Vishnu Agencies (Pvt.) Ltd. Vs.
Commercial Tax Officer & Ors [1977] INSC 240 (16 December 1977)
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ) BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
(CJ) CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION: 1978 AIR 449 1978 SCR (2) 433 1978
SCC (1) 520
CITATOR INFO:
F 1979 SC1158 (3,4,5) RF 1980 SC 674 (4) R
1980 SC1124 (30) F 1985 SC1199 (6) R 1988 SC1487 (48) C 1989 SC1371 (15)
ACT:
Sales-tax-Statutory sale-If sale for the
purposes of Salestax Acts.
Cement sold to holders of permits issued
under the West Bengal Cement Control Act 1948-Sale, if exigible to tax.
Transactions between growers and procuring
agents and rice miller and whole-sale agents under A. P. Paddy Procurement
(Levy) Order-If exigible to sales-tax.
HEADNOTE:
The Cement Control Order promulgated under
the West Bengal Cement Control Act, 1948 prohibits storage for sale and sale by
a seller and purchase by a consumer of cement except in accordance with the
conditions specified in a licence issued by a designated officer. It also
provides that no person shall sell cement at a higher than the notified price
and no person to whom a written order has been issued shall refuse to sell
cement "at a price not exceeding the notified price". Any
contravention of the order becomes punishable with imprisonment or fine or
both.
Under the A.P. Procurement (Levy and
Restriction on Sale) Order, 1967, (Civil Appeals Nos. 2488 to 2497 of 1972)
every miller carrying on rice milling operation is required to sell to the
agent or an officer duly authorised by the Government minimum quantities of
rice fixed by the Government at the notified price, and no miller or other
person who gets his paddy milled in any rice-mill can move or otherwise dispose
of the rice recovered by milling at such rice mill except in accordance with
the directions of the Collector. Breach of these provisions becomes punishable.
It was contended in this Court on behalf of
the appellants that the word ,sale" in the Bengal Finance Sales Tax Act,
1941, must receive the same meaning as in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 since the
expression "sale of goods" was, at the time when the Government of
India Act, 1935 was enacted, a term of well recognised legal import in the
general law relating to sale goods and in the legislative practice relating to
that topic both in England and in India and (2) since under the Sale of Goods
Act there can be no sale without a contract of sale and since the parties had
no volition but were compelled by law to supply the goods at prices fixed under
the Control Orders by the authorities the transactions were not sales and so
were not exigible to tax.
Disssing the appeals.
HELD : Per curiam Sale of cement by the
allottees to the permit-holders and the transactions between the growers and
procuring agents as well as those between the rice millers on the one band and
the wholesalers or retailers on the other, are sales exigible to sales-tax in
the respective States. [465-F-G] Per Beg. C.J, The transactions in the instant
cases are sales and are exigible to tax on the ratio of Indian Steel and Wire
Products Ltd.. Andhra Sugar Ltd. and Karam, Chand Thapar.
In cases like New India Sugar Mills, the
substance of the concept of a side itself disappears because the transaction is
nothing more than the execution of an order. Deprivation of property for a
compensation called price does not amount to a sale when all that is done is to
carry out an order so that 434 the transaction is substantially a compulsory
acquisition.
On the other hand, a merely regulatory law,
even if it circumscribes the area of free choice, does not take away the basic
character or core of sale from the transaction.
Such a law which governs a class obliges a
seller to deal only with parties holding licences who may buy particular or
allotted quantities of goods at specified prices, but an essential element of
choice is still left to the parties between whom agreements take place. The
agreement despite considerable compulsive elements regulating or restricting
the area of his choice, may still retain the basic character of a transaction
of sale. In the former type of case, the binding character of the transaction
arises from the order directed to particular parties asking them to deliver
specified goods and not from a general order or law applicable to a class. In
the latter type of cases, the legal tie which binds the parties, to perform
their obligations remains contractual. The regulatory law merely adds other
obligations, such as the one to enter into such a tie between the parties. Although
the regulatory law might specify the terms, such as price, the regulation is
subsidiary to the essential character of the transaction which is consensual
and contractual. The parties to the contract must agree upon the same thing in
the same sense.
Agreement on mutuality of consideration,
ordinarily arising from an offer and acceptance, imparts to it enforceability
in courts of law. Mere regulation or restriction of the field of choice does
not take away the contractual or essentially consensual binding core or
character of the transaction. [438B-D, EG, 439A-C, 440B] New India Sugar Mills
v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bihar, AIR 1963 SC 1207; [1963] Supp. 2 SCR 459
explained.
Commissioner, Sales tax, U.P. v. Ram Bilas
Ram Gopal, AIR 1970 All 518, Chittar Mal Narain v. Commissioner of Sales Tax,
[1971] 1 SCR 671, Indian Steel and Wire Products Ltd.
v. State of Madras, [1968] 1 SCR 479, Andhra
Sugar Ltd. v.
State of Andhra Pradesh [1968] 1 SCR 705 and
State of Rajasthan v. Karam Chand Thapar, AIR 1969 SC 343 referred to.
[Per Chandrachud, Bhagwati, Krishna Iyer,
Untwalia, Murtaza Fazal Ali and Kailasam, JJ.] According to the definitions of
"Sale" in the two Acts the transactions between the appellants and
the allottees or nominees are patently sales because in one case the property
in cement and in the other property in the paddy and rice was transferred for
cash consideration by the appellants.
[445D]
1. When essential goods are in short supply,
various types of Orders are issued under the Essential Commodities Act, 1955
with a view to making the goods available to the consumer at a fair price. Such
Orders sometimes provide that a person in need of an essential commodity like
cement, cotton, coal or iron and steel must apply to the prescribed authority
for a permit for obtaining the commodity. Those wanting to engage in the
business of supplying the commodity are also required to possess a dealer's
licence. The permit-holder can obtain the supply of goods, to the extent of the
quantity specified in the permit, from the named dealer only and at a
controlled price. The dealer who is asked to supply the stated quantity to the
particular permit holder has no option but to supply the stated quantity of
goods at the controlled price. [440 E-G]
2. In State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley
& Co. Ltd., [1959] SCR 379 after considering a variety of authorities on
the subject, this Court held that the expression sale of goods in Entry 48 List
11 Government of India Act, 1935 cannot be construed in its popular sense and
that it must be interpreted in its legal sense. Whereas in popular parlance a
sale is said to take place when the bargain is settled between the parties
through property in the goods may not pass at that stage, as where the contract
relates to future or unascertained goods, the essence of sale in the legal
sense is the transfer of property in a thing from one person to another for a
price. It was further held that according to the law both of England and India
in order to constitute a sale, it is necessary that there should be an
agreement between the parties for the purpose of transferring title to the
goods which pre-supposes capacity to contract, supported by valuable
consideration and that as a result of the transaction property must actually
pass 435 in the goods. "Unless all these elements are present, there can
'be no sale." The effect of the construction which the Court put on the
words of Entry 48 in Gannon Drunkenly is that a sale is necessarily a
consensual transaction and if the parties have no volition or option to
bargain, there can be no sale. If this view is assumed to reflect the correct
legal Position, the transactions in these cases will amount to sales. [447B-C,
D-F, 449D-E]
3. Offer and acceptance need not always be in
an elementary form, nor does the law of contract or of sale of goods require
that consent to a contract must be express.
Offer and acceptance can be spelt out from
the conduct of the parties which covers not only their acts but omissions as
well. On occasions, silence can be more eloquent than eloquence itself. Just as
correspondence between the parties can constitute or disclose an offer and
acceptance, so can their conduct. This is because law does not require offer
and acceptance to conform to any set pattern or formula. [450D-E]
4. In the instant case, it is not correct to
say that the transactions between the dealer and the consumer were not
consensual. The limitations imposed by the Control Order on the normal right of
the dealers and consumers to supply and obtain goods, the obligations imposed
on the parties and the penalties prescribed by the order do not militate
against the position that eventually, the parties must be deemed to have
completed the transactions under an agreement by which one party bound itself
to supply the stated quantity of goods to the other at a price not higher than
the notified price and the other party consented to accept the goods on the
terms and conditions mentioned in the permit or the order of allotment issued
in its favour by the concerned authority. in order, to determine whether there
was any agreement or consensuality between the parties regard must be had to
their conduct at or about the time when the goods changed hands. In the first
place, it is not obligatory on a trader to deal in cement nor on the consumer
to acquire it. The primary fact is that the decision of the trader to deal in
an essential commodity is volitional. Such volition carries with it the
willingness to trade strictly on the terms of the Control Order. The consumer
who is under no legal compulsion to acquire or Possess cement, decides as a
matter of his volition to obtain it on the terms of the permit or the order of
allotment issued in his favour. That brings the two parties together, one of
whom is willing to supply the essential commodity and the other to receive it.
When the allottee presents his permit to the
dealer, he signifies his willingness to obtain the commodity from the dealer on
the terms stated in the permit. His conduct reflects his consent. And when,
upon the presentation of the permit the dealer acts upon it, he impliedly
agrees to supply the commodity to the allottee on the terms by which he has
voluntarily bound himself to trade in the commodity.
His conduct too reflects his consent. Thus,
though both parties are bound to comply with the legal requirements governing
the transaction, they agree as between themselves to enter into the tranaction
on statutory terms, one agreeing to supply the commodity to the other on those
terms and the other agreeing to accept from him on the very terms.
[449E-H, 450C, E-H,451A]
5. Secondly, though the terms of the
transaction are mostly predetermined by law, it cannot be said that there is no
area at all for bargain. The conditions provided in the order that cement shall
not be sold at a higher than the notified price and that no dealer shall refuse
to sell it at a price not exceeding the notified price leaving it open to the
individuals to charge and pay a price which is less than the notified price or
charge a lesser price. Within the bounds of reasonableness, it would be open to
the parties to fix the time of delivery. The consumer has a right to ask for
weighment of goods which shows that he may reject the goods if found short in
weight or are not of the requisite quality. The consumer has a right to ask for
weigh ment of goods which shows that he tions have the freedom to bargain
militates against the view that the transactions are not consensual. [451-AE]
6. In New India Sugar Mills Ltd. the question
was whether sugar supplied by the mills on the orders of the Sugar Controller
was exigible to tax. The majority held that a contract of sale between the
buyer and the seller, which is a pre-requisite to a sale, being absent the
transaction was not exigible to sales 436 tax. But the principle on which the
problem should be approached was set out in the dissenting judgment which said
that consent may be express or implied and that it could not be said that
unless offer and acceptance were present in an elementary form, there could be
no taxable sale. Taking the view that on obtaining the necessary permit the
seller on the one hand and the buyer on the other agreed to sell and purchase
sugar it was pointed out that when the buyer, after receiving the permit,
telegraphed instructions to dispatch sugar and the seller dispatched it, 'a
contract emerged and consent must be implied on both sides though not expressed
antecendently to the permit". So long as the parties trade under controls
at fixed price and accept these as any other law of the realm, the contract is
at the fixed price, both sides having or deemed to have agreed to such a price.
Consent under the law of contract need not be
express; it could be implied. [453B-G; 454A-C] 7.In coming to its conclusion
the majority in New India Sugar Mills followed the decision of this Court in
Gannon Dunkerley that in a building contract there was no agreement express or
implied to sell goods and secondly that property in the building materials does
not pass in the materials regarded as goods" but it passes as part of
immovable property. The majority in-New India Sugar Mills was in error in saying
that the ratio govern that case because the questions involved in both
different. In New India Sugar Mills the commodity with concerned was sugar and
was delivered as sugar just as in commodity is cement, which was delivered as
cement Dunkerley tax was demanded after the commodity had after property in it
had passed. The question in this case which was question involved in New India
Sugar Mills namely decidendi of Gannon Dunkerley must cases were altogether
which the Court was the instant case the Secondly, in Gannon changed hands,
that is, the very whether a transaction effected in accordance with the
obligatory terms of a statute can amount to a sale, did not arise in Gannon
Dunkerley, Gannon Dunkerley is not an authority for the proposition that there
cannot at all be a contract of sale if the parties to a transaction are obliged
to comply with the terms of a statute. [456C-E]
8. In Gannon Dunkerley this Court was
influenced largely by the observations in the 8th edn. of Benjamin on
"Sale?' that to constitute a valid sale there must be a concurrence of
four elements, one of which is "mutual assent". The majority judgment
in New India Sugar Mills also derived sustenance from the same passage in
Benjamin's 8th edn.
Gannon Dunkerley involved an altogether
different point and is not an authority for the proposition that there cannot
at all be a contract of sale if the parties to a transaction are obliged to
comply with the terms of a statute. [464E-F , 465C-D]
9. With the high ideals of the Preamble and
the directive principles of our Constitution, there has to be a fundamental
change in the judicial outlook. Freedom of contract has largely become an
illusion. The policy of the Parliament in regard to the contracts including
those involved in sale of goods, has still to reflect recognition of the
necessity for a change, which could be done by a suitable modification of the
definition of sale of goods.
[464C-D] Majority decision in New India Sugar
Mills v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bihar, AIR 1963 SC 1207; [1963] Supp. 2 SCR
459 overruled.
Minority opinion in India Steel & Wire
Products v. State of Madras [1968] 1 SCR 479, Andhra Sugar Ltd. v. State of
Andhra Pradesh, [1968] 1 SCR 705, Salar Jung Sugar Mills Ltd. v. State of
Mysore [1972] 2 SCR 228 and Oil and Natural Gas Commission v. State of Bihar
[1977] 1 SCR 354 approved.
State of Tamil Nadu v. Cement Distributors
Pvt. Ltd. [1973] 2 SCR 1019 partly approved.
Chhitter Mal Nazrain Das. v. Commissioner of
Sales Tax [1971] 1 SCR 671 explained.
State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley [1959]
SCR 379 explained and distinguished.
Kirkness v. John Hudson and Co. Ltd. [1955]
A.C. 696 held inapplicable.
Ridge No miness Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners [1962] Ch. 376 referred to.
Commissioner, Sales Tax U.P. v. Ram Bilas Ram
Gopal AIR 1970 Allahabad 318 referred to.
43 7
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: civil Appeal
No. 724 of 1976.
Appeal by Special Leave from the, Judgment
and Order dated 13th Dec. 1974 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from
Original Order No. 240 of 1973.
AND Civil Appeals. Nos. 2488-2497 (NT) 1972
(From the Judgment and Order dated the 31st March, 1970 of the Andhra Pradesh
High Court in Writ Petitions Nos. 3005, 3006, 3085, 3086, 3088, 3090, 4232,
4243 and 4244 of 1969.
Sachin Chowdhary, B. Sen, S. S. Bose, K. K.
Chakraborty, A.
G. Manzes, J. B. Dadachanji and k. J. John
for the Appellant in C.A. 724/76.
L. N. Sinha, D. N. Mukherjee, G. S.
Chatterjee and A. K.
Ganguli for respondents 1 to 4 in C.A.
724/76.
B. Kanta Rao for the Appellants in C.As
2488-97 of 1972.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Addl. Sol. Genl. (In
2488-97) 72, P.
Parameshwara Rao A. K. Ganguli and T. V. S.
Narasimhachari for the Respondents in CAs. Nos. 2488-97/72.
A. Subba Rao for the Intervener.
The following Judgment were delivered BEG,
C.J.--I am in general agreement with my learned brother Chandrachud who has
discussed all the authorities so admirably and comprehensively. I, however,
would like to add a few observations stating the general conclusion, as I see
it, emerging from an application of general principles and accumulation of case
law on the subject of what may be called "statutory" or
"compulsory" sales. Are they sales at all so as to be exigible to
sales tax or purchase tax under the relevant statutory provisions ? The term
'sale? is defined as follows in Eenjamin on Sale (Eighth Edn.) :
"To constitute a valid sale there must
be a concurrences of the following elements, namely :(1) parties competent to
contract;
(2) mutual assent;
(3) a thing, the absolute or general property
in which is transferred from the seller to the buyer; and (4) a price in money
paid or promised." It is true that a considerable part of the field over
which what are called 'sales' take place under either 'regulatory orders or levy
orders passed or directions given under statutory provisions is restricted and
controlled by these orders and directions. If, what is called a
"sale" 438 is, in substance, mere obedience to a specific order, in
which the so called "price" is only a compensation for the compulsory
passing of property in goods to which an order relates, at an amount fixed by
the authority making the order, the individual transaction may not be a
,,sale" although the compensation is determined on some generally fixed
principle and called "price". This was, for example, the position in
New India Sugar Mills v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bihar(1). That was a case
of a delivery according to an order given by the Govt. which could amount to a
compulsory levy by an executive order although there was no legislative
"levy order" involved in that case. On the other hand,, in
Commissioner, Sales Tax, U.P. v. Ram Bilas Ram Gopal,(2) the order under
consideration was actually called a levy order, but the case was
distinguishable from New India Sugar Mills v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bihar
(supra) on facts. It was held in the case of Ram Bilas (supra) that the core of
what is required for a "sale" was not destroyed by the so called
"levy" order which was legislative. It is true that passages from the
judgement of Pathak, J., in the case of Ram Bilas Ram Gopal (supra) were cited
and specifically disapproved by a Bench of this Court in Chittar Mal Narain v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax(3). But, perhaps the view of this Court in Chittar
Mal Narain, Das (supra) goes too far in this respect. It is not really the
nomenclature of the order involved, but the substance of the transaction under
consideration which matters in such cases.
In the first typo of case mentioned above the
substance of the concept of a sale, as found under our Law, itself disappears
because the transaction is nothing more than the execution of an order.
Deprivation of property for a compensation, which may even be described as
"price", does not amount to, a sale when all that is done is to,
carry out an order so that the transaction is substantially a compulsory
acquisition. On the other hand, a merely regulatory law, even if it
circumscribes the area of free choice, does not take away the basic character
or core of sale from the transaction. Such a law, which governs a class, may
oblige sellers to deal only with parties holding licences who may buy
particular or allotted quantities of goods at specified prices, but an
essential element of choice is still left to the parties between whom
agreements take place. The agreement, despite considerable compulsive elements
regulating or restricting the area of free choice, may still retain the basic
character of a transaction of sale. This was the position in Indian Steel and
Wire Products Ltd. v. State of Madras(4). Andhra Sugar Ltd. v. State of Andhra
Pradesh(5) and State of Rajasthan v. Karam Chand Thapar(6): There might be
borderline cases in which itmay be difficult to draw the line.
(1) AIR 1963 SC 1207 : [1963] (Supp) 2 SCR
459.
(2) AIR 1970 All 518.
(3) [1971] 1 S.C.R. 671.
(4) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 479.
(5) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 705.
(6) A.I.R. 1969 S.C. 343.
439 In the former type of case, the binding
character of the, transaction arises from the order directed to particular
parties asking them to deliver specified goods and not from a general order or
law applicable to a class. In the latter type of cases, the legal tie (vinculum
juris) which binds the parties to perform their obligations remains contractual.
The regulatory law merely adds other obligations, such as the one to enter into
such a tie between the parties indicated there. Although the regulatory law
might specify the terms, such as price, or parties, the regulation is
subsidiary to the essential character of the transaction which is consensual
and contractual. The basis of a contract is : "consensus adem". The
parties to the contract must agree upon the same thing in the 'same sense.
Agreement on mutuality of consideration,
ordinarily arising from an offer and acceptance, imparts to it enforceability
in Courts of law. Mere regulation or restriction of the field of choice does
not take away the contractual or essentially consensual binding core or
character of the transaction.
I may be forgiven for citing a passage from my
judgment in Commissioner of State Tax v. Ram Bilas Ram Gopal,(supra) to
indicate the setting of such transactions "It appears to me to be
necessary to distinguish between a restriction in the area of choice of parties
and the transaction itself in order to, determine the true character of the
transaction. Limitation of the field of choice is a necessary concomitant of a
controlled or mixed economy which ours is. Absolute freedom of contract or
unregulated operation of the laws of supply and demand, which an apotheosis of
the laissez-faire doctrine demanded, led really to a shrinking of the area of
freedom in the economic sphere, producing gross inequalities in bargaining
powers and recurrent crises.
Therefore, a regulated or a socialistic
economy seeks to regulate the play of forces operating on the economic arena so
that economic freedom of all concerned, including employers and employees, is
preserved and so that the interests of consumers are also not sacrificed by any
exploitation of conditions in which there is scarcity of goods,. I think that
the regulation or restriction of the area of choice, cannot be held to take
away the legal character of the transactions which take place within the
legally restricted field. It is too late in the day, when so much of the
nation's social and economic activities are guided and governed by control
orders, allotment orders, and statutory contracts, to contend that mere State
regulation of the economic sphere of life results in the destruction of the
nature of the transactions which take place within that sphere." (P. 524)
In Roman Law the contract of sale was classed as a "consensual"
contract. The consent could, no doubt, be express or implied. I find that
Hidayatullah J., in his very learned dissenting judgment in New India Sugar
Mills Case (supra), where some Roman Law is. referred to, thought that even in
a case of a 'specific order directing delivery of 440 goods there could be an
implied consent so as to constitute a safe. I find it, with great respect, difficult
to go so far as that. What could be implied, upon the facts of a particular
case, must still be a consent to a proposal if the transaction is to be
construed as a "sale". Mere compliance with an order may imply an
acceptance of an order but acceptance of a proposal to purchase or sell are of
a juristically different genus. It is, however, not necessary for us, in this
case, to accept the correctness of the minority view of Hidayatullah, J. in New
India Sugar Mills case (supra). The transactions before us are sales on an
application of the ratio decidendi of Indian Steel and Wire Products Ltd's case
(supra) and other cases decided on similar grounds.
The difficulty arises from the fact that,
although the ingredients of a "sale," as defined in Benjamin's
treatise on "Sale?', may seem to be satisfied even if delivery of goods is
in obedience to "an order to deliver them for a consideration, fixed or to
be fixed if we stretch mutual assent to cover assent resulting from orders
given, yet, it is difficult to see how such a transaction would be based on a
contractual tie. According to Sec. 4(3) of our Sale of Goods Act, a sale
results only from a contract which presupposes a minimal area of freedom of
choice where the ordinary mechanism of proposal and acceptance operates.
For the reasons indicated above, while I
agree with the answer given by my learned brother Chandrachud to the question
before us and also practically with all the views expressed by my learned
brother, yet, I hesitate to hold that the majority opinion expressed by Shah
J., in New India Sugar Mills case (supra), is erroneous. I think the case is
distinguishable. Ibis, however, makes no difference to the common conclusion
reached by us on the facts of the cases before us.
CHANDRACHUD, J. These appeals have been
placed for hearing before a seven-Judge Bench in order to set at rest, to the
extent foreseeable, the controversy whether what is conveniently, though
somewhat loosely, called a 'compulsory sale? is exigible to sales tax. When
essential goods are in short supply, various types of Orders are issued under
the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 with a view to making the goods available
to the consumer at a fair price. Such Orders sometimes provide that a person in
need of an essential commodity like cement, cotton, coal or iron and steel must
apply to the prescribed authority for a permit for obtaining the commodity.
Those wanting to engage in the-business of supplying the commodity are also
required to possess a dealer's licence. The permit holder can obtain the supply
of goods, to the extent of the quantity specified in the permit, from the named
dealer only and at a controlled price. The dealer who is asked to supply the
stated quantity of goods at the particular permit holder has no option but to
supply the stated quantity of goods at the controlled price. The question for
our consideration not easy to decide, is whether such a transaction amounts to
a sale in the language of the law.
We will refer to the facts of civil appeal
724 of 1976, in which a company called M/s Vishnu Agencies (Pvt.) Ltd., is the
appellant. It carries on business. as an agent and distributor of cement in the
441 State of West Bengal and is a registered dealer under the Bengal Finance
(Sales Tax) Act, 1941, referred to hereinafter as the Bengal Sales Tax Act. Cement
being a controlled commodity, its distribution is regulated by the West Bengal
Cement Control Act, 26 of 1948, referred to hereinafter as the Cement Control
Act, and by the Orders made under section 3 (2) of that Act. Section (3) (1) of
the Cement Control Act provides, inter alia, for regulation of production,
supply and distribution of cement for ensuring equitable supply and
distribution thereof at a fair price. By the Cement Control Order, 1948 framed
under the Cement Control Act, no sale, or purchase of cement can be made,
except in accordance with the conditions contained in the written order issued
by the Director of Consumer Goods, West Bengal or the Regional Honorary Adviser
to the Government of India at Calcutta or by officers authorised by them, at
prices not exceeding the notified price.
The appellant is a licensed stockiest of
cement and is permitted to stock cement in its godown, to be supplied to
persons in whose favour allotment orders are issued, at the price stipulated
and in accordance with the conditions of permit issued by the authorities
concerned. The authorities designated under the Cement Control Order issue
permits under which a specified quantity of cement is allotted to a named
permit-holder, to be delivered by a named dealer at the price mentioned in the
permit. A permit is generally valid for 15 days and as soon as the price of
cement allotted in favour of an allottee is deposited with the dealer, he is
bound to deliver to the former the specified quantity of cement at the specified
price.
A specimen order issued in favour of an
allottee, under which the appellant had to supply 10 metric tons of cement at
Rs. 144.58 per M.T., exclusive of sales tax, reads thus "LICENCE FOR
CEMENT The quantities of cement detailed below are hereby allotted to M/s.
Marble & Cement products Co. Pvt. Ltd., 2, Braboume Road, Calcutta-1 to be
supplied by M/s. Vishnu Agencies Pvt. Ltd., 3, Chittaranjan Avenue,
Calcutta-13, on conditions detailed below.
The price of material involved must be
deposited with the Stockist within 15 days and the actual delivery must be
taken within 15 days from the date of issue of the permit.
The licence is issued only for the purpose of
Mfg. of Mosaic Tiles at 188, Netaji Subhas Road, Calcutta-40.
Under no circumstances will the validity of
the permit be extended beyond the period of 15 days from the date of its issue.
Cement Total Tonnge Country Cement at Rs.
144.58 Ton Cwt. per M.T. exclusive of S. T. 10 M/T (Ten M/T only)" 442 The
appellant supplied cement to various allottees from time to time in pursuance
of the allotment orders issued by appropriate authorities and in accordance
with the terms of the licence obtained by it for dealing in cement. The
appellant was assessed to sales tax by the first respondent, the Commercial Tax
Officer,, Sealdah Charge, in respect of these transactions. It paid the tax but
discovered on perusal of the decision of this Court in New India Sugar Mills
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax(1) that the transactions were not exigible to
sales tax. Pleading that the payment was made under a mistake of law, it filed
appeals against the orders of assessment passed by respondent 1. It contended
in appeals before the Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes that by virtue
of the provisions of the Cement Control Act and the Cement Control Order, no
volition or bargaining power was left to it and since there was no element of
mutual consent aggreement between it and the allottees, the transactions were
not sales within the meaning of the Sales Tax Act. The appellant further
contended that if the transactions were treated as sales, the definition of
"sale" in the Sales Tax Act was ultra vires the legislative
competency of the Provincial Legislature under the Government of India Act,
1935 and of the State Legislature under the Constitution.
The appellate authority rejected the first
contention and upheld the assessments. It did not, as it could not, go into the
second contention regarding legislative competence.
The appellant adopted the statutory remedies
open to it but since the arrears, of tax were mounting up and had already
exceeded a sum of rupees eight lacs, it filed a writ petition in the Calcutta
High Court praying that the various assessment orders referred to in the
petition be quashed and a writ of prohibition be issued directing the sales tax
authorities to refrain from making any further assessments for the purpose of
sales tax on the transactions between the appellant and the allottees.
A learned single Judge of the High Court
allowed the writ petition and issued a writ of mandamus restraining the
respondents from imposing sales tax on the transactions.
between the appellant and the allottees. That
judgment having been set aside in appeal by a Division Bench of the High Court
by its judgment dated December 13, 1974, the appellant has filed appeal No. 724
of 1976 by special leave.
Civil appeals No. 2488 to 2497 of 1972 raise
a similar question under the Andhra Pradesh Paddy Procurement (Levy) Orders,
under which paddy growers in the State are under an obligation to sell the
paddy to licensed agents appointed by the State Government at the prices fixed
by it. The High Court of Andhra Pradesh by its judgment dated March 31, 1970
has taken the, same view as the Calcutta High Court, namely, that the
transactions amount to sales and are taxable under the Sales Tax Act. Counsel
appearing in the Andhra Pradesh appeals agree that the decision in the Calcutta
case will govern those appeals also.
(1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 459.
443 Since the crux of the appellant's
contention is that the measures adopted to control the supply of cement leave
no consensual option to the parties to bargain, it is necessary first to notice
the relevant provisions of law bearing on the matter. The West Bengal Cement Control
Act, 26 of 1948, was enacted in order. to "confer powers to control the
production, supply and distribution of, and trade and commerce in, cement in
West Bengal." Section 3(1) of the Act empowers the Provincial Government
to provide, by order in the Official Gazette, for regulating the supply and
distribution of cement and trade and commerce therein.
Section 3(2) provides by clauses (b) to (o)
that an order made under sub-section (1) may provide for regulating or
controlling the prices at which cement may be purchased or sold and for
prescribing the conditions of sale thereof, regulating by licences, permits or
otherwise, the storage, transport, movement, possession, distribution,
disposal, acquisition, use of consumption of cement; prohibiting the withholding
from sale of cement ordinarily kept for sale;
and for requiring any person holding stock of
cement to sell the whole or specified part of the stock at such prices and to
such persons or classes of persons or in such circumstances, as may be specified
in the order. If any person contravenes an order made under section 3, he is
punishable under section 6 with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
three years or with fine or with both, and, if the order so provides, any
Court, trying such contranvention, may direct that a property in respect of
which the Court is satisfied that the order been contravened shall be forfeited
to the Government.
In exercise of the powers erred by section
3(1) read with clauses (b) to (h) of section (2) of the Act, an Order which may
conveniently be called the Cement Control Order was promulgated by the Governor
on August 18, 1948. The relevant clauses of that Order contain the following
provisions. By paragraph 1, no person shall after the commencement of the order
sell or store for sale any cement unless he holds a licence and except in
accordance with the conditions specified in such licence obtained from the
Director of Consumer Goods, West Bengal, or any officer authorised by him in
writing in this behalf. By paragraph 2, no person shall dispose of or agree to
dispose of any cement except in accordance with the conditions contained in a
written order of the Director of Consumer Goods, West Bengal or the authorities
specified in the paragraph. By paragraph 3, no person shall acquire or agree to
acquire any cement from any person except in accordance with the conditions
contained in a written order of the Director of Consumer Goods, West Bengal, or
the authorities specified in the paragraph. By paragraph 4, no person shall
sell cement at a "higher than notified price". By Paragraph 8, no
person or stockist who has any stock of cement in his possession and to whom a
written order has been issued under paragraph 2 shall refuse to sell the same,
"at a price not exceeding the notified price", 'and the seller shall
deliver the cement to the buyer "within a reasonable time after the
payment of price". By paragraph 8A, every stockist or every person
employed by him shall, if so re 3-1146 SCI/77 444 quested by the person acquiring
cement from him under a written order issued under paragraph 3, weigh the
cement in his presence or in the presence of his authorised representative at
the time of delivery.
We are not concerned with the amendments made
by the Government of West Bengal to the, Cement Control Order on December 30,
1965 by which, inter alia paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 8 and 8A of that Order were
deleted. The,appeal from the decision of the Calcutta High Court is limited to
the transactions between the appellant and the allottees from the years 1957 to
1960.
As regards the batch of appeals from Andhra
Pradesh, the levy of tax was challenged by three sets of persons, the procuring
agents, the rice-millers and the retailers with the difference that the
procuring agents were assessed to purchase tax, while the others to sales tax
under the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957. By virtue of the
provisions of the, Andhra Pradesh Paddy Procurement (Levy) Orders, the
paddy-growers can sell their paddy to licensed procuring age nts appointed by
the State Government only and at the prices fixed by the Government. The
agriculturist has the choice to select his own procuring agent but he cannot
sell paddy to a private purchaser. The procuring agents in their turn have to
supply paddy to the ricemillers at controlled prices. The millers, after
converting paddy into rice, have to declare their stocks to the Civil Supplies
Department. Pursuant to the Orders issued by the Department, the
rice-millers-have to supply a requisite quantity of rice to the wholesale or
retail dealers at prices fixed by the Department. Orders for such supply by the
millers are passed by the authorities under the A.P.
Procurement (Levy) and Restriction on Sale
Order, 1967.
Under this Order, every miller carrying on
rice-milling operations is required to sell to the agent or officer duly
authorised by, the Government the minimum quantities fixed by the Government at
the notified price; and no miller or other person who gets his paddy milled in
any price mill can move or otherwise dispose of the, rice recovered by milling
at such rice mill except in accordance with the, directions of the Collector. A
breach of these provisions is liable to be punished under section 7 of the Essential
Commodities Act 1955 and the goods are liable to be forfeited under section 6A
of that Act. The A.P. sales tax authorities levied purchase tax on the purchase
of paddy made by the procuring agents from the agriculturists and they levied
sales tax on the transactions relating to the sup of rice by the millers to the
wholesale and retail dealers and on the supply made, by the retailers to their
customers. The case as regards the sales tax imposed on the transactions
between the retail dealers and the consumers stood on an altogether different
footing, but the writ petitions filed by the procuring agents and rice-millers
raised questions similar to those involved in the writ petition filed in the
Calcutta High Court.
These then are the provisions of the
respective Orders passed by the Governments of West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh.
445 We may now notice the provisions of the
Sales Tax Acts.
Section 2(g) of the Bengal Finance (Sales
Tax) Act, 6 of 1941, defines a sale" to mean "any transfer of
property in goods for cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration,
including a transfer of ,property in goods involved in the execution of a contract,
but does not include a mortgage, hypothecation, charge or pledge." Section
2 (1) provides that the word "turnover" used in relation to any
period means "the aggregate of the sale prices or parts of sale-prices
receivable, or if a dealer so elects, actually received by the dealer........
By clause (h) of section 2, "sale-price" is defined to mean the
amount payable to a dealer as valuable consideration for "the sale of any
goods". By section 4(1), every dealer whose gross turnover during the year
immediately preceding the commencement of the Act exceeded the taxable quantum
is liable to pay tax under the Act on all "sales" effected after the
date notified by the State Government.
Section 2(n) of the Andhra Pradesh General
Sales Tax Act 1957 defines a "sale" as "every transfer of the
property in goods by one person to another in the course of trade or commerce,
for cash, or for deferred payment or for any other valuable consideration.
Section 5 of that Act is the charging section.
According to these definitions of 'sale' in
the West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh Sales Tax Act, transactions between the
appellants on one hand and the allottees or nominees on the other are patently
,sales because indisputably, in one case the property in cement and in the other,
property in paddy and rice was transferred for cash consideration by the
appellants; and in so far as the West Bengal case is concerned, property in the
goods did not pass to the transferees by way of mortgage, hypothecation, charge
or pledge. But that is oversimplification. To counteract what appears on the
surface plain enough, learned. counsel for the appellants have advanced a twofold
contention.
They contend, in the first place,' that the
word 'sale' in the Sales Tax Acts passed by the Provincial or State
legislatures must receive the same meaning as in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930;
or else, the definition of sale in these Sales 'Tax Acts will be beyond the
legislative competence of the Provincial and' State legislatures. Secondly, the
appellants contend that since under the Sale of Goods Act, there can be no sale
without a contract of sale and since the parties in these matters had no
volition of their own but were compelled by law to supply and receive the goods
at prices fixed under the Control Orders by the prescribed authorities, the transactions
between them are not sales properly so palled and therefore are not exigible to
sales tax.
For examining the validity of the first
contention, it is necessary to turn to the appropriate entries in the
legislative lists of the Constitution Acts, for the contention is founded on
the premise that the word sale' which occurs in those entries must receive the
same meaning as in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 since the expression "sale
of goods" was, at the time when the Government of India Act was enacted, a
term of well-recognised legal import in the general law relating to sale 446 of
goods and in the legislative practice relating to that topic both in England
and in India. Entry 48 in the Provincial List, List II of Schedule VII to the
Government of India Act, 1935 relates to; "Taxes on the sale of
goods." Entry 54 of List II, of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution
reads to say: "Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods other than
newspapers, subject to the provisions of entry 92A of the Union List but we may
refer to it in order to complete the picture. It refers to: "Taxes on 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." The
contention of the appellants that the expression 'sale of goods' in entry 48 in
the Provincial List of the, Act of 1935 and in entry 54 in the State List of
the constitution must receive the same meaning as in the Sale of Goods Act is
repelled on behalf of the State Governments with the argument that
constitutional provisions which confer legislative powers must receive a broad
and liberal construction and therefore the expression 'sale of goods' in entry
48 and its successor, entry 54, should not be construed in the narrow sense in
which that expression is used in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 but in a broad
sense.
The principle that in interpreting a
constituent or organic statute, that construction most beneficial tothe widest
possible amplitude of its powers must be adopted has been examined over the
years by various courts, including this Court, and is too firmly established to
merit reconsideration. Some of the leading cases on this point are the Privy
Council decisions in British Coal Corporation v. king(1), Edwards v. A. G. for
Canada(2) and James v.
Commonwealth of Australia("); the
Australian decisions in Morgan v. Deputy Federal Commissioner of Land Tax,
N.S.W.(4) and Broken Hill South Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxation (N.S.W.) (5) ;
the Federal Court decisions in In re the Central Provinces and Berar Act No. XIV
of 1938(6) and United Provinces v. Atiqa Begum;(7) and the decisions of this
Court in Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay
City(8) and The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras), Ltd.
(9) These decisions have taken the view that a constitution must not be
construed in a narrow and pedantic sense, that a board and liberal spirit
should inspire those whose duty it is to interpret it, that a Constitution of a
Government is a living and organic thing which of all instruments has the
greatest claim to be construed ut res magis valeat quam pereat, that the
legislature in selecting subjects of taxation is entitled to take things as it
finds them in remum natura and that it is not proper that a Court should deny
to such a legislature the right of solving taxation problems unfettered by a
priori legal categories which often derive from the exercise of legislative
power in the same constitutional unit.
(1) [1935] A.C. 500. (6) [1939] F.C.R. 18.
(2) [1930] A.C. 124. (7) [1940] F.C.R. 110.
(3) [1936] A.C. 578. (8) [1955] 1 S.C.R.
529..
(4) [1912] 15 C.L.R.661. (9) [1959].S.C.R.
379.
(5) [1937] 56 C.L.R. 33.
447 On a careful examination of various
decisions bearing on the point this Court speaking through Venkatarama Aiyar J.
in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) upheld the contention of the State of Madras that
the words "sale of goods" in Entry 48 which occur in-the Constitution
Act and confer legislative powers on the State Legislature in respect of a
topic relating to taxation must be interpreted not in a restricted but broad
sense. But as observed by the learned Judge in that case, this conclusion opens
up questions as to what that sense is, whether popular or legal, and what its
connotation is, either in the one sense or' the other. After considering
text-book definitions contained in Blackstone, Benjamin on Sale, Halsbury's
Laws of England, Chalmer's Sale of Goods Act, Corpus Juris, Williston on Sales
and the Concise Oxford Dictionary, the Court held that the expression 'sale of
goods' in Entry 48 cannot be construed in its popular sense and that it must be
interpreted in its legal sense. Whereas in popular parlance a sale is said to
take place when the bargain is settled between the parties though property in
the goods may not pass at that stage, as where. the contract relates to future
or unascertained goods, the essense of 'sale' in the legal sense is the
transfer of the property in a thing from one person to another for a price.
The Court then proceeded to determine, the
connotation of the expression 'sale of goods' in the legal sense and held,
having regard lo the evolution of the law relating to sale of goods, the scheme
of the Indian Contract Act and the provisions of the Sale of Goods Act, 1930,
which repealed Chapter VII of the Indian Contract Act relating to sale of goods,
that according to the law both of England and of India, in order to constitute
a sale it is necessary that there should be an agreement between the parties
for the purpose of transferring title to the goods, which presupposes capacity.
to contract, that the contract must be supported by valuable consideration and
that as a result of the transaction property must actually pass in the goods.
"Unless all these elements are present,
there can be no sale," Basing itself on this position, the Court finally concluded
in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) that the expression 'sale of goods' was, at the,
time when the Government of India Act was enacted, a term of wellrecognised
legal import in the general law relating to sale of goods and in the
legislative practice relating to that topic both in England and in India and
therefore that expression, occurring in entry 48, must be interpreted in the
sense which it bears in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930. In coming to this
conclusion, the Court relied upon the, American decisions in United States v.
Wong Kim Ark, South Carolina v. United States(2 ) and Ex Parte.
Grossman(3); the Privy Council decisions in
L'Union St.
Jacques De Montreal v. Be Lisle (4) , Royal
Bank of Canada v. Larue,(5) The Labour Relations Board of (1) [1898] 169 U.S.
649.
(2) [1905] 199 U.S. 437.
(3) [1925] 267 U.S. 87.
(4) [1874] L.R. 6 P.C.31.
(5) [1928] A.C. 187.
448 Saskatochewan v. John East Iron Works
Ltd.(1); Croft v. Dunphy(2), and Wallace Brothers and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Bombay City and Bombay Suburban District;(3) the decision of the
Federal Court in re The Central Provinces and. Berar Act No. XIV of 1938;
(supra); and the decisions of this Court in The State of Bombay v. F. N. Balsara(4)
and The Sales Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs Budh Prakash Jai Prakash(5). In a
nutshell, these decisions have taken the view that the Constitution must be
interpreted in the light of the common-law, the principles and history of which
were familiarly known to the framers of the Constitution, that the language of
the Constitution cannot be understood without reference to the common law, that
to determine the extent of the grants of power, the Court must place itself in
the position of the men who framed and' adopted the Constitution and inquire
what they must have understood to be the meaning and scope of those grants,
that when a power is conferred to legislate on a particular topic it is
important, in determining the scope of the power, to have regard to what is
ordinarily treated as embarced within that topic in-legislative practice and
particularly in the legislative practice of the State which has conferred that
power, that the object of doing so is emphatically not to seek a pattern to
which a due exercise of the power must conform, but to ascertain the general
conception involved in the words of the Act, and finally, that Parliament must
be presumed to have had Indian legislative practice in mind and unless the
context otherwise clearly requires, not to have conferred a legislative power
intended to be interpreted in a sense not understood by those to whom the Act
was to apply.
The view expressed in Gannon Dunkerley
(supra) that the, words "sale of goods" in entry 48 must be
interpreted in the sense which they bear in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 an$
that the, meaning of those words should not be left to fluctuate with the
definition of 'sale in laws relating to sales of goods which might be in force
for the, time being.
may, with respect, bear further consideration
but that may have. to await a more suitable occasion. It will then be necessary
to examine whether the words "sale of goods" which occur in entry 48
should not be construed so as to extend the competence of the legislature to
enacting laws in respect of matters which mightbe unknown in 19 3 5 when the
Government of India Act was passed but which may have come into existence
later, as a result of a social and economic evolution. In Attorney General v.
Edison Telephone, Company of London(,,) a question arose whether the Edison
Telephone Company London, infringed by installation of telephones, the,
exclusive privilege, of transmitting telegrams which was conferred; uponthe
Postmaster-General under an Act of 1869. The decision depended on the meaning
of the (1) [1949] A.C. 134.
(2) [1933] A.C. 156.
(3) [1948] L.R. 75 I.A. 86.
(4) [1951] S.C.R. 682.
(5) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243.
(6) [1880] L.R. 6 Q.B.D. 244.
449 word "telegraph" in the Acts of
1863 and 1869. The company contended that since-telephones were unknown at the
time when these Acts were passed, the definition of 'telegraph' could not
comprehend 'telephones. That contention was negatived by an English Court. In
the Regulation and Control of Radio Communication in Canada, In re(1) a similar
question arose as to whether 'broadcasting" was covered by the expression
"telegraph and other works and undertakings" in section 92(10) (a) of
the Constitution Act of 1867. The Privy Council answered the question in the
affirmative and was apparently not impressed by the contention that
broadcasting was not known as a means of communication at the time when the
Constitution Act was passed. These decisions proceed on the principle that if
after the enactment of a legislation, new facts and situations arise which
could not have been in the contemplation of the legislature, statutory
provisions can justifiably be applied to those facts and situations so long as
the words of the statute are in a broad sense capable of containing them.
This principle, according to the view
expressed in Gannon Dunkerley, (supra) did not apply to the interpretation of
Entry 48, a view which in our. opinion is capable of further scrutiny. It is,
however, unnecessary in these appeals to investigate the matter any further
because, the position which emerges after putting on the words of Entry 48 the
same meaning which those words'-bear in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 is that in
order to constitute a sale, it is necessary that there should be an agreement
between the parties. In other words, the effect of the construction which the
Court put on the words of Entry 48 in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) is that a sale
is necessarily a consensual transaction and if the parties have no volition or
option to bargain, there can be no sale. For the present purposes, this view
may be assumed to reflect the correct legal position but even so, the
transactions which are the subject matter of these appeals will amount to
sales.
Applying the ratio of Gannon Dunkerley,
(supra) the true question for decision, therefore, is whether in the context of
the Control Orders issued by the Government of West Bengal for regulating the
supply and distribution of cement, the transactions under which the, appellant
supplied cement to persons who were issued permits by the authorities to obtain
the commodity from the appellant, involved an element of volition or
consensuality. If they did, the transactions would amount to sales, but not
otherwise. It is undeniable that under paragraph 2 of the West Bengal Order of
1948, which we have for convenience designated as the Cement Control Order, no
person can dispose of or agree to dispose of any cement except in accordance
with the conditions contained in a written order of the Director of Consumer
Goods or the authorities specified in that paragraph. That is a limitation on
the dealer's right to supply cement.
Correspondingly by paragraph 3, no person can
acquire or agree to acquire cement from any person except in accordance with
the conditions contained in a written order of the Director of Consumer Goods
or the authorities specified in that paragraph. That is a limitation on the
consumer's right to obtain cement. Paragraph 4 puts a restriction on the price
which a dealer (1) [1932] A.C. 304.
45 0 may charge for the commodity by
providing that no person shall sell cement at a price higher than the notified
price.
Paragraph 8 imposes on the dealer the
obligation to supply cement by providing that no person or stockist who has any
stock of cement in his possession and to whom a written order has been issued
under paragraph 2 shall refuse to sell the same at a price not exceeding the
notified price. person who contravenes the provisions of the Cement Control Order
is punishable under section 6 of the West Bengal Cement Control Act, 1948 with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years These limitations on
the normal right of dealers and consumers to supply and obtain the goods, the
obligations imposed on the parties and the penalties prescribed by the Control
Order do not, in our opinion, militate against the position that eventually,
the parties must be deemed to have completed the transactions under an
agreement by which one party bound itself to supply the stated quantity of
goods to the other at a price not higher than the notified price and the other
party consented to accept the goods on the terms and conditions mentioned in
the permit or the order of allotment issued in its favour by the concerned authority.
Offer and acceptance need not always be in an
elementary form, nor indeed does the Law of Contract or of Sale of Goods
require that consent to a contract must be express.
It is commonplace that offer and acceptance
can be spelt out from the conduct of the parties which covers not only their
acts but omissions as well. Indeed, on occasions, silence can be more eloquent
than eloquence itself. Just as correspondence between the parties can
constitute or disclose an offer and acceptance, so can their conduct.
This is because, law does not require offer
and acceptance to conform to any set pattern formula.
In order, therefore, to determine whether
there was any agreement or consensuality between the parties, we must have
regard to their conduct at or about the time when the goods changed hands. In
the first place, it is not obligatory on a trader to deal in cement nor on any
one to acquire it.
The primary fact, therefore, is that the
decision of the trader to deal in an essential commodity is volitional. Such
volition carries with it the willingness to trade in the, commodity strictly on
the terms of Control Orders. The consumer too, who is under no legal compulsion
to acquire or possess cement, decides as a matter of' his volition to obtain it
on the terms of the permit or the order of allotment issued in his favour. That
brings the two parties together, one of whom is willing to supply the essential
commodity and the other to receive it. When the allottee presents his permit to
the dealer, he signifies his willingness to obtain the commodity from the
dealer on the terms stated in the permit. His conduct reflects his consent. And
when, upon the presentation of the permit, the dealer acts upon it, he
impliedly agrees to supply the commodity to the allottee on the terms by which
he has voluntarily bound himself to trade in the commodity. his conduct too
reflects his consent. Thus, though both parties are bound to comply with the
legal requirements governing the transaction, they agree as between themselves
to enter into the transaction on statutory terms, 451 one agreeing to supply
the commodity to the other on those terms and the other agreeing to accept it
from him on the very terms. It is therefore not correct to say that the
transactions between the appellant and the allottees are not consensual. They,
with their free consent, agreed to enter into the transactions.
We are also of the opinion that though the
terms of the transaction are mostly predetermined by law, it cannot be said
that there is no area at all in which there is no scope, for the parties to
bargain. The West Bengal Cement Control Act, 1948 empowers the Government by
section 3 to regulate or control the prices at which cement may be purchased or
sold. The Cement Control Order, 1948 provides by paragraph 4 that no person
shall sell cement at a "higher than notified price", leaving it open
to the parties to charge and pay a price which is less than the notified price,
the notified price being the maximum price which may lawfully be charged.
Paragraph 8 of the Order points in the same direction by providing that no
dealer Who has a stock of cement in his possession shall refuse to sell the
same "at a price not exceeding the notified price", leaving it open
to him to charge a lesser price, which the allottee would be only too agreeable
to pay. Paragraph 8 further provides that the. dealer shall deliver the cement
"within a reasonable time" after the payment of price. Evidently,
within the bounds of reasonableness, it would be open to the parties to fix the
time of delivery. Paragraph 8A which confers on the allottee the right to ask
for weighment of goods also shows that he may reject the goods on the ground
that they are short in weight just as indeed, he would have the undoubted right
to reject them on the ground that they are not of the requisite quality. The
circumstance that in these areas, though minimal, the parties to the
transactions have the freedom to bargain militates against the view that the
transactions are not consensual.
While on this aspect, we may usefully draw
attention to two important decisions of this Court, the first of which is
Indian Steel & Wire Products Ltd. v. State of Madras(1).
The appellant therein supplies certain steel
products to various persons in Madras at the instance of the Steel Controller
exercising powers under the Iron and Steel'(Control of Production and
Distribution) Order, 1941.
The State of Madras assessed the turnover of
the appellant to sales tax upon which, the appellant contended that the deliveries
of steel products were made under compulsion of law since it was the controller
who determined the persons to whom the goods were to be supplied, the price at
which they were to be supplied, the manner in which they were to be transported
and the mode in which the payment of the price was to be made. Since every
facet of the transaction was prescribed by the controller, so it was argued,
there was no agreement between the parties and therefore the transaction could
not be considered as a sale. Rejecting this contention, it was observed by
Hegde J., who spoke for the Constitution Bench, that though the controller
fixed the base price of the steel products and determined the (1) [1968] 1
S.C.R. 479.
452 buyers, the parties were stiff 'free to
decide the other terms of the bargain, as for example, the time and date of
delivery and the time and mode of payment and therefore it could not be said
that there was no agreement between the parties to sell and buy the goods. It
was held that though the area within which it was possible for the parties to
bargain was greatly relieved on account of the Iron and Steel Control Order, it
was not correct to contend that because law imposes restrictions on freedom of
contract, there could be no contract at all. "So long as mutual assent is
not completely excluded in any dealing, in law it is a contract." The
second decision is reported in Andhra Sugar Ltd. v.
State of Andhra Pradesh(1). In that case, the
occupier of a sugar factory had to buy sugarcane from cane-growers in
conformity with the directions. of the Cane Commissioner issued under the
Andhra Pradesh (Regulation of Supply and Purchase) Act, 1961. Under section 21
of that Act, sales and purchase of sugarcane were exempt from tax under the
Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957, but under section 2(1), of the Act
of 1961, the State Government had power by notification, to levy a tax "on
the purchase of cane required for use, consumption or sale in a sugar
factory". Various sugar factories in the State filed writ petitions under
Article 32 of the Constitution challenging the validity of section 21 mainly on
the ground that since they were compelled by law to buy cane from the can egrowers,
their purchases were not made under agreements and were not taxable under entry
54, List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution having regard to the
decision in Gannon Dunkerley (supra). The writ petitions were decided by a
Constitution Bench of this Court which delivered its unanimous judgment through
Bachawat J. It is necessary in the first place to state that though it was
argued on behalf of the State Government in that case that the occupier of the
factory had some option of not buying the sugarcane from the grower and had
some freedom of bargaining about the terms and conditions of the agreement,
that point was not pursued any further and the writ petitions proceeded on the
basis that there was no option left for any bargain in the transaction.
After referring to the definition of
"contract of sale of goods" in section 4(1) of the Indian Sale of
Goods Act, 1930, and the relevant provisions of the Contract Act relating to
offer and acceptance,. the Court observed that under section 10 of the Contract
Act, an agreements are contracts if they are made by the free consent of the
parties competent to contract, for a lawful consideration and with a lawful
object, and are not by the Act expressly declared to be void. Section 13 of the
Contract Act defines "consent" and section 14 says that consent is
said to be free when it is not caused by coercion, undue influence, fraud,
misrepresentation or mistake as defined in sections 15 to 22. In the background
of those provisions, the Court observed that the canegrower in the factory zone
was free to make or, not to make an offer of sale of cane 'to the occupier of
the factory. But if be made an offer, the occupier of the factory was bound to
accept it and the consent of the occupier not being caused by coercion, undue
influence, fraud, misrepresentation or mistake was "free (1) [1968] 1
S.C.R. 705.
453 consent as defined in section 14 of the
Contract Act, even though he was obliged by law to enter into the agreement.
"The compulsion of law is not coercion
as defined in section 15 of the Act" and "in the eye of the law, the
agreement is freely made." Since the, parties were competent to contract,
the agreement was made for a lawful consideration and with a lawful object, the
agreement was not void under any provision of law and it was enforceable at
law, the Court held that the purchases of sugarcane were taxable by the State
legislature under Entry 54, List 11 of the Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution.
Strong reliance was placed by the factory
owners in Andhra Sugars (supra) on the majority' judgment of Kapur and Shah JJ.
in New India Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax (supra) to which we
must refer here. The "admitted course of dealing" between the parties
in that case was that the Governments of various consuming States used to
intimate to the Sugar Controller of India, from time to time, their
requirements of sugar and similarly, the factory owners used to send to the Sugar
Controller of India statements of stocks of sugar held by them. On a
consideration of the requests received from the State Governments and the
statements of stock received from the factories, the Sugar Controller used to
make allotment of sugar. The. allotment order was addressed by the Sugar
Controller to the factory owner directing him to supply sugar to the State
Government in question in accordance with the dispatch instructions received
from the competent officer of the State Government.
A copy of the allotment order was
simultaneously sent to the State Government concerned on receipt of which the
competent authority of the State Government sent to the factory concerned
detailed instructions about the destinations to which the sugar was to be dispatched
as also the quantities of sugar to be dispatched to each place. The Madras
Government which, under this arrangement, received its quota of sugar from the
New India Sugar Mills, also laid down the' procedure of payment. The Patna High
Court having held that the supply of sugar by the mills to the Province of
Madras was liable to be taxed under the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947, the mills
filed an, appeal to this Court which was decided by a Bench of three learned
Judges. Kapur and Shah J. held that since the mills were compelled to carry out
the directions of the Controller and since they had no volition in the matter
of supply of sugar to the State of Madras, there was no offer by them to the
State Government and no acceptance by the latter. Shah J., speaking for the
majority observed that a contract of sale between the seller and the buyer is a
prerequisite to a sale and since there was no such contract, the transaction in
question which the Bihar Sales Tax authorities sought to tax was not exigible
to sales tax.
Hidayatullah J. who 'delivered a dissenting
opinion observed-after reviewing the position both under the English and the
Indian Law, that though it was true that consent makes a contract of sale, such
consent "may be express or implied and it cannot be said that unless the
offer and acceptance are there in an elementary form, there can be no taxable
sale." Taking the view that on obtaining the necessary permit, the sugar
mills on the one hand and the Government of 454 Madras on the other agreed to
"sell" and "purchase" sugar could admit of no doubt, the
learned Judge said that when the Province of Madras after receiving the permit,
telegraphed instructions to despatch sugar and the mills despatched it, "a
contract emerged and consent must be implied on both sides though not expressed
antecedently to the permit." The Controller brought the seller and the
purchaser together, gave them permission to supply and receive sugar leading
thereby to an implied contract of sale between the parties. The learned Judge
accepted that there was an element of compulsion in both selling and buying,
perhaps more for the supplier than for the receiver, but, according to him,
"a compelled sale is nevertheless a sale" and "sales often take
place without volition of party." The learned Judge summed up the matter
pithily thus : "So-long as the parties trade under controls at fixed price
and accept these as any other law of the realm because they must, the contract
is at the fixed price both sides having or deemed to have agreed to' such a
price. Consent under the law of contract need not be express, it can be implied..
. . . The present is just another example of an implied contract with an
implied offer and implied acceptance by the parties." Adverting to the
construction of the legislat ive entry 48 of List 11, VII Schedule to the
Government of India Act, 1935, the learned Judge observed that the entry had to
be interpreted in a liberal spirit and not cut down by narrow technical
consideration. "The entry in other words should not be shorn of all its
content to leave a mere husk of legislative power. For the purposes of
legislation such as on-sales tax it is only necessary to see whether there is a
sale, express or implied..... The entry has its meaning and within its meaning
there is a plenary power. If a sale express or implied is found to exist then
the tax must follow." We are of the opinion that the true position in law
is as is set out in the dissenting judgment of Hidayatullah J., and that, the
view expressed by Kapur and Shah JJ. in the majority judgment, with deference,
cannot be considered as good law. Bachawat J. in Andhra Sugar (supra) was, with
respect, right in cautioning that the majority judgment of Kapur and Shah JJ.
in New India Sugar Mills (supra) "should not be treated as an authority
for the proposition that there can be no contract of sale under compulsion of a
statute." (pages 715-716). Rather than saying what, in view of the growing
uncertainty of the true legal position on the question, we: are constrained to
say, namely, that the majority judgment in New India Sugar Mills (supra) is not
good law, Bachawat J. preferred to adopt the not unfamiliar manner of confining
the majority decision to "the special facts of that case." The
majority judgment in New India Sugar Mills (supra) is based predominantly on
the decision of this Court in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) to which we have
referred at length in another context. In fact, Shah J. observes at page 459 of
the report after discussing the judgment in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) that
"the ratio decidendi of that decision must govern this case." The
decision in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) really turned on a different point, the
question for consideration therein being whether the value of the materials
used in the execution 455 of building contracts could be included within the
taxable turnover of the company. It was contended on behalf of the company that
the power of the Madras Legislature to impose a tax on sales under entry 48,
List 11 of Schedule VII of the government of India Act, 1935 did not extend to
unposing a tax on the value of materials used in construction works, as there
was no transaction of sale in respect of those goods, and that the provisions
introduced in the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, by the Madras General
Sales Fax (Amendment) Act, 1947, authorising the imposition of such tax were
ultra vires. Venkatarama Aiyar J. posed the question thus : "The sole
question for determination in this appeal is whether the provisions of the
Madras General Sales Tax Act are ultra vires, in so far as they seek to impose
a tax on the supply of materials in execution of works contract treating it as
a sale of goods by the contractor. . . . . . ". The Court accepted that
building materials were 'goods' and limited the inquiry to whether there was
"a sale of those materials within the meaning of that word in entry
48". Reference was then made to Benjamin on Sale in which it is said that
in order to constitute a 'sale, four elements must concur "(1) Parties
competent to contract; (2) mutual assent, (3) a thing, the absolute or general
property in which is transferred from the seller to the buyer; and (c) a price
in money paid or promised." (Vide 8th Edn., p.. 3). On the strength of
this statement and on a consideration of the provisions of the Contract Act and
the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 it was concluded that "according to the law
both of England and of India, in order to constitute a sale it is necessary
that there should be an agreement between the parties for the purpose of
transferring title to goods". The Court then proceeded to examine the true
nature of a building contract and held "It has been already stated that,
both tinder the common law and the statute law relating to sale of goods in
England and in India, to constitute A transaction of sale there should be an
agreement, express or implied, relating to goods to be completed by passing of
title in those goods. It is of the essence of thisconcept that both the
agreement and the sale, should relate to the same subject-matter.
Where the goods delivered under the contract
are not the goods contracted for,, the purchaser has got a right to reject
them, or to accept them and claim damages for breach of warranty. Under the
law, therefore, there cannot be an agreement relating to one kind of property
and a sale as regards another. We are accordingly of opinion that on the true
interpretation of the expression`sale of goods' there must be an agreement
between the parties for the sale of the very goods in which eventually property
passes. In a building contract, the agreement between the parties is that the
contractor should construct a building according to the specifications
contained in the agreement, and in consideration therefor receive payment as
provided therein, and as will presently be shown there is in such An agreement
neither a contract to sell the materials used in the construction, nor does
property pass therein as movables. It is therefore impossible to maintain that
there 456 is implicit in a building contract a sale of materials as understood
in law." (pages 413414) The final conclusion on the point involved in the
appeal was expressed thus "To sum up, the expression 'sale of goods' in
Entry 48 is a nomen juris, its essential ingredients being an agreement to sell
movables for a price and property passing therein pursuant to that agreement.
In a building contract which is, as in the present case, one entire and
indivisible--and that is its norm, there is no sale of goods, and it is not
within the competence of the Provincial Legislature under Entry 48 to impose a
tax on the supply of the materials used in such a contract treating it as a
sale." (pages 425426) Thus, the, two reasons given by the Court in support
of its conclusion were, firstly, that in a building contract there was no
agreement, express or implied, to sell 'goods' and secondly, that property in
the building materials does not pass in the materials regarded a; 'goods' but
it passes as part of immovable property. In New India Sugar Mills.
(supra) the commodity with which Court was
concerned was sugar and was delivered as sugar just as in the instant case the
commodity with which we are concerned is cement which was delivered as cement.
That meets the first reason in Gannon Dunkerley (supra). As regards the second,
it is quite clear that the tax was demanded after the commodity had changed
hands or putting it in the words of the Sale of Goods law, after property in it
had passed. With great respect therefore, the majority in New India Sugar Mills
(supra) was in error in saying that "the ratio decidendi of that decision
(Gannon Dunkerley) must govern this case'.
The question before us which was the very
question involved in New India Sugar Mills (supra) viz., whether a transaction
effected in. accordance with the obligatory terms of a statute can amount to a
'sale did not arise in Gannon Dunkerley. (supra). Just as the, majority Judges
in New India Sugar Mills (supra) applied to the case before them the ratio of
Gannon Dunkerley, (supra) the Court in the latter case applied the ratio of the
House of Lords decision in Kirkness v. John Hudson and Co. Ltd.(1) observing
categorically that "the derision in Kirkness must be hold to conclude the
matter" (P. 412). We think it necessary to lay particular emphasis on this
aspect because it shows how the question for decision in Gannon Dunkerley
(supra) was basically different from the question in New India Sugar Mills
(supra) or in, the appeals before us.
In Kirkness (supra), railway wagons belonging
to the respondent company were taken over by the Transport Commission
compulsorily it) exercise of the powers conferred by section 29 of the
Transport Act, 1947, and compensation was paid there for. The question was
whether this amount was liable to income-tax on the footing of sale of the
wagons by the company.
The contention on behalf of the revenue if
was that compulsory acquisition being treated as sale under the English law,
the taking over of the wagons and payment of compensation (1) [1955] A.C. 696.
457 therefore must also be regarded as sale
for purpose of income-tax and therefore, the company was liable to a balancing
charge under section 17 of the Income-tax Act, 1945. The case turned on the
meaning of the word sale' for the purposes of the Excess Profits Tax
legislation and the income-tax Act, 1945 (8 & 9 Geo. 6, c. 3). Lord Morton
in his dissenting speech found it "impossible to say that the only
construction which can fairly be given to the word 'sold' in section17(1) (a)
of the Income Tax Act, 1945, is to limit it to a transaction in which the
element of mutual assent is present." But the majority of the House came
to A different conclusion, and held that the element of bargain was essential
to constitute a sale' and to describe compulsory taking over of property as a
sale was a misuse of that word. We are not concerned in these appeals with
'Compulsory acquisition' of goods nor indeed, was the Court concerned with it
in Gannon Dunkerley (supra). The majority in New India Sugar Mills (supra) was
right in saying that the decision in Kirkness (supra) and the
"observations made therein have little relevance in determining the limits
of the, legislative power of the Provincial legislature under the Government
of, India Act, 1935, and the interpretation of statutes enacted in exercise of
that power." In fact, if we may say so with great respect', the
observation in Gannon Dunkerley (supra) that the decision in Kirkness (supra)
concluded the question before the Court. seems to us somewhat wide of the mark.
Since Kirkness (supra) involved an altogether different point, we would have
avoided referring to it put the reliance upon it 'in Gannon Dunkerley (supra)
may lead to a misunderstanding regarding its true ratio which needs to be
clarified. Besides Kirkness (supra) has been referred to in various decisions
and has been considered as an authority for apparently conflicting
propositions, which too made it necessary to understand the decision in a
proper perspective.
It is not the decision in Kirkness (supra)
but another English decision which may with advantage be noticed. That is the
decision of the Court of Appeal in Ridge Nominees Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners.(1) The question in that case was whether a transfer of shares
executed under section 209 of the Companies Act, 1948 on behalf of a
stockholder who declined to accept the offer of purchase was required to be
stamped as a transfer on sale. Under section 209, the transferee company was
entitled in certain circumstances to give a notice to a dissenting shareholder
that it desired to acquire his shares. Upon such notice being given, the
transferee company became entitled to acquire the shares of the dissenting
shareholder at a particular price. If the dissenting shareholder did not
transfer the shares, then subsection (3) provided for the execution of a
transfer on behalf of the shareholder by a person appointed by the transferee
company. In the First Schedule to the Stamp Act, 1891 was included the item
"Conveyance or transfer on sale of any property........ In the light of
this entry under which stamp duty was payable, the question which the Court had
to consider was whether a transfer executed on behalf of a dissenting shareholderwasa"transferonsale".
Theanswerdepended upon whether there could be a sale even though the essential
element (1) [1962] Ch 376.
45 8 of mutual assent was totally absent.
Lord Evershed M.R. observed in his judgnient that what the Companies Act had
done, by file machinery it had created, was that in truth it brought into being
a transaction which ex facie in all its essential characteristics and effect
was a transfer on sale.
Donovan L.J. in his concurring judgment said
that when the legislature by section 209 of the C Act empowered the transferee
company to appoint an agent on behalf of a dissenting shareholder 3 for
thempurpose of executing a transfer of his shares against a price to be paid to
the transferor company and held in trust for the dissenting-shareholder, it was
clearly shring his dissent and putting him in the same position as if he had.
For the purpose of considering whether the transaction amounted to a sale, one
must, according to the learned Judge, regard the dissent of the shareholder as
overriden by an assent which the statute imposed upon him, fictional though it
may be.
Danckwerts L.J., also by a concurring
judgment, said that a sale may not always require the consensual element and
that there may, in truth, be a compulsory sale of property in which the owner
is compelled to part with Ws property for a price, against his will.
We will proceed to refer to the other
decisions of this Court bearing on the point under discussion. In State of
Rajasthan v. M/s Karam Chand Thapper & Bros. Ltd.(1) the
respondent-assessee which was registered as a dealer under the Rajasthan Sales
Tax Act, 1954, entered into a contract with the Equitable Cod Company under
which it acquired monopoly rights to supply coal in_Rajasthan as an agent of
the Coal Company. The respondent supplied coal to the State of Rajasthan under
an agreement with it and that transaction was included in the respondent's
turnover by the Sales Tax Officer, Jaipur. The High Court of Rajasthan allowed
the respondents writ petition against the order of assessment on the,, ground,
inter alia, that the supply of coal by the respondent to the State of Rajasthan
did not constitute salt as the, supply was controlled by a statutory order,
namely, the Colliery Control Order, 1945. In appeal to this Court by the State
of Rajasthan, it was held that under the Colliery Control Order, coal could be
supplied under a contract and the effect of the Control Order was only to
superimpose upon the agreement between the parties the rate fixed by the Control
Order. The four elements required to constitute a sale, namely, competency of
parties, mutual assent of the parties, passing of property in the goods
supplied to the purchaser, and lastly, payment or promise of payment of price
were all present to render the turnover liable to sales tax" Shah J. who
spoke for the Court relied upon the judgments in Indian Steel and Wire
Products, (supra) and Andhra Sugar (supra) observing that in these two cases
the Court had held that "when goods, supply of which is controlled by
statutory orders, are delivered pursuant to a contract of & The, the
principle of the case in M/s New India Suqar Mills Ltd. case (supra) has no
application.." The Court distinguished the decision in New India Sugar
Mills (supra) on the ground that it was founded on a different principle since
the condition requiring mutual assent of the parties was lacking in that case.
(1) [1969]. 1 S.C.R. 861.
459 In Chhitter Mal Narain Das v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax(1) the appellants who were dealers in food grains
supplied to the Regional Food Controller diverse quantities of wheat in
compliance with the provisions of the U.P. Wheat Procurement (Levy) Order,
1959. The High Court held in a reference made to it under the Sales Tax Act
that the transaction amounted to a sale And was exigible to sales tax. In
appeal to this Court it was held by a Bench consisting of Shah and Hegde JJ.
that clause 3 of the U.P. Procurement (Levy) Order, 1959 sets up a machinery
for compulsory acquisition by the State Government of stocks of wheat belonging
to the licensed dealers, that the Order contains a bald injunction to supply
wheat of the specified quantity day after day, that it did not envisage any
consensual arrangement and that the Order did not even require the State Government
to enter into an informal contract with the supplier. Delivering the judgment
of the Bench, Shah J. observed that the transaction in which an obligation to
supply goods is imposed, and which does not involve an obligation to enter into
a contract, cannot be called a 'sale', even if the person supplying goods is
declared entitled to the value of goods which is determined in the prescribed
manner. It was observed that the decision in Indian Steel and Wire Products
(supra) does not justify the view that even if the liberty of contract in
relation to the fundamentals of the transaction is completely excluded, a
transaction of supply of goods pursuant to directions issued under a Control
Order may be regarded as a sale. This decision is clearly distinguishable since
the provisions of the Wheat Procurement Order were construed by the Court as
being in the nature of compulsory acquisition of property obliging the dealer
to supply wheat from day to day. Cases of compulsory acquisition of property by
the State stand on a different footing since there is no question in such cases
of offer and acceptance nor of consent, either express or implied.
We would, however, like to clarify that
though compulsory acquisition of property would exclude the element of mutual
assent which is vital to a sale, the learned Judges were, with respect, not
right in holding in Chitter Mal(1) that even. if in respect of the place of
delivery and the place of payment of price, there could be a consensual
arrangement the transaction will not amount to a sale (p. 677). The true
position in law is as stated above, namely, that so long as mutual assent,
express or implied, is not totally excluded the transaction will amount to a
sale. The ultimate decision in Chitter Mal (supra) can be justified only on the
view that clause 3 of the Wheat Procurement Order envisages compulsory
acquisition of wheat by the State Government from the licensed dealer. Viewed
from this angle, we cannot endorse the Court's criticism of the Full Bench
decision of the Allahabad High Court in Commissioner, Sales Tax U.P. v. Ram
Bilas Ram Gopal(2) which held while construing clause 3 that so long as there
was freedom to bargain in some areas the transaction could amount to a sale
though effected under compulsion of a statute. Looking at the scheme of the
U.P. Wheat Procurement Order, particularly clause 3 thereof. this Court in
Chitter Mal (supra) seems to have concluded that the transaction was, in truth
and substance, in the nature of (1) [1971] 1 S.C.R. 671.
(2) AIR 1970 Allahabad 518.
4-1146SCI Allhabad 518 460 compulsory
acquisition, with no real freedom to bargain in any area. Shall J. expressed
the Court's interpretation of clause 3 in no uncertain terms by saying that
"it did not envisage, any consensual arrangement." In Salar Jung
Sugar Mills Ltd. v. State of Mysore, (supra) which was decided by a Bench of
seven learned Judges, the appellants were subjected to levy of tax on purchase
of sugarcane after the inclusion of sugarcane in the Third Schedule to the; Mysore
Sales Tax Act, 1957. They challenged the levy on the ground that on account of
the Central and State Control Orders applicable to the transactions, there was
no mutual assent between them and the growers of sugarcane in regard to supply
of sugarcane by the latter and since there was no purchase and sale of
sugarcane, they were not dealers within the meaning of section 2(k) of the
Mysore Sales Tax Act. After referring to the cases which we have considered
above, it was held by the Court that the decisions relating to 'compulsory
sales? establish that statutory orders regulating. the supply and distribution
of goods do not absolutely impinge on the freedom of contact.
In spite of the fact that under the relevant
Control Orders the parties, the minimum price and the minimum quantity of
supply were, determined or regulated, the Court held that the Control Orders
left to the parties the option in regard to a higher quantity then was
stipulated in the Orders, It higher price than the minimum as also the form and
manner of payment. A factory could reject goods after inspection which
indicated not only freedom in the formation but also in the performance of the
contract. A combination of all these factors, according to RayJ. who spoke for
a unanimous Court, indicated with unerring accuracy that the parties entered
into agreement with mutual assent and with volition for transfer of' goods in
consideration of price. The transactions were accordingly held as amounting to
sales within the meaning of section 2(t) of the, Mysore Sales Tax Act. In
coming to this conclusion the Court relied on the statement in Benjamin on
Sale, 8th ed. page 68 that though a contract of sale requires mutual assent,
"The assent need not as a general rule be express" and that, it may
be implied from the language of or conduct of parties and indeed it may even be
inferred from the silence on the part of parties in certain cases. As an
instance, the Court referred to the common case of a person buying rationed
articles from a ration shop. "The parties, the price, the shop, the supply
and the acceptance of goods in accordance with the provisions of the Ration
Order ,ire all regulated." All the same, said the Court, when the customer
presents the ration card to the shopkeeper, the shopkeeper delivers the
rationed articles, the customer accepts the articles and pays their price
"there is indisputably a sale".
In State of Tamil Nadu v. Cement Distributors
Private Ltd.() the principal question which arose for decision was whether
producers who supplied cement to the State Trading Corporation or its agents in
gunny bass in pursuance of the directions given by the Government were liable
to pay sales tax on the turnover relating to the price of gunny bags. In some
of the connected appeals the question also arose whether the (1) [1973] 2
S.C.R. 1019.
461 selling agents of the, State Trading
Corporation were liable to, pay sales lax in respect of the price of the gunny
bags in which, they sold cement to, the consumers. As regards the question
whether the transactions between producers and the State Trading Corporation in
so far as the supply of cement was concerned amounted Lo sales within the
meaning of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959, Hegde, J. who spoke for the
three Judge Bench observed that there was "no dispute" that those
transactions could not amount to sales in view of the Cement Control Order,
1958. On the question whether the gunny bags, in which the cement was supplied,
can be considered to have been sold it was observed that there was "no
dispute' that if the price of gunny bags was held to have been wholly
controlled, then the supply of gunny bags also could not be considered as
sales. This position was held to have been concluded by the decisions in New
India Sugar Mills Ltd. (supra) and Chittar Mal Narain Das (supra). The only
question which the Court considered was whether, in fact, the price of the
gunny bags in which cement was supplied to the State Trading Corporation was
controlled by the Cement Control Order of 1958. On that question it was held
that since the Central Government had fixed the actual price of the gunny bags
also, the supply of gunny bags did not amount to sales. In the first place,
the, decision proceeds on a concession in so far as the supply of cement is
concerned as is shown by the statement that there was "no dispute' that
"the same cannot be considered as sales". As regards the other
question concerning gunny bags, the Court did not allow the AdvocateGeneral of
Tamil Nadu to contend that since. tinder clause 6(4) of the Cement Control
Order the Central Government could have fixed the maximum and not the actual
price of gunny bags, was scope for bargaining between the parties.
That question not having been raised in the
High Court or in the appeal memo filed in this Court and the Central Government
not having put in its appearance in this Court, permission was declined to
raise the questions Thus the decision is not an authority for the, proposition
for which the appellant contends. Besides. the judgment rests partly on the
decision in New India Sugar Mills (Supra) which we have dissented from and
partly on Chitter Mal (supra) which, by reason of the 'compulsory acquisition'
inferred therein, was distinguishable.
In oil and Natural Gas Commission v. State of
Bihar(1) a three Judge Bench speaking through Ray CJ. held, following the
judgment in Salar Jung Sugar Mills Ltd., (supra) that the supplies of crude oil
by the Oil and Natural Gas Commission to a refinery of the Indian Oil
Corporation amounted to sales, even though the supplies were made pursuant to
the directions and orders of the Central Government and the Commission had no
volition in the matter.
Law presumes assent of parties, it was
observed, when there is transfer of goods from one party to the other.
This resume of cases, long as it is, may yet
bear highlighting the true principle underlying the decisions of this Court
which have (1) [1977] 1 S.C.R. 354.
462 taken the view that a transaction which
is effected in compliance with the obligatory terms of a statute may
nevertheless be a safe in the eye of law. The Indian Contract Act which was
passed in 1872 contained provisions in its seventh chapter comprising sections
76 to 123 relating to sale of goods which were repealed on the enactment of a
comprehensive law of sale of goods in 1930.
The Contract Act drew inspiration from the
English law of contract which is almost entirely the creation of English courts
and whose growth is marked by features which are peculiar to the social and
economic history of England.
Historically the English law of contract is
largely founded upon the action on the case for assumpsit, where the essence of
the matter was the undertaking. The necessity for acceptance of the undertaking
or the promise led the earlier writers on legal theories to lay particular
emphasis on the consensual nature of contractual obligations. It was out of the
importance, which political philosophers of the eighteenth century gave to
human liberty that the doctrine was evolved that every person should be free to
pursue his own interest in the way he thinks best and therefore law ought to
give effect to the will of the parties as expressed in their agreement. Adam
Smith in his famous work on "The Wealth of Nations" propounded in
1776 the view that the freedom of contract must as far as possible be left
unimpaired. Gradually, as would appear from Friedman's statement in Law in a
Changing Society (1959), ch. 4 freedom of contract the freedom to contract on
whatever terms might seem most advantageous to the individuals-become a
cornerstone of nineteenth centuary laissez faire economics. Champions of
individualist social philosophy who protested against legal and social
restrictions in order to advance the policies of expansion and exploitation
pursued by I industry and commerce won their battle and "freedom of
contract was one of the trophies of victory" (see Anson's Law of Contract,
23rd Ed. page 3). The freedom and sanctity of contract thus became "the
necessary instruments of laissez faire, and it was the function of the courts
to foster the one and to vindicate the other. Where a man sowed, there he
should be able to reap". is Cheshire and Fifoot's Law of Contract, 8th Ed.
page 19). it is significant that the maxim itself laissez faire, laissez passer
which derived from eighteenth century France has been commonly attributed to
Gournay, at first a merchant and later one of the intendments of commerce and a
friend of Turgot. Turgot attributes the phrase laissez nous faire to another
merchant, Legendre, who is said to have used it in impressing upon Colbert the
desire on the part of the mercantile community for non-interference by the
state .
When Colbert asked a meeting of French
businessmen what the state might do to assist them, Legendre pointedly replied,
"laissez-nous faire" The underlying assumption-of the laissez faire
doctrine turns on an optimistic view of the nature of the universe and on the
conception of a "natural order' or system of economic harmonies which will
prevail and work out to mankind's advantag e in the absence of positive
regulation. (see International Encyclo paedia of the Social Sciences, 1968 Ed.
edited by David L. Sills, Vol. 8, page 546 and Encyclopaedia of the Social
Sciences edited by Edwin R. A. Seligman, Vol. IX, pages 15-16).
463 Towards the close of the nineteenth
century it came to be realised that private enterprises, in order to be
socially just, had to ensure economic equality.
"The very freedom on contract with its
corollary, the freedom to complete, was merging into the freedom to combine;
and in the last resort competition and combination were, incompatible.
Individualism was yielding to monopoly, where strange things might well be done
in the name of liberty. The twentieth century has seen its progressive erosion on
the one hand by opposed theory and on the other by conflicting practice. The
background of the law, social, political and economic, has changed Laissez fare
as an ideal has been supplanted by, 'social security'; and social security
suggests status. rather than contract. The State may thus compel persons to
make contracts, as where, by a series of Road Traffic Acts from 1930 to 1960, a
motorist must insure against third party risks; it may, as by the Rent
Restriction Acts, prevent one party to a contract from enforcing his right
under it; or it may empower a tribunal either to reduce or to increase the rent
payable under a lease. In many instances a statute prescribes the contents of
the contract. The Moneylenders Act 1927 dictates the terms of any loan caught
by its provisions; the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1924, contains six pages of
rules to be incorporated in every contract for 'the carriage of goods by sea
from any port in Great Britain or Northern Ireland to any other port;' the
Hire-Purchase Act 1965, inserts into hire-purchase contracts a number of terms
which the parties are forbidden to exclude;
successive Landlord and Tenant Acts from 1927
to 1954 contain provisions expressed to apply ,notwithstanding any agreement to
the contrary'. The erosion of contract by statute continues briskly; and there
are no immediate signs of a reaction." (Cheshire and Fifoot's Law of
Contract, 8th Ed. pages 21-22).
In the words of Anson, "Freedom of
contract is a reasonable social ideal only to the extent that equality of
bargaining power between contracting parties can be assumed, and no injury is
done to the economic interests of the community at large.
In the more complicated social and industrial
conditions of a collectivist society it has ceased to have much idealistic
attraction. It is now realised that economic equality Often does not exist in
any real sense, and that individual interests have to be made to sub serve
those of the corn munity. Hence there has been a fundamental change both in our
social outlook and in the policy of the legislature towards contract, and the
law today interferes at numerous points with the freedom of the parties to make
what contract they like . ... ... ...
464 " This intervention is especially
necessary today when most contracts entered into by ordinary people are not the
result of individual negotiation. It is not possible for a private person to
settle the terms of his agreement with the British Railways Board or with the
local electricity authority. The 'standard form contract is the rule. He must
either accept the terms of this contract in to, or go without. Since, however,
it is not feasible to deprive oneself of such necessary services, the
individual is compelled to accept on those terms. In view of this fact, it is
quite clear that freedom of contract is now largely an illusion." (Anson's
Law of Contract, 23rd Ed. pages 3-4).
Anson is perhaps over-optimistic in saying
that there has been a fundamental change in social outlook and in the
legislative policy towards contract. Anyway, with the high ideals of the
Preamble and the directive principles of our Constitution there has to be such
a fundamental change, in judicial outlook. Instances given in Cheshire and
Anson have their parallels in India too, wherein freedom of contract has
largely become an illusion. The policy of our Parliament in regard to
contracts, including those involved in sale of goods, has still to reflect
recognition of the necessity for a change, which could be done by a suitable
modification of the definition of 'sale of goods.
It all began with the reliance in Gannon
Dunkerley (supra) (pages 396-398) on the statement in the 8th Edition (1950) of
Benjamin on Sale. that to constitute a valid tale there must be a concurrence
of four elements, one of which is "mutual assent". That statement is
a reproduction of what the celebrated author had said in the 2nd and last
edition prepared by himself in 1873. The majority judgment in New India Sugar
Mills (supra) (page 467) also derives, sustenance from the same passage in
Benjamin's 8th edition.
But as observed by Hidayatullah J. in his
dissenting judgment in that case, consent may be express or implied and offer
and acceptance need not be in an elementary form (page 510). It is interesting
that the General Editor of the 1974 edition of 'Benjarnin's Sale of Goods"
says in the preface that the editors decided to produce an entirely new work
partly because commercial institutions, modes of transport and of payment,
forms of contract, types, of goods, market areas and marketing methods, and the
extent of legislative and governmental regulation and intervention, had changed
considerably since 1868, when the 1st edition of the book was published. The
formulations in Benjamin's 2nd edition, relating to the conditions of a valid
'sale' of goods, which are reproduced in the 8th edition evidently require modification
in the light of regulatory measures of social control. Hidayatullah J., in his
minority judgment referred to above struck the new path; and Bachawat J. Who spoke
for the Court in Andhra Sugars (supra) went a step ahead by declaring that
"the contract is a contract of sales and purchase of cane, though the
buyer is obliged to give his assent under compulsion of a statute". (page
716). The concept of freedom of contract, as observed by Hedge J. in Indian
Steel and 4 6 5 Wire Products, (supra) has undergone a great deal of change
even in those countries where it was considered as one of the basic economic
requirements of a democratic life. (page 490). Thus, in Ridge Nominees Ltd.,
(supra) the Court of Appeal, while rejecting the argument that there was no
sale because the essential element of mutual assent was lacking, held that the
dissent of the shareholder was overridden by an assent which the statute
imposed on him, fictional though it may be, that a sale may not always require
the consensual element mentioned in Benjamin on Sale, 8th Edition, page 2, and
that there may in truth be a compulsory sale of property with which the owner
is compelled to part for a price against his will. (pages 405406). Decisions in
case of 'compulsory acquisition, where such acquisition is patent as in
Kirkness (supra) or is inferred as in Chitter Mal (supra) fall in a separate
and distinct class. The observations of Lord Reid in Kirkness (supra) that
'sale' is a women juris the name of a particular consensual contract-have
therefore to be understood in the context in which they were made, namely, that
compulsory acquisition cannot amount to sale. In Gannon Dunkerley, (supra) Venkatarama
Aiyar J. was influenced largely by these observations (see pages 411, 412 and
425) and by the definition of 'sale' in Benjamin's 8th edition' Gannon
Dunkerley _(supra) involved an altogether different point and is not an
authority for the proposition that there cannot at all be a contract of sale,
if the parties to a transaction are obliged to comply with the terms of a
statute. Since we are putting in a nutshell what we have discussed earlier, we
would like to reiterate in the interest of uniformity and certainty of law
that, with great deference the majority decision in New India Sugar Mills
(supra) is not good law. The true legal position is as is stated in the
minority judgment in that case and in Indian Steel and Wire Products, (supra)
Andhra Sugars, (supra) Salar Jung Sugar Mills (supra) and Oil and Natural Gas
Commission. (supra). To the extent to which Cement Distributors Pvt. Ltd.
(supra) is inconsistent with these judgments, it is also, with respect, not
good law.
The conclusion which therefore emerges is
that the transactions between the appellant, M/s. Vishnu Agencies (Pvt.) Ltd.,
and the allottees are sales within the meaning of section 2(g) of the Bengal
Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941.
For the same reasons, transactions between
the growers and procuring agents as also those between the rice-millers on one
hand and the wholesalers or retailers on the other are sales within the meaning
of section 2(n) of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957. The turnover
is accordingly' exigible to sale tax or purchase tax as the case may be.
The appeals are accordingly dismissed with
costs, with one hearing fee.
P.B.R.
Appeals dismissed.
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