Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
J.K. STEEL LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/10/1968
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1173 1969 SCR (2) 481
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC2039 (14,26)
RF 1977 SC1884 (26)
R 1980 SC1255 (11)
RF 1986 SC1682 (17)
ACT:
Central Excise and Salt Act (1 of 1944), First Schedule,
item 25 AA, Indian Tariff Act (32 of 1934), First Schedule,
entry 63(36) and Finance Act (20 of 1962)--Steel wires made
from imported steel rods--Whether excise duty is leviable.
Central Excise and Salt Rules, 1944. rr. 9(2) and 10--Wrong
rule mentioned--No prejudice to assessee--If could be
justified under the correct rule.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a manufacturer of iron and steel
products.It was importing steel rods from which steel wires
were manufactured. On.April 24, 1962 Finance Act (No. 2)
1962 imposed excise duty on iron and steel products by
introducing item 26AA in the Central Excise and Salt Act,
1944. Under that item, on wires, 5% ad valorem plus the
excise duty for the time being leviable on pig iron and
steel ingots as the case may be was payable. Pig iron ’and
steel ingots were already subject to excise duty under items
25 and 26 respectively. On the same day, the first
Schedule of the Tariff Act 1934 was amended and two
Notifications Nos. 70 and 77 were issued in exercise of the
powers conferred by r. 8(1) of the rules framed under the
Excise Act. In the Tariff Act item 63(36) which deals with
imported iron and steel products was added to the First
Schedule by. Finance Act (No. 2),. 1962.The items included
therein are the very items set out in item 26AA of the
Excise Act. The standard rule of duty is mentioned as ’the
excise duty for the time being leviable on like articles if
produced or manufactured in India... and the duty so
leviable shall be in addition to the duty which would have
been levied if this entry had not been inserted.Under
Notification 70, the Central Government exempted iron and
steel products falling under item 26AA if made from pig iron
or steel in gots on which the appropriate amount of excise
duty has already been paid,from so much of the excise duty
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leviable thereon as is equivalent to the duty leviable under
item 25 or 26 as the case may be. Under Notification 77,
the Central Government exempted other iron and steel
products falling under sub-items (2), (3), (4) and (5) of
item 26 AA if made from articles which have already paid
the ’appropriate. excise duty under sub-item (1) of item
26AA, from so much of the excise duty as is equivalent to
the duty payable under sub-item (1). This notification was
later superseded by another Notification No. 89. by, which
the Government exempted with effect from April, 24, 1962,
iron and steel products falling under item 26AA if made from
another article falling under the said item and having
already paid the appropriate amount of’ duty, from so much
of the excise duty as is equivalent to the duty payable
on the said article. On and after April 24, 1962, the
appellant cleared from its warehouse wires produced from the
imported steel rods. The required permission from the
excise authorities was obtained and the duty assessed was
paid’, At that time the excise authorities proceeded on the
basis that only ad valorem duty had to be levied and not
’excise duty for the time leviable on pig iron or steel
ingots.’ On March 21, 1963, the assessing authority issued
a written demand under r. 9(2) demanding steel ingot duty
which, according to the authority the appellant had evaded
to pay. The appellant paid the duty demanded under protest
482
and appealed to higher authorities. The Government, in
revision. treated the demand as one under r. 10, because,
there was no question of any evasion by the appellant, and
confined the demand to clearances effected after December
21, 1962.
In appeal to this Court against the order of the Central
Government, the. appellant contended that: (1) The clause
’excise duty for the time being leviable under the Act on
pig iron or steel ingots’ is attracted only when any pig
iron or steel ingot dutiable under the Act is Used in the
manufacture of any article dutiable under item 26AA (1),
and, as the steel bars used in the manufacture of wire were
imported and were not made out of steel ingots dutiable
under the Act, that loan of the levy was not attracted to
the wires; and (2) The demand by the Central Government was
barred by limitation under r. 10.
HELD: (1) (Per Sikri and Bachawat, JJ.) The excise duty
was levied correctly as determined by the Central
Government.
Item 26AA prescribes a rate of duty as the heading of
its column 3 indicates. The rate consists of two parts, one
part is the ad valorem duty and the other excise duty. The
context indicates that the words ’as the case may be’ denote
the excise duty leviable on pig iron under item 25 is to be
charged if the product is an iron product; if it is a steel
product then the excise duty leviable on steel ingots under
item 26 is to. be levied. The weight to be taken into
consideration for determining the excise duty would be the
weight of the products made out of iron steel ingots and
not that of the pig iron or steel ingot out of which they
were made. That is, the duty will be the duty leviable on
the hypothetical piece of pig iron or steel ingot ’as the
case may be of the same weight as the particular products
to be assessed. The duty is not -concerned with the actual
price of pig iron or steel ingot out of which other articles
are made, and it is not concerned with whether any excise
duty or countervailing duty was paid on the pig iron or
steel ingot used. Therefore it is irrelevant whether the
article out of which the assessed article was manufactured
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was imported or not. [486 A B; F--H; 487 B--E]
The effect of item 63(36) in the Tariff Act, is to levy
a countervailing duty as an additional custom duty
equivalent to the prevalent .excise duty on like articles
produced and manufactured. The manufacturer in India, who
used steel rods made in India and made wires from them was
given a certain relief under Notification 77, but the
manufacturer who used steel rods made abroad was not given
this exemption. Later by Notification 89, and suitable
amendments, he was also given a similar exemption. But the
item in the Tariff Act does not throw any light on item
26AA(1) of the Excise Act. [487 H; 488 A B]
Assuming that it is permissible to look at the
notifications issued by the. Central Government for
interpreting item 26AA, they proceed on the interpretation
of the item that it refers to a rate. The Notifications do
not exempt an article from the levy of duty; they give
relief which may in a particular case be the excise duty or
the countervailing duty levied on the article out of which
the assessed article has been manufactured. The rule that a
fiscal enactment should be strictly construed does not mean
that close reasoning should not be employed to arrive at the
true meaning of a badly drafted entry in an Excise Act. [487
A-C]
Per Hegde, J. (dissenting): The expression leviable of
pig iron and steel ingots as the case may be’ has reference
to pig iron or steel ingots dutiable under the Excise Act.
Therefore. the wires which ’are the subject matter of the
impugned levy in the present case, are not liable to pay
the duty in dispute as they were made out of imported steel
rods and hence not dutiable under the Excise Act. [495 A-B;
505 B]
403
If the item 26AA refers to a rate Parliament would have
conveyed such intention without any ambiguity as it has done
in item 5. The words used are ’the excise duty’. If the
clause refers to a rate the article ’the’ has no place in
the context. The expression ’the excise duty for the time
being leviable’ by necessary implication refers to an
article dutiable under the Act That must necessarily be the
’article which is one of the components of the article on
which duty is sought to be levied, that is, in the instant
case, the steel ingot used in the production of wires.
Moreover pig iron is the intermediate form through which
iron must pass in the manufacture of steel. Therefore,
every steel product is also an iron product. If the clause
in item 26AA refers to a rate and not to the duty leviable
on the material used in the manufacture of the dutiable
article, then the question would be whether the rate is that
at which duty is leviable on steel ingot or that leviable on
pig iron. If it merely depends on the practice prevailing
in the trade then the power of the assessing authorities to
determine the nature of an. article would be an arbitrary
power, and the legislature is not likely to have conferred
such an arbitrary power on the authorities. If on the other
hand. the item refers to the material from which the article
on which duty is sought to be levied is made--the
proximate, raw material and not the material from which
that raw material is made, then there is definiteness for
the purpose of finding out the amount. [495 A--C, E--F; 496
E--G; 497 A-B]
Observations in C.A. Abraham v. I.T.O. Kottayam [1961] 2
S.C.R. 765, 771; C.I.T.v. Karamchcmd Premchand, Ahmedabad,
[1960] 3 S.C.R. 727, 742; Inland Revenue Commissioners v.
Duke of West minister [1936] A.C. 1, 24 and Partington v.
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The Attorney-General, (1869) 4 H.L 100, 122, applied
Entry 63(36) in the Tariff Act and item 26AA in the
Excise Act were enacted simultaneously, came into force on
the same day from one code and are pari materia. They were
introduced in pursuance of a common purpose, namely, that
the articles listed in item 26AA, whether produced out of
indigenous pig iron or steel ingot or made of imported pig
iron or steel ingot must bear the same amount of duty. The
duty levied under item 63(36) being a countervailing duty it
cannot be considered as an additional duty over and above
the duty imposed under item 26AA of the Excise Act. [497
C--E, F---G]
For finding out the scope of a particular levy,
notifications issued by the executive Government providing
for exemption from levy can be looked into as they
disclose the overall scheme. The notifications Nos. 70,
77 and 89 were issued with a view to avoid double taxation,
and the exemption granted provides a clue to the scope of
item 26AA. The effect of Finance Act (2), 1962, and the
various Notifications is that excise duty is leviable at the
rate mentioned in item 26-AA on pig iron or steel ingot used
in the production of the article on which duty under item
26AA is sought to be levied but. to the extent any excise
duty or countervailing custom duty has been paid on any of
the material used in the manufacture of the article, the
same is exempt. Therefore, when item 26AA speaks of ’the
excise duty for the time being leviable on pig iron or steel
ingots as the case may be’ it refers to the excise duty
payable on pig iron or steel ingots used in the production
of the article dutiable under that item. [503 C--E; 504
G--H]
Kailash Nath v. State of U.P.A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 790,
followed.
(2) (By Full Court): If the exercise, of a power can be
traced to a legitimate source, the fact that it was
purported to have been exercised under a different power
does not vitiate the exercise of the power. In
484
the present case, a common form is prescribed for issuing
notices under rr. 9(2) and 10 and the incorrect statements
in the written demand did not prejudice the appellant as
shown from its answer to the demand: Therefore, though the
demand was made under r. 9(2), the Revenue could change its
position and justify the demand under r. 10. [484 E; 505
D--H; 506 A--B]
B. Balakotaiah v. Union of India [1958] S.C.R. 1052 and
Afzal Ulah v. State of U.P. [1964] 4 S.C.R. 991, referred to
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1263 of
1968.
Appeal by special leave from the order, dated November
2, 1967 of the Government of India, Ministry of Finance,
Department of Revenue & Insurance, New Delhi in Central
Excise Revision Application No. 1323 of 1967.
K. Sen, S.V. Gupte, Rameshwar Nath, Mahinder Netrain and
Ravinder Nath, for the appellant.
V.A. Seyid Muhammad and S.P. Nayar, for the respondents.
[ SIKRI, J. delivered the majority Judgment on behalf of
himself and BACHAWAT, J. HEGDE, J. gave a dissenting
Opinion].
Sikri, J. I have had the advantage of reading the draft
judgement prepared by Hegde, J., but, while I agree with him
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that there is no force in the plea of limitation advanced on
behalf of the assessee, in my opinion the appeal should fail
on the ground that the excise duty was levied correctly as
determined by the Central Government in its order, dated
November 2, 1967.
The facts are fully set out in the judgment of Hegde,
21’. It is only necessary to mention a few facts in order
to make this judgment readable. The assessee manufactures
iron and steel products. It manufactured wires out of steel
rods, which had been imported by it prior to April 24, 1962.
Item 26AA was added to the First Schedule of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (I of 1944)-hereinafter referred
to as the Excise Act--by Finance Act (No. 2), 1962 (XX of
1962) with effect from April 24, 1962. This reads as under:
"26-AA.IRON OR STEEL PRODUCTS, THE FOLLOWING, NAMELY
:--
(i)Bars,rods,coils,wires,joi- Five per cent. ad volorem pl-
sts, girders, angles,channa- us excise duty for the time
ls,tees,flats,beams,zeds,tr- being leviable on pig iron
ough,pilling and all other or steel ingots,as the case
rolled forced or extruded may be.
shapes and sections,not other-
wise specified.
(ii) Plates and sheets, other Seven and a half per cent.ad
than plates and sheets inten- valorem plus the excise duty
ded for for
485
tinning and hoops, and str- the time being leviable on
ipe, all sorts,including pig iron or steel ingots as
galvanised or corrugated the case may be.
and sheets.
(iii) Uncoated plates and Seven and a half per cent.
sheets intended for tin- ad valorem plus the excise
ning. duty for the time being le-
viable on pig or iron steel
(iv) Pipes and tubes ingots, as the case may be.
(including blanks there-
fore)all sorts, whether Five per cent.ad valorem
rolled,forged,spun,cast plus the excise duty for
drawn,annealed,welded or the time being leviable
extruded. on pig iron or steel ingots
as the case may be.
(v) All other steel Five per cent.ad valorem
castings,not otherwise sp- plus the excise duty for
ecified. the time being leviable
on steel ingots.’
The short point that arises is this: What is the duty
leviable on the wires manufactured by the assessee out of
steel rods which had already been imported ? For the time
being I will ignore notifications issued under r. 8 (1) of
the rules made under the Excise Act, and the amendments made
by the Finance Act (No. 2) of 1962, and Indian Tariff
(Amendment Act) 1963 (III of 1963) to the Indian Tariff Act,
1934. ’
"Wires". are mentioned in item No. 26AA(i).Therefore we
have to scrutinize the third column of item 26AA(i) for the
rate of duty. Three points need clarification:
(a) What is the meaning of or inference
derivable from the word ’plus’?
(b) What iS the meaning of the formula
"the excise duty for the time being leviable
on pig iron or steel ingots"?
(c) What is the import of the words"as the
case may be"?
The word ’plus’ in the context indicates that the rate
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of duty consists of 2 parts: one part is ad valorem duty and
the other is the excise duty calculated according to the
formula given. In other words, both duties have to be
levied. I will presently discuss what the formula means but
this is clear that the third column contemplates one duty,
consisting of two parts, being levied.
Before I discuss the meaning of the formula it will
clarify matters if the import of the words "as the case may
be" is first ascertained. These words indicate that a
choice has to be made between two types of excise
duties--excise duty leviable on pig iron or excise duty
leviable On steel ingots, Sub-items (ii), (iii) and (iv) of
item 26AA use the same set of words. In sub-item (v) excise
duty leviable on steel ingots is only mentioned. This sub-
item consists of steel casting. This indicates that the
duty is being calculated thus because steel castings have
been made
486
from steel ingots. Item 26AA deals with iron ’and steel
products. It seems to me that the context indicates that the
words "as the case may be" denote that the excise duty
leviable on pig iron is to be charged of the product is an
iron product; if it is a steel product then the excise duty
leviable on. steel ingots is to be levied. In other words,
this decides the choice whether item 25 (pig iron) or item
26 (steel ingots) is to be looked at. Although 1 was not
enlightened on the point by counsel during the course of the
hearing, I have no doubt that the Excise Department and the
trade know how to distinguish a steel product from an iron
product. If there is a dispute on the point it will have to
be resolved in the future.
Now to come to the formula "the excise duty for the time
being leviable on pig iron or steel ingots." Let me give a
simple problem in order to illustrate the points which’
arise under this head of inquiry. "A" manufactures a steel
ingot ’X’ in May 1961 in Jamshedpur. He pays excise duty on
it in May 1961 as he removes it out of the factory. Its
value is determined at the wholesale cash price at the time
of removal in accordance with s. 4 of the Excise Act. Steel
ingot ’X’ is sold to a manufacturer "B" in Faridabad who
manufactures steel rods (’Y’ & ’Z’) out of it in May 1962
and removes them in May 1962. What is the excise duty
payable on steel rods (’Y’ & ’Z’) ? Ad valorem duty is easy
to calculate. What about the additional duty ? We know that
the steel ingot ’X’ has paid excise duty. But this does not
make any difference. The additional duty has still to be
calculated under the formula. It is also plain that no
excise duty is strictly leviable under ss. 3 and 4 of the
Excise Act on steel ingot ’X’ as such. Not only that it
does not exist any longer but duty on it has already been
paid and further no duty would be leviable under s. 4 for it
was removed from the factory long time ago in May 1961.
Therefore, it is clear that the formula cannot be concerned
with the particular ingot ’X’ at all.’ It seems to me that
what it is concerned with is the duty leviable on a
hypothetical steel ingot if it had been manufactured or
removed at the same time as the steel rods (’Y’ & ’Z’) were
manufactured or removed. In the example given above, under
the formula the excise duty leviable under item 26 in May
1962 would have to be charged, i.e., 39.35 per metric tonne.
The weight to be taken into consideration would be the
weight of steel rods ’Y’ & ’Z’, and not of the steel ingot
’X’ out of which they were made.
It seems to me that this is the true interpretation of
column 3 of items 26AA(i). It simply prescribes a rate of
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duty as the heading of column indicates. It is not
concerned with actual ingots out of which other articles are
made. It is not concerned with whether that steel ingot has
paid excise duty or countervail-
487
ing duty or not. It is a simple formula perhaps
inartistically formulated. It is said that the item should
be strictly construed, it being a taxing enactment. But no
rule or principle ,of construction requires that close
reasoning should not be employed to arrive at the true
meaning of a badly drafted entry in an Excise Act. I
believe I am not stretching the language of the entry
against the subject, but it, appears to me that in the
context of scheme of the Excise Act this is the only
reasonable construction to give to the entry.
If it is permissible to look at the notifications issued
by the Central Government which have given reliefs of
various kinds, they seem to me to proceed on the
interpretation which I have given above. It will be noted
that they do not exempt the article from the levy of duty;
they give relief which may in a particular case be the
excise duty or countervailing duty levied on the article out
of which the assessed article has been manufactured.
To revert to the example given by me above,
notification No.70/62, dated April 24, 1962, would exempt
manufacturer B’"from so much of the duty of excise leviable
on steel rods as is equivalent to .the duty leviable under
item 26." Therefore, reading entry 26AA(i) with this
notification, manufacturer ’B’ does not pay the whole of the
duty leviable on steel rods (’Y’ & ’Z’) under col. 3 (item
26AA) because the steel ingot which he has used had already
paid the appropriate amount of duty.
I am not able to appreciate how the insertion of item
No. 63 (36) in the First Schedule of the Tariff Act or the
subsequent amendment of the Indian Tariff Act, 1934, by
Indian Tariff (Amendment Act) 1963 throw any light on .the
interpretation of item 26-AA(i). Item No. 63(36) is in
respect of the same iron and steel products as are mentioned
in item 26AA. Column 4 (standard rate of duty) reads:
"The excise duty for the time being
leviable on like articles if produced or
manufactured in India, and where such duty is
leviable at different rates the highest duty;
and the duty so leviable shall be in addition
to the duty which would have been levied ’if
this entry had not been inserted."
The effect of this entry is to levy an additional customs
duty equivalent to the prevalent excise duty on like
articles produced and manufactured. In other words, if the
customs duty leviable under other entries in the Second
Schedule on steel rods is ’D’, an additional duty ’E’ has to
be levied equal to the excise duty leviable on steel rods,
i.e., under item 26AA. This has been called countervailing
duty.
488
The manufacturer India, who used steel rods made in
India, and made wires from them was given a certain relief
by notification No. 77 of 1962, but the manufacturer in
India who used steel rods made abroad to make wires was not
first given this exemption. Later by amendments he was
given a similar exemption. The’ Central Excise Manual
(Seventh Edition) at p. 123 states the position thus:
"26AA(2) Iron or Steel products falling
under item No. 26AA, if made from another
article falling under the said item or item
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No. 63 36) of the First Schedule to the Indian
Tariff Act, 1934 (32 of 1934) and having
already paid the appropriate amount of excise
or countervailing customs duty, as the case
may.be, are exempt with effect from 24th
April, 1962, from so much of the duty of
excise as is equivalent to the excise or
countervailing customs duty payable on the
said article ’--vide Government of India,
Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue)
Notification No. 89/62-Central Excise, dated
10th May, 1962 (issued in supersession of
Notification No. 77/62-Central Excises, dated
24th April, 1962, as further amended by
Notifications No. 93/62-Central Excises,
dated 26th May, 1962, and No. 225/62-Central
Excises,dated 29th December, 1962."
The only light thrown by these amendments. and the
notifications referred to above is that it is not the idea
to levy excise duty at various stages of manufacture of
certain articles and this is achieved by issuing
notifications giving appropriate reliefs. But if there is
no relief given by notifications the full duty at the rate
mentioned in col. 3 of entry (i) of item 26-AA has to be
paid.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Bachawat, J. I agree with Sikri, J.
Hegde, J. This is an appeal by special leave. It is
directed against the order of the Government of India in No.
1323 of 1967, dated November 2, 1967 rejecting the
appellant’s application for refund of the excise duty paid
by him under protest.
In order to appreciate the controversy between the
parties it is necessary to set out the material facts. The
appellant is a Company having a factory at Rishara in the
State of West Bengal. It manufactures, among other items,
Iron and Steel Products such as Jute Baling Hoops, Wire
Ropes, Cold Rolled Strips, Chain Pulley Blocks, Electric
Hoists.etc. Between December 1961 and January 1962 the
appellant received various consignments of imported High
Carbon Steel Wire Rods. Its opening stock of imported High
Carbon Steel Wire Rods on April 24, 1962 was
489
2,788.401 metric tons. As before, the appellant
manufactured wires from those steel rods even after April
24, 1962.
Finance (No. 2) Act 1962 (Act No. 20 of 1962) imposed
for the first time excise duty on the Iron and Steel
Products; and by sub-el. (S) of sub-s. (2) of s. 16 of the
said Act an amendment was made to the First Schedule of the
Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter referred to
as the Act) incorporating after item 26A item 26AA. The
relevant portion of that entry reads thus:
Iron or Steel Products.
The following namely:
(1) Bars, rods,coils,wires 5% ad valorem plus the ex-
joists girders,angels,channels cise duty for the time
tees,flats beam,zeds,trough, being leviable on pig iron
piling and all other rolled and Steel Ingots as the
forged or extruded shapes and case may be.
section not otherwise specified.
Pig Iron and Steel Ingots were already subject to excise
duty under Items Nos. 25 and 26 in the First Schedule of the
Act. The rate of duty in the case of the former at the
material time was Rs. 10 per metric tonne and that of the
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latter Rs. 39/35 per metric tonne. The newly imposed duty
under Item 26AA came into force on April 24, 1962. The
Collector of Central Excise, West Bengal, Calcutta by a
Trade Notice, Central Excise No. 32--Iron and Steel Products
2/62 dated Calcutta the 16th May 1962 notified the procedure
to be followed.
By Notification No. 70/62, dated April 24, 1962 issued
in exercise of the powers conferred by rule 8 (1 ) of the
rules framed under the Act (to be hereinafter referred to as
the rules), the Central Government exempted Iron and Steel
Products falling under Item 26AA, if made from Pig Iron or
Steel Ingots on which the appropriate amount of excise duty
has already been paid, from so much of the duty of the
excise leviable thereon as is equivalent to the duty
leviable under Item 25 or 26 as the case may be.
On the same day as per Notification No. 77 of 1962, the
Central Government exempted Iron and Steel Products falling
under sub-items (2), (3), (4) and (5) of Item 26AA, if made
from articles which have already paid the appropriate duty
of excise under sub item (1 ) of the said Item, from so much
of the duty of excise as is equivalent to the duty payable
under the sub item (1). Finance (Act No. 2) of 1962 by s.
15 amended the First Schedule of the Tariff Act by adding
Item No. 63 (36) which deals with imported Iron and Steel
Products. The second column of that entry mentions the
various Iron and Steel Products included therein. The items
included therein are the very items set out in Sup CI/69-14
490
Item 26AA of the First Schedule to the Act. The third
column of that Item which specifies the levy reads thus:
"The excise duty for the time being
leviable on like articles if produced or
manufactured in India, and where such duty
is leviable at different rates the highest
duty so leviable shall be in addition to the
duty which would have been levied if this
entry had not been
inserted."
On May 10, 1962, the Government issued a fresh
Notification (No. 89 of 1962) under rule 8(1) of the rules
in supersession of the Notification No. 77/62 dated April
24, 1962. By that Notification, the Government exempted
with effect from April 24, 1962, Iron and Steel Products
falling under Item 26AA if made from another article falling
under the said Item and having already paid the appropriate
amount of duty from so much of the duty of excise as is
equivalent to the duty payable on the’ said article.
On the same day namely May 10, 1962, the Government
issued yet another Notification (Notification No. 90 of
1962) under rule 8 (1) under which it exempted Iron and
Steel Products falling under Item 26AA specified in column 2
of the table annexed to the Notification if made from Pig
Iron or Steel Ingots on which appropriate amount of excise
duty has already been paid, from so much of the duty of
excise leviable on such products as in excess of the duty
corresponding entry in column 3 of the said table. (Wire)
the product with which we are concerned in this case is also
included in the table. That Notification contains a proviso
which says:
"Provided that if the products are made
from pig iron and steel ingots on which
appropriate amount of duty has not been paid
the excise duty for the time being leviable on
pig iron or steel ingots as the case may be
shall be payable in addition to the duties
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specified in the appropriate entry in column 3
of the table."
On December 29, 1962, the Government issued yet another
Notification under rule 8(1) amending the Notification No.
89 of 1962 issued on May 10, 1962. In the place of words "if
made from another article falling under the said item and
having already paid the appropriate amount of duty from so
much of the duty of excise as is equivalent .to the duty
payable on the said article.", the following was
substituted:
"if made from another article falling under
the said Iterm or Item No. 63(36) of the
First Schedule to the Indian Tariff Act 1934
(32 of 1934) and having already paid the
appropriate amount of excise or court-
491
tervailing custom duty as the case may be from
so much of the duty of excise as is equivalent
to the excise or countervailing custom duty
payable on the said article."
By Indian Tariff (Amendment Act 1963) (Act No. 3/63)
effective from the 25th January 1963, the Indian Tariff Act
1934 was amended and after s. 2, the following section was
inserted namely:
2(a) (1).--Any article which is imported
into India shall be liable to custom duty
equal to the excise duty for the time being
leviable on a like article if produced or
manufactured in India.
Explanation: In this sub-sec. the
expression "the excise duty for the time being
leviable on a like article if produced or
manufactured in India" means the excise duty
for the time being in force which would be
leviable on a like article if produced or
manufactured in India or if a like article is
not so produced or manufactured, which would
be leviable on the class or description of
articles to which the’ imported
article belongs and where. such duty is
leviable at different rates, the highest duty.
(2) The customs duty referred to in sub-
section (i) shall be in addition to any duty
imposed under this Act or under any other law
for the time being in force."
On or after April 24, 1962, the appellants cleared from
their warehouse wires produced from the aforementioned
imported Steel Rods after obtaining the required permission
from the excise authorities and after paying the duty
assesse. d. On those wires, duty was assessed without
taking into consideration "the excise duty for the time
being leviable on Pig Iron and Steel Ingots as the case may
be." At that time the Central Excise authorities proceeded
on the basis .that on the stock of wire in question only ad
valorem duty had to be levied and not "excise duty for the
time being leviable on Pig Iron or Steel Ingots as the case
may be." On March 21, 1963, the Inspector of Central
Excise attached to M/s. J.K. Steel Ltd., Rishara issued the
following notice:
"COLLECTORATE OF CENTRAL EXCISE
WEST BENGAL
No. 6 Range RIS. I.
Date: 21-3-1963. Circle-CGR.
Notice of Demand for duty under rule 9(2) of C.E. Rules,
1944.
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492
To
M/s. J.K. Steel Ltd., Rishara,
Hooghly.
Take notice that on behalf of the Central Government,
I hereby demand payment by you of the sum of Rs. 4,18,801/30
N.P. (Rupees four lacs eighteen thousand eight hundred
one and paise thirty only) within ten days from the date
hereof.
Particulars of Demands
-----------------------------------------------------------
Quantity Rate of duty Amount of duty
involved
-----------------------------------------------------------
Steel Ingot Duty on 6932.964 Rs.39.36 NP Rs.2,72,812/13
M.T.Hoops Per M.T.
Steel Ingot Duty on 921.937 Rs.39.36 NP Rs. 36,278/22
M.T.Strips Per M.T.
Steel Ingot Duty on 2788.00 Rs.39.36 NP Rs.1,09,710/95
Wire. --------------
Total Rs.4,18,801/30
No. VI/5A/I&S/JKS/CE/63/183, dated 21-3-1963.
Sd/-
Inspector I/C
Central Excise
M/s. 1. K. Steel Ltd., Rishara."
The appellants objected to the demand in question as per
their letter of March 24, 1963. They contended that they
had not contravened rule 9(2) of the rules nor was there any
short levy. As per his letter of August 26, 1963, the
Assistant Collector of Central Excise Calcutta 4th Division
confined the demand to that made under serial No. 3 of the
notice. The appellants paid’ the same under protest and
thereafter took up the matter in appeal to the Collector of
Central Excise who dismissed their appeal as per his order
of March 19, 1964, with these observations:
"The crucial point of this appeal is whether counter vailing
import duty was paid by the appellants on the imported
steel rods from which steel wires were manufactured. The
appellants could not produce any documents in support of
their argument that either import duty or countervailing
duty equivalent to steel ingot rate was paid by them on the
iron rods from which steel wires were drawn. Such duty is
leviable on steel rods under tariff item No. 26AA. As no
such duty on steel rods was paid by the appellants,
countervailing
493
duty equivalent to steel ingot duty has, therefore, to be
paid."
As against the order of the Collector, the appellants went
up in revision to the Central Government. The Central
Government allowed the revision petition to some extent.
This is what the Central Government ordered:
"The Government of’ India have carefully
considered all the points raised by the
petitioners but see no reason to interfere
with the Collectors stated that the Steel
Wires manufactured out of steel wire rods
imported prior to 24-4-1962 on which no
countervailing duty was paid, and cleared
during the period, from 24-4-1962 to 10-8-1963
were subject to full duty as then leviable
under Item 26AA (1) of Central Excise Tariff.
However the demand for differential duty
initially made on 2-3-1963 and subsequently
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amended vide the Asstt. Collector’s order,
dated 26-8-1963 shall be restricted to the
clearance effected during the 3 months period
prior to the initial service of demand on 21-
31963 that is to say, up to 21,12-1962 only as
per the provisions of Rule 10 of Central
Excise Rules, 1944 which was applicable to
this case. The demand in respect of clearances
effected prior to 21-12-1962 is hereby set
aside and consequential refund shall be
granted to the petitioners.
Subject to the above modifications, the
revision application is otherwise rejected."
Aggrieved by that order, the appellants have brought this
appeal. The questions that arise for decision in this appeal
are:
(1) What is the true scope of entry No. 26AA
of the First Schedule to the Act ?
(2) In considering the scope of the said
entry, can the Notifications issued by the
Government on or after April 24, 1962 be taken
into consideration?
(3) Is the demand barred by limitation under
rule 10 of the rules ?
One other question had been raised in the grounds of
appeal namely that the order of the Central Government is
vitiated as it had contravened the principles of natural
justice. That contention was not pressed at the hearing.
In the context of this case that contention loses much of
its significance If we accept the appellant’s contention as
regards the scope of entry 26AA then’ the fact that the
Government’s illegal is immaterial illegal is immaterial.
If
494
on the other hand we accept the interpretation placed by the
Revenue on that entry remand of the case to Central
Government serves no purpose.
I shall now proceed to consider the questions earlier
formulated for decision.
According to the assessee the true import of the clause
in column 3 of entry 26AA is that goods mentioned in column
2 of that entry are dutiable at 5 per cent ad valorem plus
the excise duty for the time being leviable under the Act on
pig iron or steel ingot used in the production of those
goods. Shri A.K. Sen, the learned Counsel for the assessee
urged that the expression leviable in that clause means
leviable under the Act; in other words dutiable under the
Act; the words ’Pig Iron’ and ’Steel Ingots’ referred to
therein is the Pig Iron or the Steel Ingot used in
manufacture of the articles on which duty is sought to be
levied; otherwise the word leviable becomes inappropriate.
In other words according to him the second limb of the levy
under that clause is attracted only when any pig iron or
steel ingot dutiable under the Act is used in the
manufacture of any article dutiable under sub-cl. (1) of
entry 26AA. As the steel bars used in manufacturing the
’wires’ with which we are concerned in tiffs case were not
made out of steel ingot dutiable under the Act, as they were
imported bars, that part of the levy is not attracted on
those wires.
The contention for the Revenue is that the expression
"the excise duty for the time being leviable on Pig Iron or
Steel Ingot as the case may be" sets out only a measure; the
rate at which the duty is leviable; it has no reference to
any particular material; it is merely a yardstick. The
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argument of Dr. Syed Muhammad, learned Counsel for the
Revenue proceeded thus:
The entry in question deals with two classes of products
i.e., iron products and steel products. The assessing
authority has first to decide whether a particular article
is an iron product or steel product. If he comes to the
conclusion that it is a steel product then he should assess
the duty payable firstly by determining the ad valorem duty
payable on it, thereafter he must find out its weight in
metric tons and add to the ad valorem duty the amount
payable as excise duty under entry 26 of the First Schedule
on steel ingot of that weight.
If the intention of the Parliament was as suggested by
the learned Counsel for the Revenue then column 3 should
have read thus:
"5 per cent ad valorem plus excise duty at
the rate for the time being leviable on pig
iron or steel ingots as the case may be."
495
It is difficult to interpret the words "for the time being
leviable" as indicating a rate. The expression "leviable on
pig iron and steel ingots as the case may be" in my opinion
has reference to pig iron or steel ingots dutiable under the
Act. In fiscal legislation the terms "rate" is a familiar
term.In fact entry 5 of the First Schedule dealing with salt
speaks of "rate fixed annually by a Central Act". Therefore
it would have been the easiest tiring for the Parliament to
convey its intention without ambiguity. At this stage it may
also be noted that the clause in question refers to "the
excise duty" and not excise duty in general. The definite
article "the" has considerable significance. It refers to
some particular excise duty. If the second part of the
clause merely refers to a rate than the article "the" has no
place in that context.
It was urged on behalf of the Revenue that to accept the
contention of the assessee and to hold that the second part
of the. clause refers to the steel ingot used in the
production of the "wires" is .to read into the clause the
words "used in the production of the article in question."
It was said that such a construction is impermissible.
Therefore we should not accede to that contention. I am not
prepared to accept that reasoning. In fact in my opinion to
accept the construction contended for on behalf of the
Revenue, it would be necessary for us to include the words
"at the rate" after the words "excise duty" and before the
words "for the time being". No such difficulty arises if we
accept the interpretation placed by the assessee on that
clause. The expression "the excise duty for the time being
leviable" by necessary implication refers to an. article
dutiable under the Act. That must necessarily be the
article which is one of the components’ of the article on
which duly is sought to be levied. In the instant case that
must be the steel ingot used in the production of the
"wires" with which we are concerned in this case.
As laid down by this. Court in C.A. Abraham v. I.T.O.,
Kottayam and Anr.(1)
"In interpreting a fiscal statute the Court
cannot proceed to make good deficiencies if
there may be any; the court must interpret the
statute as it stands and in case of doubt in a
manner favourable to the tax payer."
This Court also laid down in Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Karamchand Premchand Ltd., Ahmedabad(2) that if there is any
ambiguity of language in a fiscal statute, benefit of that
ambiguity must be given to the assessee. At this. stage I
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am tempted to recall to my mind the well known observations
of Lord Russel of Killowen in Inland Revenue Commissioners
v. Duke of Westminister(3) viz.:
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 765:A.I.R.1961 S.C.607,612
(2) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 727, 742.
(3) [1936] A.C.1, 24.
496
"I confess that I view with disfavour the
doctrine that in taxation cases the
subject is to be taxed if in accordance with
a Court’s view of what it considers the
substance of the transaction, the Court thinks
that the case falls within the contemplation
or spirit of the statute. The subject is
not taxable by inference or by analogy, but
only by the plain words of a statute
applicable to the facts and circumstances of
his case."
About a century ago Lord Cairns in Partington v. The
Attorney General(x) observed:
"As I understand the principle of all fiscal
legislation it is.tiffs: If the person sought
to be taxed comes within the letter of the law
he must be taxed however great the hardship
may appear to the judicial mind to be. On the
other hand, if the Crown, seeking to recover
the tax cannot bring the subject within the
letter of the law, the subject is. free,
however apparently within the spirit of the
law the case might otherwise appear to be."
Unless I am satisfied that the only reasonable
interpretation that can be placed on the clause in col. 3 of
entry 26AA is that placed by the Revenue, it is not possible
to justify the impugned levy.
There is yet another difficulty in accepting the
interpretation tried to be placed by the Revenue on entry
26AA. According to books on steel making pig iron is the
intermediate form through which almost all iron must pass in
the manufacture of steel (see "The Making, Shaping and
Treating of Steel" edited by Harold E. Mcgannon at p. 384).
Therefore every steel product is also. an iron product. If
the second part of the clause in column 3 of entry 26AA
refers to .a rate and not the duty leviable on the material
used in the manufacture of the dutiable article under that
entry then the question arises whether the rate in question
is that at which duty is leviable on steel ingot or that
leviable on pig iron. That part of the clause refers to two
different materials dutiable at different rates. If on the
other hand it refers. to the material from which the article
on which duty is sought to be levied is made-the proximate
raw material and not the material from which that raw
material is made, then there is no difficulty in finding out
the amount.
Dr. Syed Muhammad was not able to tell us how the
assessing authorities classify articles into iron products
and steel products. It is not his case that there is any
recognised basis for doing so. It is also not his case that
there is any prescribed procedure for deciding that
question. His explanation that it is done on the basis of
the practice prevailing in the trade is far from
satisfactory.
(1) [1869] 4, H.L. 100, 122.
497
He was not able to tell us how we can ascertain that
practice or what that practice is. If his contention is
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correct then the power of the assessing authorities to
determine the nature of an article is an arbitrary power.
It is undefined and unguided. The determination may vary
from officer to officer. It is doubtful whether such a
power is a valid power. That apart legislature is not
likely to have conferred such an arbitrary power on the
authorities. That difficulty will not arise if the duty
under the second limb of the levy in column 3 of entry 26AA
is determined on the basis of the actual material used.
For the purpose of interpreting the clause in question,
reference may also be made to entry 63(36) in the First
Schedule to the Tariff Act. It may be remembered that
entry as well as entry 26AA in the First Schedule of the Act
were enacted simultaneously under Finance (No. 2) Act, 1962.
Both these entries came into force on the same day namely on
24th April 1962 The Act and the Tariff Act are cognate
legislations. In other words they are legislations which
are pari materia. They form one code. They must be taken
together as forming one system and as interpreting and
enforcing each other. It is proper to assume from the
surrounding circumstances, that these two entries were
introduced in pursuance of a common purpose, that purpose
being that the articles listed in entry 26AA whether
produced out of indigenous Pig Iron or Steel Ingot or made
out of imported Pig Iron or Steel Ingot must bear the same
amount of duty. If the interpretation placed on entry 26AA
by the learned Counsel for the assessee is accepted then it
would be seen that entry by itself would not impose the duty
contemplated by the second part of the clause in col. 3 of
entry 26AA on imported Pig Iron or Steel Ingot. Evidently in
order to equalise the duty on articles made out of
indigenous material as well as imported material entry 63
(36) of the First Schedule to the Tariff Act was enacted. In
other words that entry imposes countervailing duty and not
additional duty. It was conceded by the learned Counsel for
the Revenue that the duty levied under entry 63(36) of the
First Schedule of the Tariff Act is only a countervailing
duty. If that be so, that duty cannot be considered as an
additional duty over and above the duty imposed under entry
26AA of the First Schedule of the Act. But it would be an
additional duty if the interpretation of entry 26AA
canvassed on behalf of the Revenue is accepted because
according to the Revenue the rate prescribed in that entry
is equally applicable to all articles mentioned therein
whether manufactured from indigenous or imported material.
If that be so the duty collected under entry 63(36) of the
First Schedule under the Tariff Act will be an additional
duty and not a countervailing duty. It is true that despite
entry 26AA of the First Schedule to the Act and entry 63(36)
of the First Schedule
498
of the Tariff Act if pig iron or steel ingot imported before
April 24, 1962 is used in the manufacture of an article
dutiable under entry 26AA only the ad valorem duty
prescribed under that entry can be levied on that article.
It may be that the legislature intended it to be so or there
is a lacuna in the provision. In either case the effect is
the same.
I now come to the question whether in interpreting a
taxing entry I can take any aid from the various steps taken
by the Department in implementing that levy, I have earlier
referred to a large number of Notifications issued under
rule 8 (1 ) of the rules. The parties have also produced
before us the instructions issued by the Department on May
16, 1962 in the matter of implementation of entry 26AA. I
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have now to see whether any aid can be taken from these
instructions as well as the Notifications for finding out
the true scope of entry 26AA.
So far as the instructions issued by the Department are
concerned there is hardly any doubt that the same are wholly
irrelevant. In Craies on Statute Law Sixth Edn. at page
131 it is stated:
"Explanatory notes regarding the working of
an Act issued by a government department for
the assistance of their officials are
inadmissible for the purpose of construing the
Act." .
The same conclusion was arrived at by this Court in
Commissioner Income’ Tax, Madras v.K. Srinivasan and K.
Gopalan.(1) At pages 502-503 of that report it is observed:
"He,(learned Counsel for the assessee),
however, drew our attention to the directions
contained in the Income-tax Manual in force
for a number of years and contended that the
department itself placed on sub-sections (3)
and (4) of section 25 the same construction as
was placed on them by the senior Judge in the
High Court and that was the true construction
of these two sub-sections. This argument in
our opinion, has no validity. The department
changed its view subsequently and amended the
manual. The interpretation placed by the
department on these sub-sections cannot be
considered to be a proper guide in a matter
like this when the construction of a statute
is involved."
Therefore I have to exclude from consideration the
instructions issued by the Government.
This takes me to the Notifications issued by the
Government under rule 8(1) of the rules. Under s. 38 of the
Act all rules
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 486, 502-503.
499
made and notifications issued under the Act shall be made
and issued by publication in the official Gazette. All such
rules and notifications shall thereupon have effect as if
enacted in the Act. The rules made have to be placed on the
table of the Parliament. The Parliament can amend those
rules. Section 3 8 is of no assistance. to us in the present
case because the notifications referred to earlier are not
those issued under the Act. They are notifications issued
under rule 8 (1) of the rules. Therefore their relevance
has to be considered without taking any assistance from s.
38. In Halsbury’s Laws of England 3rd edn. vol. 36 at page
401 it is observed:
"Where a statute provides that subordinate
legislation made under it is to have effect as
if enacted in the statute, such legislation
may be referred to for the purpose of
construing a provision in the statute
itself. Where a statute does not contain such
a provision, and does not confer any power to
modify the application of the statute by
subordinate legislation, it is clear that
subordinate legislation made under the.
statute cannot alter or vary the meaning of
the statute itself where it is unambiguous,
and it is doubtful whether such legislation
can be referred to for the purpose of
construing an expression in the statute, even
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if the meaning of the expression is
ambiguous."
No decision of this Court or of any of the High Courts
in this country dealing with tiffs aspect has been brought
to my notice. Even the Counsel for the parties were not
definite about the stand that they should take. They were
changing their position again. and again. On this question
the opinion in English courts is not unanimous. That
question came up for consideration as early as in 1871 in Ex
Parte Wier In re Wier.(1). Sir G. Mellish L.J. delivering
the judgment of the Court observed:
"We do not think that any other section of
the Act throws any material light upon the
proper construction of this section,. and if
the question had depended upon the Act alone
we should have had great doubt what the proper
construction was; but we are of opinion that,
where the construction of the Act is ambiguous
and doubtful on any point, recourse may be had
to the rules which have been made by the Lord
Chancellor under the authority of the Act, and
if we find that in the rules any particular
construction has been put on the Act, that it
is our duty to adopt and follow that
construction."
(1) Ch. Appeal Cases (Vol. 6) p. 879.
500
In Re: Normal Ex parte Board of Trade (1) Lord
Esher,M.R.Observed:
"It was urged that we ought to hold the
Act to be retrospective by reason of the rules
and forms which have been made under it, and
which have a statutory force; and it is said
that shew that that the trustee must go back
in his accounts to matters which happened
before the Act came into operation. But, when
we look at the forms, we see that they are in
express terms headed so as to relate to
transactions taking place after the coming
into operation of the Act; and, therefore,
they supply no reason why we should depart
from the ordinary rule that an Act is not
retrospective."
From these observations, it is clear that Lord Esher did
take into consideration the subordinate legislation in
considering the principal Act.
In Billings v. Reed,(2) Lord Greene stated
that:
"The fact that the object .of this Act was in
substance what I have suggested can be seen
from a consideration of the way in which the
scheme has been framed pursuant to the Act
itself and with the tacit approval of
Parliament as provided in the Act. At any
rate, we are entitled to look at the scheme
for the purpose of seeing the kind of
practical treatment of these questions which
Parliament has authorised."
From this observation, it is seen that the learned Judge did
look into the subordinate legislation in finding out the
object of the Act.
In Hale v. Bolton Leathers Ltd.,(8)
Somervell L. J. observed:
"The county court judge was referred, as
we were, to various paragraphs in the
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regulations made under the Act of 1946. He
took the view that these regulations could not
affect the construction of the Act. The
regulation making power is conferred by s. 89,
sub-s. 1, proviso (b), and is as follows:
’regulations may make such transitional
’or consequential provisions as appear to the
Minister to be necessary or expedient,
having regard to the repeal of the said
enactments in relation to diseases and to
injuries not caused by accident, including
provision for modifying or winding up any
scheme made thereunder.’ We agree that these
regulations could not contradict the Act.
(1) [1893] 2 Q.B.D. 369, 373:.
(2) [1945] K.B. 11.
(3) [1950] K.B. 493, 505.
501
They might, we think, properly be referred to
as working out in detail the provisions of the
Act consistently with its terms."
In Howgate v. Ganall and .Anr.(1) Barry J. observed:
"I cannot, of course, have recourse to
these schemes as a guide to the correct
interpretation of the Act under which they
were made, but I am, I think, entitled to
consider them for certain limited purposes.
In Billings v. Reed(1) Lord Greene
H.R., .said, in reference to a scheme made
under the Act: ’The fact that the object of
this Act was in substance what I have
suggested can be seen from a consideration of
the way in which the scheme has been formed
pursuant to the Act itself and with the tacit
approval of Parliament as provided in the Act.
At any rate we are entitled to look at the
scheme for the purpose of seeing the kind of
practical treatment of these questions which
Parliament has authorized. It is abundantly
clear from the wording of the various schemes
made under the Act that the Minister, with the
tacit consent of Parliament has throughout
considered that ’war injuries’ may be
sustained outside the United
Kingdom ............ "
The decision in Hales v. Bolton Leathers Ltd.(a) to which
references has been made earlier was taken in appeal to the
House of Lords. The judgment of the House of Lords is
reported in [1951] A.C.p. 531. Dealing with the question
whether subordinate legislation could be taken into
consideration in interpreting the principal Act lord Simonds
said:
"I much doubt whether I am entitled. to
look to the regulations for guidance on the
eaning of the word in sub-s. (1), but I will
say something on this point later."
Reverting back to that topic again (at p. 541 of the report)
the learned Judge observed:
"First, if I may look at the regulations
made under s. 55, sub-s. (4), to assist in the
interpretation of the word, I agree with my
noble and learned friend Normand, in
thinking that they assist or at least are
consistent with this interpretation."
Lord Normand one of the other Judges who heard the appeal
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observed:
"The National Insurance (Industrial Injuries)
(Prescribed Diseases) Regulations, 1948, were made under
(1) [1951] 1 K.B. 265, 274.
(2) [1945] K.B. 11.
(3) [1950] K.B. 493. 505.
502
s. 55, sub-s. 4, and though in my opinion they
cannot control the construction of the Act, it
is yet of some importance to consider whether
they fit into the construction which I think
the Act properly hears."
Lord Oaksey in the same case was positive that the
regulations could be looked into for certain limited
purposes. This is what
observed:
"I agree with your Lordships in thinking
that the regulations themselves (National
Insurance) (industrial Injuries) (Prescribed
Diseases) (Regulations 1948) cannot alter the
meaning of the words of the statute, but they
may, I think, be looked at as being an
interpretation placed by the appropriate
Government department on the words of the
statute."
Therein Lord MacDermott also took the assistance of the
regulations while considering the statute.
Lastly we come to the decision of the Chancery Division
in London County Council v. Central Land Board(1).
Danckwerts J. in that case referred to the regulations made
under the Housing Act, 1936 while construing the provisions
of the Act.
From the above decisions, it is clear that several
judges in England have referred to the subordinate
legislation made under a statute for the purpose of
interpreting that statute though for the limited purpose of
know how the department which was entrusted with the task of
implementing that statute had understood that statute. In
the case of fiscal statutes, it may not be inappropriate to
take into consideration the exemptions granted in
interpreting the nature and the scope of the impost. In the
matter of fiscal legislation the initiative is in the hands
of the executive. Under Art. 112(1) of our Constitution,
the President shall in respect of every financial year.
cause to be laid before both the Houses of Parliament a
statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure for that
year. Under sub Art. (3) of Art. 113 no demand for a grant
shall be made except on the recommendation of the President.
In the matter of taxation very large powers are left in the
hands of the executive. Generally speaking the question of
exemption is left to the discretion of the Government. It
ought to be so because the exercise of that power depends on
various circumstances some of which cannot be anticipated in
advance. But yet the levy and exemptions are parts of the
same scheme of taxation. The two together carry into effect
the purpose of the legislation. For finding out the true
scheme of a taxing measure we have to take into
consideration not merely the levy but also
(1) [1959] Ch. D. 386.
503
the exemptions granted. This Court in Kailash Nath and
another v. State of U.P. and ors. (1) held that the
exemption granted in pursuance of a notification issued
under the.U.P. Sales Tax Act must be considered as having
been contained in the parent Act itself. This is what this
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Court stated therein:
"This notification having been made in
accordance with the power conferred by the
statute has statutory force and validity and,
therefore, the exemption is as if it is
contained in the parent Act itself."
I do not think it is necessary for me to decide in this case
the general question whether subordinate legislation can be
used for interpreting a provision in the parent Act. I am
not unaware of the danger in accepting that it could be so
done. But for the present purpose, it is sufficient to hold
that for finding out the scope of a particular levy,
notifications issued by the executive Government providing
for exemption from that levy can be looked into as they
disclose the overall scheme.
Even according to the learned Counsel for the Revenue
the notifications referred to earlier were issued with a
view to avoid double taxation. If that is so, the exemption
granted under those notifications provide a clue as to the
scope of the levy made under Item 26AA.
We have earlier seen that on the very day, the levy came
into force the Government had issued two notifications i.e.,
Notifications Nos. 70 and 77 of 1962. Under Notification
No. 70 it exempted Iron and Steel Products falling under
item 26AA if made from Pig Iron or Steel Ingots on which the
appropriate amount of duty has already been paid, from so
much duty of the excise leviable thereon as is equivalent to
the duty leviable under Item 25 or as the case may be under
Item 26. Under Notification. No. 77, it exempted Iron and
Steel Products falling under subitems Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5 of
Item 26AA, if made from articles which have already paid
appropriate duty of excise under subitem (1) of the said
item from so much of the duty of excise as is equivalent to
the duty payable under the said sub-item (1). These
Notifications clearly indicate that under Item 26AA, there
was no intention to levy double excise duty on the same
material. The intention appears to be that if one article is
made out of another article both of which are subject to
excise duty, the excise duty paid on the raw material should
be deducted in putting the excise duty payable on the
finished product. In addition these Notifications clearly
show that the Pig Iron and Steel Ingot mentioned in el. 3 of
entry 26AA are those used in the manufacture of the article
on which duty is sought to be levied under that entry.
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C.790.
504
In this connection we may also refer to Notification No.
89/62. Notification No. 77/62 referred merely to Iron and
Steel Pro,ducts falling under sub items 2, 3, 4 and 5 of
item 26AA manufactured out of articles falling under sub-
item (1) thereof. That Notification by itself was not all
comprehensive. It did not take in other articles made out
of Pig Iron or Steel Ingot. It is that reason Notification
No. 89/62 was issued on May 10, 1962 under which exemption
was given with effect from April 24, 1962 to all Iron and
Steel Products falling under Item 26AA if made from another
article falling under the said item and having already paid
appropriate amount of duty from so much of the duty of
excise as is equivalent to the duty payable on the said
article. Notifications Nos. 70, 77 and 89 exempted payment
of excise duty on an article to the extent duty had been
paid on the raw material used in the manufacture of the
article dutiable under entry 26AA. All these Notifications
proceeded on the basis that the second limb of the levy in
column 3 of entry 26AA refers to the duty payable on the Pig
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Iron or Steel Ingot, as the case may be used in the
manufacture of an article dutiable under 26AA.
But the above Notifications do not deal with the
countervailhag duty levied under entry 63(36) of the First
Schedule to the Tariff Act. This was clearly an omission.
To make good that omission the Government amended
Notification No. 89/62 by its order, dated December 29,
1962. The amended Notification in addition to the exemption
already given under Notification No. 89/62 also exempted
from the payment of duty any article falling Within any of
the sub-items in item 26AA if made from an article on which
countervailing duty has been paid under item 63(36) of the
First Schedule to the Tariff Act from so much ,of the duty
of excise as is equivalent to the countervailing
custom .duty payable on the said article. This Notification
clearly shows that the countervailing duty in question was
levied on the basis that the excise duty contemplated by
entry 26AA will not apply to articles made out of imported
Pig Iron or Steel Ingot. Further if the legislature
intended the duty under entry 63(36) to be an additional
duty, the exemption granted would nullify the legislative
mandate.
To summarise the effect of the Finance (No. 2) Act of
1962 and the various Notifications issued for the purpose of
implementing the scheme under that Act is that excise duty
is leviable at the rate mentioned in column 3 of Item 26AA
on pig iron or steel ingot used in the production of the
article on which duty under entry 26AA is sought to be
levied but to the extent .any excise duty or countervailing
custom duty had been paid on any of the material used in the
manufacture of any of that article, the ,same is exempt.
From this scheme it is clear that when Item 26AA
505
speaks of ,’the excise duty for the time being leviable on
Pig Iron or Steel Ingots: as ’the case may be" it refers
to the excise duty payable on’ the Pig Iron or Steel Ingots
used in the production of the article dutiable under that
item.
From the above discussion, it follows that the wires
which are the subject matter of the levy impugned in this
case are not liable to pay the duty in dispute in this case.
At one Stage it was contended on behalf of the assessee
that the levy under sub item (1) of Item 26AA comes into
effect only when an article is made directly from out of Pig
Iron or Steel Ingot as the case may be and not otherwise.
It is not necessary to examine the correctness of this
contention because at no stage the assessee had
challenged his liability to pay ad valorem duty .under Item
26AA. He paid the same without objection nor had he claimed
refund of the same.
I shall now take up the question of limitation. The
written demand made on March 21, 1963 purports to have been
made under rule 9 (2) of the rules. Therein the assessing
authority demanded steel ingot duty which according to it
the assessee had failed to pay. Quite clearly rule 9(2) is
inapplicable to the facts of the case. Admittedly the
assessee had cleared the goods from the warehouse after
paying the duty demanded and after obtaining the permission
of the concerned authority. Hence there is no question of
any. evasion. Despite the fact that the assessee challenged
the validity of the demand made on him both the Assistant
Collector as well as the Collector ignored that contention;
but when the matter was taken up to the Government it
treated the demand in question as a demand under rule 10.
The Government confined the demand to clearances effected
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after December 21, 1962. The demand so modified is in
conformity with rule 10. But the contention of the assessee
is that the demand having been made under rule 9 (2) and
there being no indication in that demand that it was made
under rule 10, the Revenue cannot now change its position
and justify the demand under rule 10; at any rate by the
time the Government amended the demand, the duty claimed
became barred even under rule 10. We are unable to accept
this contention as correct. There is no dispute that the
officer who made the demand was competent to make demands
both under rule 9(2) as well as under rule 10. If the
exercise of a power can be traced to a legitimate source,
the fact that the same was purported to have been exercise
under a different power does not vitiate the exercise of
the power in question. This is a well settled proposition
of law. In this connection reference may usefully be made to
the decisions of this Court in B. Balakotaiah v. The Union
of India and Ors. (1) and
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1052.
3sup.CI/69-15
506
Afzal UIlah v. State of U.p.(1). Further a common form is
prescribed for issuing notices both under rule 9(2) and rule
10. The incorrect statements in the written demand could not
have prejudiced the assessee. From his reply to the demand,
it is clear that he knew as to the nature of the demand.
Therefore I find ass suesseeance in the plea of Limitation
advanced on behalf of the For the reasons mentioned above,
this appeal is the Revenue is directed to refund the
excess duty paid under protest.
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion of the appeal is dismissed
with costs.
V.P.S.
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 991.
507