Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2359 of 1999
PETITIONER:
M/S. OSRAM SURYA P. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF CENTRAL EXCISE, INDORE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/05/2002
BENCH:
N. Santosh Hegde & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
(With CA Nos.6199-6201 of 2000)
J U D G M E N T
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
In regard to the interpretation of the second proviso to
Rule 57G of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 (for short ’the
Rules’), two different Benches of the Customs, Excise & Gold
(Control) Appellate Tribunal (for short ’the tribunal’) have
taken conflicting views consequent to which the issue came to
be referred to a larger Bench of the tribunal which by its order
dated 11.7.2000 made in Appeal No.E/273/99-NB and other
connected matters took the view that after the introduction of
the said proviso, a manufacturer cannot take the Modvat credit
after six months from the date of the documents specified in the
first proviso to Rule 57G of the Rules.
Being aggrieved by the said order of the tribunal, the
appellants have preferred these appeals questioning the
correctness of that order.
Prior to the introduction of the second proviso to Rule
57G i.e. prior to 29.6.1995, a manufacturer was entitled to
withdraw the said credit at any time without there being a
limitation on such withdrawal. On 29.6.1995, second proviso to
Rule 57G was introduced by substituting the then existing
proviso and the newly introduced proviso read thus : "Provided
further that the manufacturer shall not take credit after six
months of the date of issue of any of the documents specified in
first proviso to this sub-rule:"
The appellants who had received their inputs for the
manufacture of their respective products, had taken credit under
the Modvat Scheme, admittedly, six months after the date of
issue of the documents specified in the said proviso to Rule
57G. Therefore, the said credit was disallowed by the
authorities. This action of the authorities was questioned by the
appellants before the tribunal, contending that the benefit of the
credit which had accrued to them prior to the introduction of the
second proviso to the said Rule, cannot be taken away by
introduction of a limitation because it was a vested right
accrued to them prior to the coming into force of the said
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proviso to the Rule. They also contend that the said proviso is
not retrospective in its operation and is only applicable to the
inputs received by a manufacturer after the introduction of the
said proviso. They also contend that since the said proviso did
not specifically state that it is taking away the vested right of a
manufacturer, the proviso should be read to mean that the same
is not applicable in regard to the credit accrued to a
manufacturer prior to the introduction of the said Rule. For all
the above reasons, they contend that the credit cannot be denied
in regard to those which have accrued prior to 29.6.1995. In the
case of M/s. Kusum Ingots & Alloys Ltd. V. Commissioner of
Central Excise, Indore, which is one of the appellants
hereinabove, a further contention was advanced that the six
months’ period contemplated under the newly introduced
proviso expired in its case on 30.6.1995 i.e. a day after the
introduction of the new proviso, therefore, it had no opportunity
of availing the credit which was otherwise due to it.
Consequently, the introduction of the proviso amounted to
canceling the credit itself.
On behalf of the Revenue, it is contended that the
language of the newly introduced proviso is very clear and
admits of no ambiguity, therefore, the question of interpretation
of the Rule contrary to the said language does not arise at all,
and on a plain reading of the Rule, the tribunal was justified in
coming to the conclusion that after the introduction of the said
proviso to the Rule, no manufacturer could avail of credit
subsequent to a period of six months, as stipulated in the said
proviso.
At the outset, we must note that none of the appellants
has challenged the validity of the said proviso, therefore, we
will have to proceed on the basis that the proviso in question is
a valid one. In that background, the sole question that we will
have to consider will be : whether the proviso to the Rule in
question is applicable to the cases of manufacturers who had
received their inputs prior to the introduction of the said proviso
and are seeking to take credit in regard to the said inputs
beyond the period of six months.
Having heard the arguments of the parties and after
considering the Rule in question, we think that by introducing
the limitation in the said proviso to the Rule, the statute has not
taken away any of the vested rights which had accrued to the
manufacturers under the Scheme of Modvat. That vested right
continues to be in existence and what is restricted is the time
within which the manufacturer has to enforce that right. The
appellants, however, contended that imposition of a limitation
is as good as taking away the vested right. In support of their
argument, they have placed reliance on a judgment of this Court
in Eicher Motors Ltd. V. Union of India (1999 [106] ELT 3 SC)
wherein this Court had held that a right accrued to an assessee
on the date when it paid the tax on the raw-materials or the
inputs would continue until the facility available thereto gets
worked out or until those goods existed. In that background,
this Court held that by Section 37 of the Act, the authorities
concerned cannot make a Rule which could take away the said
right on goods manufactured prior to the date specified in the
concerned Rule. In the facts of Eicher’s case (supra), it is seen
that by introduction of Rule 57F(4A) to the Rules, a credit
which was lying unutilized on 16.3.1995 with the manufacturer
was held to have lapsed. Therefore, that was a case wherein by
introduction of the Rule a credit which was in the account of
the manufacturer was held not to be available on the coming
into force of that Rule, by that the right to credit itself was
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taken away, whereas in the instant case by the introduction of
the second proviso to Rule 57G, the credit in the account of a
manufacturer was not taken away but only the manner and the
time within which the said credit was to be taken or utilized
alone was stipulated. It is to be noted at this juncture that the
substantive right has not been taken away by the introduction of
the proviso to the Rule in question but a procedural restriction
was introduced which, in our opinion, is permissible in law.
Therefore, in our opinion, the law laid down by this Court in
Eicher’s case (supra) does not apply to the facts of these cases.
This is also the position with regard to the judgment of this
Court in Collector of Central Excise, Pune & Ors. V. Dai Ichi
Karkaria Ltd. & Ors. [1997 (7) SCC 448].
It is vehemently argued on behalf of the appellants that in
effect by introduction of this Rule, a manufacturer in whose
account certain credit existed, would be denied of the right to
take such credit consequently, as in the case of Eicher (supra), a
manufacturer’s vested right is taken away, therefore, the Rule in
question should be interpreted in such a manner that it did not
apply to cases where credit in question had accrued prior to the
date of introduction of this proviso. In our opinion, this
argument is not available to the appellants because none has
questioned the legality or the validity of the Rule in question,
therefore, any argument which in effect questions the validity of
the Rule, cannot be permitted to be raised. The argument of the
appellants that there was no time whatsoever given to some of
the manufacturers to avail the credit after the introduction of the
Rule also is based on arbitrariness of the Rule, and the same
also will have to be rejected on the ground that there is no
challenge to the validity of the Rule.
Without such a challenge, the appellants want us to
interpret the Rule to mean that the Rule in question is not
applicable in regard to credits acquired by a manufacturer prior
to the coming into force of the Rule. This we find it difficult
because in our opinion the language of the proviso concerned is
unambiguous. It specifically states that a manufacturer cannot
take credit after six months from the date of issue of any of the
documents specified in the first proviso to the said sub-rule. A
plain reading of this sub-rule clearly shows that it applies to
those cases where a manufacturer is seeking to take the credit
after the introduction of the Rule and to cases where the
manufacturer is seeking to do so after a period of six months
from the date when the manufacturer received the inputs. This
sub-rule does not operate retrospectively in the sense it does not
cancel the credits nor does it in any manner affect the rights of
those persons who have already taken the credit before coming
into force of the Rule in question. It operates prospectively in
regard to those manufacturers who seek to take credit after the
coming into force of this Rule. Therefore, in our opinion, the
tribunal was justified in holding that the Rule in question only
restricts a right of a manufacturer to take the credit beyond the
stipulated period of six months under the Rule. Therefore, this
appeal will have to fail.
However, in C.A. Nos.6199-6201/2000, learned senior
counsel appearing for the appellants, pointed out that it had
specifically questioned the imposition of penalty but the
tribunal has failed to consider, may be because it was
considering only the question of law which was posed before it.
It is pointed out to us that in the connected appeals, a similar
prayer by the manufacturer for setting aside the penalty was
entertained and the penalty as against those appellants was set
aside. We are satisfied that this is a just complaint and on facts
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and circumstances of these cases also, we are of the opinion that
the penalty imposed against the said appellant should be set
aside. To that extent these appeals should succeed.
There is a further plea addressed on behalf of the
appellants in C.A. Nos.6199-6201 of 2000 that their Company
in question is before the Board for Industrial & Financial
Reconstruction (the BIFR) which has framed a scheme,
therefore, there could be no recovery of amount from the said
Company except in accordance with the said scheme. In support
of that proposition the appellant has relied upon a judgment of
this Court in Tata Davy Ltd. V. State of Orissa & Ors. (1997 6
SCC 669). In our opinion, this is a question which should be
dealt with by the concerned authorities in the recovery
proceedings. It is open to the appellant to raise this question
when recovery proceedings are taken against it, we leave this
question open and express no opinion thereon.
For the reasons stated above, C.A. No.2359/1999 is
dismissed. No costs.
C.A. Nos.6199-6201/2000 are allowed to the extent of
setting aside the penalty only, as stated above. Ordered
accordingly.
J.
(N. Santosh Hegde)
..J.
May 2, 2002. (Shivaraj V. Patil)