Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd. & ANR
Vs. Union of India & Ors [1980] INSC 224 (25 November 1980)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION: 1981 AIR 1014 1981 SCR (2) 271 1981
SCC (1) 653
CITATOR INFO:
R 1986 SC 662 (33) RF 1988 SC 113 (5) R 1988
SC2237 (6) R 1991 SC2125 (9,11,12) E 1991 SC2222 (21,22,23)
ACT:
Central Sales tax Act, 1956, section 8(3) (b)
and rule 13-Whether the blending of ore whilst loading it in the ship by means
of the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant constituted manufacture or processing of
ore for sale within the meaning of section 8(3)(b) of the Act and Rule
13-Whether the process of mining, conveying the mine ore from the mining site
to the river side carrying out by barges to the harbour and then blending and loading
it into the ship through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant constituted one
integrated process of mining and manufacture Or process of ore for sale, so
that that items of goods purchased for use in every phase of these integrated
operations could be said to be goods purchased for use in mining and
manufacturing or processing of ore for sale falling within the scope and ambit
of section 8(3) (b) and Rule 13.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee is a Private Limited Company,
carrying on business of mining iron ore and selling it in the export market
after dressing, washing, screening and blending it.
The extraction of iron ore in some of the
mines is carried on by mechanised process and at others by manual labour. The
entire activity of the assessee consisted of seven different operations, one
following upon the other, namely. (i) extraction of ore from the mine; (ii)
conveying the ore to the dressing plant; (iii) washing, screening and dressing
the ore; (iv) conveying of the ore from the mine site, to the river side; (v)
transport of the ore from the river side to the harbour by means of barges;
(vi) stacking of the ore at the harbour in different stock piles according to
its physical and chemical composition; and (vii) blending of the ore from
different stock piles with a view to producing ore of the required
specifications and loading it into the ship by means of the Mechanised Ore
Handling Plant.
Under Section 8(1)(b) of the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956 the assessee would be liable to pay, in respect of goods
purchased for use "in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale in
mining", a lower rate of sales tax at 3% of his turnover, if it is
granted, under section 7(3), a Certificate of Registration by Sales Tax Officer
specifying the class or classes of goods for the purpose of sub-section (1) of
section 8 read with Rule 13.
The assessee, therefore, made an application
to the Sales Tax Officer for inclusion of 36 items of goods in the certificate
of registration on the ground that these items of goods were being purchased by
it for use in mining ore and processing it for sale in the export market, and
hence they were goods falling within section 8(3)(b) of the Act and Rule 13.
The Sales Tax Officer granted certificate only in respect of 11 items and
disallowed 25 items. In revision, the Assistant Commissioner, Sales Tax, took
the same view of the Sales Tax 272 A Officer, reviewed all the 25 items
disallowed and found that six more items to be eligible for certification. The
further revision before the Government carried by the assessee failed.
Thereupon the assessee filed a writ petition in the court of Judicial
Commissioner, Goa. The Judicial Commissioner agreed with the views of the Sales
Tax Authorities but on his scrutiny found that 4 more items, out of 19 items
rejected, to be eligible for certification.
Hence, the appeals by special leave, one by
the assessee in respect of all the 15 items and another by the Union of India
regarding the 4 items found to be in order by the Judicial Commissioner.
Allowing the appeal of the assessee,
dismissing the appeal of Union of India and remitting the matter to the Tax
Authorities for further scrutiny of the 14 items pressed by the assessee, the
Court ^
HELD: (I) Applying the test laid down in M/s.
Pio Food Packers [1980] 3 SCR p. 1271, namely, "Does the processing of the
original commodity bring into existence a commercially different and distinct
commodity ?", it is clear that the blending of different qualities of ore
possessing different chemical and physical composition so as to produce ore of
the contractual specifications cannot be said to involve the process of
manufacture, since the ore that is produced cannot be regarded as a
commercially new and distinct commodity from the ore of different
specifications blended together. What is produced as a result of blending is
commercially the same article, namely, ore, though with different
specifications than the ore which is blended and hence it cannot be said that
any process of manufacture is involved in blending of c-re.
[279G, 280B-D] The Deputy Commissioner of
Sales Tax v. M/s. Pio Food Packers, [1980] 3 SCR p. 1271, applied.
(2) Where any commodity is subjected to a
process or treatment with a view to its "development of preparation for
the market". it would amount to processing of the commodity within the
meaning of sec. 8(3)(b) and Rule 13. The nature and extent of processing may vary
from case to case; in one case the processing may be slight and in another it
may be extensive; but with each process suffered, the commodity would
experience a change. What is necessary in order characterize an operation as
"processing" is that the commodity must, as a result of the
operation, experience some change. In this sense word "processing" in
section 8(3) (b) and Rule 13 should be understood as it has not been defined in
the Act. [280E, G-H, 281A-B] Om Prakash Gupta v. Commissioner of Commercial
Taxes, 16 Sales Tax Cases 935 (Cal.), approved.
(3) The blending of ore in the course of
loading through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant amounted to
"processing" of ore within the meaning o section 8(3)(b) and Rule 13
and the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant fell within the description of
"machinery, plant, equipment" used in the processing of ore for sale.
Therefore, if any items of goods were purchased by the assessee as being
intended for use as "machinery, plant, equipment. tools, spare-parts,
stores, accessories, fuel or lubricants" for the Mechanical Ore Handling
Plant, they would be eligible for inclusion in the Certificate of Registration
of the assessee. [282X 283A-B] 273 Diverse quantities of ore possessing
different chemical and physical compositions are blended together to produce
ore of the requisite chemical and physical composition demanded by the foreign
purchaser and obviously as a result of this blending, the quantities of ore
mixed together in the course of loading through the Mechanical Ore Handling
Plant experience change in their respective chemical and physical compositions,
because what is produced by such blending is ore of a different chemical and
physical composition. When the chemical and physical composition of each kind
of ore which goes into the blending is changed, there can be no doubt that the
operation of blending would amount to "processing" of ore within the
meaning of sec.
8(3)(b) and Rule 13. It is no doubt true that
the blending of ore of diverse physical and chemical composition is carried out
by the simple act of physically mixing different quantities of such ore on the
conveyor belt of the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant. But it is immaterial as to
how the blending is done and what process is utilised for the purpose of blending.
What is material to consider is whether the different quantities of ore which
are blended together in the course of loading through the Mechanical Ore
Handling Plant undergo any change in their physical and chemical composition as
a result of blending. Whatever be the means employed for the purpose of
carrying out the operation, it is the effect of the operation on the commodity
that is material for the purpose of determining whether the operation
constitutes "processing". [281B-E, 212G-H] Nilgiri Ceylon Tea
Supplying Co. v. State of Bombay, 10 Sales Tax Cases 500 (Bom.) overruled.
(4). The machinery, vehicles, barges and
other items of goods purchased by the assessee for use in carrying the mined
ore from the mining site to the river side and from the river side to the
Marmagoa harbour fall within the description of goods intended for use in
processing of ore for sale within the meaning of sec. 8(3)(b) and Rule 13. If
any of these items of goods are purchased by the assessee as being intended for
use as "machinery, plant, equipment, tools, spare-parts, stores,
accessories, fuel or lubricants" in carrying the mined ore from the mining
site to the river side and from the river side to the Marmagoa harbour, they
would qualify for inclusion in the Certificate of Registration. [285D-E] F The
process of mining comes to an end when ore is extracted from the mines, washed,
screened and dressed in the dressing plant and stacked at the mining site and
the goods purchased by the assessee for use in the subsequent operations could
not therefore be regarded as goods purchased for use "in mining". The
requirement of sec. 8(3) (b) and Rule 13 is that the goods must be purchased
for use "in mining" and not use "in the business of mining".
It is only the items of goods purchased by the assessee for use in the actual
mining operation which are eligible for inclusion in the certificate of
registration under this head and these would not include good purchased by the
assessee for use in the operations subsequent to the stacking of the ore at the
mining site. [283C-E] Where a dealer is engaged both in mining operation as
also in processing the mined ore for sale, the two processes being
inter-dependent, it would be essential for carrying on the operation of
processing that the ore should 274 be carried from the mining site, mined ore
for sale, the two processes being inter-dependent, it would be essential for
carrying on the operation of processing that the ore should be carried from the
mining site where the mining operation comes to an end to the place where the
processing is carried on and that would clearly be an integral part of the
operation of processing and if any machinery, vehicles, barges and other items
of goods are used for carrying the ore from the mining site to the place of
processing, they would clearly be goods used in processing of ore for sale.
In the present case, the mining of ore is
done by the assessee with a view to processing the milled ore through the
Mechanical Ore Handling Plant at the Marmagoa harbour and the entire operation
of mining ore and processing the mined ore is one integrated process of which
transportation of the mined ore from the mining site to the Marmagoa harbour is
an essential part. [284A-D] Indian Copper Corporation Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Commercial Taxes, 15 STC 259 (SC), followed.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 1632 of 1973 and 167 of 1974.
From the Judgment and Order dated 29th April,
1972 of the Judicial Commissioner, Goa, Daman and Diu at Panaji in Special Civil
Application No. 60 of 1970.
R. V. Patel and Mrs. Ali Verma for the
Appellants in CA No. 1632/73 and for the Respondent in CA 107/74.
V. S. Desai, B. B. Ahuja and M. N. Shroff for
the Appellants in CA 107/74 and for the Respondent in CA.
1632/73.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. These two appeals by special leave are directed against a judgment
of the Judicial Commissioner, Goa, Daman and Diu, partly allowing a writ
petition filed by Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the
assessee) for quashing an order of the Lieutenant Governor, Goa, Daman and Diu
dated 22nd August 1970. The question which arises for determination in these
two appeals is a short one but in order to appreciate the arguments bearing
upon it, it is necessary to state a few facts giving rise to the controversy
between the parties.
The assessee is a private limited company
carrying on business of mining iron ore and selling it in the export market
after dressing, washing, screening and blending it.
The assessee owns mines at Sirigao, Pale and
various other places in the territory of Goa. The extraction of ore from the
mines at Sirigao and Pale is carried on by mechanised process while the
extraction of ore from the other mines is done by manual labour. When the ore
is extracted from the mines it 275 is carried to the dressing plant where it is
washed, screened and dressed and then it is stacked at the mining site from
where it is carried by conveyor belts to the river side for being carried by
barges to the Marmagoa harbour.
Before the ore is carried from the mining
site to the river side, its chemical as well as physical composition is
ascertained by taking samples and testing them in the laboratories at each
major mine and this process is carried on every day round the clock in order to
ascertain the chemical and physical composition of the ore which comes to
Marmagoa, harbour. Since the chemical and physical composition of the ore
varies from mine to mine and even within the same mine itself, intra mine blending
of the ore is carried out at the mining site with a view to arriving at a
certain specified chemical and physical composition. When the ore carried by
barges arrives at the Marmagoa harbour, it is stacked in different stockpiles
according to its chemical and physical composition. Since the assessee sells
the ore only in the export market, it has to supply ore to the foreign buyers
in accordance with the specifications required by them and therefore it is
required to carry out blending of the ore mined by it in such a manner as to
produce ore of the required chemical and physical composition. This operation
of blending is carried out by the assessee, not before the loading of the ore
into the ship, but in the process of loading itself through the mechanical ore
handling plant. What is done is to draw different quantities of ore from
different stock piles and put them together in the mechanical ore handling
plant so that they get blended in the process of loading and the blended ore
which is actually loaded into the ship is ore of the contractual chemical and
physical composition. The mechanical ore handling plant thus performs a dual
function, namely, blending of ore from different stock piles containing ore of
different chemical and physical composition and loading of the blended ore into
the ship for delivery to the foreign buyers. It will thus be seen that the
entire activity of the assessee is broadly divisible into seven different
operations, one following upon the other, namely, (i) extraction of ore from
the mine; (ii) conveying the ore to the dressing plant; (iii) washing,
screening and dressing the ore; (iv) conveying of the ore from the mine site to
the river side; (v) transport of the ore from the river side to the harbour by
means of barges;
(vi) stacking of the ore at the harbour in
different stock piles according to its physical and chemical composition, and
(vii) blending of the ore from different stock piles with a view to producing
ore of the required specifications and loading it into the ship by means of the
mechanised ore handling plant. The question is whether goods purchased by the
assessee for use in the above operations could be said 276 to be goods
purchased for use "in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale or
in mining" so as to attract the lower rate of sales tax under section
8(1)(b) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.
It would be convenient at this stage to set
out the relevant provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) which have a bearing on the question before us. Section
6 provides that, subject to the other provisions contained in the Act, every
dealer shall be liable to pay tax under the Act on all sales of goods other
than electrical energy effected by him in the course of interstate trade or
commerce during any year.
Section 7 provides for registration of
dealers and sub- section (1) of this section states that every dealer liable to
pay tax under the Act shall make an application for registration to such
authority in the appropriate State as the Central Government may specify and
every such application shall contain such particulars as may be prescribed.
Sub-section (3) of section 7 enacts that if the authority to whom an
application under sub section (1) is made is satisfied that the application is
in conformity with the provisions of the Act and the Rules made there under, he
shall register the applicant and grant to him a certificate of registration in the
prescribed form which shall specify the class or classes of goods for the
purposes of sub- section (1) of section 8. Section 8 provides inter alia as
under and we are setting out here the relevant part of the section as it stood
at the material time:
"Sec. 8(1): Every dealer, who is in the
course of inter State trade or commerce- (a) sells to the Government any goods;
or (b) sells to a registered dealer other than the Government goods of the
description referred to in sub section (3), shall be liable to pay tax under
this Act, which shall be 3 per cent of his turn-over.
(3) The goods referred to in clause (b) of
sub- sec.(1)- (b) x x x are goods of the class or classes specified in the
certificate of registration of the registered dealer purchasing the goods as
being in tended for re-sale by him or subject to any rules made by the Central
Government in this behalf, for use by him in the manufacture or processing of
277 goods for sale or in mining, or in the generation or h distribution of
electricity or any other form of power.
Section 13 confers rule making authority on
the Central Government and by clause (e) of sub-section (1) of that section,
the Central Government is authorised to make rules providing for "the
enumeration of goods or class of goods used in the manufacture or processing of
goods for sale or in mining or in the generation or distribution of electricity
or any other form of power." Pursuant to the authority conferred by this
provision, the Central Government has made Rule 13 which at the material time
was in the following terms:
Rule 13: The goods referred to in clause (b)
of sub sec.(3) of section 8, which a registered dealer may purchase, shall be
goods intended for use by him as raw materials, processing materials, machinery
plant, equipment, tools, stores, spare parts, accessories, fuel or lubricants,
in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale or in mining, or in the
generation of distribution of electricity or any other form of power."
" The assessee made an application to the Sales Tax Officer on 14th
September 1967 for inclusion of 36 items of goods in the certificate of
registration on the ground that these items of goods were being purchased by it
for use in mining ore and processing it for sale in the export market, and hence
they were goods falling within section 8(3) (b) and Rule 13. It is obvious that
if this application were granted and the items of goods mentioned in the
application were specified in the certificate of registration, the dealer
selling these goods to the assessee in the course of inter- State trade or
commerce would be liable to pay sales tax only at the rate of 3 per cent of the
turnover of these sales and the assessee in its turn would have to reimburse
the selling dealer only at the rate of 3 per cent of the sale price, where as
otherwise the amount payable would be at a much higher rate. The assessee
therefore pressed this application before the Sales Tax Officer with a certain
amount of vehemence, but the Sales Tax Officer by his order dated 4th March
1968 granted specification only in respect of 11 items and disallowed the
remaining 25 items. The view taken by the Sales Tax Officer was that the
blending of ore which was done in the course of loading through the Mechanical
Ore Handling Plant did not amount to manufacture or processing of ore and,
therefore, the only goods in respect of which specification could be claimed by
the assessee in the certificate of registration were goods purchased for use in
mining and since the process of mining came to an end when ore was extracted
from the mines and washed, screened 2-57 SCI/81 278 and dressed in the dressing
plant and stacked at the mining site, the goods purchased by the assessee for
use only in these operations were eligible for being specified in the Certificate
of Registration and no the goods purchased for use in any of the subsequent
operations including bending and loading through the Mechanical Ore Handling
Plant. The Sales Tax Officer held that only l l items of goods could be
regarded as goods purchased for use in mining and the remaining 2 I ems of
goods did not fall within this description and hence were not includable in the
Certificate of Registration. The assessee preferred a revision application, but
the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax who heard the revision application,
took the same view as the Sales Tax Officer in regard to me nature of the
operations carried on by the assessee and holding that the assessee was
entitled to inclusion in the Certificate of Registration of only those items of
goods which were purchased for use in the process of mining (which ended with
the stacking of the ore at the mining site after extraction, washing, screening
and dressing), he examined the 25 items disallowed by the Sales Tax Officer
with reference to this criterion and came to the conclusion that 6 out of these
25 items were eligible for inclusion in the Certificate of Registration and he
accordingly allowed the revision application in respect of these 6 items and
rejected it in respect of the remaining 19 items. The assessee thereupon
carried the matter further in revision to the Government of Goa, Daman and Diu,
but the Lieutenant Governor on behalf of the Government agreed with the view
taken by the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax and rejected the revision
application by an order dated 22nd August 1970. This led to the filing of a
writ petition by the assessee in the Court of the Judicial Commissioner for
quashing the Order of the Government and . directing inclusion of the remaining
19 items in the Certificate of Registration. The Judicial Commissioner took the
same view as the Sales Tax Authorities in regard to the nature of the
operations carried on by the assessee, but gave relief to the assessee in
respect of 4 items of goods on the ground that they were goods purchased for
use in the process of mining and were therefore liable to be included in the
Certificate of Registration. The result was that 15 items of goods ultimately
remained unincluded in the Certificate of Registration. It is not necessary to
reproduce here these 15 items of good in respect of which the application of
the assessee was disallowed but it is sufficient to state that they were items
Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19 and 20 in the list Ex. No.
6. The assessee being aggrieved by the disallowance of these 15 items preferred
Appeal No. 1632 of 1973 after obtaining certificate from the Court of the
Judicial Commissioner. Item 9 which consisted of "Safety Boards and 279
Posters" was not pressed at the hearing of the appeal and hence the
controversy between the parties before us centred round the remaining 14 items
of goods only and the question is whether these 14 items of goods were eligible
for inclusion in the Certificate of Registration. The Union of India also felt
aggrieved by the Order of the Judicial Commissioner allowing 4 items of goods
to be included in the Certificate of Registration and hence it preferred Appeal
No. 107 of 1974 against the Order of the Judicial Commissioner to the extent to
which it was adverse against it.
There are two questions which primarily arise
for consideration in these appeals. One is whether the blending of ore whilst
loading it in the ship by means of the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant
constituted manufacture or processing of ore for sale within the meaning of
sec.8(3)(b) and Rule 13 and the other is whether the process of mining,
conveying the mined ore from the mining site to the river side, carrying it by
barges to the Marmagoa harbour and then blending and loading it into the ship
through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant constituted one integrated process of
mining and manufacture or processing of ore for sale, so that the items of
goods purchased for use in every phase of this integrated operations could be
said to be goods purchased for use in mining and manufacturing or processing of
ore for sale falling within the scope and ambit of section 8(3) (b) and Rule
13. We shall begin with the consideration of the first question, not because it
has been formulated as a first question by us, but because on the answer to it
depends to a large extent the decision of the second question.
The point which arises for consideration
under the first question is as to whether blending of ore in the course of
loading it into the ship through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant constituted
manufacture or processing of ore. Now it is well settled as a result of several
decisions of this Court, the latest being the decision given on 9th May, 1980
in Civil Appeal No. 2398 of 1978-The Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax v. M/s
Pio Food Packers that the test for determining whether manufacture can be said
to have taken place is whether the commodity which is subjected to the process
of manufacture can no longer be regarded as the original commodity, but is
recognised in the trade as a new and distinct commodity. This Court speaking
through one of us (Pathak, J.) pointed out: "Commonly manufacture is the
end result of one or more processes through which the original com- 280 modity
is made to pass. The nature and extent of processing may vary from one case to
another, and indeed there may be several stages of processing and perhaps a
different kind of processing at each stage. With each process suffered, the
original commodity experiences a change. But it is only when the change, or a
series of changes, take the commodity to the point where commercially it can no
longer be regarded as the original commodity but instead is recognised as a new
and distinct article that a manufacture can be said to take place." The
test that is required to be applied is; does the processing of the original
commodity bring into existence a commercially different and distinct commodity?
On an application of this test, it is clear that the blending of different
qualities of ore processing differing chemical and physical composition so as
to produce ore of the contractual specifications cannot be said to involve the
process of manufacture, since the ore that is produced cannot be regarded as a
commercially new and distinct commodity from the ore of different
specifications blended together. What is produced as a result of blending is
commercially the same article, namely, ore, though with different
specifications than the ore which is blended and hence it cannot be said that
any process of manufacture is involved in blending of ore.
It still remains to consider whether the ore
blended in the course of loading through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant can
be said to undergo processing when it is blended.
The answer to this question depends upon what
is the true meaning and connotation of the word "processing" in
sec.8(3)(b) and Rule 13. The word has not been defined in the Act and it must
therefore be interpreted according to its plain natural meaning. Websters'
Dictionary gives the following meaning of the word "process",
"to subject to some special process or treatment, to subject (especially
raw material) to a process of manufacture, development or preparation for the
market etc., to convert into marketable form as live stock by slaughtering,
grain by milling, cotton by spinning, milk by pasteurizing fruits and
vegetables by sorting and repacking." Where therefore any commodity is
subjected to a process or treatment with a view to its "development or
preparation for the market", as, for example, by sorting and repacking
fruits and vegetables, it would amount to processing of the commodity within
the meaning of sec.8(3) (b) and Rule 13. The nature and extent of processing
may vary from case to case; in one case the processing may be slight and in
another it may be extensive;
but with each process suffered, the commodity
would experience a change. Wherever a commodity undergoes a change as a result
of some operation performed on it or in regard to it, such operation would
amount to processing of the commodity. The nature and extent of the change is
not material. It may be that camphor powder may just be compressed into camphor
cubes by application of mechanical force or pressure without addition or
admixture of any other material and yet the operation may amount to processing
of camphor powder as held by the Calcutta High Court in Om Parkash Gupta v.
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, What is necessary in order to characterise an
operation as "processing" is that the commodity must, as a result of
the operation, experience some change. Here, in the present case, diverse
quantities of ore possessing different chemical and physical compositions are
blended together to produce ore of the requisite chemical and physical
composition demanded by the foreign purchaser and obviously as a result of this
blending, the quantities of ore mixed together in the course of loading through
the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant experience change in their respective
chemical and physical compositions, because what is produced by such blending
is ore of a different chemical and physical composition. When the chemical and
physical composition of each kind of ore which goes into the blending is
changed, there can be no doubt that the operation of blending would amount to
'processing' of ore within the meaning of sec. 8(3) (b) and Rule 13. It is no
doubt true that the blending of ore of diverse physical and chemical
compositions is carried out by the simple act of physically mixing different
quantities of such ore on the conveyor belt of the Mechanical Ore Handling
Plant. But to our mind it is immaterial as to how the blending is done and what
process is utilised for the purpose of blending. What is material to consider
is whether the different quantities of ore which are blended together in the
course of loading through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant undergo any change
in their physical and chemical composition as a result of blending and so far
as this aspect of the question is concerned, it is impossible to argue that
they do not suffer any change in their respective chemical and physical
compositions.
The Revenue however relied on the decision of
the Bombay High Court in Nilgiri Ceylon Tea Supplying Co. v.
State of Bombay. The assessees in this case
were registered dealers in tea under the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953 and they
purchased in bulk diverse brands of tea and without the application of any
mechanical or chemical process, blended these brands of different qualities
according to a certain formula evolved by them and sold the tea mixture in the
market. The question arose before the Sales Tax Authorities whether the
different brands of tea purchased and blended by the assessees for the 282
purpose of producing the tea mixture could be said to have been 'processed'
after the purchase within the meaning of the proviso to sec. 8(a), so as to
preclude the assessees from being entitled to deduct from their turn-over under
section 8(a) the value of the tea purchased by them. The High Court of Bombay
held that the different brands of tea purchased by the assessees could not be
regarded as 'processed' within the meaning of the proviso to clause (a) of sec.
8, because there was "not even application of mechanical force so as to
subject the commodity to a process, manufacture, development or
preparation" and the commodity remained in the same condition. The
argument of the Revenue before us was that this decision of the Bombay High
Court was on all fours with the present case and if the blending of different
brands of tea for the purpose of producing a tea mixture in accordance with a
formula evolved by the assessees could not be regarded as 'processing' of tea,
equally on a parity of reasoning, blending of ore of different chemical and
physical compositions could not be held to constitute 'processing' of the ore.
Now undoubtedly there is a close analogy between the facts of Nilgiri Tea
Company's case and the facts of the present case, but we do not think we can
accept the decision of the Bombay High Court in the Nilgiri Tea Company's case
as laying down the correct law. When different brands of tea were mixed by the
assessees in Nilgiri's Tea Company's case for the purpose of producing a tea
mixture of a different kind and quality according to a formula evolved by them,
there was plainly and indubitably processing of the different brands of tea,
because these brands of tea experienced, as a result of mixing qualitative
change, in that the tea mixture which came into existence was of different
quality and flavour than the different brands of tea which went into the
mixture. There are it is true, some observations in the judgment of the Bombay
High Court which seem to suggest that if instead of manual application of
energy in mixing the different brands of tea, there had been application of
mechanical force in producing the tea mixture, the Court might have come to a
different conclusion and these observations were relied upon by the assessee,
since in the present case the lending was done by application of mechanical
force, but we do not think that is the correct test to be applied for the
purpose of determining whether there is 'processing'. The question is not
whether there is manual application of energy or there is application of
mechanical force. Whatever be the means employed for the purpose of carrying
out the operation, it is the effect of the operation on the commodity that is
material for the purpose of determining whether the operational constitutes
'processing'. We are clearly of the view that the blending of ore in the course
of loading through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant amounted to 'processing'
of ore within the 283 meaning of sec. 8(3) (b) and Rule 13 and the Mechanical
Ore Handling Plant fell within the description of "machinery, plant,
equipment" used in the processing of ore for sale. It must therefore
follow as a necessary corollary that if any items of goods were purchased by
the assessee as being intended for use as "machinery, plant, equipment,
tools, spare-parts, stores, accessories, fuel or lubricants" for the
Mechanical Ore Handling Plant, they would be eligible for inclusion in the
Certificate of Registration of the assessee.
The question which then arises is as to
whether items of goods purchased by the assessee for use in carrying the ore
from mining site to the river side and from the river side to the Marmagoa
harbour could be said to be goods purchased for use in mining or in processing
of ore for sale. Now there can be no doubt, and indeed this could not be
seriously disputed that the process of mining comes to an end when ore is
extracted from the mines, washed, screened and dressed in the dressing plant
and stacked at the mining site and the goods purchased by the assessee for use
in the subsequent operations could not therefore be regarded as goods purchased
for use 'in mining'. The requirement of sec.
8(3) (b) and Rule 13 is that the goods must
be purchased for use 'in mining' and not use 'in the business of mining'. It is
only the items of goods purchased by the assessee for use in the actual mining
operation which are eligible for inclusion in the certificate of registration
under this head and these would not include goods purchased by the assessee for
use in the operations subsequent to the stacking of the ore at the mining site.
This view finds support from the decision of this Court in Indian Copper
Corporation Limited v. The Commissioner of Commercial Taxes.
But the claim of the assessee for including
in the Certificate of Registration items of goods purchased for use in carrying
ore from mining site to the river side and from river side to the Marmagoa
harbour was not based solely on the ground that these items of goods are
purchased for use `in mining'. The alternative contention of the assessee was
that these items of goods are purchased for use in processing of ore for sale.
The assessee submitted that mining of ore and processing it for the purpose of
sale by carrying out blending through the Mechanical Ore Handling Plant
constitute one integrated process and carrying the ore from the mining site to
the river side and from the river side to the Marmagoa harbour where the
processing is being done, is part of this integrated process and hence the
items of goods purchased for use in this latter operation are eligible for
inclusion in the Certificate of Registration.
We think there is great force in this
submission of the 284 assessee. Where a dealer is engaged both in mining
operation as also in processing the mined ore for sale, the two processes being
interdependent, it would be essential for carrying on the operation of
processing that the ore should be carried from the mining site mined ore for
sale, the two processes being inter-dependent, it would be essential for
carrying on the operation of processing that the ore should be carried from the
mining site where the mining operation comes to end to the place where the
processing is carried on and that would clearly be an integral part of the
operation of processing and if any machinery, vehicles, barges and other items
of goods are used for carrying the ore from the mining site to the place of
processing, they would clearly be goods used in processing of ore for sale. It
is obvious that, in the present case, the mining of ore is done by the assessee
with a view to processing the mined ore through the Mechanical Ore Handling
Plant at the Marmagoa harbour and the entire operation of mining ore and
processing the mined ore is one integrated process of which transportation of
the mined ore from the mining site to the Marmagoa harbour is an essential part
and, in the circumstances, it is difficult to see how the machinery, vehicles,
barges and other items of goods used for transporting the mined ore from the
mining site to the Marmagoa harbour can be excluded from consideration on the
ground that they are not goods used in processing of ore for sale. The decision
of this Court in Indian Copper Corporation case (supra) is directly in point
and completely supports this conclusion which we are inclined to reach on
principle. The assessee in that case was a company which mined copper and iron
ore from its own mines, transported the ore to its factory and manufactured
finished products from the ore for sale. There were several questions which
arose for consideration, before the Court in regard to the assessees' claim for
inclusion of certain items of goods in its certificate of registration and one
of them was whether the locomotives and motor vehicles used for removing ore
from the place where the mining operations were concluded to the factory where
the manufacturing process was going on, could be said to be goods intended for
use in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale within the meaning of
sec. 8(3) (b) and Rule 13. This Court held that they were goods falling within
this description so as to be entitled to inclusion in the Certificate of
Registration of the assessee and Shah, J. speaking on behalf of the Court gave
the following reasons for taking this view "We are also of the opinion
that in a case where a dealer is engaged both in mining operations and in the
manufacturing process-the two processes being inter- dependent-it would be
impossible to exclude vehicles which are used for 285 removing from the place
where the mining operations are concluded to the factory where the manufacturing
process starts. It appears that the process of mining ore and manufacture with
the aid of ore copper goods is an integrated process and there would be no
ground for exclusion from the vehicles those which are used for removing goods
to the factory after the mining operations are concluded. Nor is there any
ground for excluding locomotives and motor-vehicles used in carrying finished
products from the factory. The expression "goods intended for use in the
manufacturing or processing of goods for sale" may ordinarily include such
vehicles as are intended to be used for removal of processed goods from the
factory to the place of storage. If this be the correct view, the restrictions
imposed by the High Court in respect of the vehicles and also the spare parts,
tyres and tubes would not be justifiable." These reasons apply with equal
force in the present case and strongly support the conclusion that the
machinery, vehicles, barges and other items of goods purchased by the assessee
for use in carrying the mined ore from the mining site to the river side and
from the river side to the Marmagoa harbour fall within the description of
goods intended for use in processing of ore for sale within the meaning of sec.
8(3) (b) and Rule 13. If any of these items of goods are purchased by the
assessee as being intended for use as "machinery, plant, equipment, tools,
spare-parts, stores, accessories, fuel or lubricants" in carrying the
mined ore from the mining site to the river side and from the river side to the
Marmagoa harbour, they would qualify for inclusion in the Certificate of
Registration.
It is in the light of this discussion that
the question whether the 14 items of goods disallowed by the Sales Tax
Authorities and the Judicial Commissioner are eligible for inclusion in the
Certificate of Registration has to be decided. We do not however think any
useful purpose will be served by ourselves examining each of these 14 items for
the purpose of deciding whether, according to the principles enunciated by us,
any of them qualifies for being included in the Certificate of Registration.
That is a matter which can appropriately be decided by the Sales Tax Officer in
the light of the principles laid down by us and it need not occupy our time
here. We accordingly allow the appeal of the assessee and direct the Sales Tax
Officer to examine these 14 items of goods and determine in the light of the
principles laid down in this judgment whether any of these 14 items of goods is
liable to be included in the Certificate of Registration. So far as the 286
appeal of the Union of India is concerned, we do not think that the Judicial
Commissioner was in error in giving relief to the assessee in respect of 4
items of goods, since these items of goods were clearly goods intended for use
in the process of mining and were rightly directed to be included in the
Certificate of Registration. The appeal of the Union of India will accordingly
stand dismissed. Since the assessee has substantially succeeded, the fair order
of costs would be that the Revenue must pay the costs of the assessee
throughout.
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