02 April 1986
Supreme Court
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VRAJLAL MANILAL AND CO. AND ANOTHER Vs STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND ANOTHER

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2635 of 1972


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PETITIONER: VRAJLAL MANILAL AND CO. AND ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT02/04/1986

BENCH: MADON, D.P. BENCH: MADON, D.P. SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:  1986 AIR 1085            1986 SCR  (2)  98  1986 SCC  Supl.  201     1986 SCALE  (1)1113

ACT:      Madhya  Pradesh   General  Sales  Tax  Act  1958/Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1968 :      Section 8(1)  - Effect  of Amending  Act 1968  -  Tendu leaves treated  different from ’raw materials’ - Increase in rate of tax - Whether within legislative competence of State Whether violates  Articles 14,  19(1)(g),  301  and  304  of Constitution.

HEADNOTE:      The Madhya  Pradesh General  Sales Tax  Act, 1958  came into force  on April 1, 1959 repealing all the earlier sales tax laws  in force  in the State. With effect from that date the Central Government or a State Government or any of their departments or offices which buy, sell, supply or distribute goods,  directly   or   otherwise,   for   cash   or   other considerations, is  to be  deemed to  be a  ’dealer’ for the purposes of  the Act  irrespective of  the fact whether such purchase, sale,  supply or  distribution of  goods is in the course of business or not.      By the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act 1968, which  came into  force from April 15, 1968 sub-s. (1) of s.  8 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act was substituted and tendu leaves ceased  to be  raw material  for the purposes of s. 8 and consequently  became exigible  to tax  at the rate of 7% under s.6  read with  residuary Entry  No.l in  Part  VI  of Schedule II.      By s.  10 of  the  Madhya  Pradesh  General  Sales  Tax (Amendment and  Validation) Act,  1971  certain  amendments, including the  amendments made  by clause  (i) of  s.2, were deemed to  have formed  part of  the M.P. Sales Tax Act from the  date  of  its  commencement.  A  new  sub-cl.  (i)  was substituted for  the original  sub-cl.  (i)  and  a  further Explanation  II   was  inserted  in  cl.  (d)  of  s.2  with retrospective effect  from April  1, 1959.  By the  1971 Act sub-s. (1) of s.8 was again substituted and a new sub-s. (3) was inserted in s.8, and they 99 came into  force on  May 6, 1971. With effect from that date the provisions  of s.8 ceased to apply to sales of any goods made by the Forest Department of the State Government or any of the  offices under  that Department, but where goods were

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purchased by  a registered dealer from the Forest Department or any  of the offices of that Department and used by him as a raw  material for  the manufacture of other goods for sale within the  State of  Madhya Pradesh  or in  the  course  of inter-State trade  or commerce or in course of export out of the territory of India such dealer became entitled to a set- off of  an amount  equal to  the difference  between the tax payable at  the full  rate on  such goods  as  mentioned  in Schedule II  and the tax payable on raw material at the rate of 2%.  Purchases of  Tendu leaves by the registered dealers from the Forest Department of the State Government or any of the offices  under that Department did not, however, qualify for the set-off.      The appellant-firm carried on business as manufacturers of bidis  and dealers  in tendu  leaves. It filed a petition under Art.  226 of the Constitution challenging the validity of the  amendment made  in sub-s.  (1) of the Madhya Pradesh General Sales  Tax Act  1958 by  the Madhya  Pradesh General Sales Tax  (Amendment) Act  1968 to the extent that the said amendment treated  tendu leave  differently from  other  raw materials.      After the enactment of the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment  and Validation)  Act 1971, the writ petition was  amended   to  challenge   also  the   validity  of  the amendments. Similar  writ petitions were also filed by other bidi manufacturers  and dealers  in tendu  leaves. The  High Court dismissed all these petitions.      In the Appeal to this Court on behalf of the appellants it was  contended : (i) that as sales and purchases of tendu leaves cease  to be  exigible to  tax under s.8 by reason of the amendments  made therein  and as  tendu leaves  were not mentioned in  any of  the entries in Schedule II to the M.P. Sales Tax Act, sales and purchases of tendu leaves could not be made  exigible to  tax under  s.6 read with the residuary Entry No. 1 in Part VI of Schedule II; (ii) that neither the State Government  nor any  of its  departments including the Forest Department  or its offices was a dealer as defined in cl. (d)  of s.2;  (iii) that  the impugned amendments to s.8 are 100 violative of  Arts. 14,  19(1)(g) 286(3), 301 and 304 of the Constitution as  tendu  leaves  were  discriminated  against hostilely as  compared with  other raw materials in that the rate of  tax on  the sales and purchases of tendu leaves was made much  higher than  the rate  of tax  on the  sales  and purchases  of   other  raw  materials;  that  there  was  no reasonable basis  for making  a  distinction  between  tendu leaves and  other raw  materials inasmuch as the only use to which tendu  leaves were  put was  as a  raw material in the manufacture of  bidis; that  without amending the definition of "raw material" given in cl. (1) of s. 2 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act, a different rate of tax cannot be levied upon tendu leaves; and  that by  taxing tendu  leaves at  a higher rate than  in   the  neighbouring   States,  the  cost  of  bidis manufactured  in  the  State  of  Madhya  Pradesh  increased considerably and  thus it  impeded the  freedom of trade and commerce throughout the territory of India.      Dismissing the Appeal, ^      HELD: 1. Schedule I to the M.P. Sales Tax Act 1958 sets out the list of goods which are exempted from payment of tax under s.10.  Parts I  to  V  of  Schedule  II  set  out  the different classes  of goods  and the  rate at  which tax  is payable. The  residuary Entry  No. 1  of Part VI states that the rate  of tax  on sales and purchases of "All other goods

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not included  in Schedule  I  or  any  other  part  of  this Schedule"  shall   be  the  one  specified  in  that  Entry. Therefore, sales  or purchases  of any  class of  goods  not specifically mentioned  in any of the Entry in Schedule I or any of  the Entries  in Parts  I to  V of  Schedule  II  are exigible of  tax at  the rate  shown in the residuary Entry, unless there  is any  specific provision  in the  Act to the contrary as there is in s. 8. [112 D-F]      M/s. Anwarkhan  Mahboob Co. v. The State of Bombay (Now Maharashtra) and others. [1961] 1 S.C.R. 709, relied upon.      2. Merely  because a  particular provision in a statute is labelled  as an  Explanation it  does not mean that it is inserted merely  with a view to explain the meaning of words contained in  the section of which it forms a part. The true scope and effect of an Explanation can only be judged by its express language  and not  merely by  the label given to it. The language  of Explanation  II to  cl. (d) of s. 2 of M.P. Sales 101 Tax Act shows that its purpose is to create a legal fiction, and that  while under  the main  clause for  a person  to be dealer, he  must carry  on the  business of  buying, selling supplying  or   distributing  goods,  even  if  the  Central Government or a State Government or any of their departments or offices  does not  carry on  such business,  if it  buys, sells, supplies  or distributes goods, it is to be deemed to be a  dealer for  the purpose  of the  Act, that is, for the purposes of  the levy  and collection  of the  tax under the Act. After  the amendment  of cl.  (d) by the 1971 Act it is irrelevant for the purposes of the levy of tax under the Act whether the Central Government or State Government or any of their departments  or offices  have bought  or sold goods in the course of business. [114 B-F]      Orient Paper  Mills Ltd. v. The State of Madhya Pradesh and others, [1971] 28 S.T.C. 532, referred to.      3. Tendu  leaves do  not stand  on the  same footing as other raw  materials. Their  only use  appears to  be  as  a consumable packing  material or container for tobacco in the manufacture of  bidis just  as a  cigarette paper is used in the manufacture  of cigarettes.  Thus, tendu  leaves from  a separate class of commercial commodity and it is open to the State  to   tax  them   differently  from  other  commercial commodities falling  in the  class of  goods known  as  "raw material" [119 H; 120 A]      Messrs Mohanlal Hargovind of Jubbulpore v. Commissioner of Income-tax, C.P. and Berar,Nagpur, L.R. (1948-49) 57 I.A.      235, 237; S.C. A.I.R. 1949 P.C. 311, approved.      Khazajan Chand  etc. v.  State of Jammu and Kashmir and Others, [1984]  2 S.C.R.  858; State of Orissa ant others v. The Titaghur  Paper Mills Company Ltd. and another, [1985] 3 S.C.R.26, 65;  T.G. Venktataraman,  etc. v.  State of madras ant another,  [1969] 2  S.C.C. 299; Jaipur Hosiery Mills (P) Ltd. Jaipur v.  The State  of Rajasthan and others, [1971] 1 S.C.R. 396, ant Hoeshst Pharmaceutical Ltd. and Another etc. v. State  of Bihar  ant Others,  [1983] 3 S.C.R. 130, relied upon.      4. Tendu leaves cannot by any stretch of imagination be equated with  bidis or  tobacco because  just as  cigarettes paper used  for rolling  cigarettes cannot be equated by any stretch of imagination with cigarettes or tobacco. [123 A] 102      5. The  increase in  the rate  of tax  on a  particular commodity cannot  per se  be said  to impede  free trade and commerce in that commodity. [124 A]      State of Kerala v. A.B. Abdul Khadir and others, [1970]

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1 S.C.R. 700, relied upon.      6. In  the instant  case there was nothing to show that impugned increase  in the  rate of  tax  on  the  sales  and purchases of  tendu leaves  has put  an end to that trade or has caused  that trade to decline nor was there any material to show that by reason of the increase in the rate of tax on the sales  and purchases of tendu leaves, the trade in bidis manufactured in  the State  of Madhya Pradesh had stopped or had deceased.  Art. 301  to  304  were  neither  enacted  to safeguard the  pleasure derived  by  bidi  smokers  from  an indulgence in  their habit to ensure that bidi smokers would continue to  get for  all time  bidis manufactured in Madhya Pradesh at  the same  price. The increase in the rate of tax on the  sales and  purchase of  tendu leaves  does not  also amount to  an unreasonable restriction on the right to carry on trade  or business in tendu leave or bidis. [124 D-E; 124 H; 125 A]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2635 of 1972.      From the Judgment and Order dated 14th October, 1971 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Miscellaneous Petition No. 317 of 1971.      Rameshwar Nath for the Appellants.      A.K. Sanghi for the Respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      MADON, J.  The First  Appellant is  a partnership  firm registered under  the Indian Partnership Act, 1932, (Act No. IX of  1932). The Second appellant is one of the partners of the First  appellant Firm.  The First appellant Firm carried on at  all relevant times business as manufacturers of bidis and dealers  in tendu  leaves. The  Appellants filed  a writ petition 103 under Article  226 and  227 of  the Constitution  of  India, being Miscellaneous  Petition No.  317 of  1971, against the State of  Madhya Pradesh  and the Divisional Forest Officer, Raisen Division,  challenging the  validity of the Amendment made in  sub-section (1)  of section 8 of the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1958 (M.P. Act No. 2 of 1959), by the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1968 (M.P. Act No.      9 of  1968) to  the  extent  that  the  said  amendment treated tendu  leaves differently  from other  raw materials and for an appropriate writ, order or direction quashing the levy of  Sales tax  on tendu leaves disposed of by the State Government and  for restraining the State Government and its Officers from  enforcing or  giving  effect  to  the  Madhya Pradesh General  Sales Tax  (Amendment) Act,  1968,  to  the extent that  it amended  section 8(1)  of the Madhya Pradesh General Sales  Tax Act, 1958. In view of the reliefs claimed in the said writ petition, it is difficult to understand how Article 227  of the  Constitution could at all come into the picture. This obviously was the result of the general laxity in drafting  pleadings which  is unfortunately becoming more prevalent as each year passes. The said writ petition was in reality  a   petition  filed   under  Article   226  of  the Constitution. After  the enactment  of  the  Madhya  Pradesh General Sales  Tax (Amendment and Validation) Act 1971 (M.P. Act No. 13 of 1971), which inter alia amended the definition of ’dealer’  in clause  (d) of  section 2 with retrospective effect and further amended section 8, the Appellants amended

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their writ  petition to  challenge also  the validity of the said amendments. The said writ petition was heard along with sixty-four  similar  writ  petitions  filed  by  other  bidi manufacturers and  dealers in  tendu leaves  and by a common judgment delivered  on October  14,  1971,  all  these  writ petitions  were   dismissed  with   costs.  The   Appellants thereafter obtained from the High Court under sub-clause (a? of clause  (1? of  Article 133  of the  Constitution. as  it stood  prior   to  the   amendment  of  clause  (1)  by  the Constitution (Thirtieth  Amendment) Act, 1972, a certificate of fitness  to appeal  to this  Court on the ground that the amount or  value of the subject matter of the dispute in the High Court, namely, the liability to pay tax, as also of the dispute  on   appeal  was  more  than  Rs.  20,000  and  the Appellants have accordingly filed the present Appeal. 104      Prior to  April 1,  1959, there  were different laws in force in the State of Madhya Pradesh relating to the levy of tax on  the sales  and purchases  of  goods,  each  of  them applying to  different regions of the State. These laws were the Central  Provinces and  Berar Sales  Tax Act,  1947, the Madhya Bharat  Sales  Tax  Act,  Samvat  2007,  the  Central Provinces and  Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947, as extended to and in force  in the  Vindhya Pradesh  and Bhopal  regions,  the Rajasthan Sales  Tax Act,  1954, as  in force  in the Sironj region, and the Vindhya Pradesh Sales Tax on Coal Ordinance, 1948. With  a view  to consolidate  and amend all these laws and to  replace them by a uniform law for the levy of tax on the sales  and purchases  of goods  in the  entire State  of Madhya Pradesh,  the Madhya  Pradesh Legislature enacted the Madhya Pradesh  General Sales  Tax Act, 1958 (M.P. Act No. 2 of 1959).  This Act will hereinafter be referred to in short as "the  M.P. Sales  Tax  Act".  Under  sub-section  (2)  of section 1,  the M.P.  Sales Tax Act extended to the whole of Madhya Pradesh  and under  sub-section (3) of section (1) it was to  come into force on such date as the State Government may, by notification, appoint in that behalf. The M.P. Sales Tax Act  was brought  into force  on April  1, 1959,  by the Madhya Pradesh  Separate Revenue Department Notification No. 622-1586-V-SR dated  March 21, 1959, published in the Madhya Pradesh Gazette  dated March 27, 1959, Part 3, Section I, at page 50. By the M.P. Sales Tax Act all the earlier sales tax laws in force in the State of Madhya Pradesh were repealed.      All fiscal  enactments are  fair game  for the amending zeal of  the Legislatures and the M.P. Sales Tax Act has not been an  exception to  this rule. We are, however, concerned in this  Appeal with  only a  few sections of the M.P. Sales Tax Act and with only certain amendments made therein and we will confine ourselves to referring to them only.      Section 4  of the  M.P. Sales  Tax Act provides for the incidence of  taxation. Under it every dealer whose turnover exceeds the  limit specified in sub-section (5) of section 4 for a  particular period is liable to pay tax on his taxable turnover in  respect of  his  sales  or  supplies  of  goods effected in  Madhya Pradesh. Clause (d) of section 2 defines the  term   "dealer".  The   relevant  provisions   of  that definition as originally enacted were as follows : 105           "(d) ’dealer’  means any person who carries on the           business  of   buying,   selling,   supplying   or           distributing goods, directly or otherwise, whether           for  cash,   or  for   deferred  payment,  or  for           commission,   remuneration   or   other   valuable           consideration and includes - B     (i) the Central           or a State Government or any of their departments,

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         a local  authority, a  company, an undivided Hindu           Family or  any society  (including a  co-operative           society), club,  firm or association which carries           on such business;           x         x         x         x       x      x ." By clause  (i) of  section 2  of the  Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment and Validation) Act, 1971 (M.P. Act No. 13 of  1971) (hereinafter  referred to  as "the  1971 Act"), clause (d)  of section  2 was  amended. By this amendment, a new sub-clause  (i) was  substituted for  the original  sub- clause (i)  and a further Explanation to the said clause (d) was inserted  as Explanation II. This substituted sub-clause (i) is as follows:           "(i) a local authority, a company, undivided Hindu           Family or  any society  (including a  co-operative           society), club,  firm or association which carries           on such business". The new Explanation II is as follows :           " Explanation  The Central  or a State Governments           or any  of their  departments  or  offices  which,           whether or  not in  the course  of business,  buy,           sell, supply  or  distribute  goods,  directly  or           otherwise, for  cash or  for deferred  payment, or           for commission, remuneration or for other valuable           consideration, shall  be deemed to be a dealer for           the purposes of that Act." By section  10 of the 1971 Act certain amendments, including the amendments  made by clause (i) of section 2, were deemed to have  formed part of the M.P. Sales Tax Act from the date of  its  commencement.  The  new  sub-clause  (i)  was  thus substituted 106 and the  new Explanation  II was thus inserted in clause (d) of section  2 with  retrospective effect from April 1, 1959. By  section  11  of  the  1971  Act,  all  assessments,  re- assessments, levy  or collection of any tax or imposition of any penalty  made or  purported to be made and any action or thing taken  or done or purported to have been taken or done in  relation   to  such   assessment,  re-assessment,  levy, collection or imposition under the M.P. Sales Tax Act before the commencement  of the  1971 Act were validated as if they had been made, taken or done under the M.P. Sales Tax Act as amended inter  alia by  section 2  of the 1971 Act. The 1971 Act came into force on May 6, 1971.      Section 6  of the  M.P. Sales  Tax Act provides for the levy of tax. As originally enacted section 6 read as follows           "6. Levy of tax -           The tax  payable by  a dealer under this Act shall           be levied  on his  taxable  turnover  relating  to           goods specified in Schedule II, at the rate and at           the point  mentioned in the corresponding entry in           columns  3   and  4   respectively,  of  the  said           Schedule. Schedule II  to the  M.P. Sales  Tax  Act  is  divided  into several parts.  Part VI  is the  residuary part and contains only one entry which is as follows :                           PART VI      "1. All other goods not  4 per cent     On the point of      included in Schedule I                  first sale      in or any other part of                 the State  by a      this Schedule.                          dealer liable                                              to tax. " Section 11  of the M.P. Sales Tax Act confers upon the State Government the power to amend, by notification, any entry in Schedule II. By Notification No. 2741-1789-V-ST dated August

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29, 1967,  the rate  of tax  mentioned in the said residuary entry was  increased from  four per  cent to  seven per cent with effect  from September 1, 1967. Schedule I mentioned in the said  residuary entry  contains the  list of goods which are 107 exempted from tax by section 10 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act. Under Entry  42 of  Schedule I  to the  M.P. Sales  Tax Act, tobacco, manufactured  or unmanufactured,  cured or uncured, and tobacco  products including cigarettes, cigars, cheroots and bidis  are exempt  from tax.  Section 7 provides for the levy of  purchase tax.  As originally  enacted (omitting the proviso thereto  which is  not  material  for  our  purpose) section 7 was as follows :           "7. Levy of purchase tax. -           Every  dealer   who  in  course  of  his  business           purchases any  taxable goods,  in circumstances in           which no  tax under  section 6  is payable  on the           sale price  of such goods and either consumes such           goods in  the manufacture  of other goods for sale           or otherwise  or disposes  of such  goods  in  any           manner other  than by  way of sale in the State or           despatches them  to  a  place  outside  the  State           except as  a direct  result of sale or purchase in           the course of inter-State trade or commerce, shall           be liable to pay tax on the purchase price of such           goods at the same rate at which it would have been           leviable on  the sale  price of  such goods  under           section 6:            X     X     X      X      X     X      X       ."      Clause (1)  of section  2 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act, as originally enacted  and as  it stood  at all relevant times, defined the  expression "raw  material". This definition was as follows :           "(1) ’raw  material’ means  an article  used as an           ingredient in any manufactured goods or an article           consumed  in   the  process   of  manufacture  and           includes fuel  and  lubricants  required  for  the           process  of  manufacture,  but  does  not  include           bullion and specie". Section 8  provides for  the rate  of tax in the case of raw materials. As  originally enacted,  section  8  provided  as follows : 108           "8. Rate of tax for raw material. -           (1) Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in  this           Act,  but   subject  to   such  restrictions   and           conditions as  may be  prescribed, the rate of tax           payable on the sale to or purchase by a registered           dealer of  any raw material for the manufacture of           other goods  for  sale  in  the  State  of  Madhya           Pradesh or  in the  course of inter-State trade or           commerce shall  be one  per cent  of the  sale  or           purchase price of such raw material.           (2)  Where   any  raw   material  purchased  by  a           registered  dealer   under  sub-section   (1)   is           utilised by  him for  any  purpose  other  than  a           purpose specified  in the  said sub-section,  such           dealer shall be liable to pay tax at the full rate           mentioned in  column  3  of  Schedule  II  on  the           purchase of  such raw material, together with such           penalty not  exceeding twenty-five per cent of the           amount of  the sales-tax payable by such dealer as           the Commissioner  may determine  having regard  to           the circumstances in which such use was made."

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Section 8  was amended  several times.  It is unnecessary to refer to  those amendments  except to  mention that  by  the substitution of  section 8(1)  made by  the  Madhya  Pradesh General Sales Tax (Amendment and Validation) Act, 1967 (M.P. Act No.  23 of 1967) the rate of tax on the sale or purchase of  raw  material  was  increased  to  two  per  cent.  This amendment came  into force  on December  21,  1967.  We  are concerned in  this appeal  only with  the amendments made by the Madhya  Pradesh General  Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1968 (M.P. Act  No. 9 of - 1968) (hereinafter referred to as "the 1968 Act"),  which was  brought into  force from  April  15, 1968, and  the 1971  Act. By the 1968 Act sub-section (1) of section 8 was substituted as follows :           "(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section           6 or  section 7  but subject  to such restrictions           and conditions  as may  be prescribed, the rate of           tax payable  on the  sale  to  or  purchase  by  a           registered dealer  of any  raw material other than           tendu leaves 109           for the manufacture of other goods for sale in the           State of  Madhya Pradesh  or in  course of  inter-           State trade  or commerce  shall be two per cent of           the sale or purchase price of such raw material :           Provided that  when the tax payable on the sale or           purchase of  such raw material under sections 6 or           7 is  payable at  a rate  lower than two per cent,           the tax  payable under  this sub-section  shall be           calculated at such lower rate.      "By the 1971 Act sub-section (1) of section 8 was again substituted and  a  new  sub-section  (3)  was  inserted  in section 8.  The amendments made in section 8 by the 1971 Act were not  retrospective and  they, therefore came into force on May 6, 1971, namely, the date of the coming into force of the 1971  Act, Section 8, as it emerged after the amendments made by the 1971 read as follows :           "8. Rates of tax for raw material. -           (1) Notwithstanding  anything contained in section           6 or  section 7  but subject  to the provisions of           sub-section  (3)  and  to  such  restrictions  and           conditions as  may be  prescribed, the tax payable           under section  6 or section 7, as the case may be,           on the  sale or purchase by a registered dealer of           any raw  material other  than tendu leaves for the           manufacture of  other goods  for sale in the State           of Madhya  Pradesh or in the course of inter-State           trade or  commerce or  in the course of export out           of the territory of India shall be levied at 2 per           cent of  the sale  or purchase  price of  such raw           material :           Provided that  when the tax payable on the sale or           purchase of such raw material under section 6 or 7           is payable  at a rate lower than two per cent, the           tax  payable   under  this  sub-section  shall  be           calculated at such lower rate.           (2)  Where   any  raw   material  purchased  by  a           registered  dealer   under  sub-section   (1)   is           utilised H 110           by him  for  any  purpose  other  than  a  purpose           specified in  the said  sub-section,  such  dealer           shall be  liable to  pay as  penalty an amount not           less than the difference between the amount of tax           on the  sale of such raw material at the full rate           mentioned in  column (3)  of Schedule  II and  the

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         amount of  tax payable  under sub-section  (1) and           not exceeding one and one-quarter times the amount           of tax  at such  full rate as the Commissioner may           determine having  regard to  the circumstances  in           which such use was made :           Provided that  no such penalty shall be imposed on           a  registered   dealer  where   any  raw  material           purchased by him under sub-section (1), is sold by           him, subject  to such  restrictions and conditions           as  may   be  prescribed,  to  another  registered           dealer, for  the purpose  specified in  that  sub-           section :           Provided further that where such registered dealer           subsequently  purchasing   the  raw   material  as           aforesaid, utilises  it for any purpose other than           the purpose  specified in sub-section (1) he shall           be liable  to pay the penalty specified under sub-           section (2).           (3) Nothing  in this  section shall  apply to  the           sales of  any goods  made by the Forest Department           of the  State Government  or any  of  the  offices           under that Department :           Provided that  where any  goods other  than  tendu           leaves purchased by any registered dealer from the           Forest Department or any of the offices under that           Department are  used by  him as a raw material for           the manufacture  of other  goods for  sale in  the           State of Madhya Pradesh or in the course of inter-           State trade or commerce or in the course of export           out of the territory of India, the dealer shall be           entitled, in  such manner, as may be prescribed to           a set off of an amount equal to the 111           difference between  the tax  payable at  the  full           rate on such goods as mentioned in Schedule II and           the tax  payable  on  raw  material  at  the  rate           specified in sub-section (1)."      The result  of the various amendments to the M.P. Sales Tax Act referred to above is fourfold, namely,           (1) with  effect from  April 1,  1959, the Central           Government or  a State  Government or any of their           departments or  offices which buy, sell, supply or           distribute goods,  directly or otherwise, for cash           or other  consideration, is to be deemed to be a C           dealer for  the purposes of the M.P. Sales Tax Act           irrespective of  the fact  whether such  purchase,           sale, supply  or distribution  of goods  is in the           course of business or not;           (2) with  effect from April 15, 1968, tendu leaves           ceased to  be raw  material for  the  purposes  of           section  8   of  the   M.P.  Sales   Tax  Act  and           consequently became exigible to tax at the rate of           seven per  cent under  section  6  read  with  the           residuary Entry No. 1 in Part VI of Schedule II:           (3) with  effect from  May 6, 1971, the provisions           of section 8 ceased to apply to sales of any goods           made  by   the  Forest  Department  of  the  State           Government  or  any  of  the  offices  under  that           Department, but  where goods  were purchased  by a           registered dealer  from the  Forest Department  or           any of  the offices of that Department and used by           him as a raw material for the manufacture of other           goods for  sale within the State of Madhya Pradesh           or in  the course of inter-State trade or commerce           or in the course of export out of the territory of

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         India, such dealer became entitled to a set-off of           an amount  equal to the difference between the tax           payable  at   the  full  rate  on  such  goods  as           mentioned in  Schedule II  and the  tax payable on           raw material at the rate of two per cent; and 112           (4)  purchases   of  tendu  leaves  by  registered           dealers from  the Forest  Department of  the State           Government  or  any  of  the  offices  under  that           Department did  not, however, qualify for the set-           off mentioned  above  even  though  the  condition           prescribed  for   obtaining   such   set-off   was           fulfilled.      Before we  turn to  the challenge to the constitutional validity of the impugned amendments to section 8, it will be convenient to  dispose of  two other  contentions which were raised in  this Appeal.  The first  contention was  that  as sales and  purchases of tendu leaves cease to be exigible to tax under section 8 by reason of the amendments made therein and as tendu leaves were not mentioned in any of the entries in Schedule  II  to  the  M.P.  Sales  Tax  Act,  sales  and purchases of  tendu leaves could not be made exigible to tax under section  6 read with the residuary entry No. 1 in Part VI of  Schedule II.  This argument  requires  merely  to  be stated in order to be rejected. Schedule I to the M.P. Sales Tax Act  sets out  the list of goods which are exempted from payment of tax under section 10. Parts I to V of Schedule II to the  M.P. Sales  Tax Act set out the different classes of goods and the rate at which tax is payable in respect of the sales and  purchases thereof.  The residuary  Entry no. 1 of Part VI  states that  the rate of tax on sales and purchases of "All  other goods not included in Schedule I or any other part of  this Schedule"  shall be  the one specified in that Entry. Therefore,  sales or  purchases of any class of goods not specifically mentioned in any of the entries in Schedule I or  any of  the entries in Parts I to V of Schedule II are exigible to  tax at  the rate  shown in the residuary entry, unless there is any specific provision in the M.P. Sales Tax Act  to  the  contrary  as  there  is  in  section  8  which originally  provided   that  its   provisions  would   apply notwithstanding anything contained in the M.P. Sales Tax Act and after  the amendment  of section 8 by the Madhya Pradesh General Sales  Tax (Amendment)  Act, 1961 (M.P.Act No. 20 of 1961), which  was  brought  into  force  on  June  1,  1961, provided that  they  would  apply  notwithstanding  anything contained in  section 6  or section  7 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act. No authority  is necessary for a proposition so obvious as this  but if one were required, we need only refer to the decision 113 of a  Constitution Bench  of this  Court in  M/s.  Anwarkhan Mahboob Co.  v. The  State of  Bombay (now  Maharashtra) and others, [1961]  1 S.C.R.  709 in  which this proposition was laid down  where  a  similar  residuary  entry  fell  to  be construed.      The  next   contention  was   that  neither  the  State Government nor  any of  its departments including the Forest Department or its offices was a dealer within the meaning of that term  as defined  in clause (d) of section 2 as none of them carried  on the  business of buying, selling, supplying or distributing  goods and  that Explanation  II  which  was inserted in  the said  clause (d) did not have the effect of enlarging the concept of a dealer as defined in that clause. In support  of this  contention reliance  was placed  upon a decision of  the Madhya  Pradesh High  Court in Orient Paper

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Mills Ltd. v. The State of Nadhya Pradesh and others, [1971] 28 S.T.C. 532 in which it was held that the State Government or the  Forest Department  could not,  merely by selling the forest produce  grown on their land, be regarded as carrying on  any   business  of   buying,   selling,   supplying   or distributing goods  and, therefore, in respect of mere sales of forest  produce, neither  the State  Government  nor  the Forest Department  was a  dealer within  the meaning  of the definition of  that term  contained in clause (d) of section 2.  As   the  Statement   of  Objects  and  Reasons  to  the Legislative Bill  which, when  enacted became  the 1971 Act, expressly states  it was  in view  of the  judgments of  the Madhya Pradesh  High Court on various provisions of the M.P. Sales Tax Act whereby the State stood to lose a considerable amount of  revenue by  way of  tax and  penalty, that it was proposed to  amend the  M.P. Sales  Tax Act  suitably in the light of  the said  judgments  in  order  to  safeguard  the revenue of  the State  and to  validate  the  imposition  of penalty and  that amongst  the amendments  which were  being made was  that the definition of "dealer" was proposed to be amended in  the light  of the judgment in the case of Orient Paper Mills  Ltd. v. The State of Madhya Pradesh and others, [1971]  28  S.T.C.  532,  so  as  "to  include  the  Central Government or  a State  Government selling  goods not during the course of business". In this context, it is pertinent to note that  for a person to be a dealer within the meaning of clause (d),  he must  be one  who carries on the business of buying, selling,  supplying or  distributing goods  and  the definition as originally enacted included within 114 its scope  the Central  Government or  a State Government or any of  their departments  which carried  on such  business. This definition was retrospectively amended by the 1971 Act, and the  reference to  the "Central  Government or  a  State Government or any of their departments" in sub-clause (I) of clause (d)  was omitted from that sub-clause and Explanation II was  added which  expressly provided  that  "the  Central Government or a State Government or any of their departments or offices  which, whether or not in the course of business, buy,  sell,   supply  or   distribute  goods,   directly  or otherwise,  for   cash  .   .  .   Or  for   other  valuable consideration shall  be  deemed  to  be  a  dealer  for  the purposes of this Act". Merely because a particular provision in a statute is labelled as an Explanation, it does not mean that it  is inserted  merely with  a  view  to  explain  the meaning of  words contained in the section of which it forms a part. The true scope and effect of an Explanation can only be judged  by its  express language  and not  merely by  the label given to it. The language of Explanation II shows that its purpose  is to  create a  legal fiction,  and that while under the  main clause, for a person to be a dealer, he must carry on  the business  of  buying,  selling,  supplying  or distributing goods,  even if  the Central  Government  or  a State Government or any of their departments or offices does not carry  on such  business, if it buys, sells, supplies or distributes goods, it is to be deemed to be a dealer for the purposes of  the M.P.  Sales  Tax  Act,  that  is,  for  the purposes of  the levy  and collection  of tax under the M.P. Sales Tax Act. After the amendment of clause (d) by the 1971 Act, it  is irrelevant  for the  purposes of the levy of tax under the  M.P. Sales Tax Act whether the Central Government or a State Government or any of their departments or offices have bought  or sold  goods in the course of business. There is, therefore,  no substance  in the above contention and it must accordingly be rejected.

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    The challenge  to the  constitutional validity  of  the impugned amendments  to section  8 was founded upon Articles 14, 286(3), 301 and 304 of the Constitution.      So far  as the  challenge under Article 14 is concerned the submissions  made in  support thereof  were that  by the impugned amendments  tendu leaves were discriminated against hostilely as  compared with  other raw materials in that the rate of tax on the sales and purchases of tendu leaves was 115 made much  higher than  the rate  of tax  on the  sales  and purchases of  other raw materials, not only within the State of Madhya  Pradesh but also as compared with the rate of tax in the neighbouring States, and that there was no reasonable basis for  making a  distinction between  tendu  leaves  and other raw  materials in  as much  as the  only use  to which tendu  leaves  were  put  was  as  a  raw  material  in  the manufacture  of   bidis.  As  pointed  out  by  Lord  Greene delivering the  opinion of  the Judicial  Committee  of  the Privy Council  in Messrs Mohanlal Hargovind of Jubbulpore v. Commissioner of  Income-tax   C.P.and  Berar,  Nagpur,  L.R. [1948-49] 57 I.A. 235, 237; S.C.   A.I.R.  1949   P.C.   311 bidis  are   country-made  cigarettes  composed  of  tobacco contained or  rolled in  leaves of  a tree,  known as  tendu leaves,  which   fulfil  a  corresponding  function  in  the finished cigarette  to that  played by  a  cigarette  paper. Thus, without  the use  of  tendu  leaves  bidis  cannot  be manufactured. Until  the amendment  to section 8 made by the 1968 Act,  for the  purpose of  levying tax on the sales and purchases of  tendu leaves  the State  of Madhya Pradesh had throughout treated  tendu leaves in the same manner as other raw materials.  From this,  however, it does not follow that there was  any constitutional  or legal  obligation upon the State to  continue doing  so far  all time. The structure of our Constitution  is federal in character. A salient feature of such  a Constitution  is the  distribution of legislative and administrative powers between the federated unit and the federating units,  that is,  between the  Central or Federal Government and  the  State  or  Provincial  Governments.  In keeping with  its federal  character, our  Constitution  has bifurcated the  field  of  taxation  as  regards  sales  and purchases of  goods between  the Union  and the State. Under clause (1)  of Article  246 of  the Constitution, Parliament has exclusive  power to make laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated  in List I in the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution which  is headed the "Union List". Under clause (2) of  the same  Article, the  Legislature of any State has the exclusive  power to make laws for such State or any part thereof with  respect to  any of  the matters  enumerated in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution which is headed the  "State List".  The M.P.  Sales Tax  was  enacted after the  Constitution  was  amended  by  the  Constitution (Sixth Amendment)  Act, 1956.  Under the  Constitution as so amended, taxes  on the sale or purchase of newspapers and on advertisements published therein and taxes on 116 the sale  or purchase  of goods other than newspapers, where such sale  or purchase  takes place  in the course of inter- State  trade   or  commerce,   fall  within   the  exclusive legislative field  of Parliament  under Entries  92 and  92A respectively in  the Union List, while under Entry 54 in the State List taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other than newspapers fall  within the  exclusive legislative  field of the State  Legislatures subject  to the  provisions of Entry 92A in the Union List. It is unnecessary to dilate upon this subject for  all that is required to be done is to quote the

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following  passage  from  the  judgment  of  this  Court  in Khazajan Chand  etc. v.  State of  Jammu and Kashmir & Ors., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 858 (at pages 873-4):           "Our Constitution  is federal in its structure and           a  salient   feature  of   a  federal   polity  is           distribution  of  legislative  and  administrative           powers  between   the  federated   unit  and   the           federating units,  that  is  between  the  federal           government  and   the  State   governments.  Thus,           matters in  respect  of  which  our  Constitution-           makers felt that there should be uniformity of law           throughout the country have been placed by them in           Union List  (List I in the Seventh Schedule to the           Constitution)  conferring   exclusive  power  upon           Parliament to  make  laws  with  respect  thereto,           while  matters  which  they  felt  were  of  local           concern and  may require  laws to  be made  having           regard  to   the  particular  needs  and  peculiar           problems of  each State  have been assigned to the           State Legislatures  by placing  them in List II of           the Seventh Schedule, that is, the State List.           Inter-State trade  and commerce  is a matter which           affects all the States in India and thus the whole           country. It is for this reason that in the Seventh           Schedule to  the Constitution the subject of taxes           on the  sale or  purchase of goods taking place in           the course  of inter-State  trade or  commerce has           been put in List I and made a Union subject. Taxes           on the  sale or  purchase of  goods  taking  place           within the  State affect  only those  who carry on           the business  of buying  and selling  goods within           the State  and, therefore,  this subject  has been           put in  List II  of the  Seventh Schedule, namely,           the State 117           List. Sales  tax is  the biggest source of revenue           for a  State and it is for the State to decide how           and in  what manner it will raise this revenue and           to determine which particular transactions of sale           or purchase  of goods  taking  place  within  that           State should be taxed and at what rates, and which           particular transactions  of sale  or  purchase  of           goods should  be exempted  from tax  or taxed at a           lower rate  having regard to the subject-matter of           sale, as  for  instance,  where  particular  goods           constitute necessities  for the  poorer classes of           people or  where the goods in question are of such           a nature  as are  required to be exempted from tax           or taxed  at a  lower rate in order to encourage a           local industry.  Consideration  of  these  matters           must, from the nature of things, differ from State           to State.  Similarly, it  is  for  each  State  to           determine the methods it will adopt to collect its           revenue from  this  source  and  to  decide  which           methods  would   be  most   efficacious  for  this           purpose. The  provision of  the sales  tax law  of           each State  must, therefore, necessarily differ in           various respects  from the provisions of sales tax           laws of  other States.  If the  provisions of  the           legislation of  every State  on a particular topic           are to  be identical in every respect, there is no           purpose in  including that topic in the State List           and it  may as well be included in the Union List.           Merely because  the  provisions  of  a  State  law           differ from  the provisions of other State laws on

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         the  same  subject  cannot  make  such  provisions           discriminatory." F Further, as pointed out by this Court in State of Orissa and others v. m e Titagarh Paper Mills Company Ltd. and another, [1985] 3  S.C.R. 26,  65, a  State is  free when  there is a series of sales in respect of the same goods to tax each one of such sales or purchases in that series or to levy the tax at one  or more points in such series of sales or purchases. Legislations of  all States in this respect are not uniform, some States having adopted a single point levy, others a two point levy, and yet others a multi-point levy.      Just as  section 2 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act contains a definition of the terms "raw material", it also contains in 118 clause  (g)  of  that  section  a  definition  of  the  term "goods".  Under that definition, the term "goods" inter alia means "all  kinds of  movable property other than actionable claims, newspapers, stocks, shares, securities or Government stamps   and    includes   all   materials,   articles   and commodities". If  the contention that sales and purchases of all raw  materials must be taxed at the same rate were true, it would  necessarily follow that sales and purchases of all goods must  also be  taxed at  the same  rate. A  submission which  leads   to  such  an  absurd  result  can  hardly  be contenanced by the Court.      Arguments such  as those  advanced before  us have been consistently rejected  by this Court. We need give only four instances. In T.G. Venkataraman, etc. v. State of Madras and another, [1969]  2 S.C.C.  299, a  notification issued under the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959, which imposed tax on sales of  cane jaggery  and exempted  sales of palm jaggery, was challenged  on the  ground that  it violated  Article 14 because it was discriminatory and opposed to equal treatment under Article  14. This  challenge was repelled by the Court holding that cane jaggery and palm jaggery were commercially different commodities.  In Jaipur  Hosiery Mills  (P)  Ltd., Jaipur v. The State of Rajasthan and others, [1971] 1 S.C.R. 396, a  notification issued  under the  Rajasthan Sales  Tax Act, 1950,  which exempted  from tax the sale of any garment the value  of which  did not exceed four rupees but excluded "hosiery  products   and  hats   of  all  kinds"  from  this exemption, was  challenged under  Article 14. Repelling this challenge, this Court held (at Pages 397-8) :           "It is well settled that although a taxing statute           can be challenged on the ground of infringement of           Art. 14 but in deciding whether the law challenged           is discriminatory  it has to be borne in mind that           in matters  of taxation  the legislature possesses           the large freedom in the matter of classification.           Thus wide discretion can be exercised in selecting           persons or  objects which  will be  taxed and  the           statute is  not open  to attack on the mere ground           that it  taxes some  persons or  objects  and  not           others. It  is only  when within  the range of its           selection the law operates unequally and cannot be           justified on the basis of a valid classification 119           that there would be a violation of Art. 14". In Hoechst Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and Another etc. v. State of Bihar and  Others, [1983]  3 S.C.R.  130 the  Constitutional validity of  sub-section (3)  of  section  5  of  the  Bihar Finance Act,  1981, was  challenged inter alia under Article 14. Sub-section  (1) of section 5 provided for the levy of a surcharge, in  addition to  the tax payable, on every dealer whose turnover  during a  year exceeded  rupees  five  lakhs

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while sub-section  (3) of section 5 prohibited such a dealer from collecting  the amount of surcharge payable by him from the purchasers.  This challenge  was repelled. In the course of the judgment this Court said (at page 190) :           "On questions  of economic regulations and related           matters, the  Court must  defer to the legislative           judgment. When the power to tax exists, the extent           of the  burden is  a matter  for discretion of the           law-makers. It is not the function of the Court to           consider the  propriety or justness of the tax, or           enter upon the realm of legislative policy. If the           evident intent  and general  operation of  the tax           legislation is  to adjust  the burden  with a fair           and   reasonable    degree   of    equality,   the           constitutional  requirement   is  satisfied.   The           equality clause  in Art. 14 does not take from the           State power  to classify  a class  of persons  who           must  bear   the  heavier   burden  of   tax.  The           classification having  some reasonable  basis does           not offend  against that  clause merely because it           is not made with mathematical nicety or because in           practice it results in some inequalities." In Khazajan  Chand etc.  v. State  of Jammu  and Kashmir and others, a challenge to section 8(2) of the Jammu and Kashmir General Sales  Tax Act,  1962, on  the ground  that  it  was violative  of  Article  14  as  it  hostilely  discriminated against dealers  in  the  State  of  Jammu  and  Kashmir  as compared with  dealers in  other States in the matter of the rate at  which interest was payable when default was made in payment of  tax by the prescribed time was negatived by this Court.      Tendu leaves do not stand on the same footing as other 120 raw materials.  Their only use appears to be as a consumable packing material or container for tobacco in the manufacture of  bidis   just  as  a  cigarette  paper  is  used  in  the manufacture  of   cigarettes.  Thus,  tendu  leaves  form  a separate class of commercial commodity and it is open to the State  to   tax  them   differently  from  other  commercial commodities falling  in the  class of  goods known  as  "raw material".  The  High  Court  has  justified  the  different treatment given to tendu leaves as compared to that given to other raw  materials by  a reference  to the  Madhya Pradesh Tendu Patta (Vyapar Viniyaman) Adhiniyam, 1964 (M.P. Act No. 29 of  1964), which was passed in order to control the trade in tendu  leaves. The  long title  of that Act is "An Act to make provision  for regulating  in the  public interest  the Trade of  Tendu leaves by creation of State monopoly in such trade". In  pursuance of  the rule-making power conferred by section 19  of the said Act, the State Government made rules called the  Madhya Pradesh  Tendu Patta  (Vyapar  Viniyaman) Niyamavali, 1966.  Under the said Act, the State Governments to appoint  agents in  respect of  different units  for  the purpose of  purchase of  and trade  in tendu  leaves and  no person other  than the State Government or an officer of the State Government  authorized in writing in that behalf or an agent in  respect of the unit in which the tendu leaves have grown can  purchase or  transport tendu leaves. Further, the State Government  is authorized  by the  said Act to fix, In consultation with  the Advisory Committee to be set up there under, the  price at  which tendu leaves are to be purchased by it or its authorized officer or agent from the growers of tendu leaves  other than the State Government in the Revenue Commissioner’s Division. The said Act received the assent of the  President   on  November  3,  1964,  which  assent  was

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published in  the Madhya  Pradesh Gazette  Extraordinary  on November 28,  1964, and  was brought into force in the whole of Madhya  Pradesh with  effect from  November 28,  1964, by Forest Department Notification No. 14334-X-64 dated November 28,  1964,   published  in   the  Madhya   Pradesh   Gazette Extraordinary dated  November 28,  1964, at  page 3368.  The said Act,  created a  monopoly in  the State Government with respect to  the trade  in tendu leaves in the State as tendu leaves are  a major  natural produce of the State. According to the High Court, the said Act, therefore, put the trade in tendu leaves in a separate class from the trade in other raw materials and  consequently it  provided a  reasonable basis for treating the trade in tendu 121 leaves differently from the trade in other raw materials. In our opinion,  it was  strictly not  necessary for  the  High Court to  go to  the said  Act for  the purpose  of  seeking justification for  levying tax on the sales and purchases of tendu leaves  at a rate different from that on the sales and purchases of  other goods.  As pointed  out  earlier,  tendu leaves constituted  a different  commercial commodity and it was open  to the  State to tax them at a rate different from the rate  of tax on other commodities. The said Act would be a justification  for treating  differently the  State  as  a dealer in  tendu leaves  from other dealers in tendu leaves. We may  mention that the validity of the said Act was upheld by a  Constitution Bench  of this  Court in  H/s. Anwar Yhan Mehbaob &  Co. v. State of Madhya Pradesh and others, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 40.      In support  of the  challenge under  Article 14, it was further contended  that without  amending the  definition of "raw material"  given in clause (1) of section 2 of the M.P. Sales Tax Act, a different rate of tax cannot be levied upon tendu leaves. Section 8 was amended both by the 1968 Act and the 1971  Act but  the definition  of "raw material" was not amended and  it continued  to remain the same. We are unable to understand what difference this makes. By section 8 tendu leaves are  expressly excluded from the concessional rate of tax in respect of other raw materials. Clause (1) of section 2 defines  the term  "raw material".  This cannot,  however, prevent the  State from  taxing  different  classes  of  raw materials at  different rates.  If this  contention  of  the Appellants was  to be  accepted, it would lead to the absurd result that  as goods are defined clause (g) of section 2 to mean  all   kinds  of  movable  property  excluding  certain specific articles  mentioned therein, section 6 and Schedule II to  the M.P.  Sales Tax  Act which  provide for different rates of  tax on  different classes of goods are also bad in law. This contention is thus wholly without any substance.      Turning now  to the  challenge under  Article 286(3) to the validity  of  the  impugned  amendments,  we  find  this challenge to  be as  hollow and  untenable as  the challenge under Article  14. Clause  (3) of  Article  286,  after  its amendment by  the Constitution  (Sixth Amendment) Act, 1956, provided as follows:           "(3) Any law of a State shall, in so far as it 122           imposes, or authorises the imposition of, a tax on           the  sale   or  purchase   of  goods  declared  by           Parliament by  law to  be of special importance in           inter-State trade  or commerce, be subject to such           restrictions  and  conditions  in  regard  to  the           system of  levy, rates  and other incidents of the           tax as Parliament may by law specify." Clause  (3)   of  Article   286  was   substituted  by   the

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Constitution (Forty-sixth  Amendment) Act,  1982. Clause (3) as so  substituted does  not affect  the position  so far as goods declared  by  Parliament  by  law  to  be  of  special importance in inter-State trade or commerce are concerned.      In pursuance  of the  power conferred by Article 286(3) Parliament has  declared by  section 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act,  1956 (Act  No. LXXIV of 1956), certain goods to be of special  importance in  inter-State  trade  or  commerce. Amongst the  goods so  declared is  "tobacco, as  defined in Item No.4  of the  First Schedule to the Central Excises and Salt Act,  1944". The  relevant provisions  of the said Item No.4 are as follows :           "4. TOBACCO -           ’Tobacco’ means any form of tobacco, whether cured           or uncured  and whether  manufactured or  not, and           includes the leaf, stalks and stems of the tobacco           plant, but  does not include any part of a tobacco           plant while still attached to the earth.           I. Unmanufactured tobacco -           x         x        x         x           x           II. Manufactured tobacco -           x         x        x          x " Under the  sub-heading "Manufactured  tobacco" are  set  out cigars  and   cheroots,  cigarettes,   and  bidis   in   the manufacture of  which any process has been conducted with or without the  aid of  power. Tendu  leaves nowhere feature in the said  Item No.4  though tobacco  and bidis  do.  It  is, therefore, tobacco 123 and bidis  which are  goods of  special importance in inter- State trade  and commerce and not tendu leaves. Tendu leaves cannot by  any stretch  of imagination be equated with bidis or  tobacco   just  as  cigarette  paper  used  for  rolling cigarettes cannot  be equated  by any stretch of imagination with cigarettes  or tobacco.  This being the position, it is wholly unnecessary  to consider the other arguments advanced in support of this challenge.      The challenge to the impugned amendments under Articles 301 and  304 of  the Constitution  was that  by taxing tendu leaves at a higher rate than in the neighbouring States, the cost of  bidis manufactured  in the  State of Madhya Pradesh increased considerably  and thus  it impeded  the freedom of trade  and  commerce  throughout  the  territory  of  India. Article 301 provides as follows :           "301. Freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse.           Subject to  the other  provisions  of  this  Part,           trade, commerce  and  intercourse  throughout  the           territory of India shall be free." Under clause  (b) of  Article 304  of the  Constitution, the Legislature of  a State  may by  law impose  such reasonable restrictions  on   the  freedom   of  trade,   commerce   or intercourse with  or within that State as may be required in the public interest. The Bill or any amendment of an Act for the  purposes   of  clause  (b),  is,  however,  not  to  be introduced or  moved in  the Legislature  of a State without the previous  sanction of the President. It may be mentioned that the  M.P. Sales  Tax Act had received the assent of the President on February 27, 1959, but neither the 1968 Act nor the 1971 Act was submitted to the President for his sanction and  the  question,  therefore,  of  either  of  these  Acts receiving the sanction of the President cannot arise.      The only  question, therefore,  is whether  taxing  the sales and purchases of tendu leaves at a higher rate than in the neighbouring States violates Article 301 by impeding the free trade  and commerce  in  tendu  leaves  throughout  the

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territory of  India. An  increase in  the rate of tax on the sales and purchases of tendu leaves would necessarily result in an 124 increase  in   the  cost   of  manufacture   of  bidis   and consequently in their sale price. An increase in the rate of tax on  a particular  commodity cannot  per se  be  said  to impede free  trade and  commerce in that commodity. In State of Kerala  v. A.B.  Abdul Khadir and others, [1970] 1 S.C.R. 700, after referring to and explaining the earlier decisions on this subject, this Court held as follows (at page 710) :           "As  we  have  already  pointed  out  it  is  well           established by  numerous authorities of this Court           that only  such restrictions  or impediments which           directly and  immediately impede  the free flow of           trade, commerce  and intercourse  fall within  the           prohibition imposed  by Art.  301. A  tax  may  in           certain cases directly and immediately restrict or           hamper the  flow of trade, but every imposition of           tax does  not do  so. Every case must be judged on           its own  facts and  in its own setting of time and           circumstance."      There was  no material  before the  High Court  and  no material before us to show that the impugned increase in the rate of  tax on  the sales and purchases of tendu leaves has put an end to that trade or has caused that trade to decline nor was  there any  material before the High Court or before us to show that by reason of the increase in the rate of tax on the  sales and  purchases of  tendu leaves,  the trade in bidis manufactured  in  the  State  of  Madhya  Pradesh  has stopped or  has decreased.  Far from  this happening, on the contrary, all  factors point  to  the  opposite  conclusion. Tendu leaves  are a  major natural  produce of  the State of Madhya Pradesh  and had the impugned increase in the rate of tax on the sales and purchases of tendu leaves the effect of putting an  end to  the trade in tendu leaves or bidis or of causing a  decline in  that trade,  the revenue of the State would have suffered and the State would have once again made the sales  and purchases of tendu leaves exigible to a lower or concessional rate of tax. What the State, however, has in fact done  is to  increase the  rate of tax mentioned in the residuary entry,  namely, Entry No. 1 in Part VI of Schedule II to  the M.P. Sales Tax Act, and consequently on the sales and purchases  of tendu  leaves, so  that as from October 1, 1978, the  rate is  ten per cent. After all, we must bear in mind that Articles 301 to 304 were 125 neither enacted  to safeguard  the pleasure  derived by bidi smokers from an indulgence in their habit nor to ensure that bidi smoker  would  continue  to  get  for  all  time  bidis manufactured in Madhya Pradesh at the same price.      The  validity   of  the  impugned  amendment  was  also challenged under  Article 19(1)(g)  of the  Constitution. No attempt was  made to  argue this  point nor any materials in support thereof  were produced  either in  the High Court or before us and we fail to see how the increase in the rate of tax on  the sales  and purchases of tendu leaves amounted to an unreasonable  restriction on  the right to carry on trade or business in tendu leaves or bidis. The only points argued before us were those which we have dealt with above.      In the  result, this appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. A.P.J.                                     Appeal dismissed. 126

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