Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V.M. SALGAONCAR AND BROS. (P) LTD. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/01/1998
BENCH:
B.N. KIRPAL, V.N. KHARE
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
(With C.A. No. 3409 of 1987)
J U D G M E N T
THOMAS, J.
Whether vessels which are used as transhippers can also
be treated as "ocean-going vessels" is the short but hotly
mooted issue involved in these appeals. It was once decided
by a Bench of two Judges of this court in Chowgule & Co.
Pvt. Ltd. Vs. union India & ors., [1987 (2) SCR 351] that
such vessels cannot be termed as "ocean-going vessels".
Another Bench has now expressed the opinion that the ratio
in the above decision requires reconsideration by a larger
Bench. Thus, these matters have come up before us.
Some facts necessary for these appeals can be seated
thus:
Section 46 of the Customs Act, 1962 requires the
importer of any goods, other than goods intended for transit
or transhipment, to present a Bill of Entry for home
consumption of such goods in the prescribed form. By a
notification issued by the Ministry of Finance (Department
of Revenue) Government of India on 11.10.1958, "ocean-going
vessels" have been exempted from payment of customs duty.
The said notification reads thus:
" Under Govt. of India Ministry of
Finance (Dept. of Revenue),
Notification No. 262- Customs dated
the 11th October, 1958, ocean-going
vessels other than vessels imported
to be broken up, are exempt from
the payment of customs duty
leviable thereon. Provided that any
such vessel if subsequently broken
up shall be chargeable with the
duty which would be payable on her
if she were imported to be broken
up."
Some persons who imported transhippers (vessels fitted
with equipment for transhipping and topping operations)
claimed the benefit of the said notification on t he premise
that those transhippers are also oceangoing vessels. But the
Customs authorities insisted on them to file Bills of Entry
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under Section 46 of the Act in respect of such vessels. The
Assistant Collector of Customs ordered, in confirmation of
the aforesaid stand of the customs officials, that the
importers should file Bills of Entry for payment of Customs
duty. Then those importers challenged the orders of the
Assistant Collector. Some of them went straight to the High
Court under Article 226 of the Constitution while others
approached the statutory authorities up to the Customs
excise & Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal. The orders
impugned before us thus relate to the question whether such
transhippers are oceangoing vessels. Importers have filed
the appeal challenging the decision which negatived their
contention and Union of India has filed the appeals
challenging those decisions which upheld the contention of
the importers.
The common features in all cases are the following:
Transhippers are vessels used for carrying cargo loaded from
the harbour and they proceed to outer sea for unloading it
into large vessels afloat in high seas. such transhippers
have been specially fitted with adequate equipment to carry
out the said task. (That operation is called topping up
work.) Some of the vessels were fitted with added holdes on
both sides, cranes, conveyors and other ship loading
equipment designed for transfer operations.
In Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd. (Supra), learned Judges
have noted that the transhippers involved in that decision
were capable of being used as ocean going vessels and were,
in fact, so used during off seasons when it was not
practicable to do topping up operations. those vessels are
not only capable of being used but were actually used as
cargo ships during off-seasons. They were structurally and
technically competent to go on the high seas and they were
certified to be so competent by appropriate maritime
authorities. Even in the course of topping up operations
during off-seasons, those transhippers have to go into the
open sea to reach the bulk carners.
Despite all the aforesaid features learned Judges did
not agree with the contention of the importers that those
vessels were ocean-going vessels. the following observation
is the ratio of the decision:
" But in our view, these operations
do not make these vessels ocean
going vessels when their primary
purpose and the purpose for which
they were permitted to be purchased
and brought to Indian waters, is to
conduct topping up operations in
Indian territorial waters and not
to serve as ocean-going vessels."
Learned counsel for the importers, in the course of
their arguments raised an incidental contention that
transhippers were not imported for "home consumption", as
the commodity remains intact, without any alteration, even
after it is put to use. it was suggested that consumption
would involve complete using up of the article to such an
extent that identity of the consumed article becomes non-
existent.
The word "consumption" may involve in the narrow sense
using the article to such an extent as to reach the stage of
its non-existence. But the word "consumption" in fiscal law
need not be confined to such a narrow meaning. It has a
wider meaning in which any sort of utilization of the
commodity would as well amount to consumption of the
article, albeit that article retaining its identity even
after its use.
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A Constitution Bench of this Court has considered the
ambit of the word "consumption" in Article 286 of the
Constitution in M/s. Anwarkhan Mahboob co. Vs. State of
Bombay (now Maharasthra) and others [1961 (1) SCR 709].
Their Lordships observed thus:
" Consumption consists in the act
of taking such advantage of the
commodities and services produced
as constitutes the "utilization"
thereof. for each commodity, there
is ordinarily what is generally
considered to be the final act of
consumption. for some commodities,
there may be even more than one
kind of final consumption
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In the absence of any words to
limit the connotation of the word
"consumption" to the final act of
consumption, it will be proper to
think that the Constitution-makers
used the work to connote any kind
of user which is ordinarily spoken
of as consumption of the particular
commodity."
In another decision a two Judge Bench of this court
considered the scope of the words "consumption" vis-a-vis
"use". (vide Kathiawar Industries ltd. vs. Jaffrabad
Municipality: AIR 1979 SC 1721). There it was held that the
precise meaning to be given to those words would depend upon
the context in which they are used. it is in a primary sense
that the word "consumption" is understood as using the
article in such a manner as to destroy it identity. It has
wider meaning which does not involve the complete using up
of the commodity.
In the context in which the expression "home
consumption" is used in Section 46 of the Customs Act it
does not warrant a construction that the commodity should
have been completely used up. Even putting the commodity to
any type of utility within the territory of India will
tantamount to "home consumption".
We would now turn to the question whether transhippers
are ocean-going vessels?
In the order of reference Bharucha and Sen, JJ, have
expressed that "there is, prime facie, merit in the
submissions on behalf of the owners that an ocean going
vessel is a vessel equipped, crewed and licensed to go out
into the ocean, regardless of whether or not it actually
does, and that the transhippers as shown by the record, are
such vessels: also, they do, in fact go out into the ocean
on their day to day business to load ore and, in the
monsoon, to carry cargo to or seek refuge in other Indian or
foreign ports."
It may be contextually useful to mention that soon
after the decision was rendered by a two Judge Bench of this
Court in Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd. (Supra), a notification
was issued on 19.3.1997 (which has been extracted above)
exempting all the vessels (other than floating structures)
from the whole of the duty of customs leviable thereon
except those which are imported for the purposes of breaking
up.
The contention was raised on behalf of the owners of
the vessels that the close proximity of the time at which
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Government issued the subsequent notification is a telling
circumstance that Government of India did not intend to
exclude transhippers from the category of ocean-going
vessels. However, Shri Gauri Shankar Murthi, learned counsel
for the Revenue forcefully contended that the transhippers
cannot get the benefit of the first notification at least
until the Government of India issued the second notification
dated 19.3.1997.
The expression "ocean-going vessels", unfortunately,
has not been defined in the notification dated 11.10.1958
and that vacuum created room for this dispute. However,
Customs Act contained definition for the term "foreign going
vessel" in Section 2(21), as a vessel engaged in carriage of
goods or passengers between any port in India and any port
outside India and includes "any vessel engaged in fishing or
any other operations outside the territorial waters of
India."
The limit of territorial waters is fixed under Section
3(2) of the Territorial Waters Continental Self, exclusive
Economic Zone and other Maritime Zones Act, 1976 (Act No. 80
of 1976) thus: "The limit of territorial waters is the line
every point of which is at a distance of twelve nautical
miles from the nearest point of the appropriate pasenne."
We find much force in the contention of the learned
counsel for the owners that, if a vessel which is engaged in
fishing or any other operations outside the territorial
waters of India, though not crossing into the territorial
waters of any other foreign country, could legitimately be
included in the category of foreign going vessel, how a
transhipper which often goes into the open sea for
transhipping operations cannot be regarded as an ocean-going
vessel?
Shri Murthi, learned counsel for the Revenue contended
that the use of transhippers is not for going beyond the
limit of territorial waters and the ambit of the expression
"ocean-going " could be judged on the test of its dominant
use notwithstanding that it may just into the open sea
infrequently. In support of the above proposition, learned
counsel relled on the decision of this Court in Good year
India Ltd. vs. Union of India [1997 (92) ELT 14 = 1997 (5)
SCC 752]. Learned senior counsel, who argued for the owners
of transhippers on the other hand contended that while
interpreting the meaning of words in fiscal connotations,
meanings attached to such expressions by people conversant
with the subject should normally be adopted.
A three Judge Bench of this court in Dunlop India Ltd.
vs. Union of India & ors., [1976 (2) SCR 98] has observed
thus:
" It is well established that in
interpreting the meaning of words
in a taxing statute, the
acceptation of a particular word by
the Trade and its popular meaning
should commend itself to the
authority.
xxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx
It is clear that meaning given to
articles in a fiscal statute mush
be as people in trade and commerce,
conversant with the subject,
generally treat and understand them
in the usual course. But once an
article is classified and put under
a distinct entry, the basis of the
classification is not open to
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question. Technical and scientific
tests offer guidance only within
and known in common parlance, we
then wee no difficulty for
statutory classification under a
particular entry."
We do not think that, in the present case, the question
whether a transhipping vessel is an ocean-going vessel, can
solely rest on the test of its dominant use to which their
owners put them at times. Use may vary from season to
season, port to port and also managers to managers. So in
this area of understanding use of the article stands down-
staged, and the court must look at to know what actually the
commodity is.
In the Merchants Shipping Act, 1958 the expression
"sea-going vessels’ is used and defined it in Section 3(41),
like this"
" Sea-going", in relation to a
vessel means a vessel proceeding to
sea beyond inland waters or beyond
waters declared to be smooth or
partially smooth waters by the
Central Government by notification
in official gazette."
Though an endeavour was made before the Tribunal to
show that there is a shade of difference between the two
words "sea" and "ocean", we are not disposed to attach much
emphasis on the nuances in the semantics now. For all
practical purposes the words "sea" and "ocean" are two
expressions of the same geographical feature concerning the
vast body of salt water one side of which appears as horizon
from the other. Hence we have no doubt that what is meant by
the expression "ocean-going vessels" is not qualitatively
different from "sea-going vessels", indeed the latter may
include the former.
How an ocean-going vessel is understood in maritime
enterprises can now be looked into. In the shorter Oxford
dictionary, it is shown as "a ship capable of crossing
oceans". In the Random House Dictionary, it is shown as" a
ship designed and equipped to travel on the open sea". In
the Collins Dictionary of English Language, it is defined as
" a ship suited for the travel on the open sea".
There is no dispute for the Department that by design
and equipment, transhippers are intended to be used mostly
to carry the cargo from harbours to the high seas and vice-
versa. That such transhippers often move into the open sea
is also not disputed by the Department. Thus considering
the question from all different angles, it is reasonable to
take the view that merely because transhippers are used for
carrying cargo for loading into the bulk carriers (those
being unable to touch the port) they cannot be excluded from
the category of ocean-going vessels. At any rate it has been
demonstrated by the Government that it was not very much
interested in segregating transhippers from the category of
ocean-going vessels as the Government brought out a new
notification enveloping all vessels including transhippers
within the ambit of ocean-going vessels, almost immediately
after pronouncement of the decision in Chowgule & Co. Pvt.
Ltd. (Supra). That subsequent development on account of its
close proximity of time cannot be overlooked as of no
impact.
In the result we accept the contention of the owners of
the transhippers that such vessels are entitled to the
benefit of the Notification dated 11.10.1958. The appeals
are disposed of in the above terms.
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