Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MADHUMILAN SYNTEX PVT. LTD. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1988
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1236 1988 SCR (3) 838
1988 SCC (3) 348 JT 1988 (2) 255
1988 SCALE (1)979
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944-Challenging demand
of short payment of excise duty being violative of
provisions of section 11-A of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent No. 1 in this appeal was manufacturing
Spun yarn. In the manufacture of the said product, the
respondents used as raw material cellulosic fibres and non-
cellulosic fibres. Prior to 7th July, 1983, the respondents
had filed a classification list in respect of the spun yarn
manufactured by them showing the same as covered by Item No.
18 (III) (i) in the first schedule to the Central Excises
and Salts Act, 1944 ("Central Excises Act"). This
classification was on the basis that the spun yarn was
manufactured by them out of non-collulosic synthetic waste.
The said classification list was approved by the excise
authorities on 7th July, 1983. A supplementary
classification list was approved on 15th October, 1983.
Samples were drawn out of the spun yarn manufactured by
the respondents and sent for chemical analysis. Reports were
submitted by the Chemical Analyser. On 7th February, 1984,
the Superintendent of Central Excises issued a demand notice
against the respondent No. 1 on the footing that there was
short payment of excise duty as the goods manufactured by
the respondents were liable to be classified under Central
Excises Tariff Item No. 18(III) (ii). The respondents filed
a writ petition in the High Court, challenging the notice of
demand. On 9th February, 1984, the Assistant Collector of
Central Excises passed an order modifying the approval
granted to the classification lists submitted by the
respondents and classifying the aforesaid product of the
respondents under Item No. 18(III) (ii) of Schedule I of the
Central Excises Act, on the basis of which the
Superintendent, Central Excises, issued on the 10th
February, 1984, a notice to the respondent No. 1, calling
upon them to show cause why duty short-levied should not be
recovered from them under the provisions of section 11-A of
the Central Excises Act. A second similar show-cause notice
was also issued.
The Assistant Collector passed orders of adjudication
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dated 5th
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March, 1984, modifying the classification lists and
confirming the demand made under the aforesaid notice of
demand. The respondents-petitioners thereupon amended their
aforesaid writ petition to challenge the two show-cause
notices and the orders of adjudication. The petitioners also
filed an appeal before the Collector of Central Excises
against the said orders of adjudication.
The High Court allowed the writ petition in part,
quashing the notice of demand for the period 15th August,
1983 to 6th February, 1984, and the orders modifying the
classification lists, and directing the Collector, Central
Excises to hear the appeal of the petitioners on merits
considering their evidence in respect of the period from 7th
February, 1984 onwards. The High Court took the view that
the show-cause notice served on the petitioner could be
treated as valid only in respect of the period from 7th
February, 1984, onwards and not retrospectively from 15th
August, 1983 to 6th February, 1984. The Union of India, the
Collector of Central Excises and other Excise officers then
moved this Court by this appeal against the decision of the
High Court.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: If the Cellulosic spun yarn made by a
manufacturer with the aid of power contains man-made fibre
of non-cellulosic origin, it will fall under Item No,
18(III) (ii), but if it does not contain any man-made fibre
of non-cellulosic origin, it will fall under Item No.
18(III) (i) and duty would be leviable there at a lower
rate. [843B-C]
Under the provisions of Section 11-A of the Central
Excises Act, before any demand is made on any person
chargeable in respect of non-levy or short levy or under-
payment of duty, a notice requiring him to show cause why he
should not pay the amounts specified in the notice must be
served on him. In this case, no such notice was served. The
aforesaid notice of demand dated 7th February, 1984, was in
violation of the provisions of Section 11-A and is bad in
law, and the High Court was fully justified in quashing the
same. [843G-H;844G-H]
The appellants contended that although the notice of
demand might be set aside, the notice to show cause dated
9th/10th February, 1984, should be treated as a valid notice
in respect of the period from 15th August, 1983 to 6th
February, 1984 and the period from 7th February, 1984,
onwards. The notice referred to the service of notice of
demand dated 7th February, 1984 on the respondent No. 1. The
notice set out as an established fact that the
classification lists submitted by the
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respondents had been modified by the Assistant Collector,
and the only matter with respect to which the respondents
were asked to show cause was with regard to the
quantification of the amount of short levy which was liable
to be recovered from the respondent No. 1. The Notice could
not be regarded as a show-cause notice against the
modification of the classification lists in respect of the
aforesaid period. The show cause notice was bad in law and
of no legal effect as far as the earlier period was
concerned. Under Section 11-A of the Central Excises Act,
the notice can relate only to a period of six months period
to the issue of that notice except in cases where it is
alleged that the short levy or payment has occurred by
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reason of fraud, collusion or wilful misrepresentation or
suppression of facts or contravention of the provisions of
the said Act or rules, as contemplated in the proviso to
sub-section (1) of Section 11-A. No such case was made out
in the said show-cause notice. The said show-cause notice
must be struck down in so far as the period upto 6th
February, 1984, was concerned and could be regarded as a
proper show-cause notice only in respect of the subsequent
period from 7th February, 1984 onwards. Under the said show-
cause notice, the question of short levy or non-levy of
excise duty prior to 6th February, 1984, could not be gone
into by the Collector and the High Court was right in the
view it took. [845B-C;846A-E]
Gokak Patel Vokkart Ltd. v. Collector of Central
Excise, Belgaum, A.I.R. 1987 S.C. 1161, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1110
(NT) of 1986
From the Judgment and Order dated 24.11.1984 of the
High Court of Madhya Pradesh, Indore Bench, passed in M.P.
NO. 104 of 1984.
Gobind Das, Mrs. Sushma Suri, Mrs. Indra Sawhney and
C.V.S. Rao for the Appellants.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, Sanjay Sarin, Abdul Chitale and S.K.
Gambhir, for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal against the judgment of a
Division Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Jabalpur
(Indore Bench) in M. Petition No. 104 of 1984. The appeal is
filed at the instance of the
841
Union of India, Collector of Central Excise, Indore and two
other excise officers. The respondents are the original
petitioners in the aforesaid petition. We propose to refer
to the parties by the description in the petition.
The facts necessary for the disposal of this appeal can
be shortly stated.
The petitioner No. 1 is a Company manufacturing spun
yarn. According to the petitioners, in the manufacture of
the said product they use as raw material cellulosic fibres
and non-cellulosic fibres. Some time prior to 7th July,
1983, the petitioners filed a classification list in respect
of the spun yarn manufactured by them showing the same as
covered by Item No. 18(III) (i) in the First Schedule to the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (referred to hereinafter
as the "Central Excise Act"). The said schedule is generally
referred to as the "Central Excises Tariff". This
classification was on the basis that the spun yarn was
manufactured by them out of non-cellulosic synthetic waste.
The said classification list was approved by the excise
authorities on 7th July, 1983. A supplementary
classification list was approved on 15th October, 1983. The
petitioners were clearing the goods on the basis of
aforesaid classification lists. It appears that samples were
drawn out of the spun yarn manufactured by the petitioners
and sent for chemical examination. There are some reports
submitted by the Chemical Analyser, with the details of
which we are not concerned. Without giving any show cause
notice or affording any opportunity to the petitioners to be
heard, on 7th February, 1984, the Superintendent of Central
Excise issued a notice of demand for a total sum of
Rs.26,47,749.39 against the petitioner No. 1 on the footing
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that there was short payment of excise duty. This was done
on the ground that the yarn manufactured by the petitioners
had been manufactured out of waste of synthetic fibres in
blend of viscose fibres (of noncellulosic origin) and hence
the said goods manufactured by them were liable to be
classified under Central Excises Tariff Item No.
18(III)(ii). It is an admitted position that the yarn
manufacturing process used by the petitioners was with the
aid of power. The petitioners filed the aforesaid writ
petition in the High Court of Madhya Pradesh challenging the
validity of the said notice of demand dated 7th February,
1984. The High Court granted an interim stay of the
operation of the demand notice on 9th February, 1984. On the
same day, namely, 9th February, 1984, an order was passed by
the Assistant Collector of Central Excise modifying the
approval granted to the aforesaid classification lists
submitted by the petitioners which had been approved
842
as aforesaid and classifying the aforesaid product under
Item No. 18(III) (ii) of Schedule 1 of the Central Excises
Act. On 10th February, 1984 a notice was issued by the
Superintendent, Central Excise on the petitioner No. 1
reciting inter alia that the Assistant Collector had
modified the approval of the classification lists on 9th
February, 1984 and calling upon the petitioner No. 1 to show
cause why the duty short levied should not be recovered from
them under the provisions of Section 11-A of the Central
Excises Act. A second similar show cause notice was also
issued. The petitioner No. 1 wrote to the excise authorities
pointing out that in view of the aforesaid writ petition
filed by the appellant, the adjudication proceedings should
be stayed till writ petition was disposed of. This request
was turned down on 5th March, 1984 and orders of
adjudication were passed by the Assistant Collector
modifying the classification lists and confirming the demand
made under the aforesaid notice of demand. The petitioners
thereupon amended the aforesaid writ petition filed by them
and challenged the two show cause notices as well as the
said orders of adjudication dated 5th March, 1984. The
petitioners also filed an appeal before the Collector of
Central Excises (Appeal) against the orders of adjudication
dated 5th March, 1984. On 24th November, 1984 by the
impugned judgment, the Madhya Pradesh High Court allowed the
aforesaid writ petition in part. Mulye, J. held by his
judgment that the writ petition was allowed to the extent
that the demand for recovery of Rs.26,47,749.39 for the
period 15th August, 1983 to 6th February, 1984, which was
the period referred to in the demand notice was quashed.
However, the learned Judge directed the Collector, Central
Excise before whom the appeal filed by the petitioners was
pending to decide the appeal in respect of the demand made
by the excise authorities for the subsequent period. Giani,
J., the other learned judge, in his concurring judgment set
aside the two roders issued by the Assistant Collector,
Central Excise, Ujjain Division both dated 5th March, 1984
as set out earlier. Copies of these adjudication orders are
at Annexure R/10 and R/11 respectively to the writ petition.
Very shortly put, both the Judges held that the notice of
demand and the orders modifying the classification list
served on the petitioners were bad in law and ordered that
the same be quashed. A perusal of the judgment also clearly
indicates that the Division Bench directed that the
Collector, Central Excise (Appeal) should hear the appeal of
the petitioners on merits after giving the petitioners an
adequate opportunity to put their case and their evidence
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before him in respect of the period from 7th February, 1984
onwards. Thus, the Division Bench took the view that the
show cause notice served on the petitioners could be treated
as valid and effective only in respect of the period
843
from 7th February, 1984 onwards and not retrospectively from
15th August, 1983 to 6th February, 1984 being the period for
which the demand has already been made in the demand notice
dated 9th February, 1984.
As far as the relevant items in the First Schedule of
the Central Excises Act are concerned, it is not necessary
to set out the same in detail. It will be enough to point
out that if the cellulosic spun yarn made by a manufacturer
with the aid of power contains man made fibre of non-
cellulosic origin, it will fall under Item No. 18(III) (ii),
but if it does not contain any man-made fibre of non-
cellulosic origin, it will fall under Item No. 18(III) (i)
and duty would be leviable there at a lower rate. The
relevant portion of Section 11-A of the Central Excises Act
runs as follows:
"When any duty of excise has not been levied or
paid or has been short-levied or short-paid or
erroneously refunded, a Central Excise Officer
may, within six months from the relevant date,
serve notice on the person chargeable with the
duty which has not been levied or paid or which
has been short-levied or short-paid or to whom the
refund has erroneously been made, requiring him to
show cause why he should not pay the amount
specified in the notice:
Provided that where any duty of excise has
not been levied or paid or has been short-levied
or short-paid or erroneously refunded by reason of
fraud, collusion or any wilful mis-statement or
suppression of fact, or contravention of any of
the provisions of this Act or of the rules made
thereunder with intent to evade payment of duty,
by such person or his agent, the provisions of
this sub-section shall have effect, as if for the
words "Central Excise Officer", the words
"Collector of Central Excise" and for the words
"six months", the words "five years" were
substituted."
A perusal of the aforesaid provisions shows that before
any demand is made on any person chargeable in respect of
non-levy or short levy or under payment of duty, a notice
requiring him to show cause why he should not pay the
amounts specified in the notice must be served on him. It is
the admitted position in the present case that no such
notice was served. It would thus appear that the aforesaid
demand notice dated 7th February, 1984 was in violation of
the provisions of Section 11-A and is bad in law. Mr. Govind
Das, learned
844
counsel for the appellant, however, contended that although
the aforesaid Section provides that no demand could be made
against a person thereunder without affording that person an
adequate opportunity to show cause against the same, in the
present case, though no prior show cause notice was given
and the petitioners were not given an opportunity to be
heard before the notice of demand was issued, such a notice
was issued and an opportunity to show cause was given after
the demand was made and the demand confirmed after hearing
and hence it must be regarded as valid. It was submitted by
him that a post facto show cause notice should be regarded
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as adequate in law. In support of this contention Mr. Govind
Das tried to place reliance on certain decisions where a
view has been taken that in cases where urgent and emergent
action is required, an opportunity to be heard can be given
after the order affecting a person adversely is passed and
that where a particular Act does not provide for any such
opportunity to be heard being given before an adverse order
is passed, a post facto opportunity to be heard might, in
certain cases, be regarded as adequate compliance with
principles of natural justice. We are of the view these
cases have no relevance in considering the questions before
us because it is quite apparent that in the present case no
urgent or emergent action was required and Section 11-A of
the Central Excises Act clearly provides that prior show
cause notice must be issued to the person against whom any
demand on ground of short levy or non-levy of payment of
excise duty is proposed to be made. In Gokak Patel Vokkart
Ltd. v. Collector of Central Excise, Belgaum, A.I.R. 1987
S.C. 1161 this Court has held that the provisions of Section
11-A(1) & (2) of Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 make it
clear that the statutory scheme is that in the situations
covered by sub-section (1), a notice of show cause has to be
issued and sub-Section (2) requires that the cause shown by
way of representation has to be considered by the prescribed
authority and then only the amount has to be determined. The
scheme is in consonance with the rules of natural justice.
An opportunity to be heard is intended to be afforded to the
person who is likely to be prejudiced when the order is made
before making the order. Notice is thus a condition
precedent to a demand under sub-Section (2).
In view of the aforesaid decision the submission of Mr.
Govind Das must be rejected and it must be held that the
aforesaid notice of demand was clearly bad in law and the
High Court was fully, with respect, justified in quashing
the same.
The next submission of Mr. Govind Das was that, in any
event,
845
as the Collector of Central Excise (Appeals) had been
directed to examine the merits of the matter in respect of
alleged short levy or non-levy and the modification of the
classification lists after allowing adequate opportunity to
the petitioners to show cause in respect of the period from
7th February, 1984, onwards, the question as to whether
there was short levy or non-levy in respect of the period
from 15th August, 1983 to 6th February, 1984 should even
also be allowed to be decided by the Collector. It was
submitted by Mr. Govind Das that although the notice of
demand may be set aside the notice to show cause dated
9/10th February, 1984 should be treated as a valid and
effective notice in respect of the period from 15th August,
1983 to 6th February, 1984 as well as the period from 7th
February, 1984 onwards. In this connection, it is the
submission of Dr. Chitale that this notice merely asked the
petitioners to show cause against calculation or
determination of the amount of short levy and not against
the alteration in the classification lists on the basis of
which short-levy was alleged and hence, in respect of the
said period from 15th August, 1983 to 6th February, 1984 the
show cause notice is liable to be struck down. In our view
the submission of Dr. Chitale deserves to be accepted. The
opening paragraph of the show cause notice refers to the
service of notice of demand dated 7th February, 1984 for
Rs.26,47,749.39 on the petitioner. Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the
said notice run as follows:
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"AND whereas the Assistant Collector Central
Excise, Ujjain under his letter C.N.
V(18)III/I/1/83/371-1374 dated 9th Feb., 84 has
modified approval of the classification lists of
the party and has directed that the short levied
should be quantified by the Inspector, Central
Excise, Biaora/Superintendent Central Excise,
Ujjain and confirmation or otherwise of such short
levied and recoveries if any would be ordered by
him (Assistant Collector Central Excise, Division
Ujjain) after following the prescribed procedure.
THEREFORE, in accordance with the said order of
the Assistant Collector, Central Excise Division,
Ujjain, you are called upon to show cause to the
Assistant Collector, Central Excise, Ujjain within
10 days of the receipt of this show cause notice
as to why the short levies of Rs.26,47,749.39
should not be recovered from you, under Section
11-A of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944."
A reading of these paragraphs clearly shows that the
notice set
846
out as an established fact that the classification lists
submitted by the petitioners had been modified by the
Assistant Collector, Central Excise, Ujjain and the only
matter with respect to which the petitioners were asked to
show cause was with regard to the quantification of the
amount of the short levy and consequently, the amount which
was liable to be recovered from the petitioner No. 1. This
notice, therefore, cannot be regarded as a show cause notice
against the modification of the classification lists in
respect of the aforesaid period. In these circumstances, the
show cause notice is bad in law and of no legal effect as
far as the said earlier period is concerned. Under Section
11-A of the Central Excise Act, the notice can relate only
to a period of six months prior to the issue of that notice
except in cases where it is alleged the short levy or short
payment has occurred by reason of fraud, collusion or wilful
misrepresentation or suppression of facts or contravention
of the provisions of the said Act or rules made by the
period concerned, as contemplated in the proviso to sub-
Section (1) of Section 11-A. No such case has been sought to
be made here in the said show cause notice. The result is
that the said show cause notice must be struck down in so
far as period upto 6th February, 1984 is concerned, and can
be regarded as a proper show cause notice only in respect of
the subsequent period from 7th February, 1984 onwards. We
are, therefore, of the view that under the said show cause
notice the question of short levy or non-levy of excise duty
prior to 6th February, 1984 cannot be gone into by the
Collector and the High Court was right in the view which it
took.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs.
S.L. Appeal dismissed.
847