02 November 1976
Supreme Court
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V. GURUVIAH NAIDU AND SONS ETC. Vs STATE OF TAMIL NADU AND ANR. ETC.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1577 of 1971


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PETITIONER: V. GURUVIAH NAIDU AND SONS ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF TAMIL NADU AND ANR. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT02/11/1976

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ KRISHNAIYER, V.R.

CITATION:  1977 AIR  548            1977 SCR  (1)1065  1977 SCC  (1) 234  CITATOR INFO :  R          1986 SC  63  (36)  RF         1990 SC 820  (23)

ACT:             Madras  General Sales Tax Act, 1959, Schedule II,  items         7(a) and  (b)--If ultra vires.

HEADNOTE:             Raw  as  well as dressed hides and  skins  are  declared         goods  under  Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.  Section 4 of the         Madras General Sales Tax  Act,  1959, provides that the  tax         shall  be payable by a dealer, on the sale or  purchase   of         declared goods inside the State, at the rate and only at the         point  specified in the Second Schedule to the Act,  on  the         turnover ’in such goods.  Item 7(a) of the Schedule provides         that  with respect to raw hides and skins, the rate  of  tax         shall  be at 3% and the point of levy shall be at the  point         of  last purchase  in  the State.  Item 7(b)  provides  that         with  respect  to dressed hides and skins  (which  were  not         subjected to tax under the Act as raw hides and skins),  the         rate  of tax shall be 1-1/2% and the point of levy shall  be         at the point of first sale in the State.             The  appellants  are dealers in hides and  skins.   They         purchase  raw  hides  and skins locally as well  as  in  the         course of inter-state trade and commerce, convert them  into         dressed  hides and skins and sell them either locally or  in         the course of export.  The appellants challenged the validi-         ty  of items 7(a) and 7(b). The challenge to item  7(a)  was         that the item would also cover inter-state sales and as such         was beyond the competence of the State Legislature; and  the         challenge to item 7(b) was that it was violative of Art. 304         (a)  of the Constitution on the ground that whereas  dressed         hides and skins sold locally, but  which  have been made out         of  imported raw-hides and skins, are subject to tax   under         the item similar sale of dressed hides and skins made out of         raw hides and skins which have been subjected to tax at  the         purchase stage are not subject to  tax under the item.             HELD:  (1) Item 7(a) relates only to intra  state  sales         and  not to inter-state sales.  This is clear from the  lan-         guage used in the item, especially  the  words "purchase  in         the State".  Assuming the language is ambiguous it should be         so construed as would sustain its, constitutional  validity.

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       [1067 F]             (2)  Article  304(a)  does not prevent levy  of  tax  on         goods:  what  it prohibits is such levy of tax on  goods  as         would  result in discrimination between goods imported  from         other  states  and similar goods  manufactured  or  produced         within  the State.  The object is to prevent  discrimination         against  imported goods by imposing tax on such goods  at  a         rate  higher  than  that borne by  local   goods  since  the         difference  between the two rates would constitute a  fiscal         barrier  and thus impede the free flow of inter-state  trade         and commerce.  The scheme  of items 7(a) and (b) is that  in         the case of raw hides and skins which are purchased  locally         in  the State, the levy of tax would be at the rate  of  3%.         When  such locally purchased raw hides and skins are  tanned         and  sold  locally  as dressed hides and skins no levy would         be made on such sales, as those hides and skins have already         been  subjected  to tax at 3% when purchased  in   the   raw         form.   On  the other hand, in the case of hides  and  skins         imported  from  other  States in the  raw  form,  thereafter         tanned,  and then sold inside  the  State  as dressed  hides         and skins, the levy of tax is at 11/2%.  This levy  however,         cannot be considered discriminatory because the Legislature,         while prescribing the rate in item 7(b) at half that  levied         under  item  7(a)  took into account  the  higher  price  of         dressed  hides and skins (nearly double) as compared to  the         price   of  raw hides and skins, and the fact  that  no  tax         under the State Act has been paid in respect of imported raw         hides and skins.  Even though dressed  hides  and skins  are         treated  as  a. separate commodity there is  a  clear  nexus         between hides         1066         and skins in the raw form and those in the dressed form; and         hence,  there is no infirmity in the legislative  provision,         which, while levying tax on the  sale  of dressed hides  and         skins  takes into account the levy in respect of  raw  hides         and skins. [1070 D-H] .             The    onus   of   showing   that   there    would    be         discrimination .between raw hides and skins purchased local-         ly  and  then tanned, and raw hides and skins  imported  and         then  tanned is on the appellant, and the appellant has  not         discharged the onus. [1070 C]             Firm A. T. B. Mehtab Majid & Co. v. The State of  Madras         &  Anr. 14 S.T.C. 355 and .4. Hajee Abdul Shukoor &  Co.  v.         The  State  of Madras 15 S.T.C. 719, explained  and  distin-         guished.

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1577   and         1579 of 1971.              Appeal  from the judgment and  Orders dated   23-3-1971         and  22-4-1971  of the Madras High Court in  Writ  Petitions         Nos. 1088/70 and 1316/71.             K. Srinivasan, I. Subramaniam and (Mrs.) S. Gopalakrish-         nan for the Appellants.             K.  Purasaran, Advocate General for the State of   Tamil         Nadu, A. V. Rangam and (Miss) A. Subhashini for the Respond-         ents.             The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KHANNA,  J.  These appeals by special leave are  against         the  judgment of Madras High Court whereby, that  court  re-         pelled the challenge to the validity of items 7(a) and  7(b)         of the Second Schedule  to the Madras General Sales Tax Act,         1959 (hereinafter referred to as the State Act).

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           The  appellants  are dealers in hides  and  skins.   The         appellants  purchase raw hides and skins locally as well  as         in  the course ’of interState trade and commerce.   The  raw         hides  and skins are converted into dressed hides and  skins         and   are sold either locally  or. in the course of  export.         The  matter relates to the assessment year 1968-69  and  the         dispute between the parties arises because of the  inclusion         in  the turnover of the sale and purchase price of  some  of         the above goods.  The appellants by means of writ  petitions         challenged the validity of items 7(a) and 7(b) of the Second         Schedule  to  the  State Act.  The High  Court,  as  already         mentioned,  repelled  the attack on the  validity  of  those         items and dismissed the. writ petitions.             Before dealing with the contentions advanced, it may  be         appropriate to refer to the relevant provisions.  Section  4         of  the  State  Act is the charging section  in  respect  of         declared goods and reads thus:                             "Tax    in    respect    of     declared                       goods.--Notwithstanding anything contained  in                       section  3,  the tax under this Act  shall  be                       payable  by a dealer on the sale  or  purchase                       inside the State of declared goods at the rate                       and  only at the point specified against  each                       in the second schedule of the turnover in such                       goods  in each year, whatever the  quantum  of                       turnover in that year."         1067         It  may  be mentioned that raw hides and skins as  well   as         dressed  hides  and skins are declared goods  under  section         14(if)  of  the  Central Sales Tax  Act,  1956  (hereinafter         referred  to  as the Central Act). Section  14(iii)  of  the         Central Act reads as under:                 "’It is hereby declared that the following goods are         of special importance in inter-State trade or commerce:                 .........     .............    .............                 .........     .............    .............             (iii)  hides  and  skins, whether in a  raw  or  dressed         state."         Items 7(a)  and 7(b) of the Second Schedule to the State Act         and read as under:         Items 7(a) and 7(b) of the Second Schedule to the State  Act         read as under :--         "S. No.  Description of goods      Point of levy     Rate                                                              of tax         1           2                           3             4         7(a)  Raw hides and skins        At the point of     3                                          last chase in                                          the State.         7(b)  Dressed hides and          At the point of     1-1/2               skins (which were          1st sale in the               not subjected to           State.               tax under this              Act as raw hides and skins)                        ,,             So  far as validity of item 7(a) of the Second  Schedule         is  concerned, the argument of the learned counsel  for  the         appellant  is that this would cover also  inter-State  sales         and  as such is beyond the competence of the State  legisla-         ture.  We are unable to accede to  this contention as we are         of the view that item 7(a) relates only to interState  sales         and  not to inter-State sales.  This is clear from the  lan-         guage  used in the item, especially  the words "purchase  in         the  State".  Assuming  that the language of  item  7(a)  is         ambiguous,  it should be so construed as would  sustain  the         constitutional  validity  of the said item.   Considered  in         this light the occasion. for the levy of tax under the above

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       item  would arise only when there is intra-State   sale  and         not inter-State sale.             Regarding from 7(b), the learned counsel for the  appel-         lants  has  contended  that it is violative  of  clause  (a)         article  304 of the Constitution.  The said clause reads  as         under:                           "304. Notwithstanding anything in  article                       301 or article 303, the Legislature of a State                       may by law--                          (a)  impOse on goods imported  from   other                       States  or  the Union Territories any  tax  to                       which...  similar foods manufactured  or  pro-                       duced in that State are subject, so,  however,                       as not to discriminate between goods                       18--1338sci/76                       1068                       so  imported  and  goods  so  manufactured  or                       produced; and                       (b) ......   .........   .... .         According to ’the learned counsel, ’there can be three types         of  sale transactions in respect of dressed hides and skins:                        (1  ) Dressed hides and skins  imported  from                       outside  the          State  of  Tamil   Nadu.                       Tanning  of the  aforesaid                       (2)  Import of raw  hides and skins from  out-                       side the State of Tamil Nadu  and sold  within                       that  State;  raw hides and skins  within  the                       State  of Tamil Nadu and the sale of the  same                       within that State as dressed hides and  skins;                       and                       (3) Purchase of raw hides and skins within the                       State  of  Tamil  Nadu and sale  of  the  same                       within  that State as dressed hides and  skins                       after tanning those hides and skins.         It  is urged that in respect of hides and skins  covered  by         the  third  category, the local sales of dressed  hides  and         skins  will  not be liable to tax under ’State  Act  as  the         purchase  of the raw hides and skins has already  been  sub-         jected  to tax under item 7(a).  Regarding  hides and  skins         mentioned  at (1) and (2) above, the local sales of  dressed         hides and skins would be subjected to tax at the rate of  1-         1/2  per  cent under item 7(b) as there was no levy  of  tax         under  the  State Act in respect of those hides  and  skins.         Learned  counsel accordingly concludes from the  above  that         imported  hides  and skins are subject to tax when  sold  as         dressed  hides  and  skins at the rate of  11/2  per   cent,         whereas  hides and skins purchased in raw form  locally  and         dressed  thereafter are not subject to tax under  the  State         Act when sold as dressed hides and skins.  The   contention,         mother  words, is that whereas dressed hides and skins  sold         locally  but which have been made out of imported raw  hides         and skins are subject to tax, similar sales of dressed hides         and  skins  made  out of raw hides  and   skins  which  have         suffered tax at purchase stage are not subject to tax  under         item  7(b)  of the Second Schedule of the State  Act.   Item         7(b)  is therefore stated to be discriminatory and violative         of  article  304(a). Reliance in this connection  is  placed         upon two decisions of this Court in the cases of Firm A.T.B.         Mehtab  Majid & Co. v. The  State  of Madras & Anr. (1)  and         A. Hajee Abdul Shukoor & Co. v. The State of Madras.(2)             In  the case of Mehtab this Court held that  the  provi-         sions of rule 16  of the Madras General Sales  Tax (Turnover         and  Assessment) Rules, 1939 discriminate between hides  and         skins   imported from outside the State and  those  manufac-         tured  or produced inside the State and therefore they  con-

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       travene  the provisions of article 304(a)  of the  Constitu-         tion.   Perusal of the facts of that case goes to show  that         the  real grievance of the appellant in that case  was  that         though there was a substantial disparity in the price of raw         hides  and skins and the price of dressed hides  and  skins,         the same rate of tax was levied         (1) 14 S.T.C. 355.         (2) 15 S.T.C. 719.         1069         in  respect of both types of hides and skins  under  section         3(1) (b) of the State Act.  This is clear from the following         observations in that case:                           "The  grievance arises on account  of  the                       amount  of tax levied being different  on  ac-                       count  of the existence of a substantial  dis-                       parity in the price of the raw hides or  skins                       and  of  those hides or skins after  they  had                       been tanned, though the rate is the same under                       section 3(1) (b) of the Act. If the dealer has                       purchased the raw. hides or skin in the State,                       he  does  not  pay on the sale  price  of  the                       tanned  hides or skins he pays on the purchase                       price only.  If the dealer purchases raw hides                       or skins from outside  the State and tane them                       within  the  State, he will be liable  to  pay                       sales  tax  o, the sale price  of  the  tanned                       hides or skins."             In  the  case of Hajee Abdul Shukoor  this  Court   held         that   Subsection  (1) of section 2 of  the  Madras  General         Sales  Tax  (Special Provisions)  Act,  1963   discriminates         against   imported  hides  and skins which were sold  up  to         August  1,  1957.   The rate of tax on the  sale  of  tanned         hides and skins, as would appear from that judgment, was  "2         per  cent on the purchase price of those hides and skins  in         the untanned condition, while the rate of tax on the sale of         raw  hides and skins in the State during 1955 to 1957  is  3         pies  per  rupee".  The Court in this  context  referred  to         Mehtab’s case and observed:                           "In  the earlier case, discrimination  was                       brought  about  on account of  sale  price  of                       tanned  hides and skins to be higher than  the                       sale  price  of untanned   hides   and  skins,                       though the rate of tax was the same, while  in                       the present case, the discrimination does  not                       arise  on account of difference of  the  price                       o.n which the tax is levied as the tax on  the                       tanned hides and skins is levied on the amount                       for  which  those hides and  skins  were  last                       purchased  in the untanned condition,  but  on                       account  of the fact that the rate of tax  the                       sale of tanned hides and skins is higher  than                       that on the sale of untanned hides and  skins.                       The  rate of tax on the sale of  tanned  hides                       and skins is 2% on the purchase price of these                       hides  and  skins in the   untanned  condition                       while the rate of tax on the sale of raw hides                       and skins on the State during 1955 to 1957  is                       3 pies per rupee.  The difference in tax works                       out  to  7/1600th of a rupee, i.e.,  a  little                       less  than  1/2 naya paise per rupee.  Such  a                       discrimination would affect the taxation up to                       the 1st of August, 1957, when the rate of  tax                       on the sale of  raw hides and skins was raised                       to 2% of the sale price."             None of the circumstances which led this Court to strike

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       down  the  relevant provisions in the  above  mentioned  two         cases exists in the present case. In Mehtab’s case discrimi-         nation  was found to exist because of the fact that tax  was         being  levied at the same rate in respect of both raw  hides         and skins’ as well as dressed hides and skins, even though         1070         the  price of dressed hides and skins was much higher.   The         position  was worse in the vase of Hajee Abdul  Shukoor  be-         cause  in  that case the sales tax was found  to  have  been         charged  at  a higher fate in respect of dressed  hides  and         skins than that on the sale of raw hides and skins in  spite         of  the fact that the price of dressed hides and  skins  was         higher  than that of raw hides and skins.  The  position  in         the present case is materially different, for here the  rate         of  sales tax for raw hides and skins is 3 per  cent,  while         that  for  dressed hides and skins is 11/2  r cent.   It  is         plain  that  the lower rate of tax in the  case  of  dressed         hides  and skins has been prescribed with a view  to  offset         the  difference between the higher price of  dressed   hides         and skins and lower price of raw hides and skins.  No  mate-         rial has been brought on the record to show that despite the         lower  rate of sales tax for dressed_ hides and  skins,  the         imported hides and skins are being subjected to  discrimina-         tion.   The onus to show that there would be  discrimination         between the hides and skins which were purchased locally  in         the  raw form and thereafter tanned and the hides and  skins         which were imported from other  States was  upon  the appel-         lant.  The appellant, we find, has failed to discharge  such         onus.             Article  304(a) does not prevent levy of tax  on  goods;         what  it  prohibits is such levy of tax on  goods  as  would         result  in discrimination between goods imported from  other         States and similar goods manufactured or produced within the         State.   The  object is to  prevent  discrimination  against         imported  goods  by  imposing tax on such goods  at  a  rate         higher than  that borne by  local  goods  since the  differ-         ence between the two rates would constitute a tariff wall or         fiscal barrier and thus impede the free flow of  inter-State         trade and commerce.  The question as to when the levy of tax         would constitute discrimination would depend upon a  variety         of  factors including the rate of tax and the item of  goods         in respect of the sale of which it is levied.  The scheme of         items 7(a) and 7(b) of the Second Schedule to the State  Act         is  that in case of raw hides and skins which are  purchased         locally  in the State, the levy of tax would be at the  rate         of 3 per cent at the point of last purchase  in  the  State.         When those locally purchased raw hides and skins are  tanned         and  are  sold locally as dressed hides and skins,  no  levy         would  be made on such sales as  those hides and skins  have         already  been subjected to local tax at the   fate of 3  per         cent  when they were purchased  in  raw  form.   As  against         that, in the case of hides and skins which have been import-         ed  from other States in raw form and are thereafter  tanned         and  then sold inside the State as dressed hides and  skins,         the  levy of tax is at the   rate of 1-1/2 per cent  at  the         point of first sale in the State of the dressed   hides  and         skins.  This levy cannot be considered to be  discriminatory         as  it takes into account the higher price of dressed  hides         and skins compared to the price of raw hides and skins.   It         also  further takes note of the fact that no tax  under  the         State Act has been paid in respect of those hides and skins.         The Legislature, it seems, calculated the price of hides and         skins in dressed condition to  be double  the price of  such         hides and skins ’in raw state,  To obviate and prevent   any         discrimination  or differential treatment in the  matter  of

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       levy of tax, the Legislature therefore prescribed a  rate of         tax for  sale of   dressed hides and skins which was half of         that  levied  under item 7(a) in respect of  raw  hides  and         skins.         1071             Lastly, it has been argued that dressed hides and  skins         are  a  commodity distinct and separate from raw  hides  and         skins  and that item 7(b) of the Second  Schedule  makes   a         discrimination  between  ’the  sales  of  locally  processed         dressed  hides  and  skins and  those  imported  from  other         States.  In this respect we find that it is not the case  of         the appellants that they import dressed hides and skins from         other  States and sell them as such in Tamil Nadu.   On  the         contrary,  the  case  of the appellants is  that  what  they         _import from other States are only raw hides and skins which         are  thereafter tanned and sold as dressed hides and  skins.         In  the circumstances, it is not clear as to what  grievance         the appellants can have on the score that there is discrimi-         nation  between  imported dresed hides  and  skins  and  the         dressed hides and skins produced and manufactured within the         State.             Apart that it seems to us that even though dressed hides         and skins have been treated as separate commodity, there  is         a clear nexus between hides and skins in raw form and  those         in  dressed form.  So far as the Central Act  is  concerned,         both  the  raw as well as the dressed hides  and  skins  are         specified together in clause (iii) of section 14. It has  to         be borne in mind that it is raw hides and skins which  after         being  subjected to processing or tanning take the shape  of         dressed  hides and skins.  Dressed hides and  skins  cannot,         therefore, be considered in isolation and we find no infirm-         ity  in a legislative provision which while levying  tax  on         the  sale of dressed hides and skins takes into account  the         levy  of  tax in respect of the purchase of  raw  hides  and         skins.   Looked  at  in this light there appears  to  be  no         warrant for the proposition that preferential treatment  has         been shown to dressed hides and skins prepared from  locally         purchased  raw  hides and skins compared  to  the  treatment         accorded to imported hides and skins.             We  are  therefore, of the view that the attack  on  the         validity  of item 7(b) of the Second Schedule to  the  State         Act  is not well founded.   We accordingly dismiss  the  ap-         peals, but in the circumstances without costs.         V.P.S.                                     Appeal dismissed.         1072