30 August 1967
Supreme Court
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STATE OF MADRAS Vs A.HABIBUR REHMAN SONS (With Connected Appeals)

Bench: WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ),BACHAWAT, R.S.,RAMASWAMI, V.,MITTER, G.K.,HEGDE, K.S.
Case number: Appeal (civil) 495 of 1966


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PETITIONER: STATE OF MADRAS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: A.HABIBUR REHMAN SONS (With Connected Appeals)

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/08/1967

BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ) BACHAWAT, R.S. MITTER, G.K. HEGDE, K.S.

CITATION:  1968 AIR  339            1968 SCR  (1) 381

ACT: Constitution  of India, 1950, Art.  286(1)(a),  Explanation, before amendment by the Constitution (Sixth Amendment)  Act, 1956;  ,Madras  General  Sales  Tax  Act  (9  of  1939)   s. 2(h),Explanation  (2); and Sales Tax Laws Validation Act  (7 of  1956),  s.  2-Ban  on  taxation  of  inter-State   Sales lifted--Outside sales, if could be taxed.

HEADNOTE: Under Explanation (2) to s. 2(h) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, a sale is deemed to have taken place in  that State,  wherever the contract of sale might have been  made, if the goods were actually in the State at the time when the contract in respect thereof was made.  The Constitution,  by Art.  286  as it was originally enacted, imposed  four  bans upon  the  legislative power of the States to  impose  sales tax.  Clause (1)(a) prohibited every State from imposing  or authorising  the imposition of, a tax on outside sales.   Am outside  sale was defined by defining an inside sale in  the Explanation  to the clause, as a sale which shall be  deemed to  have  taken place in the State in which the  goods  have actually been delivered as a direct result of such sale  for the purpose of consumption in that State notwithstanding the fact  that under the general law relating to sale  of  goods the property in the goods has by reason of such sale  passed in  another State.  Clause (1)(b) prohibited the  imposition of  tax on sales in the course of import into or export  out of,  the  territory  of India.  Clause  (2)  prohibited  the imposition of tax on the sale of goods where such sale  took place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce  unless Parliament  otherwise provided.  Clause (3)  prohibited  the State  from imposing or authorising the imposition of a  tax on the sale of any goods declared by Parliament by law to be essential  for  the  life  of  the  community,  unless   the legislation  was  reserved  for  the  consideration  of  the President  and had received his assent.  This Court, in  its judgment  in  the Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd.  Case,  [1955]  2 S.C.R. 603 delivered on September 6, 1955, held that because of  Art.  286(2),  the State legislature  could  not  impose

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sales-tax  on  inter-State sales until  Parliament  provided otherwise.   By  the Sales Tax Laws  Validation  Act,  1956, Parliament  removed the ban contained in Art. 286(2)  retro- spectively,  during  the period between April 1,  1951,  and September  6,  1955, with the result that,  transactions  of sale,  even though they were inter-State sales,  could,  for that period be lawfully charged to tax. [386C-E; 387D,  F-H; 388A-D] The  respondent was a beedi manufacturer in  the  appellant- State.   Beedies,  which were within the  territory  of  the appellantState  at the time the contract of sale in  respect of  them was made were sold to non-resident buyers.  On  the question  whether the sales during the period from April  1, 1955  to  September  5,  1955  were  taxable  by  virtue  of Explanation  2  to s. 2(h) of the Madras General  Sales  Tax Act, 1939, in view of the lifting of the ban on the levy  of tax  on inter-State sales by the Sales Tax  Laws  Validation Act,  the High Court relying on additional affidavits  filed before it, held 381 382 that the sales were outside sales and that the State had  no jurisdiction to impose sales tax. In appeal by the State; Held: (1) The restrictions imposed by the several clauses of Art.  286 as it stood were cumulative, and  the  legislative power  of  the State to tax sale  or  purchase  transactions could  be exercised only if it was not hit by any  of  those limitations.  The Validation Act merely lifted the ban under Art. 286(2) but the ban imposed by Art. 286(1)(a) was  still effective,  and could not be removed by any  legislation  of Parliament.   Thus. even if the ban under Art. 286  (2)  was removed by the Validation Act, no State could tax an  inter- State  sale  or  purchase  which  took  place  outside   its territorial   limits.    The  sales   falling   within   the Explanation  to  Art.  286(1)(a)  were  fictionally  to   be regarded  as  inside  the  State in  which  the  goods  were actually delivered for consumption and so within the  taxing power  of that State and as being outside all  other  States and  so,  exempt  from  sales-tax  by  those  other  States. Therefore,  in the present case, even though the sales  fell within  Explanation  (2) to s. 2(h) of  the  Madras  General Sales  Tax Act, it was beyond the competence of  the  Madras State  to tax them as the assessee had delivered  the  goods for  consumption  outside the State and  were  thus  outside sales covered by the ban imposed by Art. 286(1)(a). [390E-H] Observations at p. 1082 in State of Bombay v. United Motors, (India)  Ltd., [1953] S.C.R. 1069, The Bengal  Immunity  Co. Ltd.  V. State of Bihar and Ors., [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603, Shree Bajrang  Jute  Mills  v. State of Andhra  Pradesh  [1964]  6 S.C.R.  691  and Singareni Collieries Co. Ltd. v.  State  of Andhra Pradesh, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 190, followed. Messrs.   Ashok  Leyland  Co. Ltd. v. The  State  of  Madras [1962] 1 S.C.R. 607, explained. (2)  The  appellant-State, not having raised  any  objection before the High Court that the High Court, in exercising the revisional  powers under s. 38 of the Madras  General  Sales Tax Act could not take the affidavits in evidence could  not urge  in  this Court that the High Court acted  illegaly  in taking them in evidence. [392E]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 495,  539 and 540, 684, 694, 717 and 857 of 1966.

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Appeals by special leave from the judgment and orders  dated September 23, 1963, April 29, 1963, July 29, 1964, March 13, 1964,  June  22, 1964 and June 24, 1964 of the  Madras  High Court  in Tax Cases Nos. 246 of 1962 (Revision No.  96)  202 and  203  of  1961, 67 of 1963 (Appeal No. 6),  43  of  1964 (Revision No. 17), 12 of 1963 (Appeal No. 2) and 112 of 1964 (Revision No. 64) respectively. G.   Ramanujam and A. V. Rangam, for the appellants (in  all the appeals). T.   A.  Ramachandran,  for respondent (in C.A. No.  495  of 1966). M.   S.  K. Sastri and M. S. Narasimhan, for respondent  (in C. As.  Nos. 539 and 540 of 1966). A.   N. Sinha and D. N. Gupta, for respondent (in C. A.  No. 684 of 1966). 383 Kartar Singh Suri and E. C. Agrawala, for the respondent (in C.A. No. 694 of 1966). Avad Behari, for respondent (in C.A. No. 717 of 1966). G. N. Dikshit for respondent (in C.A. No. 857 of 1966). Civil Appeal No. 495 of 1966 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Ramaswami, J.  This appeal is brought, by special leave,from the  judgment of the Madras High Court dated  September  23, 1963, in Tax Case No. 246 of 1962. The  respondent who was a Beedi manufacturer in  Gudiyattam, Madras State was assessed to sales tax on a taxable turnover of Rs. 1,73,502/11/10 for the assessment year 1955-56 by the Deputy  Commercial  Tax  Officer.   Against  this  order  of assessment  dated February 15, 1957 the respondent  appealed to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Salem disputing the inclusion of a sum of Rs. 1, 1 1,299 / - and  odd  on  the ground that the  said  amount  represented either second purchases or purchases made outside the  State of Madras.  Pending the appeal the Madras General Sales  Tax Act,  1959  was  passed  and the earlier  Act  of  1939  was repealed and by force of the provisions in the 1959 Act, the appeal  was finally disposed of by the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Salem.  By his order dated July 2, 1960, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that the  excise duty paid by the respondent could not form  part of  his purchase turnover but in purported exercise  of  his powers  under  the new Act enhanced the  assessment  of  the turnover  by including a gum of Rs. 1,15,406/14/9 as  inter- State  purchases  from April 1, 1955 to September  5,  1955. The  respondent  took the matter in further  appeal  to  the Sales  Tax  Appellate Tribunal.  The  appellant  also  filed petitions  before  the  Tribunal  for  enhancement  of   the assessment  by  Rs.  3,66,213/12/- on the  ground  that  the amount  represented  sales of manufactured beedies  to  non- resident buyers during the period May 12, 1955 to  September 5,  1955  and that the goods, in question  were  within  the territory  of the State at the time the contract of sale  in respect thereof was made.  It was contended on behalf of the appellant   that  the  sales  were  taxable  by  virtue   of Explanation  (2) to s. 2(h) of the Madras General Sales  Tax Act,  1939 in view of the lifting of the ban on the levy  of tax  on inter-State sales by the Sales Tax  Laws  Validation Act, 1956 (Central Act VII of 1956), hereinafter called  the ’Validation Act’, and that it was wrongly excluded from  the taxable  turnover by the taxing authorities.  By  its  order dated  July  13,  1962 the Appellate  Tribunal  allowed  the petition for enhancement and rejected the contention of  the respondent   that  the  sales  were  agency  sales   through Commission Agents.  As regards the alleged second  purchases

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or outside purchases of raw tobacco, the Appellate  Tribunal remanded  the case to the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner. Against  the order of the Appellate Tribunal the  respondent filed a petition in the High Court, of 384 Madras  under  s. 38 of the Madras General  Sales  Tax  Act, 1959.  By its order dated September 23, 1963 the High  Court held:  (1) that the inclusion of the  inter-State  purchases from   April   1,  1955  to  September  5,   1955   of   Rs. 1,15,406/14/9.   was   bad  as   the   Appellate   Assistant Commissioner  had no jurisdiction to include that  turnover; (2)  that the turnover of Rs. 3,66,213/12/- included by  the Appellate  Tribunal  could  not be brought  to  tax  as  the beedies, which were the subject of the relevant sales,  were delivered outside the State for purposes of consumption  and as  the sales therefore constituted Explanation sales  under Art.  286(1)  of the Constitution as it stood prior  to  the Sixth  Amendment  and consequently the Madras State  had  no jurisdiction to tax the said sales.  Being aggrieved by that part  of  the  decision  of the Madras  High  Court  on  the question  of taxability of the said transactions  of  inter- State  sales effected prior to September 6, 1955, the  State of Madras has brought the present appeal. The  question presented for consideration in this appeal  is whether the Madras State had jurisdiction to levy sales  tax on the alleged "Explanation sales" by the respondent  during the  period  between April 1, 1955 to September 5,  1955  by virtue  of Explanation (2) to s. 2(h) of the Madras  General Sales Tax Act, 1939. Section  2(h)  of  the Madras General Sales  Tax  Act,  1939 states:               "2.  In  this Act, unless  there  is  anything               repugnant in the subject or context-               (h)’sale’ with all its grammatical  variations               and  cognate expressions means every  transfer               of  the  property in goods by  one  person  to               another in the course of trade or business for               cash or for deferred payment or other valuable               consideration, and includes also a transfer of               property in goods involved in the execution of               a  works  contract,  and  in  the  supply   or               distribution   of  goods  by  a   co-operative               society, club, firm or any association to  its               members  for cash or for deferred  payment  or               other  valuable  consideration  but  does  not               include  a mortgage, hypothecation, charge  or               pledge;               Explanation  (2)-The sale or purchase  of  any               goods  shall  be deemed, for the  purposes  of               this  Act, to have taken place in this  State,               wherever  the  contract of  sale  or  purchase               might have been made-               (a)  if the goods were actually in this  State               at  the  time  when the contract  of  sale  or               purchase, in respect thereof was made, or               (b)  in case the contract was for the sale  or               purchase of future goods by description, then,               if  the  goods are actually produced  in  this               State  at any time after the contract of  sale               or purchase in respect thereof was made. 385 Section 3 which is the charging section provides as follows:               "Subject to the provisions of this Act,-               (a)   every  dealer shall pay for each year  a               tax on his total turnover for such year; and

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             (b)   the tax shall be calculated at the  rate               of   three  pies  for  every  rupee  in   such               turnover: Provided  that if and to the extent to which  such  turnover relates  to  articles  of food or drink or both  sold  in  a hotel, boarding house, restaurant, stall or any other place, the  tax shall be calculated at the rate of four and a  half pies  for  every rupee, if the turnover  relating  to  those articles is not less than twenty-five thousand rupees. Under  the  Government of India Act, 1935, it  was  open  to every   Provincial   Legislature   to   enact    legislation authorising  the levy of tax on sale of goods in respect  of transactions   whether  within  or  outside  the   Province, provided  the Province had a territorial nexus with  one  or more elements constituting the sale.  This resulted in  levy of  sales  tax  by many Provinces in  respect  of  the  same transaction--each Province fixing upon one or more  elements constituting the sale wish which it had a territorial nexus. The  Constitution  with  a view  to  prevent  imposition  of manifold  taxes on the same transaction of sale, imposed  by Art. 286 restrictions on the levy of sale and purchase taxes on certain classes of transactions.  Article 286, as it  was originally enacted, read as follows:               (1)   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-(.a) outside the  State;               or               (b)  in the course of the import of the  goods               into,  or  export  of the goods  out  of,  the               territory of India. Explanation.-For  the purposes of sub-clause (a), a sale  or purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the State in which  the  goods have actually been delivered as  a  direct result  of  such  sale  or  purchase  for  the  purpose   of consumption  in  that State, notwithstanding the  fact  that under the general law relating to sale of goods the property in  the goods has by reason of such sale or purchase  passed in another State. (2)  Except  in so far as Parliament may  by  law  otherwise provide,  no law of a State shall impose, or  authorise  the imposition  of, a tax on the sale or purchase of  any  goods where  such  sale or purchase takes place in the  course  of inter-State trade or commerce: 386               Provided  that  the  President  may  by  order               direct that any tax on the sale or purchase of               goods  which  was  being  lawfully  levied  by               the’Government of any State immediately before               the  commencement of this Constitution  shall,               notwithstanding  that the imposition  of  such               tax  is  contrary to the  provisions  of  this               clause,  continue  to  be  levied  until   the               thirty-first day of March, 1951.               (3) No law made by the Legislature of a  State               imposing, or authorising the imposition of,  a               tax on the sale or purchase of any such  goods               as have been declared by Parliament by law  to               be  essential  for the life of  the  community               shall have effect unless it has been  reserved               for the consideration of the President and has               received his assent.". Article 286 thus imposed four bans upon legislative power of the States.  Clause (1) prohibited every State from imposing or authorising the imposition of, a tax on outside sales and

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on sales in the course of import into or export outside  the territory  of  India.  By el. (2) the State  was  prohibited from imposing tax on the sale of goods where such sale  took place  in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.   But the  ban  could be removed by the legislation  made  by  the Parliament.   By  el.  (3) the Legislature of  a  State  was incompetent  to impose or authorise imposition of a  tax  on the sale or purchase of any goods declared by the Parliament by law to be essential for the life of the community, unless the  legislation was reserved for the consideration  of  the President and had received his assent. In  The Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd., v. The State of Bihar  and Others(1),  it  was held by this Court  that  the  operative provisions  of  the several parts of Art.  286,  namely  el. (1)(a),  el.  (1)(b), el. (2) and el. (3), are  intended  to deal  with different topics and one cannot be  projected  or read  into  another, and therefore the  Explanation  in  el. (1)(a) cannot legitimately be extended to el. (2) either  as an  exception or as a proviso thereto or read as  curtailing or limiting the ambit of el. (2).  It was further held  that until  the Parliament by law made in exercise of the  powers vested  in it by el. (2) of Art. 286 provides otherwise,  no State  may impose or authorise the imposition of any tax  on sales  or  purchases of goods when such sales  or  purchases take  place in the course of inter-State trade or  commerce, and therefore the State Legislature could not charge  inter- State sales or purchases until the Parliament had  otherwise provided.  The judgment of this Court in The Bengal Immunity Company’s(1)  case was delivered on September 6, 1955.   The President  then issued the Sales Tax Laws  Validation  Ordi- nance,  1956, on January 30, 1956, the provisions  of  which were  later embodied in the Sales Tax Laws  Validation  Act, 1956.  Section 2 of this Act provided: (1)  [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603, 387               "Validation   of  State  laws   imposing,   or               authorising  the imposition of, taxes on  sale               or  purchase of goods in the course of  inter-               State  trade or commerce.Nothwithstanding  any               judgment, decree or order of any Court, no law               of  a  State  imposing,  or  authorising   the               imposition  of, a tax on the sale or  purchase               of any goods where such sale or purchase  took               place  in the course of inter-State  trade  or               commerce during the period between the 1st day               of  April 1951, and the 6th day of  September,               1955, shall be deemed to be invalid or ever to               have been invalid merely by reason of the fact               that  such sale or purchase took place in  the               course  of inter-State trade or commerce;  and               all such taxes levied or collected or purport-               ing  to have been levied or  collected  during               the aforesaid period shall be deemed always to               have  been  Validly  levied  or  collected  in               accordance with law..............." By  this  Act  therefore  the  Parliament  removed  the  ban contained in Art. 286(2) of the Constitution retrospectively but  limited  only to the period between April 1,  1951  and September  6, 1955.  All transactions of sale,  even  though the were inter-State sales could for that period be lawfully charged to tax. On behalf of the appellant the argument was put forward that the  Validation  Act having lifted the ban  on  taxation  of interState sales, the transactions of the respondent for the period  from  April  1,  1955  to  September  5,  1955  were

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assessable to tax under the provisions of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 operating on its own terms.  Counsel for the appellant particularly based his argument on the  second Explanation  to s.2(h) of that Act and the decision of  this Court  in  Messrs  Ashok  Leyland  Ltd.  v.  The  State   of Madras(1).   In  our opinion, the argument  put  forward  on behalf  of the appellant is not warranted.  The decision  of this Court in Ashok Leyland’s(1) case has no bearing on  the question  presented  for determination in  this  case.   The reason is that in that case the deliveries of motor vehicles were  inside the Madras State and the inter-State  sales  in question  were not "Explanation Sales" falling  within  Art. 286(1)(a).   It  is  a  well-settled  proposition  that  the operative  provisions  of  the several parts  of  Art.  286. namely el. 1(a), el. 1(b), el. (2) and el. (3), are intended to deal with different topics and one cannot be projected or read  into  another, and therefore the  Explanation  in  el. (1)(a) cannot legitimately be extended to el. (2) either  as an  exception or as a proviso thereto or read as  curtailing or  limiting  the  ambit of el. (2).  In  other  words,  the legislative authority of the States to impose taxes on sales and purchases was restricted by four limitations-in  respect of sales or purchases outside the State, in respect of sales or purchases in the course of imports into or exports out of India, in respect of sales or purchases which take place  in the course of (1)  [1962] 1 S.C.R. 607. 388 inter-State  trade or commerce and in respect of  sales  and purchases  of goods declared by Parliament to  be  essential for the life of the community.  These limitations overlap to some  extent, but the legislative power of the State to  tax sale  or purchase transactions may be exercised, only if  it is  not  hit by any of the  limitations.   The  restrictions imposed  by Art. 286 are cumulative.  It  follows  therefore that even if the ban under Art. 286(2) is lifted by  Parlia- ment  by  the enactment of the Validation  Act,  the  Madras State cannot still tax inter-State sales or purchases  which take  place outside its territorial limits because  of,  the ban  under Art. 286(1)(a) of the Constitution.  What  is  an "outside  sale"  is  defined  by  the  Constitution  by  the explanation  to  Art.  286(1) which states  what  should  be deemed  to  be  an ’inside sale’.  As provided  by  the  Ex- planation to Art. 286(1), a sale or purchase shall be deemed to  have  taken place in the State in which the  goods  have actually  been  delivered  as a direct result  of  the  sale notwithstanding the fact that under the general law relating to sale of goods the property in the goods has, by reason of such  sale or purchase, passed in another State.  The  legal position was stated by this Court in The State of Bombay  v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1) as follows:               "It provides by means of a legal fiction  that               the State in which the goods sold or purchased               are actually delivered for consumption therein               is the State in which the sale or purchase  is               to   be  considered  to  have   taken   place,               notwithstanding  the  property in  such  goods               passed  in  another State.  Why  an  ’outside’               sale or purchase is explained by defining what               is an inside sale, and why actual delivery and               consumption   in  the  State  are   made   the               determining  factors  in locating  a  sale  or               purchase  will  presently appear.The  test  of               sufficient territorial nexus was thus replaced               by a simpler and more easily workable test:Are

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             the  goods  actually delivered in  the  taxing               State, as  a  direct  result  of  a  sale   or               purchase,  for  the  purpose  of   consumption               therein?  Then, such sale or purchase shall be               deemed  to have taken place in that State  and               outside  all other States.  The latter  States               are   prohibited  from  taxing  the  sale   or               purchase; the former alone is left free to  do               so.  Multiple taxation of the same transaction               by different States is also thus avoided." This  observation was not in any way dissented from  by  the judgment of this Court in the later case-The Bengal Immunity Company’s(2)  case.   The result therefore is  that  if  the terms  of the Explanation are satisfied such sales are by  a fiction  deemed  to be ’inside’ the State  of  delivery-cum- consumption  and therefore ’ outside’ all other States.   In such cases therefore only the State ’inside’ which the  sale is deemed to take place by virtue of the (1) [1953] S.C.R, 1069, 1082. (2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603. 389 Explanation   is  exempt  from  the  ban  imposed  by   Art. 286(1)(a); all other States would be subject to that ban  in respect  of  such  sales.   This  principle  underlies   the decision  of this Court in Shree Bajrang Jute Mills Ltd.  v. State  of Andhra Pradesh(1).  In that case,  the  appellant, carrying  on business as a manufacturer of jute  goods  with its factory at Guntur, used to send jute bags by railway  to the  cement  factories of the A.C.C. Outside  the  State  of Andhra.   For  securing a regular supply of jute  bags,  the A.C.C. entered into a contract with the appellant and  under the  despatch instructions from that company, the  appellant loaded  the  goods in the railway wagons,  obtained  railway receipts in the name of the A.C.C. as consignee and  against payment of the price, delivered the receipts to the  Krishna Cement  Works,  Tadepalli,  which was  for  the  purpose  of receiving the railway receipt and making payment, the  agent of  the A.C.C. From the amounts shown as gross  turnover  in the  return for the assessment year 1954-55,  the  appellant claimed reduction of certain amounts in respect of the goods supplied  by rail to the A.C.C. outside the State of  Andhra Pradesh under its despatch instructions.  The Commercial Tax Officer  and  the Deputy Commissioner  of  Commercial  Taxes disallowed  the claim and held that as the railway  receipts were delivered to the agent of the buyer within the State of Andhra,  and price was also realized from the agent  of  the buyer  within the State, goods must be deemed to  have  been delivered  to the buyer in the Stale of Andhra Pradesh,  and the  appellant  was  liable to pay tax on  the  sales.   The question  for  determination in this Court was  whether  the sales  by  the appellant to the A.C.C. may  be  regarded  as ’nonExplanation   sales’,   i.e.,   failing   outside    the Explanation to Art. 286(1).  It was held by this Court  that if  the  goods were delivered pursuant to the  contracts  of sale  outside  the  State  of  Andhra  for  the  purpose  of consumption   in  the  State  into  which  the  goods   were delivered,  the State of Andhra could have no right  to  tax those  sales  by virtue of the restriction imposed  by  Art. 286(1)(a)  read  with  the  Explanation.   To  attract   the Explanation,  the  goods had to be actually delivered  as  a direct result of the sale, for the purpose of consumption in the  State  in which they were  delivered.   The  expression ’actually delivered’ in the context in which it occurs,  can ’Only mean physical delivery of the goods, or such action as puts  the  goods in the possession of the purchaser  and  it

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does  not contemplate mere symbolical or notional  delivery. It  was  accordingly held that the State of  Andhra  had  no authority to levy tax in respect of these sale  transactions in  which  the  goods were sent under  railway  receipts  to places  outside the State of Andhra and  actually  delivered for  the purpose of consumption in those States.   The  same view  was reiterated by this Court in  Singareni  Collieries Co.  Ltd. v. State of Andhra Pradesh(2).  In that case,  the appellant  company  carried on the business of  mining  coal from  its  collieries  and supplying it  to  consumers  both within and outside the State. (1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 691.     (2) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 190. 390 In  proceedings  for assessment to Sales  tax,  the  company claimed  that it was not liable to pay sales tax  under  the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act, 1950, on the price of  coal supplied  to allottees outside the taxing State pursuant  to the  directions  of the Coal Commissioner issued  under  the Colliery  Control Order, 1945.  This claim was  rejected  by the  Sales  Tax  Officer  on the ground  that  the  coal  in question  was sold F.O.R. colliery siding and  was  actually delivered  to  the consumers within the State  when  it  was loaded  on their account in railway wagons at  the  colliery siding.  The appeals against that decision to the  appellate authorities as well as to the High Court were dismissed.  It was decided by this Court that so far as the period  between April 1, 1954 and September 6, 1955 was concerned, sales  of coal  for delivery to consumers outside the State could  not be  taxed under the Hyderabad Act because they were  covered by  the  explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) as  it  stood  before amendment.   It  was held that the Explanation  defines  the State  in which the goods have actually been  delivered  for consumption,  as  the  State in which  for  the  purpose  of cl.(1)(a) of Art. 286 the sale shall be deemed to have taken place,  and that State alone in which the sale is deemed  to take  place  has  the power to tax the sale,  and  for  this purpose  it  is immaterial that property in  the  goods  has under  the general law relating to sale of goods  passed  in another  State in which the allottee resided or  carried  on business. The  legal  position therefore is that  the  Validation  Act merely lifted the ban under Art. 286(2) of the  Constitution on  the  State’s power to legislate but the ban  imposed  by Art.  286(1)(a) of the Constitution was still effective  and could not be removed by legislation of Parliament.  In other words,  even if the ban under Art. 286(2) is removed by  the Validation  Act,  no  State can tax an  interState  sale  or purchase  which takes place outside its territorial  limits. What is an "outside sale" is defined by the Constitution  as Explanation  to  Art.  286(1) which states  what  should  be deemed  to be an "inside sale".  It is well-settled that  by Art.  286(1) (as it stood before the Sixth Amendment)  sales as a direct result of which goods were delivered in a  State for  consumption  in  such State, i.e.,  the  sales  failing within the Explanation to Art. 286(1) were fictionally to be regarded as inside that State for the purpose of cl.  (1)(a) and  so within the taxing power of the State in  which  such delivery  took  place  and being outside  all  other  States exempt  from  sales-tax by those other States.  As  we  have already  said, the Validation Act has lifted the  ban  under Art.  286(2)  alone but did not remove the  ban  under  Art. 286(1)  which continued to apply without being  affected  by the  Validation Act.  Therefore, even if a sale fell  within the  Explanation under s. 2(h) of the Madras  General  Sales Tax  Act,  1939 it was beyond the competence of  the  Madras

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State to tax if the assessee had delivered the goods outside the State for consumption therein.  It follows therefore  in the present case that the goods sold and delivered outside 391 the  State during the period from April, 1955 to  September, 1955  were not liable to tax under the Madras General  Sales Tax Act, 1939 and the taxing authorities had no jurisdiction to  include  Rs.  3,66,213/12/-  in  the  turnover  of   the respondent. We  proceed  to consider the next question  raised  in  this case,   viz.,  that  the  High  Court  acted  illegally   in entertaining  and relying upon the affidavits filed  by  the respondent  while exercising its revisional powers under  s. 38  of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (Madras Act  I of 1959).  It was contended for the appellant that the  High Court could not itself record a finding of fact after taking additional evidence and there was no express power conferred by s. 38 upon the High Court for taking additional evidence. Section 38 of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 states:               "38.  (1) Within ninety days from the date  on               which  a copy of the order  under  sub-section               (3)  of  section 36 is served  in  the  manner               prescribed,  any  person who objects  to  such               order or the Deputy Commissioner may prefer  a               petition to the High Court on the ground  that               the  Appellate  Tribunal  has  either  decided               erroneously  or failed to decide any  question               of law:               Provided  that  the  High Court  may  admit  a               petition preferred after the period of  ninety               days  aforesaid  if it is satisfied  that  the               petitioner   had  sufficient  cause  for   not               preferring   the  petition  within  the   said               period.                ..................................               (4)(a) If the High Court does not dismiss  the               petition  summarily,  it shall,  after  giving               both the parties to the petition a  reasonable               opportunity  of  being  heard,  determine  the               question  of  law raised and  either  reverse,               affirm  or amend the order against  which  the               petition was preferred or remit the matter  to               the  Appellate Tribunal, with the  opinion  of               the  High Court on the question of law  raised               or  pass such order in relation to the  matter               as the High Court thinks fit.               (b)   Where  the High Court remits the  matter               under  clause  (a)  with its  opinion  on  the               question of law raised, the Appellate Tribunal               shall   amend  the  order  passed  by  it   in               conformity with such opinion.               (5) Before passing an order under  sub-section               (4),  the High Court may, if it  considers  it               necessary so to do, remit the petition to  the               Appellate  Tribunal, and direct it  to  return               the petition with its finding on any  specific               question or issue.                ....................................... 392               (8)  (a) The petitioner or the respondent  may               apply  for review of any order passed  by  the               High Court under clause (a) of sub-section (4)               on  the  basis  of the discovery  of  new  and               important  facts which after the  exercise  of               due diligence were not within his knowledge or

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             could  not be produced by him when  the  order               was made.               (b)  The  application  for  review  shall   be               preferred within such time, and in such manner               as  may  be prescribed and shall where  it  is               preferred  by any party other than the  Deputy               Commissioner  be accompanied by a fee  of  one               hundred rupees.            .................................... It  was argued for the appellant that under S. 38  the  High Court  was  empowered  to interfere with the  order  of  the Appellate Tribunal only if it bad either decided a  question of  law erroneously or bad failed to decide any question  of law.   It  was said that in any case the High  Court  should have  remitted  the matter to the Appellate Tribunal  if  it considered it necessary for the proper disposal of the  case to  take in evidence any additional facts under S. 38(5)  of the  Act before passing an order under sub-s. (4)  remitting the  matter  to  the  Appellate  Tribunal  on  any  specific question  or  issue.  In our opinion there  is  considerable force  in  the  argument  put  forward  on  behalf  of   the appellant.   But  we do not wish to, express  any  concluded opinion on this point in the present case.  It appears  that the  appellant did not raise any objection before  the  High Court when the affidavits were taken into evidence.   Having preferred  no objection before the High Court it is not  now open  to  the  appellant to gay that the  High  Court  acted illegally  in taking those affidavits in evidence.   It  was submitted   for   the  respondent  that   the   transactions themselves  took  place in 1955, nearly 12  years  back  and ordinarily accounts of dealings would not be retained beyond five  years.   Counsel for the respondent referred  in  this connection  to a rule framed under the Madras General  Sales Tax  Act.  In these circumstances it was  hardly  worthwhile for  the  High  Court  to  remand  the  case  for  a   fresh investigation.   We  therefore reject the  argument  of  the appellant on this aspect of the case. For  the  reasons assigned we hold that this appeal  has  no merit  and must be dismissed.  In the circumstances  of  the case we do not propose to make any order as to costs. Civil  Appeals Nov. 539 & 540 of 1966, 717 of 1966,  684  of 1966, 694 of 1966 and 857 of 1966. The main question to be considered in these appeals is  whe- ther,  after  the enactment of the  Validation  Act,  Madras State  had  the  constitutional power  to  tax  "Explanation sales"  falling  under Art. 286(1)(a)  of  the  Constitution i.e., where goods were delivered for consumption outside the State  and  whether  the ban under  Art.  296(1)(a)  was  an independent   ban  and  whether  it  could  be  removed   by Parliamentary legislation under Art. 286(2).  This question 393 has been the subject-matter of consideration in Civil Appeal No. 495 of 1966, and for the reasons given in that case,  we hold  that the Madras State had no authority to  levy  sales tax  on  such transactions of sale and the  High  Court  was right  in  holding that the constitutional  bar  under  Art. 286(1)(a) was not lifted by the Validation Act. In  Civil appeals Nos. 539 and 540 of 1966 Counsel  for  the appellant took an additional point that the High Court ought not  to  have called for an affidavit  from  the  respondent "regarding  the  mode  of sale of  wool  to,  the  Bangalore merchants".   It  was also said that the High Court  had  no power  to  take that affidavit into evidence and come  to  a finding that the sales were "’Explanation sales" within  the meaning of Art. 286(1)(a) of the Constitution.  It, however,

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appears that the appellant did not object to the  production of  the affidavit in the High Court.  It must be taken  that the  objection  was  waived and it is not now  open  to  the appellant to argue that the High Court had no power to  take the  affidavit  into evidence.  We  accordingly  reject  the argument of the appellant on this point. In Civil Appeal No. 717 of 1966 it was argued for the appel- lant  that  the  High Court erred in assuming  that  in  the transactions  in  question  the  goods  were  delivered  for consumption outside the Madras State.  It was said that  the case  should  have been remanded by the High  Court  to  the Appellate  Tribunal for a fresh finding on the  point.   The High   Court   has,  however,  taken  the  view   that   the transactions  took place in 1955-56 and ordinarily  accounts of  dealings  would not be retained by the  assessee  beyond five  years.   The High Court has observed that  apart  from this the transactions were very large in number, about  4000 and  odd  and most of them were for  a  comparatively  small value.   Some  of the invoices referred  in  the  assessment order  show  that they were for small amounts in  regard  to articles like paint, aluminium, tar and other articles.   In these  circumstances the High Court came to  the  conclusion that  the goods were delivered to places outside the  Madras State for the purpose of consumption in the deliver  States. The High Court added that it was hardly worthwhile in  these circumstances  to direct  a  remand of  the  case  to  the Appellate Tribunal for a fresh enquiry.  It is manifest that the finding of the High Court on this point is a finding  on a  question  of  fact and as there  is  proper  material  to support the finding of the High Court it is not possible  to accept the contention of. the appellant that the finding  is in  any  way defective in law.  We  accordingly  reject  the argument of the appellant on this point. For the reasons expressed we hold that these appeals have no merit   and   they  are  accordingly  dismissed.    In   the circumstances  of  the case we do not propose  to  make  any order  as to costs except in C ’ ’A. 71.7 of 1966,  In  that appeal, the respondent will be entitled to costs as  already ordered on 29th July 1965. V.P.S.                       Appeals dismissed. 394