determining  whether  a commodity is  consumed in  the manufacture  of another.  The generally prevalent  test is whether the article produced is regarded in  the trade, by those who deal in it, as distinct in identity  from the commodity involved in its manufacture. Commonly, manufacture  is the  end result  of  one  or  more processes through  which the  original commodity  is made to pass. The  nature and extent of processing may vary from one case to  another, and  indeed there may be several stages of processing and  perhaps a  different kind  of processing  at each  stage.   With  each  process  suffered,  the  original commodity experience  a change.  But it  is  only  when  the change, or  a series  of changes,  take the commodity to the point where commercially it can no longer be regarded as the original commodity  but instead  is recognised  as a new and distinct article  that a  manufacture can  be said  to  take place. Where  there is  no essential  difference in identity between the  original commodity and the processed article it is not  possible to say that one commodity has been consumed in the  manufacture of  another. Although it has undergone a degree of processing, it must be regarded as still retaining its original identity. [1274 F-H, 1275 A-B]      In the  present case,  there is no essential difference between pineapple fruit and the canned pineapple slices. The dealer and  the consumer  regard both as pineapple. The only difference is that the sliced pineapple is a presentation of fruit in  a more  convenient form  and by  reason  of  being canned it  is  capable  of  storage  without  spoiling.  The additional sweetness in the canned pineapple arises from the sugar added as a preservative. The pineapple slices continue to possess  the same  identity  as  the  original  pineapple fruit.  [1275 G-H, 1276-A]      Tunghabhadra Industries Ltd., Kurnool v. Commercial Tax Officer, Kurnool, [1960] 10 S.T.C. 827 (SC); Commissioner of Sales Tax,  U.P., Lucknow  v. Harbilas Rai & Sons, [1968] 21 S.T.C. 17 (SC); followed.      East Texas  Motor Freight Lines v. Frozen Food Express, 100 L.ed.  917; Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association v. United

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States, 52 L. ed. 336-338; quoted with approval.      Anwarkhan Mahboob  Co. v. The State of Bombay and Ors., [1960] 11  STC 698,  A Hajee  Abdul Shukoor  and Co.  v. The State of  Madras, [1964]  15 STC 719; The State of Madras v. Swasthik Tobacco  Factory, [1966]  17  STC  316  and  Ganesh Trading Co.  Karnal v.  State of Haryana and Anr., [1973] 32 STC 623; held inapplicable.      3. The  fact that  the pineapple  slices have  a higher price in  the market  than the original fruit does not imply that the slices constitute a different commercial commodity. The higher  price, is  occasioned only because of the labour put into  making  the  fruit  more  readily  consumable  and because of  the can  employed to contain it. It is not as if the  higher   price  is   claimed  because  it  a  different commercial commodity. [1277 A-B]      4. The  fact that  the pineapple  slices  appeal  to  a different sector  of the trade and that when a customer asks for a  can of pineapple slices he has in mind something very different from  fresh pineapple  fruit does  not give to the canned pineapple  slices a  separate  identity  either.  The distinction in  the mind of the consumer arises not from any difference in  the essential  identity of  the two,  but  is derived from  the mere  form in  which the fruit is desired. [1277 B-C] 1273      5. Clause  (1) (a) of Section 5-A of the Kerala General Sales Tax  Act, speaks  of goods consumed in the manufacture of other goods for sale or goods consumed in the manufacture of other goods for purposes other than sale.[1277 C-D]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2398 of 1978.      Appeal by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and  Order dated 24-1-1978  of the  Kerala High  Court at  Ernakulam in T.R.C. No. 2 of 1976.      M. M.  Abdul Khader,  V. J. Francis and M. A. Firoz for the Appellant.      S. T.  Desai, P.  A. Francis and Mrs. S. Gopalakrishnan for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      PATHAK, J.  This appeal  by special  leave is  directed against the  judgment of  the Kerala High Court holding that the turnover  of pineapple  fruit  purchased  for  preparing pineapple slices  for sale  in sealed cans is not covered by s.5-A(1)(a) of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963.      The  respondent,   Messrs.  Pio   Food  Packers   ("the assessee"), carries  on the  business of  manufacturing  and selling canned  fruit besides  other products. In its return for the year 1973-74 under the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 the assessee claimed that a turnover of Rs. 3,64,138-89 representing the purchase of pineapple fruit was not covered by s.  5-A(1)(a) of  the  Act.  It  was  asserted  that  the pineapple was  converted into  pineapple  slices,  pineapple jam, pineapple  squash and  pineapple juice.  Section 5-A(1) (a) of the Act provides:      "5-A. Levy of purchase tax-           (1)  Every  dealer  who,  in  the  course  of  his                business, purchases  from a registered dealer                or from  any other  person any goods the sale                or purchase  of which  is liable to tax under                this Act, in circumstances in which no tax is                payable under section 5, and either-

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              (a)  consumes such  goods in  the manufacture                     of other goods for sale or otherwise; or                     ........................................                     shall, whatever  be the  quantum of  the                turnover relating  to  such  purchase  for  a                year, pay tax 1274                on the  taxable  turnover  relating  to  such                purchase for  the year at the rates mentioned                in section 5."      The assessee  maintained  that  by  the  conversion  of pineapple fruit  into its  products  no  new  commodity  was created and  it was  erroneous  to  say  that  there  was  a consumption of pineapple fruit "in the manufacture of" those goods. The  Sales Tax  Officer did not accept the contention and  completed   the  assessment   on  the  finding  that  a manufacturing process  was involved and that, therefore, the case fell  within s. 5-A(1)(a). In revision before the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal, the assessee conceded that pineapple jam and  pine-apple squash would be covered by s. 5-A(1)(a), and in  regard to pineapple juice the Tribunal found that s. 5-1(a) was  attracted. The  only question which remained was whether the  preparation of  pineapple slices fell within s. 5-A(1)(a). On  that question  two members  of  the  Tribunal found in  favour of the assessee, and the third member found in favour  of the  Revenue,  The  Revenue  then  applied  in revision to  the High  Court and  the High Court has, by its judgment dated  24th January,  1978, maintained the order of the Tribunal.      It appears that the pineapple purchased by the assessee is washed and then the inedible portion, the end crown, skin and inner  core are  removed, thereafter the fruit is sliced and the  slices are  filled in  cans, sugar  is added  as  a preservative, the cans are sealed under temperature and then put in  boiling water  for sterilisation.  Is the  pineapple fruit consumed in the manufacture of pineapple slices ?      Section 5-A(1)(a)  of the  Kerala General Sales Tax Act envisages the  consumption of a commodity in the manufacture of  another   commodity.  The   goods  purchased  should  be consumed, the  consumption  should  be  in  the  process  of manufacture, and the result must be the manufacture of other goods. There  are several criteria for determining whether a commodity is  consumed in  the manufacture  of another.  The generally prevalent  test is whether the article produced is regarded in  the trade, by those who deal in it, as distinct in identity  from the commodity involved in its manufacture. Commonly, manufacture  is the  end result  of  one  or  more processes through  which the  original commodity  is made to pass. The  nature and extent of processing may vary from one case to  another, and  indeed there may be several stages of processing and  perhaps a  different kind  of processing  at each  stage.   With  each  process  suffered,  the  original commodity experiences  a change.  But it  is only  when  the change, or  a series  of changes,  take the commodity to the point where 1275 commercially it  can no  longer be  regarded as the original commodity but  instead is  recognised as  a new and distinct article that  a manufacture can be said to take place. Where there is  no essential  difference in  identity between  the original commodity  and the  processed  article  it  is  not possible to  say that one commodity has been consumed in the manufacture of  another. Although  it has undergone a degree of processing,  it must  be regarded  as still retaining its original identity.

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    A large  number of  cases has  been placed before us by the parties, and in each of them the same principle has been applied: Does the processing of the original commodity bring into existence a commercially different and distinct article ? Some  of the  cases where it was held by this Court that a different commercial article had come into existence include Anwarkhan Mehboob  Co. v.  The State  of Bombay  and  Others (where raw  tobacco was  manufactured into  bidi  patti),  A Hajee Abdul  Shukoor and  Co. v.  The State  of Madras  (raw hides and  skins  constituted  a  different  commodity  from dressed hides and skins with different physical properties), The State of Madras v. Swasthik Tobacco Factory (raw tobacco manufactured into  chewing tobacco)  and Ganesh  Trading Co. Karnal v. State of Haryana and Another, (paddy dehusked into rice). On  the other  side, cases  where this Court has held that although  the original commodity has undergone a degree of processing  it has not lost its original identity include Tungabhadra  Industries  Ltd.,  Kurnool  v.  Commercial  Tax Officer,  Kurnool  (where  hydrogenated  groundnut  oil  was regarded as  groundnut oil)  and Commissioner  of Sales Tax, U.P., Lucknow  v. Harbilas  Rai  and  sons  (where  bristles plucked from  pigs,  boiled,  washed  with  soap  and  other chemicals and  sorted out in bundles according to their size and colour  were regarded  as remaining  the same commercial commodity, pigs bristles).      In the  present case,  there is no essential difference between pineapple fruit and the canned pineapple slices. The dealer and  the consumer  regard both as pineapple. The only difference is that the sliced pineapple is a presentation of fruit in  a more  convenient form  and by  reason  of  being canned it is capable of storage without 1276 spoiling. The  additional sweetness  in the canned pineapple arises from  the sugar  added as  a preservative. On a total impression, it  seems to  us, the  pineapple slices  must be held to  possess the same identity as the original pineapple fruit.      While on  the point,  we may  refer to East Texas Motor Freight Lines v. Frozen Food Express, where the U.S. Supreme Court held  that  dressed  and  frozen  chicken  was  not  a commercially distinct  article from the original chicken. It was pointed out:           "Killing,  dressed   and  freezing  a  chicken  is      certainly a  change in the commodity. But it is no more      drastic a  change than  the change which takes place in      milk from  pasturising,  homogenizing,  adding  vitamin      concentrates, standardising and bottling."      It was also observed:           "..................   there    is   hardly    less      difference between  cotton in  the field  and cotton at      the gin  or in  the bale  or between  cottonseed in the      field and cottonseed at the gin, than between a chicken      in the  pen and  one that  is dressed.  The ginned  and      baled cotton and the cottonseed, as well as the dressed      chicken, have  gone  through  a  processing  stage  But      neither has  been "manufactured" in the normal sense of      the word."      Referring to  Antheuser-Busch  Brewing  Association  v. United States the Court said:           "Manufacture implies  a change but every change is      not manufacture  and yet  every change in an article is      the result  of treatment,  labour and manipulation. But      something  more   is  necessary...................There      must be  transformation; a  new and  different  article      must emerge,  having a  distinctive name,  character or

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    use."      And further:           "At some  point processing  and manufacturing will      merge. But  where the  commodity retains  a  continuing      substantial identity  through the  processing stage  we      cannot say that it has been "manufactured".      The comment  applies  fully  in  the  case  before  us. Although a  degree of  processing is  involved in  preparing pineapple slices from 1277 the original  fruit, the  commodity continues to possess its original identity,  notwithstanding the  removal of inedible portions, the  slicing and  thereafter canning  it on adding sugar to  preserve it.  It is contended for the Revenue that pineapple slices  have a higher price in the market than the original fruit and that implies that the slices constitute a different commercial  commodity. The  higher price, it seems to us,  is occasioned  only because  of the  labour put into making the  fruit more readily consumable and because of the can employed to contain it. It is not as if the higher price is claimed  because it  is a different commercial commodity. It is  said that  pineapple slices  appeal  to  a  different sector of  the trade and that when a customer asks for a can of pineapple  slices he has in mind something very different from fresh  pineapple fruit.  Here again, the distinction in the mind  of the  consumer arises not from any difference in the essential  identity of  the two, but is derived from the mere form in which the fruit is desired.      Learned counsel  for the  Revenue contends that even if no manufacturing  process is  involved, the case still falls within s.  5-A(1) (a)  of the  Kerala General Sales Tax Act, because the  statutory provision  speaks not  only of  goods consumed in the manufacture of other goods for sale but also goods  consumed   otherwise.  There  is  a  fallacy  in  the submission. The clause, truly read, speaks of goods consumed in the manufacture of other goods for sale or goods consumed in the  manufacture of  other goods  for purposes other than sale.      In the  result, we  hold that  when pineapple  fruit is processed into  pineapple slices  for the  purpose of  being sold in  sealed cans there is no consumption of the original pineapple fruit  for the  purpose of  manufacture. The  case does not  fall within  s. 5-A(1)(a)  of the  Kerala  General Sales Tax  Act. The High Court is right in the view taken by it.      The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. S.R.                                       Appeal dismissed. 1278