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where one of the end-buyer firm21 denied having received the goods in question or even knowing the appellant; and the other end-buyer firm22 was not even found at the given address. As noticed hereinbefore, the overall dealings indicate that the attempt on the part of the appellant had only been to distort the facts and by alleging multiple transactions, to somehow avoid the operation of law relating to Central Sales Tax. Such attempt has rightly met with its disapproval at the hands of the CTO and the High Court.

 REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

 CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

 CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1322-1323 of 2019

M/S VELLANKI FRAME WORKS .….APPELLANT(S)

 VERSUS

THE COMMERCIAL TAX OFFICER, ….RESPONDENT(S)

VISAKHAPATNAM

 JUDGMENT

Dinesh Maheshwari, J.

Preliminary and brief outline

1. These appeals by special leave are directed against the common

judgment and order dated 18.12.2014 in Writ Petition Nos. 2552 of 2013 and

6258 of 2013 whereby, the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for the State

of Telangana and the State of Andhra Pradesh1

 upheld the assessment orders

dated 20.01.2010 and 18.05.2010 passed by the Commercial Tax Officer,

Chinawaltair Circle2

 and held that the transactions in question were not the

sales in the course of import but had been inter-State sales, liable to Central

Sales Tax; and denied the exemption claimed under Section 5(2) of the Central

1 Hereinafter referred to as ‘the High Court’

2 Hereinafter referred to as ‘the CTO’.

1

Sales Tax Act, 19563

 while granting time to the appellant to produce the

prescribed C-Forms to the assessing authority for availing the benefit of

concessional rate of tax.

2. We may usefully observe at the outset that, in all, seven transactions of

similar nature form the subject matter of these appeals; one relating to the

assessment for the year 2005-06 and others relating to the assessment for the

year 2006-07. The common salient features of all these transactions had been

that they were for supply of timber from a foreign country and were allegedly

executed in a similar fashion thus: The supplier (party number 1) sold the

goods in question to the first buyer (party number 2) and delivered them at the

port of shipment. Thereafter, while the goods were in transit on high seas,

party number 2 transferred the goods to the appellant (who was invariably

party number 3 in these transactions) by endorsing the bill of lading in favour

of the appellant. Further to this and while the goods were on high seas, the

appellant allegedly transferred them to the end-buyer (party number 4) by

endorsing the bill of lading in favour of the end-buyer.

2.1. However, in each of these transactions, when the goods in question

reached the port at Visakhapatnam (also known as Vizag), the appellant

carried out the proceedings envisaged by the Customs Act, 19624

 and filed a

bill of entry for warehousing and thereafter, filed another bill of entry for home

consumption (ex-bond). Accordingly and on the basis of such bills of entry, the

3 Hereinafter referred to as ‘the CST Act’.

4 Hereinafter referred to as ‘the Customs Act’.

2

appellant was duly assessed for customs duty. The appellant later on raised

debit notes on the end-buyers.

3. With reference to the aforementioned transactions and the high seas

sale agreements, the case of appellant had been that it had only acted as an

agent of the end-buyers while filing the bills of entry; and the sales of the

goods in question to the end-buyers, being the sales taking place in the course

of import of goods into the territory of India, were eligible for exemption from

payment of sales tax by virtue of Section 5(2) of the CST Act. However, in the

assessment orders dated 20.01.2010 and 18.05.2010, the CTO denied the

benefit of exemption to the appellant, particularly for the reason that the

appellant cleared the goods from the customs after filing the bills of entry and

later on raised debit notes, showing sales to the end-buyers. The CTO held

that the goods in question had crossed the customs frontiers of India when the

bills of entry were filed by the appellant and the goods were assessed to

customs duty and hence, the sales effected by the appellant to the end-buyers

could not be said to be high sea sales.

4. The appellant felt aggrieved of the orders so passed by the CTO but,

instead of availing the statutory remedy of appeal, chose to challenge the

same by way of writ petitions in the High Court. These writ petitions have been

considered and dismissed by the High Court by way of the impugned judgment

and order dated 18.12.2014. The High Court rejected the contention that the

appellant had only acted as an agent of the respective end-buyers while filing

the bills of entry at the port of destination with the findings, inter alia, to the

3

effect that customs duty could be assessed only on the importer of goods; that

neither in the bill of entry nor in the Import General Manifest5

 the name of endbuyer was reflected as the importer; that it was the appellant alone who had

imported the goods; and that the sale by the appellant to the end-buyer could

have only been effected after the goods were cleared for home consumption.

The High Court also rejected the contention that high seas sale to end-buyer

had occasioned the import of goods into the territory of India. The appellant

has challenged the decision of the High Court by way of these appeals on a

variety of grounds as shall be noticed hereafter.

5. As noticed, the transactions involved in the present matters had been

of similar nature. For appropriate dealing with the issues involved, we may

take note of the facts relating to the assessment order dated 20.01.2010

pertaining to the tax period 2005-06 and the assessment order dated

18.05.2010 pertaining to the tax period 2006-07 in necessary details.

Assessment Order dated 20.01.2010: relevant facts and background

6. The appellant M/s. Vellanki Frame Works is said to be a sole

proprietary concern, engaged in the business of sale and purchase of logs,

timber and wooden batons; and in the course of its business, the appellant

also imports timber from other countries.

7. For the tax period 2005-06, in respect of inter-State sales falling within

clause (a) of Section 3 of the CST Act, the appellant claimed payment of tax at

the concessional rate of 4% covering a turnover of Rs. 55,23,233/- and in

support thereof, furnished 9-Nos. of C-Forms; and also sought exemption from

5 ‘IGM’ for short.

4

payment of tax on a turnover of Rs. 1,14,86,342/- on the ground that these

sales were effected by transfer of title documents before the goods had

crossed the customs frontiers of India. Even while accepting the claim of the

appellant for concessional rate of tax on the inter-State sales turnover, the

CTO proposed to reject the claim for exemption for want of evidence and to

treat the transactions in question as inter-State sales under Section 3(a) of the

CST Act. Hence, the CTO issued show-cause notice dated 19.11.2009 to the

appellant stating, inter alia, that the appellant had claimed exemption on the

ground that the said sales were effected by transfer of the document of title

before the goods had crossed customs frontiers of India but had not furnished

any evidence in support thereof.

7.1. In response to the said show-cause notice, the appellant asserted that

the transactions in question were covered by Section 5(2) of the CST Act; and

furnished seven documents being the sales invoice, bill of lading, two high

seas sale agreements, bill of entry for warehousing, bill of entry for ex-bond

and the debit note raised on the end-buyer. The CTO, however, found that on

filing of the said bills of entry, the appellant alone was assessed to customs

duty at both the stages. Hence, the CTO was of opinion that the import stream

dried up on such clearance by the customs authorities and the goods got

mixed into the stream of local goods; and any subsequent sale by the

appellant would constitute a sale of local goods exigible to tax. In view of this

opinion, the CTO proposed to treat the sale by the appellant to the end-buyer

as inter-State sale falling under Section 3(a) of the CST Act and issued further

5

show-cause notice dated 02.12.2009 inviting objections, if any, from the

appellant.

8. After taking a few adjournments, the appellant filed its letter of

objection to the show-cause notice dated 02.12.2009 while giving out the

particulars of the transactions in question and the details of its stand which

could be usefully noticed as follows:

8.1. The case of the appellant had been that M/s. Radha Industries,

Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh)6

 was its close business associate; that Radha

desired to purchase the subject goods from M/s. World Best Trading Co.

(L.L.C.), Dubai (U.A.E.)7

 but, for not having the requisite infrastructure with the

Customs Department, approached the appellant for help; that though the

appellant had the requisite infrastructure facilities at Visakhapatnam Customs,

but was not having the letter of credit facilities for import; that in the given

circumstances, the appellant and Radha entered into a quadripartite

agreement with the seller and Indus Tropics Ltd.8

 whereby, it was agreed that

Indus would purchase the goods and during the course of transit of the goods

from the port of shipment, would sell them to the appellant; that the appellant

would purchase the said goods from Indus as the agent of Radha and transfer

the documents on high seas in favour of Radha for which, Radha would pay

the appellant commission of 2% plus bank charges.

8.2. It was asserted by the appellant that pursuant to the said quadripartite

agreement, Indus purchased the goods from WBT and the seller sent the

6 The end-buyer, hereinafter also referred to as ‘Radha’.

7 The seller, hereinafter also referred to as ‘WBT’.

8 The first buyer, hereinafter also referred to as ‘Indus’.

6

consignment from the port of shipment with bill of lading dated 09.12.2005;

that on 10.12.2005, Indus caused transfer of the bill of lading on high seas in

favour of the appellant; and that on 12.12.2005, another high seas sale

agreement was entered into between the appellant and Radha whereby the bill

of lading was sold in favour of Radha. It was further asserted by the appellant

that on and from 12.12.2005, the appellant did not have control over the bill of

lading dated 09.12.2005, as the same had been parted in favour of Radha by

then. It was yet further asserted that since Radha did not have the customs

facility at Visakhapatnam customs port, the appellant had extended its help by

filing the bills of entry in its name for the purpose of customs bonding as well

as customs clearance but, it had only been a friendly transaction arranged by

the appellant in favour of Radha and the appellant paid the entire amount to

Indus without retaining anything as commission.

8.3. The submissions of the appellant had been that the circumstance of its

filing the bill of entry had no relevance in determining the nature of transaction

which was evidenced by the relevant documents, including (i) quadripartite

Master Agreement dated 21.11.2005; and (ii) High Seas Sale Agreement

dated 12.12.2005. According to the appellant, it had transferred the import

document on high seas and at any rate, the title in the goods always stood

vested in Radha, as the owner of the goods; and that the appellant was merely

acting as an agent of Radha at all points of time. The appellant maintained that

by reason of transfer of the import document, it could not be said that it had

sold the goods to Radha; on the contrary, as the appellant had acted as the

7

agent of Radha, at all points of time including at the time of purchase, the

transactions between the appellant and Radha cannot be treated as between

one principal and another. The appellant further maintained that it had charged

commission at 2% plus bank charges to Radha and had parted with the entire

amount to Indus, which was the proof that it had only acted as a conduit, as a

friendly gesture to Radha. It was also submitted that the transaction was

accounted in the books of accounts of the appellant as an agency purchase;

that receipt and payment of commission was also accounted in its books of

accounts; and the balance sheet for the year also supported this submission.

Put in a nutshell, the appellant asserted that the transfer of imported goods by

it to Radha did not partake the character of sale of goods and that, in any

event, the transfer, having been effected over high seas before bonding with

the customs authorities, cannot be treated as inter-State sale in the State of

Andhra Pradesh.

9. The contentions of the appellant were examined by the CTO in the

impugned assessment order dated 20.01.2010. For their relevance, the

observations and findings in this assessment order could be usefully noticed

as follows:

9.1. The CTO summed up the stand of the appellant that the documents of

title to the goods were transferred to Radha on high seas by virtue of the High

Seas Sale Agreement dated 12.12.2005; that the transaction did not attain the

character of an inter-State sale; and that filing of the bill of entry had no

relevance in determining the nature of the transaction. The CTO observed that

8

it was not the case of the appellant that the sale or purchase had occasioned

the import falling under the first limb of Section 5(2) of the CST Act and the

question which necessitated examination was as to whether there was a sale

of goods by the appellant, or it had been a commission transaction as stated

by the appellant. The CTO examined the computer printout of the Trading

Account for the year 2005-2006 where the purchase was shown as purchase

trading (high seas), and the relevant sale was shown as sales trading (high

seas). After referring to a few other details of the ledger account and debit note

etc., the CTO noted the contents of High Seas Sale Agreement dated

10.12.2005 entered into between Indus and the appellant wherein the

appellant was described as ‘the buyer’; the contents of second High Seas Sale

Agreement dated 12.12.2005 wherein the appellant and Radha were

described as ‘the seller’ and ‘the buyer’ respectively; and the letter of the

appellant dated 25.11.2009 wherein, while submitting certain documents like

the sales invoice, the bill of lading, high seas sale agreement, bill of entry for

warehousing and the bill of entry for home consumption, the appellant had

stated that exemption from payment of tax was claimed on the ground that the

said sales were effected by transfer of documents of title to the goods before

the goods had crossed the customs frontiers of India. The CTO, therefore,

observed that obviously, the intention of the appellant was to sell the goods

and, in fact, there was a sale; and there was no truth in the statement of

appellant that it had acted as the agent of Radha. The relevant part of the

order reads as follows:

9

“1)….In the High Sea sale agreement dated 10.12.2005 entered

into between M/s Indus Tropics Ld and M/s Vellanki Frame Works

the assessee was described as ‘the buyer’.

In the 2nd High Sea sale agreement dated 12.12.2005 entered into

between the assessee M/s Vellanki frame Works and M/s Radha

Industries - the parties were described as ‘the seller’ and ‘the

buyer’ respectively.

Similarly in the letter dated 25.11.2009…..the assessee stated

that they claimed exemption from payment of tax on the ground

that the said sales were effected by the transfer of document of

title to the goods before the goods have crossed the customs

frontiers of India.

Therefore, it is obvious that there is intention to sell the goods and

in fact there was sale. There is no truth in their statement that they

acted as an agent to M/s Radha Industries.”

9.2. In regard to the main contention of the appellant that document of title

was transferred before the goods had crossed the customs frontier of India

and the transaction fell within Section 5(2) of the Act, the CTO examined the

documentary evidence placed on record and found the facts that: (i) Indus

had imported 324 PCS of Myanmar Hardwood Gurjan Round Logs from

Yangon (Myanmar) to Vizag (India) and the bill of lading No. 01/YGN-VZG

dated 09.12.2005 was endorsed by the importer in favour of the appellant; (ii)

on the strength of such endorsed documents, Sri Sanjiv Kumar Agarwal (sole

proprietor of the appellant) presented the bill of entry No. 804116 dated

12.12.2005 for warehousing and customs duty was assessed on the appellant

alone on this bill of entry for warehousing; and (iii) subsequently, the appellant

filed the bill of entry for home consumption No. 804353 dated 28.12.2005 and

customs duty was assessed on the appellant alone on this bill of entry. The

CTO also referred to the debit note dated 12.01.2006 raised by the appellant

on Radha for a sum of Rs. 1,14,86,342/- and observed that though the

intention of the parties in High Seas Sale Agreement dated 12.12.2005 was to

10

effect the transfer before the goods crossed the customs frontiers in India but,

in fact, the said agreement did not come into operation and the sale took place

on 12.01.2006, as shown in the debit note.

9.3. The CTO further held that the goods must be treated as having crossed

the customs frontiers of India when the bill of entry was made and the goods

were assessed to customs duty; and the sale effected by the appellant could

not be said to be sale in the course of import or high seas sale inasmuch as

the goods had crossed the customs frontiers. The CTO reiterated that the

second high seas sale agreement had not come into operation; and there was

no case for claiming that the transfer of documents was effected by virtue of

the said agreement itself. With reference to the facts of the case and the

relevant case-law, the CTO held that the sale in fact took place only after

customs clearance and proceeded to overrule the contentions of the appellant.

The CTO, inter alia, observed and held as under:

“2)…. In view of the above legal position and the facts of the case,

it is to be treated that the goods had crossed customs frontiers of

India when the bill of entry having been made, the goods were

assessed to customs duty, Hence the sales effected by the

assesees can’t be said to be sales in the course of import or High

Sea Sales in as much as the goods had crossed the customs

frontiers.

*** *** ***

4) It may not be out of place to mention that as far as the

quadripartite agreement to have been entered into on 21.11.05 is

concerned, it has not come into operation while the transactions is

taking place. Had there been any nexus in respect thereof the

necessity of the subsequent two high sea sale agreements dated

10.12.2005 and 12.12.2005 would not have arose in the scheme.

5) It is to be further noted that obviously the 2nd high sea sale

agreement has not come into operation when the sale is taking

place. Thus there is no case in claiming that the transfer of

documents was effected by virtue of the said agreement itself. As.

was held by the Honourable Apex Court in the case of Tata Iron &

11

Steel Co Ltd, Bombay Vs. S.R. Sarkar and others 11 STC 655 – a

sale will be reckoned as a sale on completion of such sale and a

mere contract of sale is not a sale within the definition of sale in

Section 2(a). Therefore, it is to be observed that the sale has not

taken place in the manner contemplated in the agreement. The

sale in fact took place after - customs clearance only. Thus, there

is no nexus to the said agreement.”

9.4. In view of the above, the CTO disallowed the exemptions claimed by

the appellant on the turnover of Rs. 1,14,86,342/- while treating the

transactions as inter-State sales falling under Section 3(a) of the CST Act and

carried out assessment accordingly, holding the appellant liable to pay balance

tax to the tune of Rs. 14,35,793/-.

Assessment Order dated 18.05.2010: relevant facts and background

10. Six other transactions of similar nature formed the subject matter of the

assessment order dated 18.05.2010 relating to the tax period 2006-07. The

CTO found that the appellant had claimed exemption from payment of tax, in

respect of a turnover of Rs. 4,05,09,427/-, while contending that this turnover

represented the sales effected by transfer of documents of title before the

goods had crossed the customs frontiers of India but, had not filed any

evidence to show that the said sales were effected in such a manner.

Accordingly, a show-cause notice dated 26.11.2009 was issued. In response

thereto, the appellant furnished certain documents relating to these six

transactions of similar nature involving four parties, being the seller, the first

buyer, the appellant, and the end-buyer respectively.

10.1. As regards first transaction, Master Agreement dated 01.04.2006 for

supply of timber logs was entered into amongst Alkemal Singapore Pte Ltd.

(seller), Purbanchal Lumbers Pvt. Ltd. (first buyer), Vellanki Frame Works

12

(appellant) and the said Radha Industries (end-buyer). Purbanchal Lumbers

Pvt. Ltd., imported 155 PCS of Myanmar Hardwood Gurjan Round logs from

Yangon (Myanmar) to Vizag (India); the bill of lading No. GCTC/531/06/11

dated 08.04.2016 was endorsed in favour of the appellant on 11.04.2006

pursuant to the High Seas Sale Agreement; and on 11.04.2006 itself, bill of

lading was endorsed by the appellant in favour of Radha. Thereafter, on

12.04.2006, bill of entry for warehousing (B/E No. 601744) was filed by the

appellant for warehousing of timber and then, on 26.04.2006, bill of entry for

home consumption (B/E No. 602044) was filed by the appellant.

10.2. As regards second transaction, Master Agreement dated 01.08.2006

for supply of timber was entered into amongst Wood Craft International Pte.

Ltd. (seller), Alpine Panels Pvt. Ltd. (first buyer), Vellanki Frame Works

(appellant) and M/s. Indo Bitumen Products, Rajasthan (end-buyer). M/s.

Alpine Panels Pvt. Ltd., imported 273 PCS of Malaysian Round Logs from

Singapore to Vizag; the bill of lading No. AMB1106/VIZ-05 dated 20.08.2006

was endorsed in favour of the appellant on 26.08.2006 and on this very date,

the bill of lading was endorsed by the appellant in favour of the end-buyer M/s.

Indo Bitumen Products. Thereafter, on 30.08.2006, bill of entry for

warehousing (B/E No. 604498) was filed by the appellant for warehousing of

timber and then, on 07.09.2006, bill of entry for home consumption (B/E No.

604677) was filed by the appellant. Here again, customs duty was assessed

on Sri Sanjiv Kumar Agarwal, Vellanki Frame Works, Vizag (the appellant).

13

10.3. The third and fourth transactions in this assessment had been of the

same nature wherein two Master Agreements dated 01.10.2006 for supply of

timber were asserted involving the said Wood Craft International Pte Ltd.

(seller), Purbanchal Lumbers Pvt. Ltd. (first buyer), Vellanki Frame Works

(appellant) and M/s. Pine Exporter, New Delhi (end-buyer). These transactions

involved two bills of lading, Nos. AMB1306/VIZ-01 and AMB1306/VIZ-02 dated

08.10.2006, which were similarly endorsed by the first buyer in favour of the

appellant on 18.10.2006 and on the same date, the appellant endorsed the

same in favour of the end-buyer. Thereafter, in a similar fashion, the appellant

filed the bills of entry on 19.10.2006 for warehousing and then, on 31.10.2006

for home consumption.

10.4. Again, the fifth and sixth transactions in this assessment had also been

of the same nature wherein two Master Agreements dated 11.12.2006 and

15.12.2006 for supply of timber were asserted involving the said Wood Craft

International Pte Ltd. (seller), M/s. G.K. Ganeriwala & Sons (first buyer),

Vellanki Frame Works (appellant) and M/s. Esskay Impex, New Delhi (endbuyer). These transactions involved two bills of lading, Nos. CON1206/VIZ-04

and CON1206/VIZ-05 dated 21.12.2006 which were similarly endorsed by the

first buyer in favour of the appellant on 04.01.2007 and on the same date, the

appellant endorsed the same in favour of the end-buyer. Thereafter, in the

similar fashion, the appellant filed the bills of entry on 05.01.2007 for

warehousing and then, on 18.01.2007 for home consumption.

14

10.5. In all these transactions and dealings, after filing of bills of entry,

customs duty was assessed on Sri Sanjiv Kumar Agarwal, the proprietor of

appellant firm. However, the appellant maintained that the said transactions

had been of high seas sales to the respective end-buyers, on whom the debit

notes were raised by the appellant later.

11. In the assessment order dated 18.05.2010, the CTO held, inter alia,

that on filing the bill of entry for warehousing and the bill of entry for ex-bond

(home consumption), the appellant alone was assessed to customs duty; that

the import stream dried up on such clearance by the customs authorities and

the goods mixed into the stream of local goods; that any subsequent sale by

the appellant, therefore, constituted sale of local goods exigible to tax; and that

the transactions, for which the appellant had claimed exemption as high sea

sales, were liable to be treated as inter-State sales falling under Section 3(a)

of the CST Act. In other words, the assessing authority held that the sales by

the appellant to the end-buyers took place only after assessment of customs

duty on the appellant upon filing the bills of entry and thus, the said sales

attained the character of sale of local goods, for the goods in question having

crossed the customs frontiers of India.

11.1. Apart from the above, the CTO also pointed out that when the letters

were addressed to the dealers at the other end (i.e., the end-buyers), one of

them, M/s. Pine Exporters, New Delhi, stated that the referred party (i.e., the

appellant) was not known to them and that they had never received any

Malaysian Round logs from the appellant whereas the letter sent to M/s.

15

Esskay Impex, New Delhi, was returned with the postal endorsement that no

such firm was existing at the given address. These factors were also taken into

account by the assessing authority to hold that the claim of the appellant was

not genuine; and the transactions, on which the appellant had claimed

exemption as high sea sales, should be treated as inter-State sales falling

under Section 3(a) of the CST Act.

11.2. The relevant part of the observations and findings of the CTO in the

assessment order dated 18.05.2010 could also be usefully extracted as

under:-

“When these settled principles are applied to the instant case,

as is ascertainable from the bills of entry for ware-house and the

ex-bond of entry - transfer of title deeds has not taken place before

filing the bills of entry and the assessment of duty. The sale took

place after the assessment is made on the assessee and on filing

of the bills of entry. Thus the said sales attained the character of

sales of local goods.

Therefore, in view of the above legal position and the facts of

the case, it is to be treated that the goods had crossed customs

frontiers of India when the bill of entry having been made, the

goods were assessed to customs duty. Hence the sales effected

by the assessee cant be said to be sales in the course of import or

high sea sales in as much as the goods had crossed the customs

frontiers.

Further, when addressed the dealers at the other end

requesting to confirm the purchase from the assessee - M/s Pine

Exporters, New Delhi (sale reported at transaction No.3

Rs.11057059/- and transaction No.4 Rs.4124375/- total

15581434-00) the party replied that they do not know the referred

party and have never received any Malaysian Round Logs from

the said party which shows that the dealer’s claim is not genuine.

Further, the letter sent to M/s Esskay Impex, New Delhi

requesting to confirm the purchase from the assessee in

transaction No. 5 Rs.8277263 and transaction No.6 Rs.3454968

total = 11732231/-, was returned by the postal authorities with an

endorsement “No such firm at this place” which also shows that

the dealer’s claim is not genuine.

In view of this position, the transactions on which the assessee

has claimed exemption being high sea sales are treated as

interstate sales falling under Section 3(a) of CST Act.”

16

Writ Petitions before the High Court

12. As noticed, the assessment orders aforesaid could have been

challenged in statutory appeal but the appellant chose to challenge the same

by way of writ petitions, being W.P. No. 4552 of 2013 (against the assessment

order dated 20.01.2010) and W.P. No. 6258 of 2013 (against the assessment

order dated 18.05.2010). Both these writ petitions were taken up for

consideration together by the High Court and were dismissed by the common

judgment and order dated 18.12.2014.

13. The High Court, in the impugned judgment and order dated

18.12.2014, examined the variety of contentions urged by the parties and took

up for determination the issues arising in the matter under different headings

while primarily dealing with the facts relating to the assessment order dated

20.01.2010 as involved in W.P. No. 4552 of 2013. The High Court examined

the issues: (i) as to whether the CTO before whom the dealer had filed returns

under CST Act was having authority to pass the assessment order in the

absence of authorisation from the Deputy Commissioner; (ii) the extent, scope

and contours of judicial review of assessment order in the writ jurisdiction; (iii)

as to whether the sale by appellant to Radha was an inter-State sale for the

appellant having filed the bill of entry and having been assessed to customs

duty; (iv) as to whether the sale in favour of Radha occasioned movement of

goods into the country; (v) as to whether the procedure prescribed for dutyfree shop was applicable to the present case; and (vi) as to whether the

appellant was entitled to be granted time to submit C-Forms?

17

14. Having regard to the facts and circumstance of the case, we may

briefly summarise the observations and findings of the High Court in relation to

these issues.

14.1. As regards the question of the authority of CTO to pass the

assessment order in question, the High Court extensively examined the scope

of the provisions contained in A.P. Value Added Tax Act, 2005, A.P. Value

Added Tax Rules, 2005 and Section 9(2) of the CST Act and ultimately

rejected the contentions urged on behalf of the appellant that the CTO was

lacking authority to assess the appellant to tax under the CST Act.

14.2. As regards judicial review of assessment order in writ jurisdiction, the

High Court took note of the extensive arguments on behalf of the appellant as

regards nature of transaction with reference to quadripartite agreement and

endorsement of bill of lading by the importer in favour of the appellant and

subsequently by the appellant in favour of Radha (end-buyer) while the goods

were on high seas as also the argument that there was no finding against

genuineness of the endorsements on the bill of lading. The High Court

observed that the appellant had invoked writ jurisdiction against the

assessment order without availing the statutory remedy of appeal; and also

pointed out that though certiorari was the appropriate remedy in challenge to a

quasi-judicial order, the appellant had sought a writ of mandamus. The High

Court further observed that it was not even the case of the appellant that the

first respondent had failed to perform a statutory duty or that the appellant’s

legal rights were adversely affected and therefore, the appellant was not

18

entitled to a writ of mandamus. The High Court, thereafter, pointed out the

limited parameters within which the validity of assessment orders and findings

therein could be examined in certiorari jurisdiction. The High Court took note of

the consideration adopted and the findings recorded in the impugned

assessment orders and observed that the assessing authority had not taken

into consideration the effect of high seas sale agreement and bill of lading etc.,

but has held the sales by appellant to Radha and other end-buyers outside the

State to be inter-State sales for the reason that those sales could only have

been effected after the appellant had filed the bills of entry for home

consumption and was assessed to customs duty. The High Court observed

that only if those findings were set aside would the matter call for remand with

direction to the assessing authority to consider the other documents relied

upon by the appellant. The High Court observed thus:

“In passing the impugned assessment orders, and in subjecting

the transactions to tax as an inter-state sale under Section 3(a) of

the CST Act, the assessing authority has not taken into

consideration the effect of the High Sea sales agreements and

other agreements, the bill of lading or the provisions of the Indian

Bill of Lading Act. He has held that the sale of goods by the

petitioner to Radha Industries (and other outside the State

purchasers) was an inter-state sale on the ground that these sales

could only have been effected after the petitioner had filed the bill

of entry for home consumption, and after he was assessed to

customs duty. It is only if these findings are set aside, would the

matter necessitate remand, and the assessing authority being

directed to consider the other documents relied upon by the

petitioner.”

14.3. After having dealt with the aforesaid preliminary aspects, the High

Court entered into the core issue involved in the matter i.e., as to whether the

sale by appellant to Radha was an inter-State sale for the appellant having

19

filed the bill of entry and having been assessed to customs duty. The High

Court took note of the rival submission where, on one hand, it was contended

on behalf of the appellant that there was no prohibition under the Customs Act

or the Rules/Regulations made thereunder, for clearance of goods by the

holder of an authorisation by the endorsee of the bill of lading; that even

otherwise, an importer under the Customs Act includes any owner or any

person holding himself out to be an importer and, as the bill of lading had been

endorsed in his favour, the appellant was entitled to file the bill of entry as an

importer; and that the department’s contention, that payment of customs duty

by the appellant was conclusive of the import having ended and any sale by

the appellant thereafter could only be a domestic sale, was not flowing from

the provisions of the Customs Act. On the other hand, it was contended on

behalf of the department that the appellant alone was assessed to customs

duty by virtue of his filing the bill of entry as the importer; that the system

permitted only the appellant to file the bill of entry as his name alone was

recorded in the Import General Manifest (IGM) as the importer; that the

contents of the bill of entry made it clear that there was no high seas sale,

subsequent to the high seas sale in favour of the appellant as the bill of entry

was generated on the basis of the IGM; that Radha was not assessed to

customs duty and if Radha was the last buyer during importation, IGM would

have reflected the same; that the appellant was assessed to customs duty as

being the last buyer/final importer of the goods before the goods got mixed

with the general goods and the sale of goods by appellant to Radha was not a

20

sale in the course of import, rather it was an inter-State sale as Radha was

located outside the State of Andhra Pradesh; and that if the appellant had sold

the goods to Radha and yet got itself assessed to customs duty, it could only

mean that the appellant and Radha had colluded to evade customs duty on

the sale transaction value.

14.4. In view of the rival submissions, the High Court took note of the

requirements of Section 5(2) of the CST Act that, for a sale to be ‘in the course

of import’, it has to be either the one which has occasioned the import or the

one which has been effected by a transfer of document of title to the goods

before the goods had crossed the customs frontiers of India. As the claim of

the appellant, for treating the sale in question to be in the course of import,

was being denied by the department for the reason that the appellant alone

had filed the bill of entry for warehousing as also the bill of entry for home

consumption, the High Court proceeded to examine the facts of the case vis-avis the essential features related with the processes of importation and filing of

bill of entry while sub-dividing its consideration with reference to various terms

in, and various provisions of, the Customs Act and the CST Act.

14.4.1. The High Court took note that the expression “crossing the customs

frontiers of India” was defined in Section 2(ab) of the CST Act to mean

crossing the limits of the area of a customs station in which the imported

goods or exported goods are ordinarily kept before clearance by customs

authorities; and as per the Explanation thereto, “customs station” and

“customs authorities” shall have the same meaning as in the Customs Act. The

21

High Court observed that “the customs frontiers”, for the purpose of the CST

Act, was equated to the limits of the area of the customs station in which the

goods were stored; and crossing of such station being regarded as amounting

to crossing the customs frontiers of India.

14.4.2. As regards connotation of the term “importer”, the High Court examined

the definition of “import” in Section 2(23) and of “imported goods” in Section

2(25) of the Customs Act and observed that the moment goods, brought into

India from a foreign country, are cleared for home consumption, they get

mixed with the local goods and cease to be imported goods thereafter. The

High Court also examined the inclusive definition of “importer” in Section 2(26)

of the Customs Act and observed that any person who imports goods from a

foreign country to India would undoubtedly be an importer; and the owner of

the goods and a person holding himself out be an importer would also be an

importer, but only during the period between the importation of the goods and

the time they are cleared for home consumption, and not prior thereto or

thereafter. The High Court observed that the expanded definition of “importer”

could not be used to usurp the identity of an importer from the person who has

filed the bill of entry; and as the bill of entry showed the goods to have been

cleared by the appellant for home consumption, the appellant was the importer

of the goods. The High Court also observed that if the appellant had sold the

goods on high seas to Radha, it was only Radha who would be the importer

and not the appellant and the very fact that the name of Radha was not

reflected as the importer in the bill of entry for home consumption belied the

22

contention of the appellant about high seas sale to Radha. The relevant parts

of observations and findings of the High Court could be usefully extracted as

under:-

“Section 2(23) of the Customs Act defines import, with its

grammatical variations and cognate expressions, to mean bringing

into India from a place outside India. Section 2(25) defines

imported goods to mean any goods brought into India from a place

outside India but does not include goods which have been cleared

for home consumption. Use of the words does not include in

Section 2(25) would mean that the moment goods, brought into

India from a foreign country, are cleared for home consumption,

they get mixed with the local goods and cease to be imported

goods thereafter. Going by the definition of the term 'import' under

Section 2(25) of the Act as "to bring into India from a place outside

India," and as he has imported the goods (his name being

reflected in the Bill of Entry as the importer), the petitioner has

rightly been held to be the importer.

*** *** ***

In view of the expanded definition of importer in Section 2(26),

while any person who imports goods from a foreign country to

India would undoubtedly be an importer, the owner of the goods

and a person holding himself out be an importer would also be an

importer, however only during the period between the importation

of the goods and the time they are cleared for home consumption,

and not prior thereto or thereafter. This period is when the goods

are warehoused after importation, and are cleared from such

warehouse by a person other than the person who actually

imported the goods. That limb of the definition of importer, in

Section 2(26) of the Customs Act, is designed to protect the

interests of the owner or the exporter where the goods have not

been claimed or redeemed by the designated importer in India.

The definition cannot be used to usurp the identity of an importer

from the person who filed the bill of entry. As Section 2(26) is an

inclusive definition, the person in whose name the bill of entry is

filed does not cease to be the importer. In other words, the person

who has secured the release of the goods from the carrier, who

has filed the bill of entry, and who has undertaken the work of

clearance, continues to be an importer. The bill of entry shows the

goods to have been cleared for home consumption by the

petitioner who is, therefore, the importer of the goods.

The person who holds himself out to be the importer of the

goods must furnish proof of being the importer before the goods

are cleared for home consumption. No doubt, Section 2(26)

permits any one holding himself out to be the importer between

the date of importation and clearance of the goods for home

consumption. But here the petitioner, in whose name the goods

have been manifested, has, by filing a Bill of Entry, already held

23

himself out to be the importer. As shall be detailed hereinafter, the

import manifest has not been amended, the petitioner has filed the

Bill of Entry for clearance of the goods for home consumption, and

has held himself out to be the importer. …. It is evident, therefore,

that, before its importation, it is only the person who imported the

goods who would be the importer. If, as contended by the

petitioner, they had sold the goods on high seas to Radha, it is

only Radha who would be the importer and not the petitioner. The

very fact that the name of Radha is not reflected as the importer in

the bill of entry ex-bond (home consumption) belies the petitioners

contention of a high sea sale by them to Radha Industries.”

14.4.3. The High Court, thereafter, proceeded to examine the relevance and

importance of Import General Manifest required to be delivered prior to the

arrival of vessel at the customs station in terms of Section 30 of the Customs

Act; permissibility of its amendment or supplementation under the Levy of Fee

(Customs Documents) Regulations, 1970; and its contents in terms of Import

Manifest (Vessels) Regulations, 1971. The High Court observed that as per

the requirements of IGM, it should have reflected the name of the last high sea

sale purchaser as the importer; and otherwise, the IGM would have

necessitated amendment, as it is only the last purchaser of the goods on high

seas who would be the importer/consignee. The High Court observed that

there was no material on record to show that either the IGM contained the

name of Radha as the importer/consignee or that it was subsequently

amended in terms of Section 30(3) of the Customs Act; and hence, held that

the contention of high seas sales was raised by the appellant only to avoid the

goods being subjected to tax as inter-State sales under the CST Act. The High

Court observed and held as under:-

“The Import General Manifest contains a cargo declaration

wherein, among others, the name of the importer, the importers

code number, IGM number and date are required to be detailed. It

24

is not even the petitioners case that his name is not reflected as

the importer in the Import General Manifest. If, as is now

contended by him, the goods had been sold on the high seas, the

Import General Manifest should have reflected the name of the

last high sea sale purchaser as the importer. Otherwise, the Import

General Manifest would have necessitated amendment as it is

only the last purchaser of the goods on high seas who would be

the importer/consignee. There is no material on record to show

that either the Import General Manifest contained the name of

Radha as the importer/consignee or that it was subsequently

amended in terms of Section 30(3) of the Customs Act. It is

evident, therefore, that the contention of high seas sales has been

raised by the petitioner only to avoid the goods being subjected to

tax as inter- state sales under the CST Act.”

14.4.4. After having found that the appellant was rightly held to be the importer

of goods and such a conclusion was fortified by the contents of IGM, the High

Court proceeded to further examine the effect of filing of bill of entry for home

consumption by the appellant. In this regard, the High Court examined the

scope and requirements of the provisions contained in the Customs Act

relating to entry of goods on importation; clearance of goods for home

consumption as also the requirements of the Bill of Entry (Electronic

Declaration) Regulations, 1995. The High Court further examined the contents

of one of the bills of entry, as placed on the record of W.P. No. 6258 of 2013

where the second party (first buyer) was Purbanchal Lumbers Pvt. Ltd. and

found that the said bill of entry made no reference to Radha and held that this

omission made it clear that the goods were imported by the appellant on a

high seas sale effected in its favour by the said first buyer. The High Court,

accordingly, concluded that the appellant had imported the goods; and the sale

of goods by the appellant to Radha could have only been effected after the

25

goods had been cleared for home consumption. The High Court, inter alia,

observed and held as under:-

“…..It is evident, from the said Bill of Entry, that the goods were

imported by the petitioner, and were cleared from customs with the

assistance of the customs house agent M/s.Srinivasa Transports.

If, as contended by the petitioner, the goods were sold by them to

M/s.Radha Industries on high seas, and before the goods entered

the customs port, the name of the importer should have been

shown as Radha Industries, and not as Sanjiv Kumar Agarwal,

Vellanki Frameworks. The fact that the name of the importer is

shown as Sanjiv Kumar Agarwal, Vellanki Frameworks, and the

Bill of Entry makes no reference to Radha Industries, goes to

show that the goods were imported by the petitioner on a high sea

sale effected in their favour by Purbanchal Lumbers Private

Limited; it is they who had imported the goods; and sale of goods

by them to Radha Industries could only have been effected after

the goods had been cleared for home consumption.”

14.4.5. The High Court also examined the submissions that the appellant

acted merely as an agent of the end-buyer and rejected the same, again with

reference to the contents of the bill of entry where the name of appellant was

shown as the importer and there was no reference to Radha. The High Court

also observed that customs duty could be assessed only on the importer of

goods and not on his agent; and found that the appellant alone was assessed

to customs duty and not Radha. In view of the given facts, the High Court

reiterated its findings that the sale of goods by appellant to Radha was not a

high seas sale; and such a sale could have been effected only after the

appellant was assessed to customs duty and had cleared the goods for home

consumption. The High Court observed and held, inter alia, as follows:-

“If, as contended by him, the petitioner was merely acting as an

agent, the bill of entry would have reflected the name of the

importer as M/s.Radha Industries and the petitioner as their agent

instead of M/s. Srinivasa Traders as the clearing house agent; and

the petitioners name would have been recorded in the bill of entry,

along with Purbanchal Lumbers Private Limited. The very fact that

26

the name of the importer is shown as Sanjiv Kumar Agarwal,

Vellanki Frameworks, and the Bill of Entry makes no reference to

Radha Industries, shows that the goods were imported by the

petitioner, on the goods being sold to them on high seas by

Purbanchal Lumbers Private Limited. Sale of goods by them to

Radha Industries could only have been effected after the goods

had been cleared for home consumption.

*** *** ***

Transfer of title to the goods on high seas would make the

person, who purchased the goods on high seas, the importer of

the goods and it is he who would be liable to be assessed to

customs duty. As the Bill of Entry records the petitioners name as

the importer, and as it is not in dispute that it was he who was

assessed to customs duty, and not Radha, it is evident that the

sale of goods by the petitioner to Radha is not a high seas sale.

Such a sale could only have been effected after the petitioner was

assessed to customs duty, and he had cleared the goods for home

consumption.”

14.4.6. With reference to a Division Bench decision of Andhra Pradesh High

Court in the case of Minerals and Metals Trading Corporation of India Ltd.

v. State of Andhra Pradesh: 1999 (106) ELT 23, an argument was advanced

on behalf of the appellant that the name on the bill of entry was irrelevant

because the name of the importer alone would be recorded in it, even if the

transfer of title deeds was effected before filing of the bill of entry and

assessment of duty. The High Court took note of the principal issue involved in

the said case of Minerals and Metals and held that the question, as to

whether name on the bill of entry was relevant or not and as to whether the

name of importer alone would be recorded therein, even if transfer by title

deed was effected before filing of bill of entry and assessment of duty, did not

arise for consideration therein. Therefore, the observations occurring in said

decision as regards the relevance of name in the bill of entry were held to be

not of a binding declaration of law.

27

14.5. Having thus held that CTO was justified in holding that sale of goods by

appellant to Radha was an inter-State sale liable to tax under the CST Act, the

High Court took note of another submission made on behalf of the appellant

that the sale in favour of Radha occasioned the movement of goods into the

country. It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the entire import of

the goods was occasioned by the ultimate sale by the appellant in favour of

Radha and even though the documents executed referred to the sale as a high

seas sale, but when the very sale itself occasioned the movement of goods

across the customs barrier, it had been a sale in the course of import. It was

also submitted on behalf of the appellant that though the case was not

presented in this light before the assessing officer, it being a pure question of

law, could be considered by the High Court. Per contra, it was submitted on

behalf of the department that such submissions were inconsistent and contrary

to the earlier stand of the appellant that it had been a high seas sale. It was

also submitted, again with reference to bill of entry, that the name of Radha

was not reflected there as the last buyer.

14.5.1. The High Court observed that it was for the first time such a plea was

taken in the writ proceedings that the sale of goods to Radha occasioned the

import of goods; and the writ Court would be disinclined to entertain this plea,

being based on certain clauses of agreements and being a mixed question of

facts and law. This apart, the High Court also observed that even otherwise,

such a submission was belied by the fact that the name of the appellant, and

not Radha, was reflected in the bill of entry as the importer of the goods.

28

14.6. Another argument advanced on behalf of the appellant before the High

Court had been that the principles enunciated in the said Division Bench

decision of Andhra Pradesh High Court in the case of Minerals and Metals

and another decision of Madras High Court got tacit approval in the decision of

this Court in the case of Hotel Ashoka (Indian Tourist Development

Corporation Ltd.). v. Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes and

Anr.: (2012) 3 SCC 204. The High Court distinguished the said decision of this

Court while pointing out that it related to the goods sold at duty-free shops

which are beyond the customs frontier of India; the goods sold thereat must be

said to have been sold before having crossed the customs frontiers of India;

and consequently, the sale of goods thereat is in the course of import.

14.7. Having thus held that the sale in question was an inter-State sale, the

High Court took note of the alternative prayer made on behalf of the appellant

for an opportunity to submit C-Forms from the buyers and granted this prayer

with reference to Rule 12(7) of the Central Sales Tax (Registration and

Turnover) Rules, 1957.

14.8. With the aforesaid findings and liberty, the High Court proceeded to

reject the challenge to the impugned assessment orders while granting three

months’ time to the appellant to produce the prescribed C-Forms. The High

Court also commented on the doubts expressed by the assessing officer about

existence of some of the dealers and observed that the appellant would be

able to procure C-Forms only if such dealers were in existence. The High

Court concluded on the writ petitions in the following words:-

29

“For the reasons aforementioned, the impugned assessment

orders do not necessitate interference, and the challenge thereto

by the petitioner is rejected. The petitioner is, however, granted

three months time from today to produce the prescribed C- Forms.

While the assessing authority has expressed his doubts regarding

the very existence of some of the dealers outside the State, it is

not necessary for us to delve on this aspect any further, as it is

only if such dealers are in existence would the petitioner be able to

procure C-Forms from them, and furnish it to the assessing

authority. While the prescribed concessional rate of tax, payable

by the petitioner on the inter-state sale of goods, shall be paid by

them forthwith, the respondents shall not take coercive steps for

recovery of the balance tax for a period of three months from

today. In case the petitioner produces C-Forms within the

aforesaid three month period, they shall be extended the benefit of

concessional rate of tax to the extent for which C-Forms are

produced. It is made clear that, in case the petitioner fails to

submit the C-Forms within three months from today, it is open to

the respondents thereafter to proceed and recover the balance tax

due from them in accordance with law.

Subject to the above observations, both the Writ Petitions fail

and are, accordingly, dismissed. The miscellaneous petitions

pending, if any, shall also stand automatically dismissed. However,

in the circumstances, without costs.”

Rival Submissions and the issues involved

15. The aforesaid decision of the High Court is questioned in these

appeals. We may now summarize the principal submissions made on behalf of

the parties.

16. Assailing the impugned judgment, learned counsel for the appellant

has made elaborate reference to the quadripartite agreement dated

21.11.2005 involving four parties and stipulating that Indus would raise the

purchase order on the foreign exporter i.e., WBT and thereafter, when the

goods were on high seas, Indus would transfer the documents of title (bill of

lading) in favour of the appellant; and the appellant would then transfer the

documents of title to the goods in favour of Radha before the goods cross the

30

customs frontiers of India. The learned counsel would submit that the intention

behind entering into a quadripartite agreement was that Indus enjoyed a 180-

day line of credit with WBT while the appellant had the requisite infrastructure

to undertake importation of goods but the agreement specifically identified

Radha as final buyer of the goods and stipulated that the goods would move

only after inspection and selection by Radha and hence, there was always a

privity of contract between WBT (the seller) and Radha (the end-buyer). The

learned counsel has further submitted that as per Schedule I to the agreement,

the appellant was to act as an agent of Radha and to clear the goods from

customs authorities where delivery of goods was to be completed once the

appellant had issued a delivery note to Radha; and the responsibility of

carriage of goods, after clearance, from the port to the factory premises in the

State of Uttar Pradesh was that of Radha.

16.1. In the aforesaid backdrop, the learned counsel for the appellant has

strenuously contended that the sale in question, being in the nature of “sale in

the course of import”, is not taxable under the CST Act; that the sale in

question, having not occasioned movement of goods between two States

within India, is not an “inter-State sale” under Section 3(a) of the CST Act and

rather, this sale has occasioned movement of goods from outside India into

India; and that the department had been unjustified and wrong in ignoring the

second high seas sale agreement between the appellant and Radha and by

treating the appellant as owner of goods only for having filed the bill of entry

and having raised the debit note.

31

16.2. Elaborating on the submissions, learned counsel has referred to Article

286 of the Constitution of India while pointing out that it prohibits the State

Government from imposing sales tax on sales made in the course of import or

export; and the Parliament could formulate the principles to determine as to

when a sale takes place in the course of import or export. The learned counsel

has referred to Section 5 of the CST Act, laying down as to when a sale is

treated to have taken place in the course of import or export and has referred

to sub-section (2) thereof, providing that sale of goods is deemed to take place

in the course of import of the goods into the territory of India only if the sale

occasions such import or is effected by a transfer of document of title to the

goods before they have crossed the customs frontiers of India. Learned

counsel has also referred to Section 3 of the CST Act and the decision of this

Court in the case of State of Maharashtra v. Embee Corporation, Bombay:

(1997) 7 SCC 190 to submit that the terms ‘sale occasioning movement of

goods’ and ‘sale occasioning import of goods’ carry the same meaning insofar

as Sections 3 and 5 of the CST Act are concerned; and that the words “sale of

goods” in Section 3 and the words “contract of sale” in Section 4(2) of the

CST Act have been assigned the same meaning, which is wider to the

meaning of sale in the general law. While also relying on the decision of this

Court in Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd., Bombay v. S.R. Sarkar and Ors.: AIR

1961 SC 65, the learned counsel has submitted that in both the situations

where sale occasions movement of goods and sale occasions import of goods,

32

the contract of sale or a covenant of a contract of sale triggers the movement

from either one State to another or from outside India into India.

16.3. Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that to qualify under

Section 5(2) of the CST Act, the essential ingredients of high sea sales would

be of the transfer of document of title and transfer of goods to be made while

the goods are on high seas. With reference to the definition of term “crossing

the customs frontiers of India”, as occurring in Section 2(ab) of the CST Act,

learned counsel has pointed out that this term means crossing the limits of the

area of customs station in which imported goods or exported goods are

ordinarily kept before clearance by customs authorities. Then, with reference

to Section 2(4) of the Sale of Goods Act, 19309

 and the decisions of this Court

in J.V. Gokal & Co. (Private) Ltd. v. Assistant Collector of Sales-Tax

(Inspection) and Ors: (1960) 2 SCR 852 and Minerals & Metals Trading

Corporation of India Ltd. v. Sales Tax Officer and Ors: (1998) 7 SCC 1910

,

learned counsel has submitted that the transfer of bill of lading signifies

transfer of title in the goods. As regards transfer before the goods crossing

customs frontiers of India, the learned counsel has referred to the decision of

this Court in Hotel Ashoka (supra) to submit that when the goods are kept in

the bonded warehouse, they cannot be said to have crossed the customs

frontiers of India.

16.4. As regards the facts of the case, learned counsel would submit that the

endorsement by appellant on the bill of lading in favour of Radha was made on

9 Hereinafter referred to as ‘the Sale of Goods Act’.

10 Hereinafter this case of Minerals & Metals has also been referred to as ‘Orissa case’, in order to

maintain the distinction with the other decision of Andhra Pradesh High Court carrying the same first

name, which was referred to by the High Court in the impugned judgment.

33

12.12.2005 when the goods were on the high seas and had not even reached

the customs frontiers of India and then, the bill of entry for home consumption

was filed on 28.12.2005. Therefore, according to the learned counsel, the title

to the goods in question was transferred in favour of Radha before the goods

crossed the customs frontiers of India and, accordingly, the transaction

between the petitioner and Radha had been a sale in the course of import not

liable to be taxed under the CST Act.

16.5. The learned counsel has also contended that the transaction in

question is sought to be taxed as inter-State sale within the ambit of Section

3(a) of the CST Act, for being not covered under Section 5(2) of the CST Act

but, for a transaction to be covered under Section 3(a) of the CST Act, the

agreement of sale must trigger the movement of goods and the goods must

move between one State to another within India as a consequence of such

agreement. The learned counsel has referred to the decision of this Court in

State of Travancore-Cochin and Ors. v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashewnut

Factory, Quilon: AIR 1953 SC 333 and has strenuously argued that in the

present case, the goods moved into India from outside as a result of the

quadripartite agreement; that the inter-State movement within India was only a

part of one whole integrated transaction of sale; that when a part of integrated

import transaction involves movement of goods within India, the department

cannot selectively question only one part of the transaction; and that the

quadripartite agreement, clearly establishing the privity amongst the parties

34

involved, could not have been ignored in part and the Indian leg of the

transaction could not have been dissected in order to be taxed.

16.6. In another leg of principal submissions, learned counsel has contended

that the High Court has fallen in error in using the bill of entry to determine the

ownership of goods. Learned counsel would submit that the ownership of

goods could only be determined under the Sale of Goods Act read with the

Indian Contract Act; that the customs duty is collected from the person having

possession of goods at the time of importation, who need not be the owner of

good, as appearing from the definition of “importer” under the Customs Act,

which includes “owner and any other person”; that in distinction to the customs

duty, sales tax is a tax on the transaction of sales or purchase when ownership

of goods is transferred and the questions as to when does the sale take place

and who is the owner of goods would be determined only under the Sale of

Goods Act, and not under the Customs Act. With a strong reliance on the

decision of this Court in the case of Union of India and Anr. v. Sampat Raj

Dugar and Anr.: (1992) 2 SCC 66, learned counsel has submitted that the

definition of importer in the Customs Act only indicates the person who is in

possession of goods at the time of filing of bill of entry but does not indicate

the title to the goods.

16.7. As regards raising of debit note, learned counsel has argued that the

respondent has tried to rely upon a subsequent debit note raised by the

appellant on Radha to conclude that the sale took place after the goods

crossed the customs frontiers of India but, as per the definition contained in

35

Section 2(g) of the CST Act, “sale” includes transfer of property in goods for

deferred payment and therefore, issuance of debit note on a later date is of no

effect on the passing of title of goods, which had taken place before the goods

crossed the customs frontiers of India. According to the learned counsel,

endorsement of the bill of lading and its date are the only factors relevant for

determination as to whether the sale in question is covered by Section 5(2) of

the CST Act or not; and all other factors are irrelevant for determining the core

issue regarding point of sale; and the High Court has been in error in

proceeding on irrelevant considerations while ignoring the relevant aspects

and the law applicable to the case.

16.8. In the alternative part, learned counsel has contended that the High

Court, despite indicating its disinclination to reappreciate the evidence in writ

jurisdiction, has proceeded to render findings on fact rather than relegating the

matter to the appellate authority. While relying on the decision in the case of

Star Paper Mills Ltd. v. Union of India and Ors.: 1995 Supp (4) SCC 674,

the learned counsel would submit that the appellant may be allowed to contest

the matter in the statutory appeal, particularly in view of the facts involved.

17. Per contra, learned counsel for the respondent has contended that on

a conjoint reading of the agreements sought to be relied upon by the appellant

and the appellant’s dealing with the goods before the customs frontier at

Visakhapatnam, make it clear that the alleged agency agreement between the

appellant and Radha was a sham and nominal document, drawn only for the

purpose of evasion of tax liability under the CST Act. The learned counsel

36

would submit that the alleged agency agreement played no role at all in the

import transaction and it was the appellant alone who was the real importer

and was rightly treated so. The learned counsel would further submit that the

documents presented by the appellant before the customs frontier at

Visakhapatnam could not have shown Radha as the real importer since the

high seas sale agreement designated appellant as the buyer; and the customs

frontier at Visakhapatnam was not called upon to even consider the agency

agreement as the basis for the bill of entry.

17.1. Learned counsel for the respondent has emphatically argued that in the

given set of facts and circumstances, while reading the agreements in

question and the real intent behind them, coupled with filing of bill of entry by

the appellant, the conclusion drawn by the High Court that the appellant alone

was the importer remains unexceptionable. Learned counsel would also

submit that the import was complete only by and through the appellant and

until completion of importation, Radha was nowhere in picture; and the

monetary transactions between the appellant and Radha are proof enough of

the transaction of sale between them after the goods had crossed the customs

frontiers of India. In other words, according to the learned counsel, delivery of

goods to Radha by the appellant and their movement from Visakhapatnam (in

the State of Andhra Pradesh) on way to Lucknow (in the State of Uttar

Pradesh) constituted an inter-State sale and hence, the appellant has rightly

been held liable to tax for this inter-State sale.

37

17.2. While distinguishing the decisions cited on behalf of the appellant,

learned counsel for the respondent has argued that the relied upon decisions,

essentially relating to the questions as to what triggered an import and when

did the title pass on to an importer, are not relevant for the purpose of deciding

as to who has been the importer in the present case. This question, according

to the learned counsel, has rightly been examined by the Assessing Officer

with reference to the nature of dealings of the parties and such conclusions

have rightly been endorsed by the High Court.

18. We have heard learned counsel for the parties at length and have

scanned the record with reference to the law applicable.

19. In summation of what has been noticed hereinabove, it is apparent that

while asserting that the sales in question took place “in the course of the

import” and do qualify for exemption under Section 5(2) of the CST Act, the

main plank of the case of the appellant is that in accordance with the

quadripartite agreements, the appellant had transferred the goods on high

seas (before goods had crossed the customs frontiers of India) by endorsing

the bills of lading in favour of the respective end-buyers and that had

completed the sale. On the other hand, the mainstay of the department is that

the appellant alone cleared the goods from the customs area after filing the

respective bills of entry and thereafter raised debit notes showing sales to the

end-buyers; and such sales having taken place only after the goods crossing

the customs frontiers of India and the end-buyers being situated outside the

State of Andhra Pradesh to whom the goods were dispatched, the sales in

38

question had only been inter-State sales. The appellant’s counter to such a

stand of the department is that filing of bill of entry and assessment to customs

duty in accordance with the Customs Act are not the factors determinative of

the ownership of goods because the importer could be the owner or even any

other person and merely because the appellant filed the bills of entry, the legal

consequences of transfer of bill of lading when the goods were on high seas

cannot be ignored.

19.1. Therefore, the principal issue in these appeals is as to whether the

sales in question took place in the course of the import of the goods into the

territory of India and qualify for exemption under Section 5(2) of the CST Act?

Sale in the course of import: Connotations

20. For determination of the principal issue and variety of questions arising

in this matter, at the outset, a brief insight into the constitutional and statutory

provisions relating to the “sale in the course of import” shall be apposite.

20.1. Under Article 286 of the Constitution of India, restrictions have been

placed on the power of the State as to imposition of tax on the specified

category of sales and purchases. At the relevant point of time, Clauses (1) and

(2) of Article 286 read as under11:-

“286. Restrictions as to imposition of tax on the sale or

purchase of goods.- (1) No law of a State shall impose, or

authorize the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of goods

where such sale or purchase takes place—

(a) outside the State; or

(b) in the course of the import of the goods into, or export of the

goods out of, the territory of India.

(2) Parliament may by law formulate principles for determining

when a sale or purchase of goods takes place in any of the ways

mentioned in clause (1).”

11 This Article 286 has undergone a few amendments later which need not be referred herein.

39

20.2. In exercise of its powers under Clause (2) of Article 286, the Parliament

has enacted the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. In Section 3, thereof, it is laid

down that a sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in the

course of inter-State trade or commerce if the sale or purchase - (a) occasions

the movement of goods from one State to another; or (b) is effected by a

transfer of documents of title to the goods during their movement from one

State to another. Section 3 with its Explanation 1 and Explanation 2 could also

be usefully extracted as under12:-

“3. When is a sale or purchase of goods said to take place in

the course of inter-State trade or commerce. —

A sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in the

course of inter-State trade or commerce if the sale or purchase—

(a) occasions the movement of goods from one State to another;

or

(b) is effected by a transfer of documents of title to the goods

during their movement from one State to another.

Explanation 1. — Where goods are delivered to a carrier or other

bailee for transmission, the movement of the goods shall, for the

purposes of clause (b), be deemed to commence at the time of

such delivery and terminate at the time when delivery is taken

from such carrier or bailee.

Explanation 2. — Where the movement of goods commences and

terminates in the same State it shall not be deemed to be a

movement of goods from one State to another by reason merely of

the fact that in the course of such movement the goods pass

through the territory of any other State.”

20.3. The basic principles for determining as to when a sale or purchase of

goods takes place in the course of import or export are contained in Section 5

of the CST Act. As per sub-section (1) of Section 5, a sale or purchase of

goods shall be deemed to take place in the course of the export of the goods

out of the territory of India only if the sale or purchase either occasions such

12 Explanation 3 inserted to this Section 3 by Act 28 of 2016 is not relevant for the present purpose.

40

export or is effected by a transfer of documents of title to the goods after the

goods have crossed the customs frontiers of India. Under sub-section (2), a

sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in the course of the

import of the goods into the territory of India only if the sale or purchase either

occasions such import or is effected by a transfer of documents of title to the

goods before the goods have crossed the customs frontiers of India. In the

present case, we are only concerned with sub-section (2) of Section 5 relating

to the course of import and hence, may extract the relevant part of Section 5 of

the CST Act as under:-

“5. When is a sale or purchase of goods said to take place in

the course of import or export. —

 xxx. xxx xxx

(2) A sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take place in

the course of the import of the goods into the territory of India only

if the sale or purchase either occasions such import or is effected

by a transfer of documents of title to the goods before the goods

have crossed the customs frontiers of India.

xxx xxx xxx”

20.4. The definition/meaning of the expressions “crossing the customs

frontiers of India” and “sale”, as occurring at the relevant time in Clauses (ab)

and (g) of Section 2 of the CST Act may also be usefully noticed as under13:-

“(ab) “crossing the customs frontiers of India” means crossing in

the limits of the area of a customs station in which imported goods

or export goods are ordinarily kept before clearance by customs

authorities.

13 At the relevant time, the expression goods was defined in the CST Act in Section 2(d) as under:-

“(d) “goods” includes all materials, articles, commodities and all other kinds of movable

property, but does not include newspapers actionable claims, stocks, shares and

securities.”

Indisputably, the goods in question were covered in the said definition.

41

Explanation.- For the purposes of this clause, "customs station"

and "customs authorities" shall have the same meanings as in

the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962);

(g) “sale”, with its grammatical variations and cognate

expressions, means any transfer of property in goods by one

person to another for cash or deferred payment or for any other

valuable consideration, and includes,—

(i) a transfer, otherwise than in pursuance of a contract, of property

in any goods for cash, deferred payment or other valuable

consideration;

(ii) a transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some

other form) involved in the execution of a works contract;

(iii) a delivery of goods on hire-purchase or any system of payment

by instalments;

(iv) a transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose

(whether or not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment

or other valuable consideration;

(v) a supply of goods by any unincorporated association or body of

persons to a member thereof for cash, deferred payment or other

valuable consideration; (vi) a supply, by way of or as part of any

service or in any other manner whatsoever, of goods, being food

or any other article for human consumption or any drink (whether

or not intoxicating), where such supply or service, is for cash,

deferred payment or other valuable consideration, but does not

include a mortgage or hypothecation of or a charge or pledge on

goods;”

20.5. The expression “crossing the customs frontiers of India” refers to

“customs port” and “customs station”, as defined in the Customs Act. Hence,

we may usefully refer to the relevant definitions in Clauses (11), (12), (13) and

(29) of Section 2 of the Customs Act, as applicable at the relevant time, as

under:-

“(11) “customs area” means the area of a customs station14 and

includes any area in which imported goods or export goods are

ordinarily kept before clearance by Customs Authorities;

(12) “customs port” means any port appointed under clause (a) of

section 7 to be a customs port and includes a place appointed

under clause (aa) of that section to be an inland container depot;

(13) "customs station" means any customs port, customs airport15

or land customs station;

14 The words “or a warehouse” inserted at this place by Act 18 of 2017

15 The words “customs airport, international courier terminal, foreign post office” substituted in place

of “customs airport” at this place by Act 7 of 2017

42

(29) "land customs station" means any place appointed under

clause (b) of section 7 to be a land customs station;”

20.6. Having regard to the submissions made and the questions raised, we

may also take note of the definition of the expression “document of title to

goods” in Section 2(4) of the Sale of Goods Act as under:-

“(4) “document of title to goods” includes a bill of lading, dockwarrant, warehouse keeper’s certificate, wharfingers’ certificate,

railway receipt, multimodal transport document, warrant or order

for the delivery of goods and any other document used in the

ordinary course of business as proof of the possession or control

of goods, or authorizing or purporting to authorise, either by

endorsement or by delivery, the possessor of the document to

transfer or receive goods thereby represented;”

21. The meaning, connotation, effect and operation of the said provisions

related with ‘sale in the course of import’ had come up for consideration in

several decisions of this Court and had been the subject matter of adjudication

in variegated factual setups concerning the transactions and the dealings of

the parties involved. Before entering into all the necessary niceties, we may

usefully notice that the phrase ‘sale in the course of import’ carries three

essential features - (i) that there must be a sale; (ii) that goods must actually

be imported into the territory of India; and (iii) that the sale must be part and

parcel of the import. A sale would become part and parcel of import if it either

occasions such import or if it occurs by way of a transfer of document of title to

the goods before the goods cross the customs frontiers of India.

22. Having taken note of the essential features of the phrase ‘sale in the

course of import’, we may now refer to the cited decisions, to find the

expositions therein and examine their applicability to the present case.

43

22.1. In the Constitution Bench decision of this Court in the case of J. V.

Gokal & Co. (supra), the petitioner company entered into two contracts on

24.03.1954 and 15.04.1954 with Government of India for selling two

consignments of sugar - One of 9,500 long tons of Peruvian origin and the

other of 25,000 metric tons of continental origin. The petitioner placed orders

with dealers in foreign countries. Some weeks before the vessel carrying the

goods in question arrived at the Bombay harbour i.e., when the vessels were

on the high seas, the Government of India received the documents of title,

including bills of lading, pertaining to the sugar purchased by them and paid

the price to the petitioner. After the goods reached the port, they were

unloaded, taken delivery of, and cleared by the Government of India after

paying the requisite customs duties. For the assessment year 1954-55, the

petitioner was assessed to sales tax where the Sales Tax Officer deducted the

price of the said two sales from the petitioner’s turnover. However, on

31.01.1958, the Assistant Collector of Sales Tax issued notice to the petitioner,

proposing to review the said assessment. The petitioner filed its objections

contending, inter alia, that the sales had taken place in the course of import

and therefore they were not liable to sales tax. The first respondent rejected

the contentions of the petitioner and held that sales tax was payable in respect

of said two transactions. The petitioner questioned the demand notice

consequently issued against it by way of the petition in this Court. It was

contented, inter alia, that the sales in question were not liable to sales tax

inasmuch as they took place in course of import of the goods into the territory

44

of India. This Court examined the questions as to what does the phrase "in the

course of the import of the goods into the territory of India" convey and when

could it be said that a sale has taken place in the course of import journey.

This Court referred to various decisions including the opinions expressed in

the case of Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut Factory (supra) and said as

under:-

“9……We respectfully agree with the aforesaid observations of

the learned Judges. The course of the import of the goods may be

said to begin when the goods enter their import journey i.e. when

they cross the customs barrier of the foreign country and end

when they cross the customs barrier of the importing country.

10. The next question is, when can it be said that a sale takes

place in the course of import journey? This Court in State of

Travancore-Cochin v. The Bombay Co. Ltd., held that a sale which

occasioned the export was a sale that took place in the course of

export of the goods. If A, a merchant in India, sells his goods to a

merchant in London and puts through the transaction by

transporting the goods by a ship to London, the said sale which

occasioned the export is exempted under Art. 286(1)(b) of the

Constitution from the levy of sales-tax. The same principle applies

to a converse case of goods which occasioned the import of the

goods into India. This Court again in State of Travancore-Cochhin

and Ors. v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashewnut Factory extended the

doctrine to a case of sale or a purchase of goods effected within

the State by transfer of shipping documents while the goods were

in the course of transit. The decision dealt with three types of

purchases viz. (i) purchases made in the local marker; (ii)

purchases made in the neighbouring districts of an adjacent State;

and (iii) imports from Africa. The imports from Africa consisted of

two groups - one group consisted of goods that were purchased

when they were on the high seas and shipped from the African

ports to Cochin or Quilon: we are not concerned with the other

group. In the said case some commission agents at Bombay

arranged for the purchase on behalf of the assessee, got delivery

of the shipping documents at Bombay through a bank which

advanced money against the shipping documents and collected

the same from the assesses at destination. This Court, by a

majority, held that, in respect of the purchases falling under the

45

first group of imports, the commission agents acted merely as

agents of the respondents therein and that the said purchases

occasioned the import and therefore came within the exemption.

That was not a case where the goods were sold by an importer in

India to a third party when the goods were on the high seas. It was

a case where a party in Cochin purchased goods which were on

the high seas through his agent at Bombay and the agent paid the

price through a bank against the shipping documents. But the

learned Judge, Patanjali Sastri, C.J., expressing the majority view,

considered the scope of the exemption in all its aspects and

summarized the conclusions thus p. 69 :

"Our conclusion may be summed up as follows: (1)

Sales by export and purchases by import fall within the

exemption under article 286(1)(b) ...... (2) Purchases in

the State by the exporter for the purpose of export as

well as sales in the State by the importer after the

goods have crossed the customs barrier are not within

the exemption. (3) Sales in the State by the exporter or

importer by transfer of shipping documents while the

goods are beyond the customs barrier are within the

exemption, assuming that the State power of taxation

extends to such transactions."

Das, J., as he then was, in his dissenting judgment, agreed with

Patanjali Sastri, C.J., on the third conclusion with which we are

now concerned. The learned Judge put forward his view at p. 94

thus:

"Such sales or purchases, by delivery of shipping

documents while the goods are on the high seas on

their import journey were and are well recognised

species of transactions done every day on a large scale

in big commercial towns like Bombay and Calcutta and

are indeed the necessary and concomitant incidents of

foreign trade. To hold that these sales or purchases do

not take place ‘in the course of’ import or export but are

to be regarded as purely ordinary local or home

transactions distinct from foreign trade, is to ignore the

realities of the situation. Such a construction will permit

the imposition of tax by a State over and above the

customs duty or export duty levied by Parliament. Such

double taxation on the same lot of goods will increase

the price of the goods and, in the case of export, may

prevent the exporters from competing in the world

market and, in the case of import, will put a greater

burden on the consumers. This will eventually hamper

46

and prejudicially affect our foreign trade and will bring

about precisely that calamity which it is the intention

and purpose of our Constitution to prevent."

The learned Judge also in his judgment elaborately considered

the great hardship that would be caused to an Indian importer if he

was not permitted to sell the goods which were on the high seas

by delivery of shipping documents against payment. Though that

case dealt with a different situation, we agree with the learned

Judge's observations that an importer can, if he receives the

shipping documents, transfer the property in the goods when they

are on the high seas to a third party by delivering to him shipping

documents against payment and such a sale is one made in the

course of import.”

22.1.1. The Court thereafter proceeded to summarize the legal position in

respect of import sale in the following words:-

“11. The legal position vis-a-vis the import-sale can be

summarized thus; (1) The course of import of goods starts at a

point when the goods cross the customs barrier of the foreign

country and ends at a point in the importing country after the

goods cross the customs barrier; (2) the sale which occasions the

import is a sale in the course of import; (3) a purchase by an

importer of goods when they are on the high seas by payment

against shipping documents is also a purchase in the course of

import, and (4) a sale by an importer of goods, after the property in

the goods passed to him either after the receipt of the documents

of title against payment or otherwise, to a third party by a similar

process is also a sale in the course of import.”

22.1.2. Having expounded on the legal position, the Court examined the facts

of the case and held that the case fell under the fourth principle aforesaid

when the petitioner, pursuant to the earlier contract with the Government,

delivered the shipping documents including the bill of lading to the

Government against payment when the goods were on high seas. Hence, it

was held that the sales in question took place in the course of imports of

goods into India. The Court also scrutinized the terms of contract to ascertain

whether they disclosed any intention of the parties that notwithstanding the

delivery of bills of lading against payment, the property in the goods should not

47

pass to the Government and held, after scrutiny of all the terms of contract that

they did not indicate any such intention. Though the scrutiny and analysis of

the terms of contract relates to the facts of that case only but worthwhile it

would be to reproduce the same to indicate that ultimately, on the facts, the

Court found that the sale took place in the course of import. The Court

analysed and held as follows:-

“13. Let us now scrutinize the terms of the contract to ascertain

whether they disclose any intention of the parties that

notwithstanding the delivery of the bill of lading against payment

the property in the goods should not pass to the Government. The

circumstances under which the contracts were entered into

between the parties indicate that both the parties were interested

to see that property in the goods passed in the ordinary way when

the shipping documents were handed over to the Government

against payment. The sellers had to meet their liability to the

foreign companies with whom they opened letters of credit and the

Government must have been anxious to get the title to the goods

so that the sellers might not divert the goods towards their other

commitments or to other buyers for more tempting prices. Under

the contract every safeguard for securing the goods of agreed

specifications was provided for in the earlier clauses and therefore

there was no reason for postponing the passing of the property in

the goods to the buyer till the goods were actually delivered in the

port. The sellers on their side would have been anxious that the

property should pass when the goods were on the high seas, for

otherwise they would be compelled to pay sales-tax. Nor are the

clauses of the contracts relied upon by the respondents

inconsistent with the property in the goods passing in accordance

with the mercantile usage. ……….

14. Apart from the terms of the contract, reliance is also placed

by the learned counsel for the respondents on the following

circumstances: (i) the seller himself chartered the ship; and (ii) the

licence issued by the Government was made non-transferable. We

do not see how these two facts indicate the contrary intention. If

the seller himself chartered a steamer, when the goods he

purchased were loaded in the ship, the property in the goods

passed to him and therefore he was in a position to sell the same

to the Government. The fact that the licence was non-transferable

48

has no relation to the property in the goods passing to the

Government. ……….

15. For all the foregoing reasons we hold that the property in

the goods passed to the Government of India when the shipping

documents were delivered to them against payment. It follows that

the sale of the goods by the petitioner to the Government of India

took place when the goods were on the high seas.

16. That being so, the sales in question must be held to have

taken place in the course of the import into India and therefore

they would be exempted from sales tax under Art. 286(1)(b) of the

Constitution.”

22.2. It does not appear necessary to dilate further on the decision in the

case of Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut Factory (supra) which had been, as

noticed, considered in detail in the case of J.V. Gokal & Co. (supra). However,

another decision cited on behalf of the appellant and relating to multiple

transactions involving import, being the Orissa case of Minerals & Metals

(supra), need to be noticed. The fact situation in that case had been that the

appellant, a Government of India undertaking, was functioning as a canalising

agent for import and export of minerals and metals. On 31.03.1991, Steel

Authority of India Limited (SAIL) requested appellant to register import of

15,000 MT of tin mill black plate coils. On 14.07.1991, SAIL opened a letter of

credit directly in favour of the exporter, M/s. Samsung Co. Ltd., Seoul, South

Korea. The consignee therein was shown as SAIL. On 02.08.1991, the

appellant placed a purchase order with the exporter for and on behalf of SAIL.

On 16.08.1991, the appellant wrote to SAIL enclosing a copy of its purchase

order and stating that they shall arrange delivery on high seas by endorsement

and transfer of shipping documents after the documents have been paid by the

banker. On 23.10.1991, the appellant sent to SAIL its invoice, adjusting the

49

amount that had already been paid by SAIL through its bankers. On

28.10.1991, the appellant wrote to SAIL that it had decided to make a high

seas sale of the said coils to SAIL. Accordingly, the documents, including the

original bill of lading, with due endorsement, were sent to SAIL to get the said

coils cleared. On the same day, the appellant wrote to Assistant Collector of

Customs, Paradeep Port, Cuttack that the said coils had been imported by the

appellant and had been sold to SAIL on high seas basis and SAIL would

process the bill of entry and pay the customs duty. The vessel arrived at

Paradeep Port on 11.11.1991. Then, on 18.11.1991, the bill of entry in respect

of the said coils was submitted and processed by SAIL. However, on

31.12.1994, the Sales Tax Officer levied sales tax on the aforesaid sale while

rejecting the case of the appellant that no sales tax was payable, this being a

sale in the course of import covered by Section 5(2) of the Central Sales Tax

Act, 1956. The Sales Tax Officer held that there had been two sales, one

between the exporter and the appellant and the other between the appellant

and SAIL; and that the sale to SAIL had not occasioned the import. There had

been another sale made by the appellant to Paradeep Phosphates Ltd., the

facts whereof were similar. The appellant’s challenge to the levy of sales tax

on the aforesaid sales failed in the High Court and hence, the matter was

before this Court.

22.2.1. After taking note of the relevant constitutional and statutory provisions

as also the decision in J.V. Gokal & Co. (supra), this Court said thus:-

“The judgment states that it is well settled in the commercial

world that a bill of lading represents the goods and the transfer of

50

it operates as the transfer of goods. The delivery of the bill of

lading while the goods are afloat is equivalent to the delivery of the

goods themselves.”

22.2.2. The Court examined the facts of the case and held the sales in

question to be those in the course of import in the following words:-

“9. The facts aforestated, based upon documents, show that

the bill of lading had been endorsed in favour of SAIL while the

consignment of the said coils was still upon the high seas. The

sale, therefore, was a sale in the course of the import of the said

coils into the territory of India; it was effected by transfer of the

documents to the said coils before they had crossed the limits of

the customs station at Paradeep Port. The position would be the

same in respect of the goods sold to Paradeep Phosphates Ltd.”

22.3. The appellants have cited the decision in the case of Embee

Corporation (supra) to submit that the terms ‘sale occasioning movement of

goods’ and ‘sale occasioning import of goods’ in Sections 3 and 5 of the CST

Act carry the same meaning; and that the use of words “sale of goods” in

Section 3 of the CST Act and the words “contract of sale” in Section 4(2) of the

Sales Tax Act were assigned the same meaning, which is much wider than the

meaning of sale in general law. In the said case, this Court examined the

definition of sale as existing at the relevant time in Section 2(g) of the CST Act

and held as under:-

“6. On perusal of the aforesaid provisions of the Act, the

question that arises for consideration herein is, what meaning

should be given to the expression "sale occasions import". It is

almost settled by numerous decisions of the Supreme Court that

the expression "sale occasions import" is to be interpreted in the

same manner in which the expression "occasions the movement

of goods" occurring in Section 3(a) of the Act has received

interpretation. In other words, the expression "sale occasions

import" has to be given the same meaning which the expression

"occasions the movement of goods" has received by the Courts. In

51

the light of aforesaid settled legal position emerging from the

Constitution Bench decisions, we will now examine the meaning of

"sale" as defined in the Act. Section 2(g) of the Act defines "sale"

thus:

2(g) ‘sale’, with its grammatical variations and cognate

expressions, means any transfer of property in goods

by one person to another for cash or for deferred

payment or for any other valuable consideration, and

includes a transfer of goods on the hire-purchase or

other system of payment by installments, but does not

include a mortgage or hypothecation of or a charge or

pledge on goods;

7. The above definition of "sale" in the Act shows that the word

"sale" has been given a very wide meaning so as to include not

only the sale of goods, but also the transactions, namely, a

transfer of goods on hire-purchase system. Further, the use of

words "sale of goods" in Section 3 of the Act and the words

"contract of sale" occurring in Section 4(2) of the Act have been

assigned the same meaning which is wider than the meaning of

sale in the general law. In such a situation the word "sale" defined

in Section 2(g) of the Act and employed in Section 3 and other

sections of the Act would embrace not only completed contract,

but also the contract of sale or agreement of sale if such contract

of sale or agreement of sale provides for movement of goods or

movement of goods is incident of the contract of sale. This matter

may be examined from another angle. An agreement to transfer

goods to the buyer for a price is an important element of sale and

the same is also borne out from Section 4 of Sale of Goods Act. If

Section 4 of the Sale of Goods Act is read along with Sections 3

and 4 of the Act, it would mean an agreement to sell would also be

a sale within the meaning of sale provided such agreement of sale

stipulates for transfer or movement of goods or movement of

goods is incident of the contract of sale and in that case, such

movement of goods would be deemed to be occasioned by the

sale. It is immaterial that actual sale does not take place at that

time of movement of goods and takes place later on. This

interpretation of Section 3(a) of the Act if applied to sub-section (2)

of Section 5 of the Act, would mean that if an agreement for sale

stipulates import of goods or import of goods is incident of contract

of sale and goods have entered the import stream, such import

would fall within the expression "sale occasions import". In the

present case, the import of Carbamite is direct result of the

contract of sale and as such it can be safely held in the present

case that sale has occasioned the import.”

52

22.3.1. In the said case of Embee Corporation, the respondent/assessee,

who was engaged in the business of buying and selling chemical, replied to

the invitation of tender of Director General of Supplies and Disposal (DGS&D)

for the supply of Carbamite. The tender of the respondent was accepted by

DGS&D with a few conditions including the one that the contracted material

shall be inspected by the Chief Inspector, C.I.M.E., Kirkee, Pune at Bombay

Port and the General Manager, Cordite Factory, Aruvankadu was mentioned

as the indentor. The respondent mentioned the name of the supplier from

Germany from whom the materials were to be imported and for which, import

recommendation certificate was required. The required import

recommendation certificate was issued whereupon the authority concerned

issued the requisite licence with the condition, inter alia, that the goods

imported shall be utilised in the manner stipulated in DGS&D’s letter and the

imported materials shall not be utilised or disposed of in any other manner.

The DGS&D also furnished the necessary end-use certificate. In the bill of

lading, the name of respondent was shown as a party to be notified and the

General Manager, Cordite Factory Aruvankadu was described as the

consignee of Carbamite. After the consignment arrived, the same was

forwarded to the consignee so named in the contract. Once the goods were

supplied to DGS&D, the respondent claimed exemption from levy of sales tax

on the ground that the supply under the contract was a sale in the course of

import of goods into India. The plea of the respondent was rejected by the

department and the Tribunal. The High Court, however, held that there were

53

two sales: One between the respondent and DGS&D and the other between

the foreign supplier and the respondent; and that the sale had occasioned the

import of material, liable for exemption from sales tax under the CST Act. In

the appeal, this Court while dismissing the appeal of the State, was of the view

that while interpreting the expression “sale occasions import” occurring in

Section 5(2) of the Act, it was not necessary that a completed sale should

precede the import.

22.4. In the case of Tata Iron and Steel Co. (supra), the petitioner was

engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling iron and steel goods and

had its factory at Jamshedpur in the State of Bihar and Head Sales office at

Calcutta in the State of West Bengal. The petitioner was registered as dealer

under the Bihar Sales Tax Act as also under the Central Sales Tax Act in the

State of West Bengal. For the period of assessment 01.07.1957 to 31.03.1958,

the petitioner submitted its return of taxable sales to the Commercial Tax

Officer, Lyons Range, Calcutta, disclosing the gross taxable turnover in

respect of sales liable to Central Sales Tax in the State of West Bengal. The

said Commercial Tax Officer directed the petitioner to submit a statement of

sales from Jamshedpur for the period under assessment, “documents relating

to which were transferred in West Bengal or of any other sales that may have

taken place in West Bengal under Section 3(b) of the Central Sales Tax Act,

1956”. The petitioner, by its letter dated 30.09.1959, informed the Tax Officer

that the requisition for production of statement of sales made from

Jamshedpur in the course of inter-State trade or commerce was without

jurisdiction while contending that “all the sales from Jamshedpur were of the

54

type mentioned in Section 3(a) of the Central Sales Tax Act and at the same

time, some of them also fell within the category mentioned in Section 3(b) of

the Act”; that even if the sales were “of the type mentioned in Section 3(b) of

the Act, the appropriate State of the place where the sales take place or are

effected alone had jurisdiction to assess such sales to Central sales tax”; and

that in respect of inter-State sales from Jamshedpur, the situs of the sale was

always the State of Bihar as the goods were in Bihar either at the time of the

contract of sale or at the time of appropriation to the contract. However, the

Tax Officer proceeded to make ‘best judgment assessment’ on a gross

turnover while including the disputed sales too which were accounted for in the

return filed with the Sales Tax Officer, Jamshedpur. Hence, in the said case,

the petitioner Company felt aggrieved of the proposition of the Tax Officer at

Calcutta to recover Central Sales Tax in respect of the sales which were

included in the assessment proceedings before the Bihar Sales Tax

Authorities. In the given backdrop, this Court expounded on the scope of

Section 3 of the CST Act, inter alia, in the following:-

“18. In our view, therefore, within clause (b) of section 3 are

included sales in which property in the goods passes during the

movement of the goods from one State to another by transfer of

documents of title thereto: clause (a) of Section 3 covers sales,

other than those included in clause (b), in which the movement of

goods from one State to another is the result of a covenant or

incident of the contract of sale, and property in the goods passes

in either State”

This Court pointed out the error on the part of the Tax Officer at Calcutta

and held as under:-

55

“30. The Commercial Tax Officer has taxed all the sales effected

by the company under Section 3, clause (b), on the view that sales

in which the documents of title were handed over in Calcutta were

taxable in the State of West Bengal. The assessment is made on

two assumptions, (1) that all the sales effected in favour of West

Bengal parties satisfied the conditions prescribed by Section 3(b),

and (2) that the place where the documents are delivered by the

company through its Head Sales Office to the purchaser is the

place where the sale is effected. Neither of these assumptions is

correct. The Commercial Tax Officer had, in our judgment, to

ascertain before he could order payment of tax under the Central

Sales Tax Act, whether on the materials he was satisfied, (a) that

the goods at the time of transfer of documents of title were in

movement from the State of Bihar to the State of West Bengal, (b)

that the place where the sale was effected was under Section 4,

clause (2), within the State of West Bengal. The Commercial Tax

Officer has, in our view, failed to apply the correct tests and has

made assumptions which are not warranted and on a true

interpretation of the provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act, the

order of assessment discloses an error apparent on its face and a

writ of certiorari must issue quashing the assessment. It will be for

the Commercial Tax Officer of West Bengal to re-assess the

company in respect of transactions of sale which are properly

taxable within the State of West Bengal by the application of the

test which we have already set out.”

22.5. Learned counsel for the appellant has also attempted to rely upon the

decision in the case of Hotel Ashoka (supra) which was rendered in the fact

situation where the goods were kept in the bonded warehouse and were made

available in the duty-free shops for sale. This Court opined that since the

goods were supplied to the duty-free shops situated at the International

Airport, Bengaluru for sale, it cannot be said that the said goods had crossed

the customs frontiers of India. The Court finally answered the claim of the

appellants therein on the finding that the liquor, cigarettes, perfumes and food

articles were sold "at the duty-free shops" at the International Airport,

Bengaluru, for which no tax was payable by the appellants as the goods sold

at the duty-free shops were sold directly to the passengers and even the

56

delivery of goods took place at the duty-free shops before importing the goods

or before the goods had crossed the customs frontiers of India. The issue

considered in the said decision, therefore, was as to whether the sale at the

duty-free shops situated at the Bengaluru International Airport would attract

levy of sales tax.

23. Before proceeding further, we may cull out the relevant attributes of the

decisions aforesaid vis-à-vis the questions involved in the present case.

23.1. The basic question in the case of Hotel Ashoka (supra) was as to

whether the sales at duty-free shops would attract levy of sales tax. As noticed

earlier, the definition of "customs station" clearly refers to customs airport as

defined in Section 2(10) of the Customs Act. As the duty-free shop is situated

in airport area, the sale of goods at the duty-free shop was deemed to have

taken place in the course of import of the goods into the territory of India and

before the goods crossing customs frontiers of India. In the present case, the

appellant alleges that the sale took place on high seas before goods had

crossed customs frontiers of India, whereas the department contends that the

sale in question took place after the appellant had filed the bill of entry for

home consumption and the goods were taken out of the bonded warehouse. It

is but apparent that the decision in Hotel Ashoka (supra), relating to the sale

of goods at duty-free shops, has no relevance whatsoever to the present case.

The decision in Tata Iron and Steel Co. (supra) also related to an entirely

different factual set up and the question involved therein was also different.

The said case related to the movement of goods from one State to another on

57

the sale made by the petitioner-company having its works in the State of Bihar

and having sales office at Calcutta in the State of West Bengal. What was

sought to be taxed in the State of West Bengal were the sales in which the

documents of title were handed over in that State on the assumption that the

sales effected in favour of West Bengal parties satisfied the conditions

prescribed by Section 3(b) of CST Act; and that the place where the

documents were delivered by the company to the purchaser was the place

where the sale was effected. The enunciations in the said case as regards the

operation of Section 3 of CST Act do not call for any debate but they hardly

provide any guide for determination of the real questions involved in the

present matter. Similarly, the observations in Embee Corporation (supra) to

the effect that “sale occasioning movement of goods” and “sale occasioning

import of goods” respectively in Section 3 and Section 5 of CST Act carry the

same meaning are not of much dispute. The other observations, that for

interpreting the expression “sale occasions import” occurring in Section 5(2) of

the Act, it is not necessary that a completed sale should precede the import,

shall have their implication only when the nature of dealings of the parties in

the transactions in question and the effect of movement of goods are

examined.

23.2. This takes us to the decisions of this Court in Minerals & Metals

(Orissa case) and in J. V. Gokal & Co. (supra).

23.2.1. As noticed, in the case of Minerals & Metals (Orissa case), the

appellant, a Government of India undertaking, had been functioning as

58

canalising agent for import and export of minerals. It was in such a capacity

that the appellant was requested by SAIL to ensure import of the goods in

question and the appellant took up the proceedings accordingly. The dealings

of the parties made it clear that the appellant had sold the goods to SAIL on

high seas by endorsement on the bill of lading. The fact was duly

communicated to the port authorities too. Significantly, when the vessel arrived

at the port of destination, the bill of entry in respect of the goods was submitted

and processed by SAIL, the end-buyer. This Court specifically found that bill of

lading had been endorsed in favour of SAIL while the consignment of goods

was still upon the high seas. It had been, on such findings of fact, that the sale

in question was held to be a sale in the course of import and having been

effected by transfer of goods (bill of lading) before they had crossed the limits

of customs frontiers of India.

23.2.2. The law declared in J. V. Gokal & Co. (supra) that bill of lading

represents the goods and its transfer operates as transfer of goods; and

delivery of bill of lading while the goods are afloat is equivalent to the delivery

of goods (as duly applied by this Court in Minerals & Metals) is neither of any

doubt nor could be a matter of debate. However, in the said case of J. V.

Gokal & Co. too, on facts, it was found by the Court that the petitioner,

pursuant to the earlier contract with the Government, delivered the shipping

documents including the bill of lading to the Government against payment

when the goods were on high seas. It was also noticed that after the goods

reached the port, they were unloaded, taken delivery of, and cleared by the

59

Government (the end-buyer) after paying the requisite customs duties.

Significantly, in J. V. Gokal & Co., the Constitution Bench went on to scrutinize

the terms of contract to ascertain whether they disclosed any intention of the

parties that notwithstanding delivery of bill of lading against payment, the

property in goods should not pass and then, the Court found no such intention

being indicated. It was only after such finding on facts the Court held that the

sale of goods by the petitioner to the Government took place when the goods

were on the high seas and hence, the sales took place in the course of import

into India.

23.2.3. Noteworthy common features in the decisions of this Court in J. V.

Gokal & Co. and Orissa case of Minerals & Metals (supra) had been that

pursuant to a previous contract with the end-buyer, the seller concerned

arranged for importation of goods; and transferred the property in goods in

favour of the end-buyer by endorsement of bill of lading when the goods were

on high seas. Coupled with these, another common feature had been that in

both those cases, the goods in question, upon reaching the port of destination,

were taken delivery of, and cleared by the end-buyer after paying the requisite

customs duties. Those had not been the cases like the present one where the

seller purportedly acted as an intermediary and even after alleged transfer of

bill of lading when the goods were on high seas, filed the bill of entry for home

consumption at the port of destination and got the goods cleared from the

customs.

60

24. Apart from the decisions so cited, for taking into comprehension the

nuances of ‘sale in the course of import’ with involvement of an intermediary,

we may take note of the case of K. Gopinathan Nair and Ors. v. State of

Kerala: (1997) 10 SSC 1 wherein, after a detailed reference to various

Constitution Bench decisions, this Court has expounded on the factors to be

reckoned for determining as to whether a particular sale or purchase could be

deemed to have taken place in the course of import. We may point out that the

decision in this case of K. Gopinathan Nair had been by a 3-Judge Bench of

this Court where the learned Judges differed in their views on the question as

to whether the transactions in question were in the course of import and,

therefore, immune under Section 5(2) of the CST Act. We shall refer to this

decision and implication of different views therein over the factual setup of the

present case in the later part of this judgment. At present, we may reproduce

the relevant part of the decision of majority, delineating the basic factors which

are germane to determination of the question as to whether a particular sale

had been in the course of import or not, as under:-

“14. In the light of the aforesaid settled legal position emerging

from the Constitution Bench decisions of this Court the following

propositions clearly get projected for deciding whether the

concerned sale or purchase of goods can be deemed to take

place in the course of import as laid down by Section 5(2) of the

Central Sales Tax Act:

(1) The sale or the purchase, as the case may be, must actually

take place.

(2) Such sale or purchase in India must itself occasion such

import, and not vice versa i.e. import should not occasion such

sale.

(3) The goods must have entered the import stream when they are

subjected to sale or purchase.

61

(4) The import of the goods concerned must be effected as a

direct result of the sale or purchase transaction concerned.

(5) The course of import can be taken to have continued till the

imported goods reach the local users only if the import has

commenced through the agreement between foreign exporter and

an intermediary who does not act on his own in the transaction

with the foreign exporter and who in his turn does not sell as

principal the imported goods to the local users.

(6) There must be either a single sale which itself causes the

import or is in the progress or process of import or though there

may appear to be two sale transactions they are so integrally

interconnected that they almost resemble one transaction so that

the movement of goods from a foreign country to India can be

ascribed to such a composite well-integrated transaction

consisting of two transactions dovetailing into each other.

(7) A sale or purchase can be treated to be in the course of import

if there is a direct privity of contract between the Indian importer

and the foreign exporter and the intermediary through which such

import is effected merely acts as an agent or a contractor for and

on behalf of the Indian importer.

(8) The transaction in substance must be such that the canalizing

agency or the intermediary agency through which the imports are

effected into India so as to reach the ultimate local users appears

only as a mere name lender through whom it is the local importercum-local user who masquerades.”

25. The principles aforesaid would obviously apply to the present case;

and if the factors so indicated are answered in favour of the appellant, it could

be treated to be a matter of sale in the course of import.

26. In order to bring the case within the four-corners of the factors

aforesaid, the appellant has suggested existence of quadripartite agreement

whereby and whereunder, the supplier (party number 1) sold the goods in

question to the first-buyer (party number 2) and delivered them at the port of

shipment. Thereafter, while the goods were on high seas, party number 2

transferred them to the appellant (invariably party number 3 in these

transactions), by endorsing the bill of lading in favour of the appellant. Further

62

to this and while the goods were yet on high seas, the appellant allegedly

transferred them to the end-buyer (party number 4) by endorsing the bill of

lading in favour of the end-buyer. The appellant has also suggested that

though the goods were being purchased by the end-buyer and were to move

only after inspection and selection by the end-buyer but the methodology of

such quadripartite agreement was adopted because of the reasons that the

end-buyer was not having ‘the requisite infrastructure’ to undertake importation

of goods whereas the appellant was having the requisite infrastructure for

importation and the first-buyer was having the credit facility with the seller. It

has, therefore, been suggested that there was always a privity of contract

between the seller and the end-buyer; and that the appellant was to act as an

agent of the end-buyer and to clear the goods from customs authorities. The

appellant has also suggested that in each of the transactions, the process was

carried out as envisaged in the quadripartite agreement and in the manner that

the first-buyer endorsed the bill of lading in favour of the appellant when the

goods were on high seas; and while the goods continued to be on high seas

and had not crossed the customs frontiers of India, the appellant endorsed the

bill of lading in favour of the end-buyer. According to these suggestions, the

appellant only acted as an agent of the end-buyer while getting the goods

cleared from the customs port at Visakhapatnam.

26.1. However, the suggestions by the appellant do not remain as innocuous

and over-simplified as projected, for the reason that in each of these

transactions, when the goods in question reached the port at Visakhapatnam,

63

the appellant carried out the proceedings envisaged by the Customs Act and

filed a bill of entry for warehousing and thereafter, filed another bill of entry for

home consumption (ex-bond); and on the basis of such bills of entry, the

appellant was duly assessed for customs duty. Admittedly, after the goods

were cleared for home consumption, they moved from the State of Andhra

Pradesh to different States where the respective end-buyers were situated;

and the appellant raised debit notes on the end-buyers. In these transactions,

the goods in question, upon reaching the port of destination, were not cleared

by the end-buyers after paying the requisite customs duties, as had been the

fact situation in the case of J. V. Gokal & Co. as also in Orissa case of

Minerals & Metals (supra). While examining the question pertinent if the

appellant acted merely as an intermediary or name-lender through whom the

import was effected and merely acted as an agent for and on behalf of the

Indian importer that is, the end-buyer, the significant facts of the present case

cannot be overlooked that in relation to the goods in question, only the

appellant filed the bill of entry for warehousing as also the bill of entry for home

consumption and was assessed to customs duty and further that before the

customs authorities, there was no suggestion that the goods in question had

already been transferred, on high seas, to the alleged real importer. Obviously,

on the facts of the present case, the effect of dealings of the appellant before

the customs authorities at Visakhapatnam with filing the bill of entry for home

consumption need to be examined.

Filing of bill of entry for home consumption by the appellant: Implication

64

27. As noticed, the High Court examined the contention of the appellant

that while filing the bills of entry, the appellant had acted merely as an agent of

the end-buyers and rejected the same, with reference to the contents of the

bills of entry where the name of appellant was shown as the importer and

there was no reference to the end-buyers; as also with reference to the facts

that the appellant alone was the importer who filed the bills of entry for home

consumption and was assessed to the customs duty and that the IGM did not

contain the name of end-buyers.

27.1. The High Court has observed that the inclusive definition of “importer”

in Section 2(26) of the Customs Act cannot be used to usurp the identity of an

importer from the person who filed the bill of entry; and the person in whose

name the bill of entry is filed, does not cease to be an importer. In this case,

the name of the appellant was reflected as importer in the Import General

Manifest of the vessel/s that brought the goods in question to the port at

Visakhapatnam. The High Court has meticulously examined the entire process

relating to the arrival of goods as cargo in a vessel; and filing of IGM as also

the contents of the bill of entry and has pointed out that the cargo declaration

form, an essential part of IGM, was required to carry, amongst others, the

particulars of bill of lading and the name of consignee/importer. After finding

that the name of the appellant was reflected as importer in IGM, the High

Court has observed that if the alleged second high seas sale had taken place,

the IGM would have reflected the name of the last high seas sale purchaser as

the importer and if there was any bonafide omission, the IGM would have

65

necessitated amendment because only the last purchaser of the goods on

high seas could have been the importer/consignee. The High Court has also

observed that there was no material on record to show that either the IGM

contained the name of end-buyer as the importer/consignee or that the same

was subsequently amended in terms of Section 30(3) of the Customs Act.

These had been the pivotal reasons for which the High Court rejected the

suggestion of second high seas sales in favour of the end-buyers and held that

the only attempt of the appellant had been to avoid inter-State sales under the

CST Act. In the given facts, the High Court specifically recorded the findings

that the sale of goods by appellant to the end-buyers had not been high seas

sales; and such sales could have been effected only after the appellant was

assessed to customs duty and had cleared the goods for home consumption.

28. To get over the aforesaid findings of the High Court, learned counsel

for the appellant has argued, with strong reliance on the decision of this Court

in the case of Sampat Raj Dugar (supra), that the definition of importer in the

Customs Act only indicates the person who is in possession of goods at the

time of filing of bill of entry but does not indicate the title to the goods; and that

the questions as to when does the sale take place and who is the owner of

goods would be determined only under the Sale of Goods Act and not under

the Customs Act.

29. For dealing with this part of submissions, we may usefully take note of

the relevant definitions in Clauses (23), (24), (25) and (26) of Section 2 as also

66

the other provisions in Sections 30 and 47 (1) of the Customs Act, as

applicable and effective at the relevant point of time, as follows: -

“(23) “import”, with its grammatical variations and cognate

expressions, means bringing into India from a place outside India;

(24) "import manifest"16 or "import report" means the manifest or

report required to be delivered under section 30;

(25) “imported goods” means any goods brought into India from a

place outside India but does not include goods which have been

cleared for home consumption;

(26) “importer”, in relation to any goods at any time between their

importation and the time when they are cleared for home

consumption, includes any owner17 or any person holding himself

out to be the importer;

30. Delivery of import manifest or import report.-

(1) The person-in-charge of-

(i) a vessel; or

(ii) an aircraft; or

(iii) a vehicle,

carrying imported goods or any other person as may be specified

by the Central Government, by notification in the Official Gazette,

in this behalf shall, in the case of a vessel or an aircraft, deliver to

the proper officer an import manifest prior to arrival of the vessel or

the aircraft, as the case may be, and in the case of a vehicle, an

import report within twelve hours after its arrival in the customs

station, in the prescribed form and if the import manifest or the

import report or any part thereof, is not delivered to the proper

officer within the time specified in this sub-section and if the proper

officer is satisfied that there was no sufficient cause for such delay,

the person-in-charge or any other person referred to in this subsection, who caused such delay, shall be liable to a penalty not

exceeding fifty thousand rupees.

(2) The person delivering the import manifest or import report shall

at the foot thereof make and subscribe to a declaration as to the

truth of its contents.

16 The words “arrival manifest or import manifest” were substituted in place of the words “import

manifest” by Act 13 of 2018.

17 The words “any owner, beneficial owner” were substituted in place of the words “any owner” by Act

7 of 2017.

67

(3) If the proper officer is satisfied that the import manifest or

import report is in any way incorrect or incomplete, and that there

was no fraudulent intention, he may permit it to be amended or

supplemented.18

47. Clearance of goods for home consumption.- (1) Where the

proper officer is satisfied that any goods entered for home

consumption are not prohibited goods and the importer has paid

the import duty, if any, assessed thereon and any charges payable

under this Act in respect of the same, the proper officer may make

an order permitting clearance of the goods for home consumption:

xxx xxx xxx”19

30. It is but apparent that that while bringing anything into India from a

place outside India is generally regarded as “import” and the imported goods

are those goods which are brought into India from a place outside but, when

18 This Section 30 has undergone several amendments over the course of time. In its present form, it

reads as under:-

“30. Delivery of arrival manifest or import manifest or import report.-

(1) The person-in-charge of-

(i) a vessel; or

(ii) an aircraft; or

(iii) a vehicle,

carrying imported goods or export goods or any other person as may be specified

by the Central Government, by notification in the Official Gazette, in this behalf

shall, in the case of a vessel or an aircraft, deliver to the proper officer an arrival

manifest or import manifest by presenting electronically prior to the arrival of the

vessel or the aircraft, as the case may be, and in the case of a vehicle, an import

report within twelve hours after its arrival in the customs station, in such form and

manner as may be prescribed and if the arrival manifest or import manifest or the

import report or any part thereof, is not delivered to the proper officer within the

time specified in this sub-section and if the proper officer is satisfied that there was

no sufficient cause for such delay, the person-in-charge or any other person

referred to in this sub-section, who caused such delay, shall be liable to a penalty

not exceeding fifty thousand rupees:

Provided that the Principal Commissioner of Customs or Commissioner of

Customs may, in cases where it is not feasible to deliver arrival manifest or import

manifest by presenting electronically, allow the same to be delivered in any other

manner.

(2) The person delivering the arrival manifest or import manifest or import report

shall at the foot thereof make and subscribe to a declaration as to the truth of its

contents.

(3) If the proper officer is satisfied that the arrival manifest or import manifest or

import report is in any way incorrect or incomplete, and that there was no

fraudulent intention, he may permit it to be amended or supplemented.”

19 The provisos to sub-section (1) which came to be inserted and amended later on as also subsection (2) and its proviso, which were also amended several times are not reproduced for being not

directly relevant for the purpose of the present case.

68

the goods are cleared for home consumption, they are no longer imported

goods for the purpose of the Customs Act. Significantly, in the process of

importation, the importer, in relation to any goods, includes any owner or any

other person holding himself to be the importer but, only between the time of

their importation and their clearance for home consumption. In other words,

the net result of the expanded definition of the expression “importer” is that

while any person who imports goods into India would be an importer but, the

owner of the goods or a person holding himself to be an importer would also

be regarded as an importer during the period between importation of goods

and their clearance for home consumption. This crucial period would generally

be that period when the goods have been warehoused after importation and

are cleared from warehouse by a person other than the person who actually

imported the goods. That being the position, in our view, the High Court has

rightly said that this definition of importer cannot be used to usurp the identity

of an importer from the person who filed the bill of entry. In other words, the

person in whose name the bill of entry is filed does not cease to be an importer

and, if that person claims to be not the owner or importer, the ouns would be

heavy on him to establish that someone else is the owner or importer of

goods.

31. As noticed, on the connotation of the term “importer” for the purpose of

the Customs Act, learned counsel for the appellant has placed reliance upon

the decision in Sampat Raj Dugar (supra). We may examine the facts and the

ratio of the case of Sampat Raj Dugar, to appreciate the implication, if any, of

69

the observations occurring therein on the questions involved in the present

case.

31.1. In the case of Sampat Raj Dugar (supra), the relevant factual aspects

had been that the second respondent Ms. Renu Pahilaj was doing business at

Delhi in the name and style of "Acquarius." whereas the first respondent, an

Indian national resident abroad, was doing business at Hong Kong in the

name and style of UNISILK. The second respondent obtained an advance

import licence on 20.05.1985 for importing raw silk that was valid for 18

months. The import licence was granted subject to the condition that raw silk

imported should be utilised for manufacturing garments which ought to be

exported. Sometime prior to the month of October, 1985, the second

respondent received three consignments sent by the first respondent from

Hong Kong but did not fulfil the said condition of import licence. Then, during

the months of October-November, 1985 the first respondent sent to India

certain quantities of raw silk in four lots, to be delivered to the second

respondent. The requisite documents were sent to the banker of the second

respondent with instructions to deliver the same on receiving the payment.

However, by the time the consignments arrived at Bombay, the customs

authorities had come to know about the non-compliance of the aforesaid

condition of licence with respect to the three earlier consignments and also of

the alleged misrepresentation while obtaining the advance import licence.

Accordingly, the proceedings were initiated against the second respondent by

the Collector of Customs. On the other hand, the second respondent failed to

70

make the payment and receive the documents of title and did not clear the

goods. While the proceedings were pending before the Collector of Customs,

the said advance import licence was cancelled but no orders were passed with

respect to the said goods. The first respondent, who appeared in the

proceedings of his own, contended before the Collector that title to the goods

had not passed to second respondent; that he was still the owner of the goods;

and that therefore, the said goods could not be confiscated or proceeded

against for the violations, if any, by the second respondent. He submitted that

he was not a party to the misuse of the earlier imports nor was he aware of the

alleged fraud practised by the second respondent in obtaining the advance

import licence and prayed that he may be permitted to re-export the goods to

Hong Kong. The Collector of Customs took the view that permission for reexport could not be granted for the reasons that the advance import licence

having been cancelled, there was no valid licence for clearance of those

goods; that for re-exporting the goods, a valid import licence was necessary

which was not there; and also because the second respondent had

abandoned the goods. On that basis, the Collector of Customs rejected the

claims of the first respondent and imposed a penalty of Rs. 5 lakhs on him.

31.2. In the aforesaid background, the first respondent, who had sent the

goods from Hong Kong, filed a writ petition before the High Court. The case of

the Collector of Customs and the Union of India was that the second

respondent must be deemed to be the owner of the consignments by virtue of

the definition of “importer” in Section 2 (26) of the Customs Act read with

71

Clause 5(3)(ii) of the Imports (Control) Order, 1955. Reliance was also placed

upon Para 26(iv) of the Imports and Exports Policy issued for the year 1985-86

and it was submitted that the goods were liable to be confiscated for the acts

and defaults of respondent. It was also submitted that in view of noncompliance with the condition relating to export of garments manufactured out

of the imported raw silk yarn, the second respondent had rendered all the

goods covered by the import licence liable to confiscation. The High Court,

however, allowed the writ petition and directed re-export of the goods to first

respondent. Hence, the matter was in appeal before this Court.

31.3. A bare look at the relevant background aspects of the said case makes

it clear that essentially, the effect of the conditions in the import licence and

non-compliance thereof had been the subject matter of consideration therein;

and particularly Clause 5(3)(ii) of the import licence, deeming the imported

goods as being the property of licensee, was under consideration in view of

the facts that the imported goods were abandoned by the importer and were

not cleared from customs by making payments and receiving documents of

title sent by the seller. While examining such a condition of licence and its

impact, this Court observed that the definition of “importer” in Section 2(26) of

the Customs Act was not really relevant to the question of title. The Court also

examined the object of the said Clause 5(3)(ii) of the import licence and

observed that the idea had been to hold the licensee responsible for anything

and everything that would happen from the time of import till the goods were

cleared through customs. The Court found that when the goods were imported

72

into the country at the instance of the licensee, the Imports (Control) Order

created a fiction that such licensee shall be deemed to be the owner of such

goods from the time of their import till they were cleared through customs; and

observed that this fiction, meant for proper and effective implementation of

Imports and Exports (Control) Act, could not be carried beyond that; and it

could not have been employed to attribute ownership of the imported goods to

the importer even in a case where he abandons them. This Court also

indicated that holding otherwise would be putting the exporter in a position of

losing goods without receiving payment with only remedy to sue the importer

for price and damages which would not be conducive to international trade.

The relevant parts of observations and consideration in paragraph 19 of the

said decision could be usefully reproduced as under: –

“19. We may first consider the question of title to the said

goods. If we keep aside the provisions of law relied upon by the

appellants viz., definition of 'importer' in Section 2(26) of the

Customs Act, clause 5(3)(ii) of the Imports (Control) Order as well

as para 26(iv) of the Import-Export Policy, the position is quite

simple. Since respondent 2 did not pay for and receive the

documents of the title she did not become the owner of the said

goods, which means that respondent 1 continued to be the owner.

How do the aforesaid provisions make any difference to this

position? The definition of 'importer' in Section 2(26) of the

Customs Act is not really relevant to the question of title. It only

defines the expression 'importer'. Respondent 1 does not claim to

be the importer. The provision upon which strong reliance is

placed by the appellants in this behalf is the one contained in

clause 5(3)(ii) of the Imports (Control) Order. Sub-clause (1) of

clause 5 specifies conditions which can be attached to an import

licence at the time of its grant. Sub-clause (2) says that a licence

granted under the Order shall be subject to the conditions

specified in Fifth Schedule to the Order. Sub-clause (3) sets out

three other conditions mentioned as (i), (ii), and (iii) which shall

attach to every import licence granted under the Order. First of

these conditions says that the import licence shall be non73

transferable except under the written permission of the licensing

authority or other competent authority. Condition (ii) - which is the

provision relevant herein - says that the goods for the import of

which a licence is granted "shall be the property of the licensee at

the time of import and thereafter up to the time of clearance

through customs." This condition, however, does not apply to STC,

MMTC and other similar institutions entrusted with canalisation of

imports. It also does not apply to certain eligible export houses,

trading houses and public sector agencies mentioned in the

second proviso. Condition (iii) says that the goods for which the

import licence is granted shall be new goods unless otherwise

mentioned in the licence. Now coming back to condition (ii), the

question is what does it mean and what is the object underlying it

when it says that the imported goods shall be the property of the

licensee from the time of import till they are cleared through

customs. It is necessary to notice the language of the sub-clause.

It says "it shall be deemed to be a condition of every such licence

that - the goods for the import of which a licence is granted shall

be the property of the licensee at the time of import and thereafter

up to the time of clearance through customs." The rule-making

authority (Central Government), which issued the order, must be

presumed to be aware of the fact that in many cases, the importer

is not the owner of the goods imported at the time of their import

and that he becomes their owner only at a later stage, i.e., when

he pays for and obtains the relevant documents. Why did the

Central Government declare that such goods shall be the property

of the licensee from the time of import? For appreciating this, one

has to ascertain the object underlying the said provision. The

interpretation to be placed upon the provision should be consistent

with and should be designed to achieve such object. In this

context, it should also be remembered that expressions like

'property of’ and 'vest' do not have a single universal meaning.

Their content varies with the context. The aphorism that a word is

not a crystal and that it takes its colour from the context is no less

true in the case of these words. In our opinion the object

underlying condition (ii) in clause 5(3) is to ensure a proper

implementation of the Imports (Control) Order and the Imports and

Exports (Control) Act, 1947. The idea is to hold the licensee

responsible for anything and everything that happens from the

time of import till they are cleared through customs. The exporter

is outside the country, while the importer, i.e., the licensee is in

India. It is at the instance of the licensee that the goods are

imported into this country. Whether or not he is the owner of such

goods in law, the Imports (Control) Order creates a fiction that he

shall be deemed to be the owner of the such goods from the time

of their import till they are cleared through customs. This fiction is

74

created for the proper and effective implementation of the said

order and the Imports and Exports (Control) Act. The fiction

however cannot be carried beyond that. It cannot be employed to

attribute ownership of the imported goods to the importer even in a

case where he abandons them, that is, in a situation where he

does not pay for and receive the documents of title. It may be that

for such act of abandonment, action may be taken against him for

suspension/cancellation of licence. May be, some other

proceedings can also be taken against him. But certainly he

cannot be treated as the owner of the goods even in such a case.

Holding otherwise would place the exporter in a very difficult

position; he loses the goods without receiving the payment and his

only remedy is to sue the importer for the price of goods and for

such damage as he may have suffered. This would not be

conducive to international trade. We can well imagine situations

where for one or other reason, an importer chooses or fails to pay

for and take delivery of the imported goods. He just abandons

them. (We may reiterate that we are speaking of a case where the

import is not contrary to law). It is only with such a situation that

we are concerned in this case and our decision is also confined

only to such a situation. Condition (ii) in sub-clause (3) of clause 5,

in our opinion, does not operate to deprive the exporter of his title

to said goods in such a situation.”

31.4. A close look at the discussion and observations above-quoted makes it

clear that basically, the fiction created under the Imports (Control) Order, to the

effect that the licensee shall be deemed to be the owner of goods from the

time of their import till they were cleared through customs, was under

consideration in that case; and having examined the object behind such a

fiction, this Court observed that the same was meant for proper and effective

implementation of Imports and Exports (Control) Act and could not be carried

beyond that, so as to attribute ownership of the imported goods to the importer

even when the importer abandons them. The observations of this Court, when

read and understood in their context, make it clear that they are of no bearing

on the facts of the present case as also the questions involved herein. It has

75

not been laid down that in Sampat Raj Dugar (supra) that a person who is

shown to be the importer by virtue of his filing bills of entry for warehousing

and for home consumption, as also for his having been assessed to customs

duty, would yet fall outside the definition of “importer” in Section 2 (26) of the

Customs Act. The said decision in Sampat Raj Dugar does not advance the

cause of the appellant in any manner.

32. As noticed, the definition of “importer” in Section 2(26) of the Customs

Act, even if not directly decisive of the question of title, has its implications on

the facts of the present case for the reason that the appellant alone filed the

bills of entry for warehousing as also for home consumption. Yet further, the

requirements of filing import manifest, as per Section 30 of the Customs Act,

have their own bearing on the present case. It remains indisputable that the

name of the appellant was reflected as importer in IGM. If, as asserted by the

appellant, the goods had been sold on the high seas, the cargo declaration of

IGM20 would have reflected the name of last high seas purchaser as importer

and in other event, the IGM would have necessitated amendment because

only the last purchaser of the goods on high seas would have been declared

as consignee/importer in IGM. The fact that the name of Radha (and other

end-buyers) was not mentioned in IGM as the importer/consignee nor the

relevant IGM was amended, the suggestion about second high seas sale in

favour of Radha (and other end-buyers) turns out to be only a self-serving

20 As per the requirements of Regulation 3 (c) (iii) of Import Manifest (Vessels) Regulations, 1971, the

import manifest has to consist, inter alia, of a ‘cargo declaration’ in Form No. III. Such ‘cargo

declaration’ is required to carry, amongst others, particulars of ‘bill of lading’ and ‘the name of

consignee/importer, if different’.

76

suggestion of the appellant, which has no corroboration on the record; rather

the official records totally belie the suggestion of the appellant.

32.1. The fact of the matter remains that even though the appellant has

suggested that the bills of lading were endorsed in favour of Radha (and other

end-buyers) when goods were on high seas but this bald assertion is not

corroborated by any of the official documents which form the part of the

process of importation, warehousing and clearance of goods. On the contrary,

the High Court has pointed out as illustration the details of one of the bills of

entry, which distinctively gave out all the particulars of IGM, the invoice, the

value of cargo, etc. and the High Court has found that in the bill of entry, the

name of appellant alone was shown as the importer who cleared the goods

from customs with the assistance of the Customs House Agent. In the given

set of facts, if the goods were at all sold to Radha (and other end-buyers) on

high seas, the name of such end-buyer would have appeared as importer and

not that of the appellant.

33. The same considerations operate against the assertion that the

appellant was only acting as an agent of the end-buyers. The High Court has

rightly pointed out that the Customs House Agent is an entirely different person

who acts only to present papers for clearance of the imported goods under a

bill of entry. Of course, under Section 147 of the Customs Act, a person could

act on behalf of importer or owner but such a person cannot be treated as

owner of the goods nor could be made liable for customs duty. If the appellant

was merely acting as an agent, then bill of entry would have reflected the

77

name of end-buyer as the importer and the appellant as an agent of the

importer; and further to that, the said end-buyer would have been assessed for

customs duty. It were not so.

34. The discussion foregoing leads to the position that though the definition

of importer includes owner or any person holding out himself as the importer;

and this definition of importer is not really relevant to the question of title but,

that does not mean that a person who holds out himself to be the importer;

and who files the bill of entry for home consumption; and who is assessed for

customs duty; and whose suggestion about transfer of title to a third person is

not established by any reference to any official record, the transfer on high

seas may be presumed on mere suggestion about the alleged endorsement of

bill of lading.

34.1. When all other official documents as also dealings of the appellant

clearly establish that the appellant had been the importer, the consequences

are bound to follow. It gets perforce reiterated that when the bills of entry

recorded the name of the appellant as importer and the appellant alone was

assessed to customs duty, the so called second high seas sale agreements

never came into operation.

Whether sale in question occasioned import of goods:

35. As noticed, the CTO specifically observed that it had not been the case

of the appellant that the sale in question occasioned the import of goods into

the country. However, an attempt was made before the High Court to suggest

that the entire import was occasioned by ultimate sale in favour of Radha and,

78

therefore, the matter would also be covered in the first part of sub-section (2)

of Section 5 of the CST Act. The High Court noticed that such a plea could not

have been raised for the first time in the writ petition for being a mixed

question of facts and law. The High Court also observed that even such

suggestion was belied by the fact that only the name of the appellant was

reflected in the bill of entry as importer and not of Radha. It has been argued

before us too that the quadripartite agreement triggered the movement of

goods from foreign country to India and not merely from Andhra Pradesh to

other States; that, in fact, the sales in question had not been inter-State sales

but these sales had occasioned the movement of goods from outside India into

India; and that the Indian leg of the integrated transaction cannot be

segregated so as to be taxed as inter-State sale under the CST Act. These

suggestions also remain totally baseless as noticed infra.

36. We had indicated in the earlier part of the judgment that the decision in

the case of K. Gopinathan Nair (supra) shall be referred at a later stage. We

are impelled to refer to the said decision now to deal with the aforesaid

suggestions of the appellant. We may, however, observe that this suggestion,

that the sales in question had occasioned import of goods into the country, is

incompatible with the other assertion that the sales were effected by transfer of

documents of title when the goods were on high seas. The two alternative

parts of sub-section (2) of Section 5 cannot ordinarily go together.

36.1. Be that as it may, the submissions made by the appellant about the

inter-linked nature of transactions under the quadripartite agreements and the

79

suggestion about the sales in question occasioning import stand effectively

repelled by the decision of this Court in K.Gopinathan Nair (supra). In the

said case, this Court dealt with the set of appeals arising from the decisions of

Kerala High Court and Karnataka High Court. The background aspects had

been that the appellants before Kerala High Court were the persons importing

cashew nuts from African countries directly but after issuance of a Import

Trade (Control) Order on 31.08.1970, cashew nuts could be imported only

through a canalising agency namely, the Cashew Corporation of India (CCI).

Consequently, the said appellants imported cashew nuts from African

countries through CCI. The CCI used to collect the information regarding

requirement of actual users but was thereafter importing cashew nuts on its

own by entering into independent contracts with the foreign exporters and

then, the goods were obtained by local users. In the appeal arising from the

decision of Karnataka High Court, CCI itself was the appellant. The principal

contention of the appellants before the taxing authorities had been that

transaction of sale by CCI to actual users was in the course of import and,

therefore, the State Sales Tax Act could not encompass such a transaction.

The contentions were rejected by the respective Tax Tribunals as also by the

respective High Courts. The common question for determination before this

Court was as to whether the import of raw cashew nuts by CCI from African

exporters was in the course of import and, therefore, eligible for exemption

under Sections 5(2) of the CST Act. As noticed, the learned Judges of this

Court differed in their views. In the majority decision, after delineating the

80

determinative factors, the Court examined the facts of the case and the nature

of transactions and dealings of the parties and observed that clearly, there

were two transactions: one being of the import of raw cashew by CCI from

foreign exporters; and the second being back-to-back sale by the canalising

agency like CCI in favour of the local users for whom the goods were indented.

The Court held that independent sale which may be based even on a prior

agreement of sale by CCI to local users would remain an independent

transaction between the importer CCI and the local purchaser but there was

no privity of contract between the local users and the foreign exporter. Hence,

this Court rejected the contention of the appellants that transaction of sale by

CCI to actual users was in the course of import in the following passage:-

“19…..All the aforesaid features which are well established on

record leave no room for doubt that it is on account of the sale to

CCI by foreign exporter that the raw cashew get imported in India

and the importer is CCI and not the local user. It is the demand of

the local users which prompted the canalising agency like CCI to

place orders for import of the quantities concerned. But CCI deals

with foreign exporter on its own and gets bulk imports of

cashewnuts. It is the sale to the CCI by the foreign exporter or

conversely the purchase by the CCI of the raw cashew from the

foreign exporter that occasions the movement of raw cashew from

African countries to India. The imported cashew remains of the

ownership of the importer CCI and only on retirement of

documents on payment of value of the allotted cashew by the local

users and on their getting the goods cleared from customs that the

property in the imported goods concerned would pass from CCI to

the local users. Thus there are two clear transactions. One

transaction is the import of raw cashew by CCI from foreign

exporters. The second transaction which is a back-to-back

transaction is of sale by the canalising agency like CCI which is

the wholesale importer in favour of the local users for whom the

goods are indented. That independent sale which may be based

even on a prior agreement of sale by CCI to local users would

remain an independent transaction between importer CCI and the

local purchaser, namely, the local user. There is no privity of

81

contract between the local users on the one hand and the foreign

exporter on the other. These two transactions cannot be said to be

so integrally interconnected as to represent one composite

transaction in the course of import of raw cashewnuts as tried to

be submitted by the learned Senior Counsel for the appellants….”

36.2. For yet further clarity, we may refer to the relevant parts of the minority

view, wherein the import of goods and sale to the local purchasers were taken

to be inextricably linked hence, the contentions of the said appellants were

proposed to be accepted with the following observations:-

“48. This seldom happens in the case of imports whenever the

local seller imports the goods as per the specifications of a specific

local buyer and on the mutual understanding between the local

buyer and the local seller that the goods so imported by the local

seller will be purchased by the local buyer. There is in such cases,

a direct link between the local sale and the import. In fact it is this

mutual understanding between the local buyer and the local seller

which occasions the import. That is why the cases dealing with

imports have not resorted to differentiating between one sale or

two sales. They have applied the test as prescribed by Section 5:

Whether the import is a result of understanding/contract between

the local buyer and local seller? If it is, the local sale falls under

Section 5. If it is not — as may well happen if the importer sells his

goods after they arrive to the best available offeror in the market,

then the sale is not covered by Section 5. That is why there has

been no need to amend Section 5 to expressly cover a local sale

following import.

49. Now, if we apply this test of inseverable link between the local

sale and import to the transaction in the present case, it is clear

that the local sale which is between the assessees and the

Cashew Corporation of India is inextricably linked with the import

of cashewnuts by the Cashew Corporation of India….

… … …

56. However, since there is a direct and inseverable link between

the transaction of sale and the import of goods on account of the

nature of the understanding between the parties as also by reason

of the canalising scheme pertaining to the import of cashewnuts,

the sales in question cannot be taxed under the Kerala General

Sales Tax Act or the Karnataka General Sales Tax Act, as the case

may be….”

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36.3. The case of the present appellant, as regards the effect of quadripartite

agreement and the suggestion about the sale having occasioned import is, at

best, the one as would appear in the minority view in the case of K.

Gopinathan Nair (supra). The said minority view being not the dictum of this

Court and rather, the contra view being the law declared, the contentions of

the appellant must fail.

These had been inter-State sales

37. The effect of raising of debit notes by the appellant on the end-buyers

has its own bearing in the present case. The appellant had admittedly raised

such debit notes on the end-buyers but only after having cleared the goods by

filing the bill of entry for home consumption. Once the suggestion about the

second high seas sales is not accepted and it is found that the appellant had

been the importer of goods and had cleared them for home consumption, the

natural consequence of raising of such debit notes on the end-buyers situated

in different States and movement of goods to such end-buyers would be to

take these transactions in the category of inter-State sales in terms of Section

3(a) of the CST Act. The appellant was not entitled to the exemption of Section

5(2) of the CST Act and has rightly been held liable for tax over inter-State

sales.

38. After the appellant got the goods released by filing bill of entry for home

consumption, indisputably, the goods were ultimately received by Radha at

Lucknow in the State of Uttar Pradesh (and other end-buyers in different

States) and appellant raised debit notes from the State of Andhra Pradesh.

83

These facts are sufficient to establish that the movement of goods inside the

country from one State to another had been on account of the sale by

appellant to the end-buyers; and such sales took place only after the appellant

obtained the goods from the bonded warehouse for home consumption.

39. In our view, the High Court was right in observing that once the

appellant got released the goods after filing the bill of entry for home

consumption, the import stream dried up and the goods got mixed in the local

goods. Any movement of the goods thereafter was bound to be a sale under

Section 3(a) of the CST Act; and such movement being from the State of

Andhra Pradesh to other State, it had been a matter of inter-State sale. The

principle that actual sale may not necessarily precede the movement of goods,

in its true effect, operates rather against the appellant in relation to the sale to

end-buyers after the goods were cleared for home consumption.

If any case for relegating the appellant to the remedy of appeal made out

40. This takes us to the alternative submission on behalf of the appellant

that in view of the disputed questions of fact involved, the appellant may be

relegated to the remedy of appeal. These submissions fail to impress even a

bit.

40.1. The appellant, despite being aware of the availability of remedy of

statutory appeal, consciously chose to file writ petitions against the

assessment orders aforesaid and consciously contested the entire matter in

the High Court. The High Court, even after noticing the framework of certiorari

jurisdiction, examined the merits of the case thoroughly and even examined

84

the submission made for the first time in writ petitions that the import of goods

was occasioned by the sales in question. Of course, in that regard, the High

Court pointed out that it was not a pure question of law but in any case, such

submission was belied by the fact that the name of the appellant was reflected

in the bill of entry as the importer and not that of the end-buyer. We are unable

to find any error or fault in the approach of High Court in this case.

40.2. The prayer that the appellant may now be allowed to contest the matter

in statutory appeal has only been noted to be rejected. After having

consciously invoked the writ jurisdiction of the High Court and having

contested the matter on merits, the appellant cannot now be allowed to reopen the matter in appeal. Reference to the decision of this Court in the case

of Star Paper Mills Ltd. (supra) is entirely inapposite. In that case, by a format

order dated 23.11.1987, the High Court of Delhi remitted the matter pending

before it in a writ petition to the Assistant Collector who, accordingly, made an

adjudication on 30.05.1988. This order of the Assistant Collector was permitted

to be brought on record in the pending writ petition and the petition was

ultimately disposed of on 05.07.1993. The contentions in the writ petition by

the petitioner related to the deductions as post-manufacturing expenses

towards freight subsidies, additional trade discounts and cost of special

packing. Though the High Court observed that the claims involved

investigation into disputed question of fact but, in effect, declined the relief

claimed under those heads of the alleged post-manufacturing costs on the

ground that sufficient material was not placed by the petitioner in support of

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the claims for deductions. In those circumstances, this Court extended liberty

of appeal to the petitioner while observing as under:-

“4. On a consideration of the matter, we are of the view that

against the adjudication made by the Assistant Collector, the

petitioner should have one effective opportunity of an appeal. The

High Court could have declined to interfere with the matter under

Article 226 if, in its view, the matter involved investigation of

disputed facts and relegated the petitioner to the statutory records.

But it rejected the claim on the ground of insufficiency of material-a

situation which might be susceptible of an irreconcilability with its

view that disputed questions of fact could not be investigated in

these proceedings.

5. We, therefore, permit the petitioner to lodge an appeal

against the order of the Assistant Collector dated 30-5-1988 with

the CEGAT insofar as and confined to the three 'Heads' of the

deductions for the alleged post-manufacturing expenses, namely:

(a) freight subsidy; (b) additional trade discount; and (c) cost of

special packing.”

40.3. The observations aforesaid and the course permitted in the given set of

facts of the case of Star Paper Mills Ltd. (supra) cannot be employed in the

present case because the findings against the appellant are not on the ground

of insufficiency of material but are essentially the result of analysis of the

material placed on record with reference to the law applicable. In our view, the

extraordinary writ jurisdiction cannot be utilised by a litigant only to take

chance and then to seek recourse to the other remedy after failing in its

attempt on the basic merits of the case before the High Court. A litigation

cannot be allowed to be unendingly kept alive at the choice of a litigant.

Another feature of the case

41. Before parting, we may also point out that suggestions of the appellant

about such transactions with involvement of multiple parties had undergone

thorough scrutiny by the concerned CTO and significantly, the suggestions

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about such quadripartite agreements and arrangements were found to be

rather false in relation to at least two of the alleged end-buyers, where one of

the end-buyer firm21 denied having received the goods in question or even

knowing the appellant; and the other end-buyer firm22 was not even found at

the given address. As noticed hereinbefore, the overall dealings indicate that

the attempt on the part of the appellant had only been to distort the facts and

by alleging multiple transactions, to somehow avoid the operation of law

relating to Central Sales Tax. Such attempt has rightly met with its disapproval

at the hands of the CTO and the High Court. We have no hesitation in

endorsing their views.

Conclusion and directions

42. For what has been discussed hereinabove, we are clearly of the view

that the claimed exemption under Section 5(2) of the CST Act has rightly been

denied to the appellant and the High Court has been justified in dismissing the

writ petitions filed by the appellant. The High Court has yet been considerate

and gave time to the appellant to submit C-Forms for availing the benefit of

concessional rate of tax. No case for interference is made out.

43. Lastly, we may observe that in terms of the orders passed in these

appeals, the appellant has deposited an amount of Rs. 7,07,325/- (rupees

seven lakhs seven thousand three hundred and twenty five) with the

21 M/s. Pine Exporters, New Delhi, the alleged end-buyer in third and fourth transactions in the

assessment order dated 18.05.2010 (vide paragraphs 10.3, 11.1 and 11.2 supra)

22 M/s. Esskay Impex, New Delhi, the alleged end-buyer in fifth and sixth transactions in the

assessment order dated 18.05.2010 (vide paragraphs 10.4, 11.1 and 11.2 supra)

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respondent. As these appeals are being dismissed, the respondent shall be

entitled to adjust the same against the dues of the appellant.

44. In the result, these appeals fail and are dismissed with costs and with

the observations foregoing.

..………………………….J.

(A.M. KHANWILKAR) 1

……..…………………….J.

(DINESH MAHESHWARI)

New Delhi

January 13th, 2021

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