Sentinel Rolling Shutters &
Engineering Co. (P) Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Maharashtra [1978] INSC
168 (12 September 1978)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION: 1979 AIR 1747 1979 SCR (1) 644 1978
SCC (4) 260
ACT:
Contract of Work and Labour and Contract of
Sale tests for guidance.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant assessee entered into a
contract dated 28th June, 1972 for fabrication, supply erection and
installation of Sentinel's Pull and Push type and Reduction Gear type rolling
shutters in sheds Nos. 3 and 4 of the Sidheshwar Sahakari Sakar Karkhana
belonging to M/s. C. M. Shah & Co. (P) Ltd as per the terms and conditions
of the contract. The special terms and conditions provided that the actual
transportation charges would be in addition to the price stipulated in the
contract and the delivery would be 6/8 weeks, ex-works from the date of receipt
of the final confirmation of the order. The terms of payment also formed part
of the special terms an(l conditions and they provided 25% advance, 65% against
delivery and remaining 10% after completion of erection and handing over of
shutters to the satisfaction of the company. The assessee carried out its part
of the contract by erecting and installing the rolling shutters. Since the assessee
entertained doubt as to whether the contract was a contract for sale or a
contract for work and labour, the assessee made an application dated 16-9-72 to
the Commissioner of Sales Tax for determining this question. The Deputy
Commissioner of Sales Tax took the view that the contract was a contract for
sale of rolling shutters and the work of erection and installation was merely
incidental to the sale and the assessee was therefore liable to pay sales tax
on 95% of the amount receivable by it under the contract. In appeal the Sales
Tax Tribunal held the contract to be a composite contract consisting of two
parts, one for sale of the rolling shutters and the other for execution of the
work of erection and installation. The High Court on a reference agreed with
the tribunal and answered it in favour of the Revenue.
Allowing the appeal by special leave the
Court
HELD: ( 1 ) The contract was a contract for
work and labour and not a contract of sale. The contract is one single and
indivisible contract and the erection and installation of the rolling shutter
is as much a fundamental part of the contract as the fabrication and supply.
[655 D-E] Vanguard Rolling Shutters &
Steel Works v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. 39 STC 372 applied.
Various component parts do not constitute a
rolling shutter until they are fixed and erected on the premises. It is only
when the component parts are fixed on the premises and fitted into one another
that they constitute a rolling shutter as a commercial article and till then
they are merely component parts and cannot be said to constitute a rolling
shutter. The erection and installation of the rolling shutter cannot,
therefore, be said to be incidental to its manufacture and supply. It is a
fundamental and integral part of the contract because without it the rolling
shutter does not come into being. The manufacturer would undoubtedly be the
owner of the component parts When he fabricates them, but at no stage does he
become the owner of the 645 rolling shutter as a unit so as to transfer the
property in it to the customer. The rolling shutter comes into existence as a
unit when the component parts are fixed in position on the premises and it,
becomes the property of the customer as soon as it comes into being. There is no,
transfer of property in the rolling shutter by the manufacturer to the customer
as a chattel. It is essentially a transaction for fabricating component parts
and fixing them on the premises so as to constitute a rolling shutter. The
contract is thus clearly and indisputably a contract for work and labour and
not a contract for sale.
[653 H, 654 A] (2) Whether a particular
contract is one for sale of goods or for work and labour depends upon the main
object of the parties gathered from the terms of the contract, the
circumstances of the transaction and the custom of the trade.
[649 D-E] (3) A contract were not only work
is to be done but the execution of such work requires goods to be used may take
one of three forms. The contract may be for work to be done for remuneration
and for supply of materials used in the execution of the work for a price: it
may be a contract for work in which the use of materials is accessory or
incidental to the execution or the work; or it may be a contract for supply of
goods where some work is required to be done as incidental to the sale. Where a
contract is of the first type, it is a composite contract consisting
essentially of two contracts, one for the sale of goods and the other for work
and labour. The second type of contract is clearly a contract for work and
labour not involving sale of goods. while the third type is a, contract for
sale where the goods re sold as chattels and some work is undoubtedly done, but
it is done only as incidental to the sale. The primary test is whether the
contract is one whose main object is transfer of property in a chattel as a,
chattel to the buyer, though some work may be required to be done under the
contract as ancillary or incidental to the sale or it is carrying out of work
by bestowal of labour and service and materials are used in execution of such
work.
[649 F-H, 650 F-G] (4), To resolve the
difficulties experienced in application of the primary test courts have evolved
some subsidiary tests. one such test may be formulated as follows: "The
primary difference between a contract for work or service and a contract for
sale of goods is that in former there is in the person performing work or
rendering service no property in tho thing produced as a whole .. In the case
of a contract for sale, the thing produced as a whole has individual existence
as the sole property of the party who produced it, at some time before
delivery, and the property therein passes only under the contract relating
thereto to the other party for price".
[651 B-C] Commissioner of Madhya Pradesh v.
Purushottam Premji 26 S.T.C. 38; State of Rajasthan v. Man Industrial
Corporation, 24 S.T.C. 349; State of Rajasthan v. Nenu Ram, 26 STC 268;
referred to.
(5) The provision "ex-works
delivery" in the contract does not make the contract a contract for sale.
A rolling shutter as a complete unit is not fabricated by the manufactures in
his factory but he manufactures only the component parts and it is only when
the component parts are fitted into position and fixed on the premises that a
rolling shutter comes into being as a commercial article and, therefore, when
the contract provides that the delivery at the goods shall be ex-works, what is
obviously meant is that the com- 646 ponent parts shall be delivered to the
company at the works of the assessee and once they are delivered, they shall
not be liable to be rejected by the company. But that does not mean that as
soon as the component parts are delivered to the company, the contract is fully
executed. The component parts do not constitute a rolling shutter and it is the
obligation of the assessee under the contract to fix. the component parts in
position on the premises. and erect and install a rolling shutter. The
execution of the contract is not completed until the assessee carried out this
obligation imposed upon it under the contract and a rolling shutter is erected
and installed at the premises.
[654 C-F] (6) The true nature of The contract
cannot depend on the mode of payment of the amount provided in the contract.
The parties may provide by mutual agreement
that the amount stipulated in the contract may be paid at different stages of
the execution of the contract, but that cannot make the contract one for sale
of goods if it is otherwise a contract for work and labour. The payment of the
amount due under the contract may be spread over the entire period of the
execution of the contract with view either to put the manufacturer or
contractor in possession of funds for the execution of the contract or to
secure him against any risk of non-payment by the customer. That cannot have
any bearing on the determination of the question whether the contract is one
for sale or for work and labour.
[654 H, 655 A-C] State of Madras v.
Richardson & Cruddes Ltd., 21 STC 245 referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 1001 Of 1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
order dated 24-2-77 of the Bombay High Court in Sales Tax Reference No. 28 of
1975.
Hemendra K. Shah, M. H. Gami, P. H. Parekh,
C. B. Singh and M. Mudgal for the Appellant.
S. T. Desai and M. N.Shroff for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. This appeal by special leave raises the vexed question whether a
particular contract is a contract of sale or a contract of work and labour.
This has always been a difficult question, because most of the cases which come
before the courts are border line cases and the decisions given by courts are
by no means uniform. But so far as the present case is concerned, it does not
present any serious difficulty and is comparatively free from complexity or
doubt for there is a decision of this Court which is directly applicable and is
determinative of the controversy between the parties.
The assesses who is the appellant before us
is a private limited company carrying on business as engineers, contractors,
manufacturers and fabricators and in the course of its business, it entered in
to a contract dated 28th June, 1972 with M/s C. M. Shah & Co. (P) Ltd.
(hereinafter referred to as the Company) for fabrication, supply, 647 erection
and installation of Sentinel's Pull and Push type and reduction Gear type
rolling Shutters in sheds Nos. 3 and 4 of the Sidheswar Sahakari Sakar Karkhana
belonging to the Company. The detailed specifications of the Rolling Shutters
were given in the contract and the price was stipulated to be Rs. 7/- per sq.
ft. and rft. for Pull and Push Type Rolling Shutters and Rs. 9/- per sq. ft.
and for the Reduction Gear Type Rolling Shutters, the price in both cases being
inclusive of "erection at site". The contract was expressed to be
subject to the terms and conditions set out in a printed form and there were
also certain special terms and conditions which were specifically written out
in the contract. Since considerable reliance was placed on behalf of the
Revenue on some of the printed terms and conditions of the contract, we shall
set them out in extenso:
"2. Once the delivery of the goods is
effected, rejection claims cannot be entertained.
4. All erection work shall be carried out at
Customer's own risk and no claim for incidental structural breakages, damages
to the property of the customers or others shall be entertained. All masonry
works require before and or after erection shall be carried out by customer's
own cost.
10. All payment shall be on overall
measurements only. Customer desiring to check the correctness of the overall
measurements shall notify their intention in advance and shall get the
measurements checked before installation. No dispute on this ground shall be
entertained once the erection is completed.
12. Terms of Business: 50% advance with the
order and the balance against delivery of the goods ex-work prior t erection,
or against through Banks." The special terms and conditions provided that
the actual transportation charges would be in addition to the price stipulated
in the con- tract and the delivery would be 6/8 weeks ex-works from the date of
receipt of the final confirmation of the order. The terms of payment also
formed part of the special terms and conditions and they provided "25%
advance, 65% against delivery and remaining 10% after completion of erection
and handing over of shutters to the satisfaction" of the Company. The
assesses carried out its part of the contract and manufactured the two types of
Rolling Shutters according to the specifications provided in the contract and
erected and 648 installed them in sheds Nos. 3 and 4 of the Sidheswar Sahakari
Sakar Karkhana. It does not appear from the record as to when the bill relating
to the contract was submitted by the assesses to the Company, but it was dated
19th August 1972 and presumably it was sent by the assessee after the
fabrication of the two types of Rolling Shutters was completed, but before they
were erected and installed at the premises of the Company. Since the assessee
entertained doubt as to whether the contract was a contract for sale or a
contract for work and labour, the assessee made an application dated 16th
September 1972 to the Commissioner of Sales Tax for determining this question,
for on the answer to it depended the taxability of the amount to be received by
the assessee against fulfilment of the contract. The deputy Commissioner of
Sales Tax, who heard the application, took the view that the contract was a
contract for sale of the two types of Rolling Shutters and the work of erection
and installation was merely incidental to the sale and the assessee was,
therefore, liable to pay sales tax on 95% of the amount receivable by it under
the contract, since that represented the sale price of the Rolling Shutters,
the remaining 5% being attributable to the work and labour involved in erection
and installation. The assessee, being aggrieved by the order passed by the
Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax, preferred an appeal to the Sales Tax
Tribunal, but the Sales Tax Tribunal also took the same view and held that the
transaction of supply of the two types of Rolling Shutters embodied in the
contract amounted to a sale but so far as the price was concerned, the Sales
Tax Tribunal observed that since 90% of the amount under the contract was
payable at the stage of delivery, that should be taken to be the sale price and
the balance of 10% should be held to be "the charges for the work".
The contract was thus held by the Sales Tax Tribunal to be a composite contract
consisting of two parts, one for sale of the two types of Rolling Shutters and
the other for execution of the work of erection and installation. This led to
an application for a reference by the assessee and on the application, the
following question of law was referred for the opinion of the High Court:
"Whether having regard to the facts and
circumstances of the case the Tribunal was justified in law in coming to the
conclusion that the contract in question essentially consisted of two
contracts, one for supply of materials for money consideration and the other
for service and labour done." The High Court made a detailed and
exhaustive review of the decided cases and held, agreeing with the Sales Tax
Tribunal, that the contract between the assesses and the Company "was a
divisible con- 649 tract which essentially consisted of two contracts, one for
the supply A of shutters of the aforesaid two types for money and the other for
service and labour", and accordingly answered the question in favour of
the Revenue and against the assesses. The assesses thereupon brought the
present appeal with special leave obtained from this Court.
Now the question whether a particular
contract is a contract for sale or for work and labour is always a difficult
question and it is not surprising to find the taxing authorities divided on it.
The difficulty, however, lies not in the formulation of the tests for
determining when a contract can be said to be a contract for sale or a
contract' for work and layout, but in the application of the tests to the facts
of the case before the Court. The distinction between a contract for sale and a
contract for work and labour has been pointed out by this Court in a number of
decisions and some tests have also been indicated by this Court, but it is
necessary to point out that these tests are not exhaustive and do not lay down
any rigid or inflexible rule applicable D alike to all transactions. They do
not give any magic formula by the application of which we can say in every case
whether a contract is a contract for sale or a contract for work and labour. they
merely focus on one or the other aspect of the transaction and afford some
guidance in determining the question, but basically and primarily, whether a
particular contract is one for sale of goods or for work and labour depends
upon the main object of the parties gathered from the terms of the contract,
the circumstances of the transaction and the custom of the trade.
It may be pointed out that a contract were
not only work is to be done but the execution of such work requires goods to be
used may take one of three forms. The contract may be for work to be done for
remuneration and for supply of materials used in the execution of the work for
a price:
it May be a contract for work in which the
use of materials is necessary or incidental to the execution of the work; or it
may be a contract for supply of goods where some work is required to be done as
incidental to the sale. Where a contract is of the first type, it is a
composite contract consisting essentially of two contracts, one for the sale of
goods and the other for work and labour. The second type of contract is clearly
a contract for work and labour not involving sale of goods, while the third
type is a contract for sale where the goods are sold as chattels and some work
is undoubtedly done, but it is done only as incidental to the sale. No
difficulty arises where a contract is of the first type because it is 650
divisible and the contract for sale can be separated from the contract for work
and labour and the amount payable under the compo site contract can be
apportioned between the two. The real difficulty arises where the contract is
of the second or third type, because in such a case it is always a difficult
and intriguing problem to decide n in which category the contract falls. The
dividing line between the two types of contracts is somewhat hazy and
"thin partitions do their bounds divide". But even so the distinction
is there and it is very much real and the Court has to perform at times the
ingenious exercise of distinguishing one from the other.
The distinction between a contract for sale
and a contract for work and labour has been pointed out in Halsbury's Laws of
England Third Edition, Volume 34, Article 3 at page 6 in the following words:
"A contract of sale is a contract whose
main object is the transfer of the property in, and the delivery of the
possession of, a chattel as a chattel to the buyer. Where the main object of
work undertaken by the payee of the price is not the transfer of a chattel qua
chattel, the contract is one for work and labour. The test is whether or not
the work and labour bestowed end in anything that can properly become the
subject of sale: neither the ownership of the materials, nor the value of the
skill and labour as compared with the value of the materials is conclusive,
although such matters may be taken into consideration in determining, in the
circumstances of a particular case, whether the contract is in substance one
for work and labour or one for the sale of a chattel." The primary test is
whether the contract is one whose main object is transfer of property in a
chattel as a chattel to the buyer, though some work may be required to be done
under the contract as ancillary or incidental to the sale or it is carrying out
of work by bestowal of labour and service and materials are used in execution
of such work. A clear case of the former category would be a contract for
supply of air conditioner where the contract may provide that the supplier will
fix up the air conditioner in the premises.
Ordinarily a separate charge is provided in
such contract for the work of fixing up but in a given case it may be included
in the total price. Such a contract would plainly be a contract for sale
because the work of fixing up the airconditioner would be incidental to the
sale. Then take a contract for constructing a building where considerable
quantity of materials are required to be used in the execution of the work.
This 651 would clearly be a contract for work and labour and fall within the
latter category. But, as we pointed out earlier, there may be, and indeed as
the decided cases show, there are a large number of cases which are on the
border line and it is here that difficulty is often experienced in the
application of this primary test. To resolve this difficulty, the courts have
evolved some subsidiary tests.
One such test is that formulated by this
Court in Commissioner of Madhya Pradesh v. Purshottam Prentji(1), where it has
been said:
"The primary difference between a
contract for work or service and a contract for sale of goods is that in the
former there is in the person performing work or rendering service no property
in the thing produced as a whole. In the case of a contract for sale, the thing
produced as a whole has individual existence as the sole property of the party
who produced it, at some time before delivery, and the property therein passes
only under the contract relating thereto to the other party for price."
This was the test applied by this Court in the State of Rajasthan v. Man
Industrial Corporation(2) for holding that a contract for providing and fixing
four different types of windows of certain size according to "specifications,
designs, drawings and instructions" set out in the contract was a contract
for work and labour and not a contract for sale. This Court, speaking through
Shah, J., analysed the nature of the contract and pointed out: "The
contract undertaken by the respondent was to prepare the window- leaves
according to the specifications and to fix them to the building. There were not
two contracts-on., of sale and another of service. "Fixing" the
windows to the building was also not incidental or subsidiary to the sale, but
was an essential term of the contract. The window-leaves did not pass to the
Union of India under the terms of the contract as window-leaves. Only on the
fixing of the windows as stipulated, the contract could be fully executed and
the property in the windows passed on the completion of the work and not
before." The contract was not for transfer of property in the window
leaves as window leaves. It was a contract for providing and fixing windows and
windows could come into existence only when the window-leaves were fixed to the
building by bestowing labour and skill. It was, therefore, held to be a works
contract. The same reasoning was applied by this Court in State of Rajasthan v.
Nenu Ram(3) for holding that a contract for supply and (1) 26 S.T.C. 38 (2)
[1969] 24 S.T.C. 349 (S.C.) (3) 26 S.T.C. 268 652 fixing of wooden doors and
windows with sashes and frames and wooden chawkhats in the Police Lines
building was a contract for work and labour. Let us, therefore, apply this test
in order to deter-mine what is the nature of the contract in the present case:
is it a contract for sale or a contract for work and labour ? Now, it is clear
that the contract is for fabrication, supply, erection and installation of two
types of Rolling Shutters and not only are the Rolling Shutters to be
manufactured according to the specifications, designs, drawings and
instructions provided in the contract, but they are also to be erected and
installed at the premises of the Company. The price stipulated in the contract
is inclusive of erection and installation charges and the contract does not
recognise any dichotomy between fabrication and supply of the Rolling Shutters
and their erection and installation so far as the price is concerned. The
erection and installation or the Rolling Shutters is as much an essential part
of the contract as the fabrication and supply and it is only on the erection
and installation of the Rolling Shutters that the contract would be fully
executed. It is necessary, in order to understand the true nature of the
contract, to know what is a Rolling Shutter and how it is erected and installed
in the premises. It is clear from the statement Ex. to the petition for special
leave, which statement was submitted before the Sales Tax Tribunal and the
correctness of which was at no time disputed before us, that a Rolling Shutter
consists of five components parts.
namely, two brackets welded with 'U' type
clamps, one pipe shafting with high tension springs Shutter screen made out of
20G/18G thickness of metal as required by the customer, side guides or guide
channels welded with iron clamps to the bottom with provision of locking
arrangements with welded handles and tope cover. These component parts are
fabricated by the manufacturer and taken to the site and fixed on the premises
and then comes into existence a Rolling Shutter as an identifiable commercial
article. The method of fixing the component parts in position in the premises
so as to bring into existence the commercial article known as a Rolling Shutter
is fully described in the statement Ext. C. First of all, certain masonry work
is required to be done by the customer and that has to be carried out by the
customer at his own cost. Then the brackets are fixed on either side on the top
portion of the opening by grouting holes on the masonry walls and inserting the
bolts. Thereafter the holes are filled with cement and the pipe shafting with
high tension springs is inserted into the 'U' clamps of the brackets. Then the
iron curtain of the Rolling Shutter is hoisted over the high tension springs
and tightened by means of nut bolts and guide channels are then fixed 653 by
grouting masonry walls where side guide clamps are to be fixed After fixing the
clamps to the grouted portion of the wall, the same is plastered and then the
iron curtain of the shutter is lowered through the guide channels to operate
the shutter manually up and down. The Rolling Shutter is then 'born' and it
becomes a permanent fixture to the premises.
The Indian Standards Specification Book for
Metal Rolling Shutter and Rolling Grills also gives a similar procedure for
fixing the component parts of the Rolling Shutter on the premises It clearly
shows that a rolling shutter consists of curtain, lock plates, guide channels,
bracket plates, rollers, hood covers, gears, worms, fixing bolts, safety
devices, anchoring rods, central hasp and staple. Each guide channel has to be
provided with a minimum of three fixing cleats or supports for attachment to
the walls or column by means of bolts or screws. The guide channels are further
attached to the jambs, plumb either in the overlapping fashion, projecting
fashion or embedded in grooves, depending on the method of fixing. All these
operations take place at the site after despatch of the component parts of the
rolling shutter. Hood cover is fixed in a neat manner and supported at the top
at suitable intervals. This also has to be done at the site. Item 11.1 of the
specifications shows that the rolling shutter curtain and bottom lock plate are
interlocked together and rolled in one piece, but the other parts like guide
channels, bracket plates, rollers, etc., are despatched separately. Item ]2.]
shows that all the rolling shutters are erected by the manufacturer or his
authorised representative in a sound manner, so as to afford trouble-free and
easy operation, long life and neat appearance". It will, thus, be seen
that the component parts do not constitute a rolling shutter until they are
fixed and erected on the premises. It is only when the components are fixed on
the premises and fitted into one another that they constitute a rolling shutter
as a commercial article and till then they are merely component parts and
cannot be said to constitute a rolling shutter. The erection and installation of
the rolling shutter cannot, therefore, be said to be incidental to its
manufacture and supply. It is a fundamental and integral part of the contract
because without it the rolling shutter does not come into being. The
manufacturer would undoubtedly be the owner of the component parts when he
fabricates them, but at no stage does he become the owner of the rolling
shutter as a unit so as to transfer the property in it to the customer. The
rolling shutter comes into existence as a unit when the component parts are
fixed in position on the premises and it becomes the property of the customer
as soon as it comes into being.
There is no transfer of property in the
rolling shutter by the manufacturer to the customer as a chattel. It is 654
essentially a transaction for fabricating component parts and fixing them on
the premises so as to constitute a rolling shutter. The contract is thus
clearly and indisputably a contract for work and labour and not a contract for
sale.
The Revenue leaned heavily on the provision
in the contract that the delivery of the goods shall be ex-works and once the
delivery of the goods is effected, no claim for rejection shall be entertained
and relying on this provision, the Revenue contended that under the contract
the rolling shutters were to be delivered by the assessee to the company
ex-works, that is, at the works of the assessee and the property in the rolling
shutters passed to the company as soon as they were delivered and hence it was
a contract for sale. We do not think this contention of the Revenue has any
force and it must be rejected. It is clear from the above discussion that a
rolling shutter as a complete unit is not fabricated by the manufacturer in his
factory but he manufactures only the component parts and it is only when the
component parts are fitted into position and fixed on the premises that a
rolling shutter comes into being as a commercial article and, therefore, when
the contract provides that the delivery of the goods shall be ex-works, what is
obviously meant is that the component parts shall be delivered to the company
at the works of the assessee and once they are delivered, they shall not be
liable to be rejected by the company. But that does not mean that as soon as
the component parts are delivered to the company, the contract is Fully
executed. The component parts do not constitute a rolling shutter and it is the
obligation of the assessee under the contract to fix the component parts in
position on the premises and erect and instal a rolling shutter. The execution
of the contract is not completed until the assessee carries out this obligation
imposed upon it under the contract and a rolling shutter is erected and
installed at the premises. It is true that clause (12) of the printed terms and
conditions provides that 50% of The amount under the contract shall be paid as
advance and the balance against delivery of the goods ex-works but this clause
is clearly overridden by the special term specifically written out in the
contract that 25% of the amount shall be paid by way of advance, 65% against
delivery and the remaining 10% after completion of erection and handing over of
the rolling shutters to the satisfaction of the company. This provision
undoubtedly stipulates that 90% of the amount due under the contract would be
paid before erection and installation of the rolling shutters has commenced,
but that would not make it a contract for sale of rolling shutters. The true
nature of the contract cannot depend on the mode of payment of the amount
provided in the contract. The parties may provide by mutual agreement that the
655 amount stipulated in the contract may be paid at different stages of the
execution of the contract, but that cannot make the contract one - for sale of
goods if it is otherwise a contract for work and labour. It may be noted that
the contract in State of Madras v. Richardson & Cruddas Ltd.(1) contained a
provision that the full amount due under the contract shall be paid in advance
even before the execution of the B, work has started and yet the Madras High
Court held, and that view was affirmed by this Court, that the contract was a
works contract. The payment of the amount due under the contract may be spread
over the entire period of the execution of the contract with a view either to put
the manufacturer or contractor in possession of funds for the execution of the
contract or to secure him against any risk of non- payment by the customer.
That cannot have any bearing on the determination of the question whether the
contract is one for sale or for work and labour.
Here the last portion of the special term in
regard to payment of the amount due under the contract also makes it clear that
it is only when the component parts are fitted into position in the premises
that t a rolling shutter would be complete and this rolling shutter has to ii
be to the satisfaction of the company and it is then to be handed over by the
assessee to the company and then, and then alone, would the remaining 10% be
payable by the company to the assessee. It is, therefore, clear that the
contract is one single and indivisible contract and the erection and
installation of the rolling shutter is as much a fundamental part of the
contract as the fabrication and supply. We 'j must, in the circumstances,.hold,
driven by the compulsion of this logic, that the contract was a contract for
work and labour and not a contract for sale. This view which we are taking is
completely sup- ported by the decision of this Court in Vanguard Rolling
Shutters & Steel Works v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P.(2) to which
one of us (Bhagwati, J.) was a party.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside
the judgment of the High Court and hold that the contract in the present case
was a contract for work and labour and not a contract for sale and conformably
G with this view, we answer the question referred by the Sales Tax Tribunal in
favour of the assessee and against the Revenue. The State will pay the costs of
the assessee throughout.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
(1) 21 S.T.C. 245.
(2) 39 S.T.C. 372.
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