Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7868 of 1995
PETITIONER:
ITW Signode India Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
Collector of Central Excise
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/11/2003
BENCH:
CJI, S.B. Sinha & Dr. AR. Lakshmanan.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. SINHA, J.
The primal question involved in this appeal which arises out a
judgment and order of the Customs, Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate
Tribunal dated 6.4.1995 revolves round the effect of a validating
statute.
BACKGROUND FACTS:
The appellant manufactures and deals in box strappings. For the
said purpose they receive duty paid cold rolled steel strips. Several
processes are undertaken for manufacturing the end product.
The appellant allegedly informed the Superintendant of Central
Excise about the processes undertaken by them contending that the
resultant product falls under Tariff Item No. 26AA(iii) and no further
excise duty is leviable thereupon. The Assistant Collector by a letter
dated 25.6.1983 stated that the box strappings made out of the duty paid
cold rolled steel strips would be classifiable under Tariff Item 68 and
not under Tariff Item 26AA(iii). The appellant protested thereagainst
by a letter dated 2.7.1983 inter alia contending that having regard to
the ISI specifications and certain judicial pronouncements, Tariff Item
68 would not be applicable. The Assistant Collector by an order dated
11.7.1983 held:
"Considering all aspects, the cold rolled strips
known as box strappings continue to be cold rolled
strips under Tariff item 26AA (iii). The painting
and waxing on the product does not change the
classification of the product.
As the raw material, cold rolled strips has
discharged its duty liability under T.I. 26AA(iii)
and the resultant product continues to be cold
rolled strips under T.I. 26AA (iii), no further
duty liability arises."
The said order is said to have become final. Thereafter on or
about 4.2.1986 a classification list was filed by the appellant
effective from 1.3.1986 stating that box strappings are made by cutting
duty paid steel strips under the column "particulars of other goods
produced or manufactured and intended to be removed by the assessee".
Reference in this behalf was also made to the order of the Assistant
Collector dated 11.7.1983. The said classification list filed by the
appellant was approved by the Assistant Collector. However, by a notice
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dated 8.4.1987, the Collector, Central Excise called upon the Appellant
herein to explain as to why processes undertaken by them would not
amount to manufacture with immediate effect and why an amount of Rs.
1,13,82,247/- should not be levied on the basis that the goods should be
classified under chapter sub-heading 7308.90 of the Central Excise
Tariff Act, 1985 upon invoking Rule 9(2) of the Central Excise Rules,
1944 read with the provisions of Section 11A of the Central Excise
Rules.
The appellants contend that the issue as regard classification was
raised with the Department even in 1983, whereupon the Assistant
Collector vide his letter dated 11.7.83 held that the process carried
out by the appellants does not amount to manufacture since the product
continues to be a strip and accordingly there was no change in the
classification, i.e., it will fall under Tariff Item 26AA(iii). This
order has not been challenged by the department and thus it has become
final and conclusive. Thereafter, all along the appellants have filed
classification lists right from 1986 claiming the classification as
strips under Tariff Item 26AA under the old Tariff according to the
order passed by the Assistant Collector. All the classification lists
described the process manufacture adopted by the appellants. This was
finally approved by the department without any modification in favour of
the appellants. This classification continued even for the period
effective from March 1987. Thus, no demand could have been raised
against the appellant under Section 11A for the past period since there
was no short levy and in any event no suppression can be attributed to
the appellants.
A reply to the show cause was filed by the appellant highlighting
the processes undertaken. The Collector by his order dated 24.9.1987
held that the processes undertaken by the appellant do not amount to
manufacture and as such their product is classifiable under Chapter 72
only. An appeal thereagainst was filed by the respondents before the
Appellate Tribunal.
The matter was heard by three members of the Tribunal who
constituted the Bench. Three separate orders in the matter were passed
on 6.4.1995. The Member (Judicial) in his order proposed to remit the
matter to the Collector for a de novo consideration on the merit;
whereas the Vice-President and the Member (Technical) decided the merit
of the matter against the appellant. The majority of the Appellant
Tribunal classified the box strappings in running length and in coil
under heading 73.08 as articles of iron or steel. However, none of the
members took into consideration the question as to whether the demand
made by revenue was barred by limitation. Aggrieved thereby and
dissatisfied therewith the appellant is in appeal before us.
REFERENCE TO CONSTITUTION BENCH AS REGARD SHORT-LEVY:
Having regard to the conflict of decision in Ballarpur Industries
Ltd. Vs. Asstt. Collector of Customs & Central Excise [1995 Supp (3) SCC
429] and Rainbow Industries (P) Ltd. Vs. Collector of Central Excise,
Vadodara [(1994) 6 SCC 563] the question was referred to a Constitution
Bench. This Court in Collector of Central Excise, Baroda Vs. Cotspun
Ltd. [(1999) 7 SCC 633] (wherein one of us V.N. Khare, CJI was a member)
overruled the decision of this Court in Ballarpur Industries (supra) and
held that the Rainbow Industries (supra) has correctly laid down the
law.
AMENDMENT IN SEC. 11A:
The Parliament thereafter amended Section 11A of the Central
Excise Act, 1944 by Act No. 10 of 2000 which was published in the
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Gazette of India on 12.5.2000 and the same was given a retrospective
effect and retroactive operation from 27.12.1985.
REFERENCE TO THIS BENCH REGADING VALIDATING ACT:
The appellants herein therafter questioned the vires of the said
provision. It is also not in dispute that the said question came up for
consideration before a two-Judge Bench of this Court in Easland
Combines, Coimbatore Vs. Collector of Central Excise, Coimbatore [(2003)
3 SCC 410] wherein the validity of the Amendment was upheld.
However, when this matter was placed before another Division Bench
it referred the matter to a three-Judge Bench by an order dated 20th
February, 2003 opining:
"Earlier this appeal was adjourned awaiting the
judgment of this Court in C.A. No. 2693 of 2000,
Easland Combines v. Collector of Central Excise,
Coimbatore, 2003 (152) E.L.T. 39 (S.C.). When
this appeal is taken up for hearing today, Mr.
Bajpai, the learned Counsel appearing for the
Revenue, invited our attention to the judgment
in Easland Combines (supra) and submitted that
the point involved in this appeal is covered by
the said judgment.
In Collector of Central Excise, Baroda v.
Cotspun Ltd., [(1999) 7 SCC 633], a Constitution
Bench of this Court laid down as follows :
"14. The levy of excise duty on the basis
of an approved classification list is the
correct levy, at least until such time as
to the correctness of the approval is
questioned by the issuance to the assessee
of a show cause notice. It is only when
the correctness of the approval is
challenged that an approved classification
list ceased to be such.
15. The levy of excise duty on the basis
of an approved classification list is not
a short levy. Differential duty cannot be
recovered on the ground that it is a short
levy. Rule 10 has then no application."
The Parliament has amended Section 11A of the
Central Excise Act, 1944 by Finance Act, 2000
(10 of 2000) with effect from November 17, 1980
with a view to change the basis of the judgment
in the afore-mentioned case. The question
whether the amendment has changed the basis of
the judgment in Cotspun’s case (supra), is the
question that arises in this case. The same
question came up for consideration of this Court
in Easland Combines (supra). A bench of two
learned Judges took the view that the amendment
which conferred power to correct the errors or
mistakes in approval, acceptance or assessment
relating to the rate of duty on or valuation of
excisable goods cannot be said to be
unreasonable. It was further held that with
retrospective effect, the legislature has
empowered the Central Excise Officer to set at
naught the erroneous approval of classification
list or acceptance of price list or assessment
order, and, on that premise, it was laid down,
"Hence, it is held that in view of the
amendment of Section 11A(1), the decision
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rendered by this Court in Cotspun’s case
(supra) would not be a good law. Show
cause notice for correcting errors or
mistakes in approval, acceptance or
assessment relating to the rate of duty on
or valuation of excisable goods under the
provisions of the Act or the Rules made
thereunder could be issued within the
prescribed period."
Having gone through the judgment carefully and
given our anxious consideration to the said
judgment in Easland Combines (supra), we are
unable to agree with the view taken by the bench
of two learned Judges in regard to either the
import of the amendment or the effect thereof
and, in our view, the amendment does not alter
the basis of the judgment in Cotspun’s case
(supra).
We, therefore, consider it appropriate to refer
the appeal to a bench of three learned Judges.
The Registry is directed to obtain the orders of
Hon’ble the Chief Justice for listing the case
before a bench of three learned Judges."
That is how the matter is before us.
SUBMISSIONS:
Mr. V. Lakshmikumaran, the learned counsel appearing on behalf of
the appellant would submit that by reason of the amendment made in
Section 11A of the Act, the basis of the decision in Cotspun (supra) had
not been taken away. The learned counsel would urge that in Cotspun
(supra) it has categorically been held that Rule 10 which was in pari
materia with Section 11A of the Act as unamended did not deal with
classification lists or related to the reopening of the draft
classification lists which having been exclusively provided for Rule 173
B, by amending Section 11A the basis of the said judgment cannot said to
have been removed.
The learned counsel would argue that in Cotspun (supra) it has not
only been held that Sub-Rule (5) of Rule 173B deals with classification
lists but therein the question as regard different stages for correct
levy had been laid down.
Mr. Lakshmikumaran would contend that levy of excise duty on the
basis of an approved classification list would not be a short levy and
as such differential duty could not be recovered on the said premise and
in that view of the matter Section 11A of the Act will have no
application.
Submission of the learned counsel is that Section 11A of the Act
as amended only provides that even if the short levy is based on the
approved classification list, show cause notice can be issued, but the
same cannot be said to be sufficient to get over the basis of the
judgment/Constitution Bench in Cotspun (supra). Once it is held in
Cotspun (supra), Mr. Lakshmikumaran would argue, that the levy based on
the approved classification list is not short levy, the entry point in
Section 11A must be held to have been closed. According to the learned
counsel, by reason of the amendment as also the retrospective effect
given thereto the short levy having been redefined for the purpose of
Section 11A contrary to what had been held in Cotspun (supra), it must
be held that even now there is no short levy of duty.
The learned counsel further submitted that the Tribunal
misdirected itself in holding that the processes undertaken by the
appellants on the duty paid cold rolled steel strappings amounts to
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manufacture in terms of Section 2(f) of the Central Excise Act, 1944.
According to the learned counsel, having regard to the processes
undergone the resultant product would not attain any new and distinct
character so as to warrant fresh levy of duty. In other words, Mr.
Lakshmikumaran would contend, that the characteristics of cold rolled
strip which is the starting material are retained in the box strappings.
Relying on the decision of Gujarat Steel Tubes Ltd. Vs. State of Kerala
[1989 (42) ELT 513] it was urged that galvanization of pipes undertaken
for the purpose of making them weather proof would not bring into
existence a new commodity and even by a circular dated 9.2.1994 the
Board of Excise and Customs has clarified that the process of
galvanization does not amount to manufacture.
As regard question of classification , the learned counsel would
submit that box strappings is classifiable under 7211.31 as strip only
and not under 7308.90. Heading 7308, it was contended, covers other
articles of iron or steel and in that view of the matter, the box
strappings can be called as article of steel. Even after the processes
undertaken for the end product, the box strappings remain as strips. It
was argued that in any event having regard to the fact that heading 7308
covers other articles of iron and steel covering articles of steel in
individual pieces like bottom steel, nails, rivets, ranges etc, it
cannot be equated with the product in question, i.e., box strappings
which are in running length in coil form and not individual pieces. In
any view of the matter, box strappings being covered as cold rolled
strips i.e. IS: 5872-1973, the same is not classifiable under 7308.90.
The learned counsel would contend that in the instant case, the
proviso appended to Section 11A of the Act is not attracted inasmuch as
the extended time period specified thereunder would have application
only when the short levy is occasioned on account of fraud, collusion,
willful mis-statement or suppression of facts with an intent to evade
payment of duty. In that view of the matter the period of limitation
for issuing a show cause notice would be six months and not five years.
In support of the aforementioned contention, reliance has been placed on
Padmini Products Ltd. Vs. CCE [1989 (43) ELT 195], P&B Pharmaceuticals
Ltd. Vs. CCE [2003 (153) ELT 14] and Pushpam Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Vs.
CCE [1995 (78) ELT 401].
In this connection, the learned counsel has drawn our attention to
the fact that the issue of classification had been raised by the
appellant since 1983 and the same had been approved and even received
the seal of approval by the Collector.
The learned counsel would lastly contend that even if the product
in question is held to be dutiable the appellant should be allowed to
take the Modvat credit of the duty paid on the cold rolled steel strips.
Mr. Dhruv Mehta, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondent, on the other hand, would submit that by reason of amendment
carried out in Section 11A of the Central Excise Act by Act No. 10 of
2000, the basis of judgment in Cotspun has been removed inasmuch as the
words "erroneously refunded" in the unamended Act had been supplemented
by "whether or not such non-levy or non-payment, short-levy or short-
payment or erroneous refund, as the case may be, was on the basis of any
approval, acceptance or assessment relating to the rate of duty on or
valuation of excisable goods under any other provisions of this Act or
the rules made thereunder". According to the learned counsel, what was
exclusively provided for by Rule 173B has now specifically been included
in Section 11A of the Act.
Mr. Mehta would urge that Section 11A, as it now stands, provides
for reopening of approved classification lists and by reason of a show
cause notice issued in terms thereof, the correctness of approval itself
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can be questioned and in that view of the matter the ratio of the
judgment as laid down in paragraph 13 of the Cotspun (supra) has been
removed.
Relying heavily on M/s. Easland Combines (supra), the learned
counsel would argue that the Cotspun (supra) could not have been
rendered if the amended provisions of Section 11A of the Act had been in
existence at the time of the said decision.
As regard the question as to whether the processes undertaken by
the appellant for obtaining the end product known as box strappings
would amount to manufacture or not, the learned counsel would submit
that the several stages of processes which are undertaken by the
appellant is a clear pointer to the fact that the same amounts to
manufacturing. The learned counsel would contend that this Court should
not interfere with such a finding of fact.
Reliance in this behalf has been placed on Aditya Mills Ltd. Vs.
Union of India [(1988) 4 SCC 315].
On the question of classification, the learned counsel would
submit that the judgment and order of the Tribunal does not suffer from
any misdirection in law inasmuch as once it is held that the processes
undertaken by the appellants lead to the manufacture of a distinct and
identifiable product known in the marked as box strappings having regard
to the fact that there is no substantial heading for box strappings and
as such the product has rightly been classified as sub-heading 7308.90.
As regard the question of limitation and MODVAT, the learned
counsel would submit that as the said question had not been raised
before the Tribunal we should not permit the appellant to do the same
before this Court for the first time.
VALIDATING STATUTE:
Relevant Statutory Provisions:
Rule 10 of the Central Excise Rules, 1944, as it stood, read as
under:
"10. Recovery of duties not levied or not paid or short-
levied or not paid in full or erroneously refunded.--
(1) When any duty has not been levied or paid or has
been short-levied or erroneously refunded or any duty
assessed has not been paid in full, the proper 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 to whom the refund has erroneously been
made, or which has not been paid in full, requiring
him to show cause why he should not pay the amount
specified in the notice:
Provided that:
(a) where any duty has not been levied or paid or has
been short-levied or has not been paid in full by
reason of fraud, collusion or any wilful mis-
statement or suppression of facts by such person
or his agent, or
(b) where any person or his agent, contravenes any of
the provisions of these rules with intent to evade
payment of duty and has not paid the duty in full,
or
(c) where any duty has been erroneously refunded by
reason of collusion or any wilful mis-statement or
suppression of facts by such person or his agent,
the provisions of this sub-section shall, in any
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of the cases referred to above, have effect as
if, for the words "six months", the words "five
years" were substituted :
Explanation : Where the service of the notice is
stayed by an order of a Court, the period of such stay
shall be excluded in computing the period of six
months or five years, as the case may be.
(2) The Assistant Collector of Central Excise shall, after
considering the representation, if any, made by the person
on whom notice is served under sub-rule (1), determine the
amount of duty due from such person (not being in excess of
the amount specified in the notice) and thereupon such
person shall pay the amount so determined.
(3) For the purposes of this rule,-
(i) "refund", includes rebate referred to in
rules 12 and 12A;
(ii) "relevant date" means,-
(a) in the case of excisable goods on
which duty of excise has not been levied
or paid or on which duty has been short
levied or has not been paid in full, the
date on which the duty was required to be
paid under these rules;
(b) in the case of excisable goods on
which the value or the rate of duty has
been provisionally determined under these
rules, the date on which the duty is
adjusted after final determination of the
value or the rate of duty, as the case may
be;
(c) in the case of excisable goods on
which duty has been erroneously refunded
the date of such refund."
Rules 173B and 173C of the Central Excise Rules read as under:
"173B ASSESSEE TO FILE LIST OF GOODS PRODUCED
FOR APPROVAL OF THE PROPER OFFICER
(1) Every assessee, shall file with the proper
officer for approval a list in such form as the
Collector may direct (in quintuplicate) showing,
-
(a) the full description of -
(i) all excisable goods produced or manufactured
by him,
(ii) all other goods produced or manufactured by
him and intended to be removed from his factory,
and
(iii) all the excisable goods already deposited
or likely to be deposited from time to time
without payment of duty in his warehouse;
(b) the Chapter, heading No. and sub-heading
No., if any, of the Schedule to the Central
Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of 1986) under which
each goods fall;
(c) the rate of duty leviable on each such
goods; and
(d) such other particulars as the Collector may
direct,
(2) The proper officer shall, after such inquiry
as he deems fit, approve the list with such
modifications as are considered necessary and
return one copy of the approved list to the
assessee who shall, unless otherwise directed by
the proper officer, determine the duly payable
on the goods intended to be removed in
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accordance with such list.
(2A)All clearances shall, subject to the
provisions of rule 173 CC, be made only after
the approval of the list by the proper officer.
If the proper officer is of the opinion that on
account of any inquiry to be made, in the matter
or for any other reason to be recorded in
writing, there is likely to be delay in
according the approval, he shall, either on a
written request made by the assessee or on his
own accord, allow such assessee to avail himself
of the procedure prescribed under rule 9B for
provisional assessment of the goods.
(3) Where the assessee disputes the rate of duty
approved by the proper officer in respect of any
goods, he may, after giving an intimation to
that effect to such officer, pay duty under
protest at the rate approved by such officer.
(4) If in the list approved by the proper
officer under sub-rule (2) any alteration
becomes necessary because of-
(a) the assessee commencing production,
manufacture or warehousing of goods not
mentioned in that list, or
(b) the assessee intending to remove from
his factory any non-excisable goods not
mentioned in that list, or
(c) a change in the rate or rates of duty
in respect of the goods mentioned in
that list or, by reason of any
amendment to the Schedule to the
Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of
1986) change in the Chapter, Heading
No. and Sub-heading No.
the assessee shall likewise file a fresh
list or an amendment of the list already filed
for the approval of such officer in the same
manner as is provided in sub-rule (1)
(5) When the dispute about the rate of duty has
been finalized or for any other reasons
affecting rate or rates of duty a modification
of the rate or rates of duty is necessitated,
the proper Officer shall make such modification
and inform the assessee accordingly.
(6) The Collector may exempt by a general order
any class of assesses who manufacture wholly
goods which, for the time being, are exempt from
paying duty, from filing the list under sub-rule
(1):
Provided that as and when duty exemption is
withdrawn or modified or no longer applicable,
the assessee shall comply with the provisions of
sub-rule (4) as if he had filed a list earlier
and the list had been approved with ’nil’ rate
of duty.
173C ASSESSEE TO FILE PRICE-LIST OF GOODS
ASSESSABLE AD VALOREM.
(1) Every assessee who produces, manufactures or
warehouses goods which are chargeable with duty
at a rate dependent on the value of the goods,
shall file with the proper officer a price-list,
in such form and at such manner and in such
intervals as the Collector may require, showing
the price of each of such goods and the trade
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discount, if any, allowed in respect thereof to
the buyers along with such other particulars as
the Central Board of Excise and Customs or the
Collector may specify.:
(2) Prior approval by the proper officer of the
price-list filed by an assessee under sub-rule
(1) shall be necessary only, where the assessee
-
(i) sells goods to or through related person as
defined in section 4 of the Act; or
(ii) uses such goods for manufacture or
production of other goods in his factory; or
(iii) clears such goods for free distribution;
or
(iv) clears such goods in any other manner which
does not involve sale to a non-related person;
or
(v) clears the goods of the same kind and
quality from his factories located in the
jurisdiction of different Collectors of Central
Excise or Assistant Collectors of Central Excise
or
(vi) submits a fresh price-list or an amendment
of the price-list already filed with the proper
officer and which has the effect of lowering the
existing value of the goods.
(5) Subject to the provisions of rule 173CC, an
assessee specified in sub-rule (2) shall not
clear any goods from a factory, warehouse or
other approved place of storage unless the
price-list has been approved by the proper
officer. In case the proper officer is of the
opinion that on account of any enquiry to be
made in the matter or for any other reasons to
be recorded in writing, there is likely to be
delay in according approval, he shall either on
a written request made by the assessee or of his
own accord allow such assessee to avail himself
of the procedure prescribed under rule 9B for
provisional assessment of the goods."
Section 11A of the Central Excise Act, 1944 introduced from
15.11.1980 reads as follows:
"11A. Recovery of duties not levied or not paid or short-levied
or short-paid or erroneously refunded.--
(1) 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 facts, 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
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substituted :
Explanation : Where the service of the notice is stayed by
an order of a Court, the period of such stay shall be
excluded in computing the aforesaid period of six months or
five years, as the case may be."
Clause 97 of the Finance Act provided that in Sub-Section (1) of
Section 11A of the Act following shall be added:--
"(a) in the opening portion, for the
words "erroneously refunded", the words
"erroneously refunded, whether or not such
non-levy or non-payment, short-levy or
short payment or erroneous refund, as the
case may be was on the basis of any
approval, acceptance or assessment
relating to the rate of duty on or
valuation of excisable goods under any
other provisions of this Act or the rules
made thereunder", shall be substituted and
shall be deemed to have been substituted
on and from the 17th day of November, 1980;
(b) for the words "six months", wherever
they occur, the words "one year" shall be
substituted;
(c) after the proviso and before the
Explanation the following provisos shall
be inserted, namely:-
"Provided further that where the amount of
duty which has not been levied or paid or
has been short- levied or short-paid or
erroneously refunded is one crore rupees
or less a notice under this sub-Section
shall be served by the Commissioner of
Central Excise or with his prior approval
by any officer subordinate to him:
Provided also that where the amount of
duty which has not been levied or paid or
has been short-levied or short-paid or
erroneously refunded is more than one
crore rupees, no notice under this sub-
section shall be served without the prior
approval of the Chief Commissioner of
Central Excise".
Section 11A after amendment by Section 110 of the Finance Act,
2000 reads as under:
"11A. Recovery of duties not levied or not paid or short-
levied or short-paid or erroneously refunded.--
(1) When any duty of excise has not been levied or
paid or has been short-levied or short-paid or
erroneously refunded, whether or not such non-levy or
non-payment, short-levy or short payment or erroneous
refund, as the case may be, was on the basis of any
approval, acceptance or assessment relating to the
rate of duty on or valuation of excisable goods under
any other provisions of this Act or the rules made
thereunder a Central Excise Officer may, within one
year 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
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or erroneously refunded by reason of fraud, collusion
or any wilful mis-statement or suppression of facts,
or contravention of any of the provisions of this Act
or of the rules made thereunder with an 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 "one year", the words "five
years" were substituted :
Explanation : Where the service of the notice is
stayed by an order of a Court, the period of such stay
shall be excluded in computing the aforesaid period of
one year or five years, as the case may be."
COTSPUN:
In Cotspun (supra) classification lists were filed in terms of
Rule 173 B of the Central Excise Rules and the same had been approved by
Revenue. The approval classified the NES yard under old Tariff Item 19-
I(2)(a)(2)(e). A notice to reopen the assessment was issued on 28th
September, 1977 in respect of the period February, 1977 to May, 1977
inter alia on the ground that the NES yarn ought to have been correctly
classified under old Tariff Item 19-I(2)(F). Another notice was issued
for a subsequent period. The contention of the assessee was that the
approved classification list could not be reopened and, therefore, the
demand for differential duty could not be enforced. The Assistant
Collector upheld the assessee’s contention whereas the Appellate
Collector reversed the same. The Tribunal held that the revised
assessment could be made effective only prospectively from the date of
the show cause notices and not with reference to earlier removals made
under approved classification lists. An appeal was filed thereagainst
by the Revenue. This Court noticed that in terms of Rule 173B which
deals with self-removal procedure, an assessee is required to file
before the proper Excise officer or approval a list of the goods that he
proposes to clear containing a description of the goods produced or
manufactured by him, the goods that he intends to remove and all
excisable goods already deposited or likely to be deposited without
payment of duty in his ware house and to indicate the tariff entry under
which he intends to fall, rate of duty leviable thereon and such other
particulars as may be required. In terms of Sub-rule (2) of Rule 173B
the proper officer was required to determine the duty payable on the
goods upon making an enquiry in that regard. Provision for a dispute as
to the approved rate of duty was made in Clause (3). Sub-rule (5) of
Rule 173B reads as under:
"(5) When the dispute about the rate of duty
has been finalized or for any other reasons
affecting rate or rates of duty a modification
of the rate or rates of duty is necessitated,
the proper Officer shall make such modification
and inform the assessee accordingly."
In Rainbow Industries (supra), it was held:
"Once the Department accepted the price list,
acted upon it and the goods were cleared with
the knowledge of the Department, then, in
absence of any amendment in law or judicial
pronouncement, the reclassification should be
effective from the date the Department issued
the show cause notice. The reason for it is
clearance with the knowledge of the Department
and no intention to evade payment of duty."
The reason for arriving at the aforementioned conclusion, thus,
was that clearance had been made with the knowledge of the Department
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and there had been no intention to evade payment of duty.
However, in Ballarpur Industries (supra), this Court had held that
reclassification would operate retrospectively. In Ballarpur Industries
(supra), Rainbow Industries (supra) was distinguished stating that the
observations made therein were confined to the facts of that case.
Placing reliance on Rule 10 which was in pari materia with unamended
Section 11A, it was observed:
"The Bench placed reliance upon Rule 10 and
held that, on a plain reading of that provision
as also of Section 11-A, the show-cause notice
which could be issued within the time-limit
prescribed under the relevant provision could
only be in relation to the duty of excise for a
period prior to the issuance of show-cause
notice. There could be no reason for the
issuance of a show-cause notice for the period
subsequent to the notice as in that case the
necessary corrective action could always be
taken. But Rule 10 with which we are concerned
as well as Section 11-A to which a reference is
made in the case of Rainbow Industries ((1994) 6
SCC 563), the show-cause notice which must be
issued within the time frame prescribed in the
said provisions must relate to a period prior
thereto as the purpose of the show-cause notice
is recovery of duties or charges short-levied,
etc. We, therefore, find it difficult to accept
the contention that the ratio of the decision in
Rainbow Industries ((1994) 6 SCC 563) is that
under Section 11-A past dues cannot be demanded.
We must, therefore, reject that contention".
The controversy, thus, revolved round the question as to whether
until the proposal for modification of the classification was mooted,
the earlier classification would operate or as to whether duty in
accordance with law also could be demanded.
The Constitution Bench analyzing the provisions of Rule 10 and
Rule 173B observed:
The levy of excise duty on the basis of an
approved classification list is the correct
levy, at least until such time as to the
correctness of the approval is questioned by the
issuance to the assessee of a show-cause notice.
It is only when the correctness of the approval
is challenged that an approved classification
list ceases to be such.
The levy of excise duty on the basis of an
approved classification list is not a short
levy. Differential duty cannot be recovered on
the ground that it is a short levy. Rule 10 has
then no application.
VALIDATION ACT:
Section 11A as amended by Finance Act, 2000 brings about
absolutely a different situation.
Statement of Objects and Reasons for amending Section 11A reads,
thus:
"Clause 106 seeks to validate certain action
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taken under Section 11A of the Central Excise
Act with retrospective effect from 17th November,
1980, so as to prescribe that the notices issued
under the said section for non-recovery or
short-recovery or erroneous refund of duties for
a period of six months or five years in certain
situations will prevail notwithstanding any
approval, acceptance or assessment of duty under
the provisions of the Central Excise Rules. The
clause also seeks to validate actions taken in
the past on this basis in conformity with the
legislative intention. This amendment has become
necessary to overcome certain judicial
pronouncements."
Further, Clause 110 of the Finance Act validating actions taken
under Section 11A provides as under:--
"110.(1) Any notice issued or served on any
person under the provisions of Section 11A of
the Central Excise Act during the period
commencing on and from the 17th day of November,
1980 and ending on the date on which the Finance
Act, 2000 receives the assent of the President
(hereinafter referred to as the said period)
demanding duty on account of non-payment, short
payment, non-levy, short-levy or erroneous
refund within a period of six months or five
years, as the case may be, from the relevant
date as defined in Clause (ii) of Sub-section
(3) of that section shall be deemed to be and to
always have been, for all purposes, validly and
effectively issued or served under that section,
notwithstanding any approval, acceptance or
assessment relating to the rate of duty on or
value of, the excisable goods by any Central
Excise Officer under any other provision of the
Central Excise Act or the rules made thereunder.
(2) Any action taken or anything done or
purporting to have been taken or done under
Section 11A of the Central Excise Act at any
time during the said period shall be deemed to
be and to have always been, for all purposes, as
validly and effectively taken or done as if Sub-
section (1) had been in force at all material
times and, accordingly, notwithstanding anything
contained in any judgment, decree or order of
any court, tribunal or other authority,-
(a) all duties of excise levied, assessed
or collected during the period specified
in Sub-section (1) on any excisable goods
under the Central Excise Act, shall be
deemed to be and shall be deemed to always
have been, as validly levied, assessed or
collected as if Sub-section (1) had been
in force at all material times;
(b) no suit or other proceedings shall be
maintained or continued in any court,
tribunal or other authority for the refund
of, and no enforcement shall be made by
any court of any decree or order directing
the refund of any such duties of excise
which have been collected and which would
have been validly collected if Sub-section
(1) had been in force at all material
times;
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(c) recovery shall be made of all such
duties of excise which have not been
collected or, as the case may be, which
have been refunded but which would have
been collected or, as the case may be,
would not have been refunded, if Sub-
section (1) had been in force at all
material times.
Explanation.--"For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that no act or omission on the
part of any person shall be punishable as an
offence which would not have been so punishable
if this section had not come into force."
THE LAW OPERATING IN THE FIELD:
A validation Act removes actual or possible voidness, disability
or other defect by confirming the validity of anything which is or may
be invalid.
In Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. Vs. Broach Borough
Municipality & Ors. [(1969) 2 SCC 283], it was pointed out that a
legislature does possess the power to validate statutes and to pass
retrospective laws. The Court, however, laid down:
"When a Legislature sets out to validate a tax
declared by a court to be illegally collected
under an ineffective or an invalid law, the
cause for ineffectiveness or invalidity must be
removed before validation can be said to take
place effectively. The most important condition,
of course, is that the Legislature must possess
the power to impose the tax, for, if it does
not, the action must ever remain ineffective and
illegal. Granted legislative competence, it is
not sufficient to declare merely that the
decision of the Court shall not bind for that is
tantamount to reversing the decision in exercise
of judicial power which the Legislature does not
possess or exercise. A court’s decision must
always bind unless the conditions on which it is
based are so fundamentally altered that the
decision could not have been given in the
altered circumstances. Ordinarily, a court holds
a tax to be invalidly imposed because the power
to tax is wanting or the statute or the rules or
both are invalid or do not sufficiently create
the jurisdiction. Validation of a tax so
declared illegal may be done only if the grounds
of illegality or invalidity are capable of being
removed and are in fact removed and the tax thus
made legal. Sometimes this is done by providing
for jurisdiction where jurisdiction had not been
properly invested before. Sometimes this is done
by re-enacting retrospectively a valid and legal
taxing provision and then by fiction making the
tax already collected to stand under the re-
enacted law. Sometimes the Legislature gives its
own meaning and interpretation of the law under
which the tax was collected and by legislative
fiat makes the new meaning binding upon courts.
The Legislature may follow any one method or all
of them and while it does so it may neutralise
the effect of the earlier decision of the court
which becomes ineffective after the change of
the law. Whichever method is adopted it must be
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within the competence of the legislature and
legal and adequate to attain the object of
validation. If the Legislature has the power
over the subject-matter and competence to make a
valid law, it can at any time make such a valid
law and make it retrospectively so as to bind
even past transactions. The validity of a
Validating Law, therefore, depends upon whether
the Legislature possesses the competence which
it claims over the subject-matter and whether in
making the validation it removes the defect
which the courts had found in the existing law
and makes adequate provisions in the Validating
Law for a valid imposition of the tax."
In M/s. Ujagar Prints and Others (II) Vs. Union of India and
Others [(1989) 3 SCC 488] wherein after considering various decisions,
this Court held thus:
"A competent legislature can always validate a
law which has been declared by courts to be
invalid, provided the infirmities and vitiating
infactors noticed in the declaratory judgment
are removed or cured. Such a validating law can
also be made retrospective. If in the light of
such validating and curative exercise made by
the legislature - granting legislative
competence - the earlier judgment becomes
irrelevant and unenforceable, that cannot be
called an impermissible legislative overruling
of the judicial decision. All that the
legislature does is to usher in a valid law with
retrospective effect in the light of which
earlier judgment becomes irrelevant. (See Shri
Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. Broach Borough
Municipality ((1969) 2 SCC 283 : (1970) 1 SCR
388 (1971) 79 ITR 136)).
66. Such legislative experience of validation of
laws is of particular significance and utility
and is quite often applied, in taxing statues.
It is necessary that the legislature should be
able to cure defects in statues. No individual
can acquire a vested right from a defect in a
statute and seek a windfall from the
legislature’s mistakes. Validity of legislations
retroactively curing defects in taxing statues
is well recognised and courts, except under
extraordinary circumstances, would be reluctant
to override the legislative judgment as to the
need for and the wisdom of the retrospective
legislation. In Empire Industries Ltd. v. Union
of India ((1985) 3 SCC 314 : 1985 SCC (Tax) 416
: 1985 Supp 1 SCR 292), this Court observed :
.... not only because of the paramount
governmental interest in obtaining adequate
revenues, but also because taxes are not in the
nature of a penalty or a contractual obligation
but rather a means of apportioning the costs of
government amongst those who benefit from it.
In testing whether a retrospective imposition of
a tax operates so harshly as to violate
fundamental rights under Article 19(1)(g), the
factors considered relevant include the context
in which retroactivity was contemplated such as
whether the law is one of validation of a taxing
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statute struck down by courts for certain
defects; the period of such retroactivity, and
the degree and extent of any unforeseen or
unforeseeable financial burden imposed for the
past period etc. Having regard to all the
circumstances of the present case, this Court in
Empire Industries case ((1985) 3 SCC 314 : 1985
SCC (Tax) 416 : 1985 Supp 1 SCR 292) held that
the retroactivity of the amending provisions was
not such as to incur any infirmity under Article
19(1)(g)."
In Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. and Another Vs. State of
Rajasthan and Others [(1996) 2 SCC 449] a question arose as to whether a
village which was not held to have been included within the limits of a
town municipality as mandatory provisions in that part had not been
followed could be so included with retrospective effect by a Validating
Act by seeking to set at naught a full Bench decision of the Rajasthan
High Court. Referring to Prithvi Cotton Mills (supra) it was held:
"15. In the case of the village of Raipura
there was a preliminary notification calling for
objections to the extension of the limits of the
Kota Municipality to include it, but it was not
followed by a final notification. In the case of
the village of Ummedganj there was a
notification extending the limits of the Kota
Municipality to include it, but it had not been
preceded by a notification inviting the
objections of the public thereto. Later, another
notification was published whereby the village
of Ummedganj was excluded from the limits of the
Kota Municipality. The provisions of Sections 4
to 7 of the 1959 Act and the earlier provisions
of the 1951 Act in the same behalf were,
therefore, not met in the case of either the
village of Raipura or the village of Ummedganj.
The Full Bench of the Rajasthan High Court has
held that these provisions were mandatory and
that judgment has become final.
16. The Validating Act provides that,
notwithstanding anything contained in Sections 4
to 7 of 1959 Act or in any judgment, decree,
order or direction of any court, the villages of
Raipura and Ummedganj should be deemed always to
have continued to exist and they continue to
exist within the limits of the Kota
Municipality, to all intents and for all
purposes. This provision requires the deeming of
the legal position that the villages of Raipura
and Ummedganj fall within the limits of the Kota
Municipality, not the deeming of facts from
which this legal consequence would flow. A legal
consequence cannot be deemed nor, therefrom, can
the events that should have preceded it. Facts
may be deemed and, therefrom, the legal
consequences that follow."
As Sections 4 to 7 of Rajasthan Municipalities Act, 1959 remained
unamended which were mandatory, the defect was held to have not been
cured.
Yet again in K. Shankaran Nair (Dead) through LRs. Vs. Devaki Amma
Malathy Amma and Others [(1996) 11 SCC 428] this Court followed the
aforementioned as well as and other decisions of this Court. It was
observed:
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"It becomes at once clear that once this Court
struck down the rule concerned permitting
compulsory retirement of a government servant
the very basis of the earlier judgment upholding
such an exercise got knocked off and was totally
obliterated from the Statute-Book. Consequently
the very foundation of the judgment vanished.
Such a judgment would obviously become baseless
lacking the very foundation on which it could
operate. The very foundation of an earlier
judgment can be displaced by either a competent
legislature enacting a retrospective provision
for that purpose or by a competent court
deciding the legal provision concerned on which
such judgment is based as ultra vires and void.
In either case the very foundation and legal
substitution of such judgment will vanish
retrospectively. In such an eventuality the law
could be said to have been totally displaced
from the very inception of enactment of such a
law and consequently any judgment based on such
a non-existing law as found in retrospect could
obviously lack efficacy and consequential force
of res judicata."
In Bakhtawar Trust and Others Vs. M.D. Narayan and Others [(2003)
5 SCC 298], one of us (Khare, CJI) speaking for the Bench upon noticing
some of the decisions referred to hereinbefore and other decisions
observed that the questions which were required to be posed and answered
are:
(i) what was the basis of the earlier decision; and
(ii) what, if any, may be said to be removal of that basis?
Upon considering the relevant provisions therein it was held that
the basis of the decision of the High Court had undergone a change
having regard to the change in the Zonal Planning Regulations which now
changed the law, which the High Court was bound to take the view in
terms of the changed law. This Court held:
"It is well settled by the decisions of this
Court that when a validity of a particular
statute is brought into question, a limited
reference, but not reliance, may be made to the
Statement of Objects and Reasons. The Statement
of Objects and Reasons may, therefore, be
employed for the purposes of comprehending the
factual background, the prior state of legal
affairs, the surrounding circumstances in
respect of the statute and the evil which the
statute has sought to remedy. It is manifest
that the Statement of Objects and Reasons
cannot, therefore, be the exclusive footing upon
which a statute is made a nullity through the
decision of a Court of law."
In Easland Combines (supra), this Court held:
"In our view, there is no substance in this
submission. As stated earlier, the relevant
amended portion of Section 11A inter alia makes
it abundantly clear that when any duty of excise
has been short levied or short paid, whether or
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not such short levy or short payment was on the
basis of any approval, acceptance or assessment
relating to the rate of duty on or valuation of
excisable goods under any other provisions of
the Act or the rules, the Central Excise
Officer, can within one year from the relevant
date, serve notice on the person chargeable with
the duty, which has been short levied or short
paid, requiring him to show cause why he should
not pay the amount specified in the notice. This
amendment changes the entire basis or foundation
of the judgment rendered in Cotspun’s case
(supra). The entire discussion in the said case
is based upon rule 173B which dealt with
classification list and that assessee must
determine the excise duty which is payable by
him on the goods which he intends to remove in
accordance with approved classification list.
The Court based its reasoning by holding "Rule
10 does not deal with classification list or
relate to reopening of approved classification
lists. That is exclusively provided by Rule
173B." The Court further held that the levy of
excise duty on the basis of approved
classification list is not short levy and the
differential duty cannot be recovered on the
ground that it is a short levy and Rule 10 then
has no application. After the amendment of law,
this reasoning of the judgment would no longer
survive. It is true that the levy of excise duty
on the basis of approved classification list or
price-list or the assessment order is correct
levy till such time as the correctness of the
approved classification list or price list or
till the assessment order is set aside. However,
with retrospective effect, the legislature has
empowered the Central Excise Officer to set at
naught the erroneous approval of classification
list or acceptance of price list or assessment
order. What was provided by Rule 173B is now
specifically provided by Section 11A."
We may notice that in Widia (India) Ltd. and Others Vs. State of
Karnataka and Others [(2003) 8 SCC 22], this Court held:
"It is true that normally tax would not be
levied with retrospective effect but at the same
time to validate the tax which was levied, after
removing the defects pointed out by the previous
decision, the State Government could exercise
its powers under Section 3(1) of the Act and it
cannot be said that it has acted beyond its
jurisdiction. Therefore, it cannot be held that
notification dated 23rd September, 1998
empowering the authority to levy and collect tax
w.e.f. 1.4.1994 to 6.1.1998 is, in any way,
illegal or erroneous. The defects pointed out in
Avinyl Polymers’s case (supra) are removed and,
therefore, it cannot be said that the
notification dated 23.9.1998 is, in any way,
illegal. In a situation like the present one
where notifications levying tax were held to be
illegal, for validating such levy, the State
Government has issued the aforesaid
notification. It is not pointed out that the
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said notification is discriminatory between the
goods imported from other States and similarly
goods manufactured or produced within the
State."
APPLICATION OF THE LAW:
The Statements of Objects and Reasons for enacting a statute can
be read for a limited purpose. In Cotspun (supra) this Court held that
Rule 10 does not deal with classification list or relate to reopening of
the approved classification list. According to the Constitution Bench,
the same is exclusively provided by Rule 173B.
Section 11A deals with a case when inter alia excise duty has been
levied or has been short-levied or short-paid. The word "such"
occurring after the words "whether or not" refers to non-levy, non-
payment, short-levy or short-payment or erroneous refund. It is,
therefore, not correct to contend that the word "such" indicates only
such short-levy which has been held to be non-existent in Cotspun having
regard to Rule 173B. Such short-levy or non-levy may be on the basis of
any approval, acceptance or assessment relating to the rate of duty on
or valuation of excisable goods. Thus, any approval made in terms of
Rule 10, in the event, any mistake therein is detected, would also come
within the purview of the expression "such short-levy or short-
payment". Such notice is to be served on the person chargeable with
the duty which inter alia has been short-levy or short-paid.
It is true that Rule 173B has not been amended. But even if the
same has not been done, it would not make a material difference as now a
comprehensive provision has been made in the primary Act, and, thus, a
rule framed thereunder even in case of conflict must give way to the
substantive statute. It is a well-settled principle of law that in case
of a conflict between a substantive act and delegated legislation, the
former shall prevail inasmuch as delegated legislation must be read in
the context of the primary/ legislative act and not the vice-versa.
The procedure laid down under Rule 173B of the Rules has
specifically been included in the Act. Furthermore, by reason of the
amended Act a provision has been made for reopening the approved
classification lists. It is a procedural provision in terms whereof
statutory authorities are required to determine as to whether the
earlier classification was correctly done or not. The said authority
upon giving an opportunity of hearing the parties may come to the
conclusion that decision on the approval granted need not be reopened
and even if the same is reopened, the reasons therefor are to be stated.
As the provision of Section 11A is a recovery provision as regards non-
levy or non-paid or short-levy or short-paid or erroneously refunded
duties by reason of the said amendment the Parliament had merely
provided that an approval on the basis of a classification list inter
alia in case of a short-levy can be recovered if a finding is arrived at
that the goods had undergone a short-levy. For the aforementioned
purpose, Clause 110 of the Finance Act, validating actions taken under
Section 11A can be taken into consideration whereby and whereunder a
legal fiction is created.
The effect of creating such legal fiction is well-known and need
not be reiterated. [See Bhavnagar University Vs. Palitana Sugar Mill
Pvt. Ltd. and others (2003) 2 SCC 111, State of Karnataka Vs.
Vishwabharathi House Building Coop. Soc. & Ors. (2003) 2 SCC 412, High
Court of Judicature for Rajasthan Vs. P.P. Singh and Anr 2003 (4) SCC
239 and Dipak Chandra Ruhidas Vs. Chandan Kumar Sarkar (2003) 7 SCC 66]
Before us, the constitutionality of Section 11A as amended in the
year 2000 has not been questioned.
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Cotspun (supra) was decided when the matters relating to
classification, approval thereof as also short-levy or upon detection of
a mistake were governed by the rules. Rule 10 and Rule 173 B were to be
read in conjunction with each other and the Constitution Bench merely
followed the said principle of interpretation of statute. A different
situation has arisen now having regard to the fact that not only the
substantive provision dealing with the consequence of non-levy, non-
payment or short levy or short-payment or erroneous refund but also has
laid down the procedure therefor.
A statute, it is trite, must be read as a whole. The plenary
power of legislation of the Parliament or the State Legislature in
relation to the legislative fields specified under Seventh Schedule of
the Constitution of India is not disputed. A statutory act may be
enacted prospectively or retrospectively. A retrospective effect
indisputably can be given in case of curative and validating statute.
In fact curative statutes by their very nature are intended to operate
upon and affect past transaction having regard to the fact that they
operate on conditions already existing. However, the scope of the
validating act may vary from case to case.
For the reasons aforementioned, we are of the opinion that the
Section 11A of the Act as amended is a valid piece of legislation.
LIMITATION:
Having answered the reference, we are of the opinion that this
Court in the peculiar facts and circumstances of this case at this stage
need not go into the question as to whether the processes undertaken by
the appellant would amount to manufacture or whether the classification
of goods under sub-heading 7308.90 is correct, in view of the fact that
the question as regard limitation and availability of MODVAT had not
been considered.
It is not in dispute that in terms of Section 11A a show cause
notice for short-levy could have been issued only within six months from
the relevant date. Only in the event, such short-levy was imposed on
account of fraud, collusion, willful mis-statement or suppression of
facts with an intent to evade payment of duty on the part of the
manufacturer, the extended period of limitation of five years could be
invoked.
The appellant herein in paragraph 15 of reply dated 2nd June, 1987
categorically stated that such classification has been made to the
knowledge of the Department. It was contended:
"On the contrary all the processes were carried
out openly and they itself had come up for
detailed consideration and eventually the
decision was taken under Assistant Collector’s
order dated 14.7.83 after due application of
mind and it would, therefore, be incredible to
allege as is sought to be done that the
department was not in a position to get first-
hand knowledge of the various processes
adopted."
The appellant further had contended:
"We deny each and every allegation contained in
the show cause notice. We submit that from the
legal point of view the classification cannot be
changed as proposed in the show cause notice,
nor does the factual position warrant
modification of the classification. When
Heading/Sub-heading 7211.31 is specific (cold
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rolled strips), the goods cannot be consigned to
7308.90 which is not specific and is a residuary
item. As long as the subject goods were not
classifiable under T.I 68 when it existed, they
cannot attract the corresponding sub-heading
7308.90. We also submit that Rule 9(2) cited in
the show cause notice is not applicable since
there was no clandestine clearances."
It is, therefore, evident that the contention of the appellant was
that Rule 9(2) cited in the show cause notice was not applicable. But,
unfortunately, despite the same it had not been adverted to by the
tribunal. We must notice that the appellant herein succeeded before the
Appellate Collector. The Revenue went up in appeal. The Tribunal was,
therefore, bound to take the aforementioned question into consideration
inasmuch a finding of fact was required to be arrived at that the period
of limitation for issuing such notices under Section 11A of the Act
would depend upon the question as to whether such short-levy was due to
any act of fraud, collusion, willful, mis-statement or suppression of
facts, the extended period of limitation of five years could not have
been invoked.
Such an extended period of limitation can be invoked only on a
positive act of fraud etc. on the part of assessee is found. Such a
positive act must be in contradistinction to mere inaction like non-
taking of licence etc. It has to be pleaded and established. [See
Padmini Products (supra), P&B Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (supra) and Pushpam
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (supra)]
Even in Easland Combines(supra) this Court held:
"It is settled law that for invoking the
extended period of limitation duty should not
have been paid, short levied or short paid or
erroneously refunded because of either fraud,
collusion, wilful misstatement, suppression of
fact or contravention of any provision or rules.
This Court has held that these ingredients
postulate a positive act and, therefore, mere
failure to pay duty and/or take out a licence
which is not due to any fraud, collusion or
willful misstatement or suppression of fact or
contravention of any provision is not sufficient
to attract the extended period of limitation."
The question of limitation involves a question of jurisdiction.
The findings of fact on the question of jurisdiction would be a
jurisdictional fact. Such a jurisdictional question is to be determined
having regard to both fact and law involved therein. The Tribunal, in
our opinion, committed a manifest error in not determining the said
question, particularly, when in the absence of any finding of fact that
such short-levy of excise duty related to any positive act on the part
of the appellant by way of fraud, collusion, willful mis-statement or
suppression of facts, the extended period of limitation could not have
been invoked and in that view of the matter no show cause notice in
terms of Rule 10 could have been issued.
Furthermore, even if the short-levy, if any, is to be recovered,
the appellant was entitled to raise a question that he is entitled to
adjust the duty upon taking MODVAT credit of the duty paid on cold
rolled steel strips. These aspects of the matter, in our opinion,
required to be gone into by the Tribunal.
CONCLUSION:
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For the reasons aforementioned, the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained which is set aside and the matter is remitted to the Tribunal
for consideration thereof afresh in accordance with law and in the light
of the observations made herein. This appeal is allowed in part but
without any order as to costs.