Ramavatar Budhaiprasad Vs. Assistant
Sales Tax Officer, Akola [1961] INSC 98 (14 March 1961)
KAPUR, J.L.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION: 1961 AIR 1325 1962 SCR (1) 279
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC 660 (4) RF 1962 SC1621 (19,41) F
1963 SC 351 (2) F 1967 SC1454 (4) F 1971 SC 65 (5) RF 1973 SC 78 (5) F 1974 SC
390 (2) R 1974 SC1362 (3) RF 1976 SC2463 (15) R 1977 SC 597 (33) F 1977 SC1132
(3) R 1977 SC1638 (2) R 1979 SC 300 (3) R 1981 SC1079 (4) F 1989 SC 622 (4) RF
1989 SC1011 (9)
ACT:
Sales Tax-'Betel leaves', if
taxable--'Vegetabls', Meaning of--Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act,
1947 (C. P. XXI of 1947), s. 6(1)(2), Second Schedule, Items Nos. 6 and 36.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners who were dealers in betel
leaves were assessed to sales tax by the Assistant Sales Tax Officer under the
provisions of the C. P. and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947.
The contention of the petitioners was that
under s. 6 read with the second schedule of the Act betel leaves were not
taxable. Under S. 6 of the Act articles mentioned in the said Schedule were
exempt from Sales Tax and articles not mentioned were taxable. There were two
items in the Schedule, namely, item 6, "vegetables", and item 36, "betel
leaves", but subsequently item No. 36 was omitted by an amendment of the
Act.
Held, that the use of two distinct and
different items i.e., "vegetables" and "betel leaves" and
the subsequent removal of betel leaves from the Schedule were indicative of the
Legislature's intention of not exempting betel leaves from taxation. The word
"vegetable" must be interpreted not in a technical sense but in its
popular sense as understood in common language i.e., denoting a class of
vegetables which are grown in a kitchen garden or on a farm and are used for
the table.
Planters Nut Chocolate Co. Ltd. v. The King,
(1952) 1 Dom.
L.R. 385, Madhya Pradesh Pan Merchants'
Association, Santra Market, Nagpur v. The State of Madhya Pradesh (Sales Tax
Departmwnt) [1956] 7 S.T.C. 99, Bhairondon Tolaram v. The State of Rajasthan, [1957] 8 S.T.C. 798, Kokil Ram & Sons v. The State of Bihar, [1949] 1 S.T.C.
217 and Dharam Das Paul v. The Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, [1958] 8
S.T.C.
194, considered.
Brahma Nand v. The State of Uttar Pradesh,
[1956] 7 S.T.C. 206 and Firm Shri Krishna Chaudhry v. Commissioner of Sales
Tax, [1956] 7 S.T.C. 742, referred to.
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petitions Nos. 4,36
and 37 of 1958.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of
India for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
R. Ganapathy Iyer and K. L. Hathi, for the
petitioners.
C. K. Paphtary, Solicitor General of India,
B. R. L. Iyengar an(! P. M. Sen, for the respondents.
280 1961. March 14. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by KAPUR, J.-These are three petitions under Art. 32 of the
Constitution challenging the imposition of sales tax on betel leaves by the
Sales Tax Officer, Akola. The question raised in all the three petitions is the
same and can conveniently be disposed of by one judgment.
The petitioners in the three petitions are
dealers in betel leaves at Akola, now in the State of Maharashtra and at the
relevant time in the State of Madhya Pradesh. The Assistant Sales Tax Officer
at Akola assessed the petitioners under the provisions of the C. P. & Berar
Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Act XXI of 1947), hereinafter termed the "Act"
to the payment of gales tax as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------Writ
Petition period Amount No. ---------------------------------------------------------W.P.
No. 4/58 7-11-53 to 26-10-54. Rs. 1882-9-0 & 27-10-54 to 14-11-55. Rs.
1885-13-0 W.P. No. 36/58 27-10-54 to 26-10-55. Rs. 1890-3-0 W.P. No. 37/58
27-10-54 to 14-11-55. Rs. 3530-4-0 --------------------------------------------------------The
petitioners in W. P. Nos. 4 and 36 did not appeal under s. 22 of the Act but
the petitioner in W. P. No. 37 did appeal under that section. As he did not
deposit the amount of tax the petition was dismissed. He then filed a petition
under Art. 226 in the High Court of Nagpur but that petition was withdrawn and
therefore no decision was given on the merits of the case. In all the petitions
the submission of the petitioners is that the order demanding tax was without
authority of law inasmuch as betel leaves were not taxable under s. 6 read with
the second Schedule of the Act. The imposition of the tax, it is alleged. is an
infringement of the petitioners' right to carry on trade 281 or business
guaranteed under Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution and the prayer is for the
issue of a writ of certiorari quashing the order of the Assistant Sales Tax
Officer and for prohibition.
Section 6 of the Act under which the
exemption is claimed provides:
S.6(1) "No tax shall be payable under
this Act on the Sale of goods specified in the second column of Schedule II,
subject to the conditions. and exceptions, if any, set out in the corresponding
entry in the third column thereof (2)The State Government may, after giving by
notification not less than one month's notice of their intention so to do, by a
notification after the expiry of the period of notice mentioned in the first
notification amend either Schedule,, and thereupon such Schedule shall he
deemed to be amended accordingly." Thus under the Act all articles
mentioned in the Schedule were exempt from Sales Tax and articles not so
specified were taxable. In the Schedule applicable there were originally two
items which are relevant for the purposes of the case. They were items Nos. 6
and 36:
Item 6 Vegetables-Except when sold in sealed
containers.
Item 36 Betel leaves.
The Schedule was amended by the C. P. &
Berar Sales Tax Amendment Act (Act XVI of 1948) by which item No. 36 was
omitted. It is contended that in spite of this omission they were exempt from
Sales Tax as they are vegetables. The intention of the legislature in regard to
what is vegetables is shown by its specifying vegetables and betel leaves as
separate items in the Schedule exempting articles from Sales Tax. Subsequently
betel leaves were removed from the Schedule which is indicative of the
legislature's intention of not exempting betel leaves from the imposition of
the tax. But it was submitted that betel leaves are vegetables and therefore
they would be exempt from Sales Tax under item
6. Reliance was placed on the 36 282
dictionary meaning of the word "vegetable" as given in Shorter Oxford
Dictionary where the word is defined as "of or pertaining to, comprised or
consisting of, or derived, or obtained from plants or their parts". But
this word must be construed not in any technical sense nor from the botanical
point of view but as understood in common parlance. It has not been defined in
the Act and being a word of every day use it must be construed in its popular
sense meaning "that sense which people conversant with the subject matter
with which the statute is dealing would attribute to it." It is to be
construed as understood in common language; Caries on Statute Law, p. 153 (5th
Ed.). It was so' held in Planters Nut Chocolate Co. Ltd. v. The King (1). This
interpretation was accepted by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh in Madhya
Pradesh Pan Merchants' Association, Santra Market, Nagpur v. The State of
Madhya Pradesh (Sales Tax Department) (2) where it was observed:"In our opinion,
the word "vegetables" cannot be given the comprehensive meaning the
term bears in natural history and has not been given that meaning in taxing
statutes before.
The term "vegetables" is to be
understood as commonly understood denoting those classes of vegetable matter
which are grown in kitchen gardens and are used for the table." In that
case the word "vegetables" was construed and in our opinion correctly
construed in relation to the very provisions of the Act which are now in controversy
before us. In cases under the U. P. Sales Tax Act betel leaves have been held
not to be within the expression "green vegetables"; Brahma Nand v.
The State, of Uttar Pradesh(3);
Firm Shri Krishna Chaudhry V. Commissioner of
Sales Tax (4).
In Bhairondon Tolaram v. The State of
Rajasthan (5) they were held not to be plants and in Kokil Ram & Sons v.
The State of Bihar (6), it was held that vegetables meant plants cultivated for
food and Paw are not foodstuffs. in Dharamdas Paul v. Commissioner of
Commercial (1) (1952) 1 Bom. L.R. 385. 389.
(3) [1956]7 S.T.C 2o6.
(5) [1957] 8 S.T.C. 798.
(2) [1956]7 S.T.C. 99, 102.
(4) [1956] 7 S.T.C. 742.
(6) [1949]1 S.T.C. 217 283 Taxes also they
were held not to be vegetables which specifically meant Sabzi, Tarkari and Sak.
Therefore &part from the fact that the legislature by using two distinct
and different items i.e. item 6 "vegetables" and item No. 36
"betel leaves" has indicated its intention, decided cases also show
that the word "vegetables" in taxing statutes is to be understood as
in common parlance i.e. denoting class of vegetables which are grown in a
kitchen garden or in a farm and are used for the table.
In our view, betel leaves are not exempt from
taxation.
Those petitions therefore fail and are
dismissed with costs.
One hearing fee.
Petitions dismissed.
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