Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax (Law)
Board of Revenue Vs. G.S. Pai & Co [1979] INSC 208 (15 October 1979)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION: 1980 AIR 611 1980 SCR (1) 938 1980
SCC (1) 142
CITATOR INFO :
APL 1981 SC1362 (1) R 1981 SC1574 (1) F 1983
SC 493 (3) E 1990 SC1779 (6)
ACT:
Kerala General Sales Tax Act 1963, First
Schedule Entries 56 and 26A-Scope of-Ornaments and articles of gold whether
'bullion and specie'-G.I. pipes whether 'water supply and sanitary fittings'.
Words and phrases-'Bullion', 'specie' and
'sanitary fittings' meaning of-Kerala General Sales Tax Act 1963, First
Schedule Entries 56 and 26A.
Interpretation of Statutes-Entries in Sales
Tax Legislation-Interpretation of-Words used by legislature to be given their
popular sense meaning.
HEADNOTE:
On the questions (1) Whether the ornaments
and other articles of gold purchased by the assessee fell within the
description of "Bullion and specie" given in Entry 56 in the First
Schedule of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act 1956 and (2) the taxability of the
turn-over of sales of G.I. Pipes made by the assessee.
HELD: 1. One cardinal rule of interpretation
while interpreting entries in Sales Tax legislation is that the words used in
the entries must be construed not in any technical sense nor from the
scientific point of view but as under stood in common parlance. The words used
by the legislature must be given their popular sense meaning, "that sense
which people conversant with the subject-matter with which the statute is
dealing would attribute to it." [940 H, 941A]
2. "Bullion" in its popular sense
cannot include ornaments or other articles of gold. "Bullion"
according to its plain ordinary meaning means gold or silver in the mass.
It connotes gold or silver regarded as raw
material and it may be either in the form of raw gold or silver or ingots or
bars of gold or silver. [941 B]
3. Ornaments and other articles of gold
cannot be regarded as "bullion" because, even if old and antiquated,
they are not raw or unwrought gold or gold in the mass, but they represent
manufactured or finished products of gold.
Nor do they come within the meaning of the
expression "specie". The word "specie" means coin, as
distinguished from paper money". [941 D]
4. The ornaments and other articles of gold
purchased by the assessee do not fall within Entry 56 and they are, liable to
be taxed not at the lesser rate of 1 per cent applicable to "bullion and
specie" but at the general rate of 3 per cent under S. 5A read with S.
5(i) (ii) of the Act.
[941 G, 943 E]
5. In State of Uttar Pradesh v. Indian Hume
Pipe Ltd., 39 STC 355 it has been held by this Court that 'sanitary fittings'
according to the popular sense of the term means such pipes or materials as are
used in lavatories urinals or bath-rooms of private houses or public buildings.
[942 C] 939
6. The G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee would
fall within the description of 'sanitary fittings' only if it can be shown and
the burden of so doing would be on the Revenue, that they were meant for use in
lavatories, urinals or bath- rooms. The attention of the assessee and the tax
authorities was not drawn to this aspect of the question and no material was
brought on record which would throw light on the question as to what was the
use for which the G.I. Pipes were meant. If the G.I. Pipes were heavy and
intended to be laid underground for carrying supply of water from one place to
another they would obviously not be 'sanitary fittings'.
[942 C-E]
7. The category of goods in Entry 26A is not
described as 'water supply pipes' but as 'water supply and sanitary fittings'.
The words 'water supply... fittings' do not occur in isolation but they are in
juxtaposition of the words 'sanitary fittings'. The entire expression 'water supply
and sanitary fittings' is one single expression and the words 'water supply...
fittings' must receive colour from the immediately following words 'sanitary
fittings'. The expression 'water supply.....fittings' in the context in which
it occurs means such pipes or materials as are meant for use for supply of
water to or in lavatories, urinals or bath-rooms of private houses of public
buildings and they do not include heavy pipes which are laid underground as
mains for carrying water supply from one area or place to another.
[942 G, 943 A-B]
8. As far as G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee
are concerned the case remanded to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner for the
purpose of deciding on the basis of the existing material as also such further
material as may be adduced, whether G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee fall within
the description "water supply and sanitary fittings" so as to be
exigible to sales tax at the higher rate of 7 per cent under Entry 26A. [943 F]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 2422 of 1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
Order dated 13-2-1978 of the Kerala High Court in TRC No. 63/76.
M.M. Abdul Khader, V.J. Francis and M.A.
Firoz for the Appellant.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. The questions of law which arise for determination in this appeal
lie in a very narrow compass and do not present any difficulty in answering
them. They are the usual type of questions that arise under the Sales Tax
legislation, namely, whether a particular commodity sold or purchased by the
assessee falls within one entry or another. The assessee always contends that
it falls within an entry which attracts lesser rate of tax while the Revenue
invariably seeks to bring it within the entry attracting a larger rate of tax.
Two questions arise here for consideration.
One question is whether certain ornaments and other articles of gold purchased
by the assessee with a view to melting them and making new ornaments 940 or
other articles out of the melted gold fall within Entry 56 in the First
Schedule of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963 (hereinafter referred to as
"the Act") which reads "Bullion and Specie". If the
ornaments and other articles of gold purchased by the assessee fall within this
Entry, the turn-over of purchases of these goods would be liable to be taxed at
the rate of 1 per cent, while it would have to suffer tax at the rate of 3 per
cent if these goods do not fall within the Entry and are taxable under section
5A read with sec. 5(1) (ii) of the Act. The other question relates to taxation
of the turnover of sales of G.I. Pipes effected by the assessee and it raises
the point whether G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee fall within Entry 26A in the
First Schedule to the Act which reads "Water Supply and Sanitary
Fittings". If they do not fall within this Entry, the turn- over of their
sales would be liable to be taxed at the rate of 3 per cent under section 5(1)
(ii) of the Act, but if they do, then the rate of tax would be 7 per cent. The
Sales Tax Officer, and in appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner decided
both the questions against the assessee and taxed the turn-over of purchases of
ornaments and other articles of gold at the rate of 3 per cent and the
turn-over of sales of G.I. Pipes at the rate of 7 per cent. The Tribunal, on
further appeal by the assessee, disagreed with the view taken by the tax
authorities and holding that the ornaments and other articles of gold purchased
by the assessee were "Bullion and specie" within the meaning of Entry
56 and G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee were not covered by the expression
"water supply and sanitary fittings" in Entry 26A, taxed the assessee
at the lesser rates as claimed by him. The Revenue thereupon took the matter by
way of revision to the High Court, but the High Court also took the same view
and affirmed the judgment of the Tribunal. This decision of the High Court is
assailed in the present appeal preferred by the Revenue after obtaining special
leave from this Court.
We will first consider the question whether
the ornaments and other articles of gold purchased by the assessee fall within
the description of "Bullion and specie" given in Entry 56. There are
two expressions in this Entry which require consideration; one is "bullion"
and the other is "specie". Now there is one cardinal rule of
interpretation which has always to be borne in mind while interpreting entries
in Sales Tax legislation and it is that the words used in the entries must be
construed not in any technical sense nor from the scientific point of view but
as understood in common parlance. We must give the words used by the
legislature their popular-sense meaning "that sense which people
conversant with the subject-matter with 941 which the statute is dealing would
attribute to it". The word "bullion" must, therefore, be
interpreted according to ordinary parlance and must be given a meaning which
people conversant with this commodity would ascribe to it. Now it is obvious
that "bullion" in its popular sense cannot include ornaments or other
articles of gold. "Bullion" according to its plain ordinary meaning
means gold or silver in the mass. It connotes gold or silver regarded as raw
material and it may be either in the form of raw gold or silver or ingots or
bars of gold or silver. The Shorter Oxford Dictionary gives the meaning of
"bullion" as "gold or silver in the lump; also applied to coined
or manufactured gold or silver considered as raw material." So also in
Jowitt's Dictionary of English Law and Wharton's Law Lexicon we find that the
following meaning is given for the word "bullion", "uncoined
gold and silver in the mass. These metals are called so, either when melted
from the native ore and not perfectly refined, or where they are perfectly
refined, but melted down into bars or ingots, or into any unwrought body, of
any degree of fineness". It would, therefore, be seen that ornaments and
other articles of gold cannot be regarded as "bullion" because, even
if old and antiquated, they are not raw or unwrought gold or gold in the mass,
but they represent manufactured or finished products of gold. Nor do they come
within the meaning of the expression "specie". The word
"specie" has a recognised meaning and according to Webster's New
World Dictionary, it means "coin, as distinguished from paper money".
The Law Dictionaries also give the same meaning. Wharton's Law Lexicon and
Jowitt's Dictionary of English Law state the meaning of "specie" as
"metallic money" and in Black's Law Dictionary, it is described as
"coin of the precious metals, of a certain weight and fineness, and
bearing the stamp of the Government, denoting its value as currency" while
"Words and Phrases-Permanent Edition-Vol. 39A" also gives the same
meaning. Therefore, according to common parlance, the word "specie"
means any metallic coin which is used as currency and if that be the true
meaning, it is obvious that ornaments and other articles of gold cannot be
described as "specie". It would thus seem clear that the ornaments
and other articles of gold purchased by the assessee do not fall within Entry
56 and they are, accordingly, liable to be taxed not at the lesser rate of 1
per cent applicable to "bullion and specie" but at the general rate
of 3 per cent under section 5A read with Section 5(1) (ii) of the Act.
That takes us to the second question in
regard to taxability of the turnover of sales of G.I. Pipes made by the
assessee. The Revenue 942 contended that G.I. Pipes fall within the description
"water supply and sanitary fittings" in Entry 26A so as to be exigible
to tax at the higher rate of 7 per cent while the assessee contended that they
are not covered by this expression and are, therefore, taxable only at the
lesser rate of 3% under sec. 5(1) (ii) of the Act. The determination of this
question turns on the true interpretation of the words "water supply and
sanitary fittings". So far as the expression "sanitary fittings"
is concerned, it has received judicial interpretation by this Court in State of
Uttar Pradesh v. Indian Hume Pipe Ltd.
where it has been laid down that
"sanitary fittings" according to the popular sense of the term mean
such pipes or materials as are used in lavatories, urinals or bath- rooms of
private houses of public buildings. The G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee would,
therefore, fall within the description of "sanitary fittings" only if
it can be shown and the burden of so doing would be on the Revenue, that they
were meant for use in lavatories, urinals or bath- rooms. It does not appear
that the attention of the assessee and the tax authorities was drawn to this
aspect of the question and hence no material was brought on record which would
throw light on the question as to what was the use for which the G.I. Pipes
were meant. If the G.I. Pipes were heavy and intended to be laid underground
for carrying supply of water from one place to another, they would obviously
not be "sanitary fittings". This is, however, a question which has
not been considered by the Revenue authorities and the case would, therefore,
have to be remanded to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner for the purpose of
determining whether having regard to the meaning which this Court has placed on
the expression "sanitary fittings", the G.I. Pipes sold by the
assessee fall within that description.
But the Revenue contended that even if the
G.I. Pipes are not "sanitary fittings" within the meaning of that
expression, they would still fall within the description "water
supply.....fittings". Now, it must be remembered that the category of
goods in Entry 26A is not described as "water supply pipes" but as
"water supply and sanitary fittings". The use of the word
"fittings" suggests that the expression is intended to refer to
articles or things which are fitted or fixed to the floor or walls of a
building and they may in a given case include even articles or materials fitted
or fixed outside, provided they can be considered as attached or auxiliary to
the building or part of it, such as, for example, a pipe carrying faecal matter
from the commode to the sceptic tank, but they cannot include pipes laid
underground 943 for carrying water supply. Moreover, the words "water
supply..... fittings" do not occur in isolation, but they are used in
juxtaposition of the words "sanitary fittings".
The entire expression "water supply and
sanitary fittings" is one single expression and the words "water
supply......fittings" must receive colour from the immediately following
words "sanitary fittings". We are, therefore, of the view that the
expression "water supply....fittings" in the context in which it
occurs means such pipes or materials as are meant for use for supply of water
to or in lavatories, urinals or bath-rooms of private houses or public
buildings and they do not include heavy pipes which are laid underground as
mains for carrying water supply from one area or place to another. Therefore,
even for the purpose of determining whether G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee are
"water supply.......... fittings", it would have to be found as to
what is the purpose for which they were meant to be used and since the question
has not been approached from this point of view, we think it desirable that the
case be sent back to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner for the purpose of
determining whether, in the light of this meaning placed by us on the words
"water supply.. fittings", the G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee could
be said to be "water suply........... fittings." We, therefore, allow
the appeal, set aside the orders made by the High Court, the Tribunal and the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and hold that so far as the ornaments and
other articles of gold purchased by the assessee are concerned, they were
liable to be taxed at the general rate of 3 per cent under section 5A read with
section 5(1) (ii) of the Act and so far as G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee are
concerned, we remand the case to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner for the
purpose of deciding on the basis of the existing material as also such further
material as may be adduced, whether G.I. Pipes sold by the assessee fell within
the description "water supply and sanitary fittings" so as to be
exigible to sales tax at the higher rate of 7 per cent under Entry 26A.
There will be no order as to costs of the
appeal.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed.
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