Source: https://www.legitquest.com/case/himmatlal-harilal-mehta-v-state-of-madhya-pradesh-others/1F3D7
Timestamp: 2020-05-30 22:24:59
Document Index: 419683778

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art. 226', 'Art. 286', 'Art. 286', 'Art. 301', 'Art. 304', 'Art. 226', 'Art. 32', 'Art. 226', 'Art. 19', 'Art. 226', 'Art. 226', 'Art. 226', 'Art 226']

LEGITQUEST - Himmatlal Harilal Mehta Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh & Others document.onselectstart = new Function("return false"); if (window.sidebar) { document.onmousedown = killCopy; document.onclick = reEnable; }
Himmatlal Harilal Mehta V. State of Madhya Pradesh & Others
Civil Appeal No. 206 Of 1952. 16-03-1954
(1954) 1 SCR 1122
AIR 1954 SC 403
1954 (I) MLJ 490 (SC)
(1954) 5 STC 115
1954 SCJ 445
1954 SCR 1122
1954 (1) MLJ 690
(1954) 67 LW 629
For the Appellant N.P. Engineer, Senior Advocate, Messrs. R.S. Dabir, I.N. Shroff, Advocates. For the Respondent T.L. Shevde, Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh, T.P. Naik, Advocate, instructed by R.H. Dhebar, G.H. Rajadhyaksha, Agent. For the Intervener V.K.T. Chari, Advocate-General of Madras, V.V. Raghavan, Advocate.
Mahajan, CJ.
1. This is an appeal by leave from a judgment of the High Court of Judicature at Nagpur dated 25-4-1952 dismissing a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution of India filed by the appellant questioning the 'vires' of certain provisions of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947.
2. The appellant represents a concern C. Parakh and Company (India) Limited, a company registered under the Indian Companies Act, 1913, having its head office at Bombay, and several branches in the State of Madhya Pradesh. The main business of the appellant company is that of cotton.The head-office of the appellant at Bombay sells cotton bales to several mills and individuals under the control and the system regulated by the Textile Commissioner at Bombay, and upon a contract of sale being completed the goods after being ginned and pressed are sent from Khamgaon and other places in the State of Madhya Pradesh and are actually delivered in Bombay and such other places outside the State of Madhya Pradesh as directed by the head office. The cotton bales are sent by rail under an insurance in favour of the appellant, and are delivered to the buyer by tender of railway receipt against the payment of price in Bombay.
3. Under the central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Act 21 of 1947), cotton was declared liable to sales tax on 11-4-1949, and since that date the appellant commenced paying the tax in respect of the purchases made by it, and continued to pay it till 31-12-1950. For the quarter ending on 31-3-1951 the appellant declined to pay the tax in respect of the purchases made during that quaterr, realizing that it could not be made legally liable for the payment of this tax in the State of Madhya Pradesh, the transactions done or effected in Madhya Pradesh not being "sales" within that State.
Apprehending that the Company may be subjected to the payment of the tax without authority of law, an application was preferred in the High Court of Judicature at Nagpur praying for an appropriate writ or writs which may secure to the Company protection from the impugned Act and its enforcement by the State. It was alleged that Explanation II to section 2(g) of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as further amended by Act 16 of 1949 was 'ultra vires' and illegal.
4. This petition, along with a Reference in another case) Misc, Civil Case No. 258 of 1951 : - 'Sir Ram Gulabdas v. Board of Revenue', AIR 1952 Nag 378 (A), was heard by a Division Bench of the Nagpur High Court and it was held that Explanation II to section 2(g) of the Act was not enforceable because under the Constitution sales tax could only be collected in the State where the goods were delivered for consumption. It was further held that explanation II as amended by the C. P. and Berar Act 16 of 1949 was not validly enacted because it made drastic changes in the rules of the Sale of Goods Act without obtaining the assent of the Governor-General as required by section 107 of the Government of India Act, 1935.
It was observed that the mere production of the goods in a State is not enough to made the tax payable unless the goods are appropriated to a particular contract, and that to impose the tax at that stage would be tantamount to charging an excise duty and not a tax on the sale of goods. In spite of these findings the High Court declined to issue a writ and dismissed the petition made to it under Article 226 of the Constitution on the ground that mandamus issues only to compel an authority to do or abstain from doing some act, that it is seldom anticipatory and certainly never issues whether the action of the authority is defendant on some action of the petitioner and that in the present case the petitioner had not even made his return and no demand for the tax could be made from him.
5. In this appeal it was argued by Shri Noshirwan Engineer, learned counsel for the appellant, that an illegal and unjust imposition operates as an illegal restraint on trade and violates Fundamental Rights, that the High Court having held that the Constitution by Art. 286 thereof made delivery of the goods for consumption the decisive factor for determining which State should have the right of taxing such sales, and having thus found the provision of the Explanation to the definition of "sale" unconstitutional, should have issued a writ of mandamus restraining the respondent State from enforcing that part of the Act.
6. To appreciate the contentions of the learned counsel, it is necessary to set out the relevant provisions of the Act which the High Court has declared 'ultra vires' the State Legislature.
Act 21 of 1947 defines the expression "sale" in Section 2(g) of the Act in these terms :
"Sale with all its grammatical variations and cognate expressions means any transfer of property in goods for cash or deferred payments or other valuable consideration, including a transfer of property in goods for cash or deferred payments or other valuable consideration, including a transfer of property in goods made in the course of the execution of a contract, but does not include a mortgage, hypothecation, charge or pledge".
Explanation (I) - "A transfer of goods on hirepurchase or other installment system of payment shall, not withstanding that the seller retains a title to any goods as security for payment of the price, be deemed to be a sale".
Explanation (II) - "Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of any goods which are 'actually' in the Central Provinces and Berar at the time when the contract of sale as defined in that Act in respect thereof is made, shall, wherever the said contract of sale is made, be deemed for the purpose of this Act to have taken place in the Central Provinces and Berar".
This provision was amended by the Central Provinces and Berar Act 16 of 1949 which came into force on 11-4-1949 by which Explanation II of section 2(g) was amended as follows :
Explanation (II) - "Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale or purchase of any goods will be deemed for the purposes of this Act, to have taken place in this Province - Wherever the contract of - sale or purchase might have been made -
(a) If the goods were 'actually' in this Province at the time when the contract of sale or purchase in respect thereof was made, or
(b) In case, the contract was for the sale or purchase of further goods by description, then, if the goods are actually produced or found in this Province at any time after the contract of sale or purchase in respect thereof was made".
Certain amendments were made in the Act by Act 4 of 1951 which came into force on 1-4-1951 but these are not relevant to the present inquiry.
7. As pointed out above, the High Court held that the new Explanation II was 'ultra vires' the State Legislature and that the mere production of goods was not enough to make the tax payable unless the goods were appropriated to a particular contract.
The correctness of this view can no longer be questioned by reason of the majority decision of this Court in - 'State of Bombay v. United Motors (India) Ltd'., AIR 1953 SC 252 (B), Wherein it was held that Art. 286 (1)(a) of the Constitution read with the Explanation thereto and construed in the light of Art. 301 and Art. 304 prohibits the taxation of sales or purchases involving inter State elements, by all States except the State in which the goods are delivered for the purpose of consumption therein and that the view that the Explanation does not deprive the State in which the property in the goods passed, of its taxing power and that consequently both the State in which the property in the goods passes and the State in which the goods are delivered for consumption have the power to tax, is not correct.
8. The learned Advocate-General of the State did not in this situation, and very properly, challenge the correctness of the decision of the High Court on this point, and conceded that the Explanation was clearly 'ultra vires' the State Legislature.
He however contended that on the principle enunciated by the Privy Council in - 'Raleigh Investment Co. v. Governor-General-in-Council', AIR 1947 PC 78(C), jurisdiction to question assessment otherwise than by use of the machinery expressly provided by the Act, was inconsistent with the statutory obligation to pay, arising by virtue of the assessment and that the liability to pay the sales tax under the Act is a special liability created by the Act itself which at the same time gives a special and particular remedy which ought to be resorted to, and therefore the remedy by a writ ought not to be allowed to be used for evading the provisions of the Act, especially a fiscal Act. It was also said that the conditions requisite for the issue of a writ of mandamus were not present in the case and that it was not within the scope and purpose of Art. 226 of the Constitution to decide an academic question.
9. In our opinion, the contentions raised by the learned Advocate-General are not well founded.
It is plain that the State evinced an intention that it could certainly proceed to apply the penal provisions of the Act against the appellant if it failed to make the return or to meet the demand and in order to escape from such serious consequences threatened without authority of law, and infringing Fundamental Rights, relief by way of a writ of mandamus was clearly the appropriate relief. In - 'Mohd. Yasin v. Town Area Committee' AIR 1952 SC 115 (D), it was held by this Court that a licence fee on a business not only takes away the property of the licensee but also operates as a restriction on his fundamental right to carry on his business and therefore if the imposition of a licence fee is without authority of law it can be challenged by way of an application under Art. 32, 'a fortiori' also under Art. 226. These observations have apposite application to the circumstances of the present case.
Explanation II to section 2(g) of the Act having been declared 'ultra vires', any imposition of sales tax on the appellant in Madhya Pradesh is without the authority of law, and that being so a threat by the State by suing the coercive machinery of the impugned Act to realize it from the appellant is a sufficient infringement of his Fundamental Right under Art. 19(1)(g) and he was clearly entitled to relief under Art. 226 of the Constitution. The contention that because of a remedy under the impugned Act was available to the appellant it was disentitled to relief under Art. 226 stands negatived by the decision of this Court in - "AIR 1953 SC 252 (B) above referred to.
There it was held that the principle that a Court will not issue a prerogative writ when an adequate alternative remedy was available could not apply where a party came to the court with an allegation that his Fundamental Right had been infringed and sought relief under Art. 226. Moreover, the remedy provided by the Act is of an onerous and burdensome character. Before the appellant can avail of it he has to deposit the whole amount of the tax. Such a provision can hardly be described as an adequate alternative remedy.
10. For the reasons given above, we are of the opinion that the High Court, having held that Explanation II to section 2(g) of the Act was 'ultra vires', was in error in dismissing the application on the ground that it was not entitled to relief under the provisions of Art 226 of the Constitution.
11. In the result therefore we allow this appeal with costs and direct an appropriate writ to issue restraining the first respondent from imposing or authorising imposition of a tax on the appellant in exercise of its authority under Explanation II held void.