Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BAIDYANATH AYURVED BHAWAN (P) LTD.JHANSI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
EXCISE COMMISSIONER, U.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/10/1970
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 378 1971 SCR (2) 590
1971 SCC (1) 4
CITATOR INFO :
D 1989 SC2227 (36,37)
F 1990 SC 781 (26)
E 1990 SC1814 (24)
ACT:
Medicinal and Toilet Preparations (Excise Duties) Act (16 of
1955) s. 4 and Item 1 of Schedule-Medical preparations
containing tinctures which contain alcohol-If dutiable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant is a manufacturer of certain medicines with
the aid of -substances like tincture, spirit, etc., which
contain alcohol. On the question whether he was liable to
pay duty under the Medicinal and Toilet Preparation (Excise
Duties) Act, 1955,
HELD : (1) The preparations are proprietary medicinal
preparations and are not capable of being consumed as
ordinary alcohol beverages, According to Item 1 of the
Schedule to the Act, in order to attract duty, all that is
required is that the medicinal preparation should contain
alcohol. Alcohol may be a part of the preparation either
because it is directly added to the solution or it came to
be included in the medicinal preparation because one of its
components contains alcohol. [592 E-G]
(2)It may be that a tincture is dutiable under the item,
and, when the medicinal preparation in which it was used is
also made dutiable it will involve multi-point taxation.
But s. 4 of the Act shows that the multi-point tax on
medicinal preparations containing alcohol was within the
contemplation of the Legislature. That section provides for
rebate of duty on alcohol supplied to the manufacturer of
dutiable goods, and, every rebate pressupposes imposition of
tax or duty. [593 B-F]
(3) The rebate under s. 4 is confined only to those goods
which directly come within the scope of s. 4 and not to
others. From such a provision it cannot be said that as
regard the other medicinal preparations, there can be no
levy when the language of the provision imposing the levy is
plain and unambiguous. [593 F-G]
M/,s-. Pharm Products Ltd. Thanjavur v. District Revenue
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Officer A.I.R. 1969 Mad. 448, approved.
Cape Brandy Syndicate v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue.
[1921] 1 K.B. 64, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1924 of 1970.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 28, 1970 of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal
’No. 368 of 1970.
S. V. Gupte and Sobhagmal Jain, for the appellant.
0. P. Rana and R. Bana, for the respondents.
591
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde J.-In this appeal by special leave the true ambit of
item 1 in the Schedule to the Medicinal and Toilet
Preparations (Excise Duties) Act, 1955 (to be hereinafter
referred to as the Act) read with S. 3(1) of that Act comes
up for consideration.
The appellant is a manufacturer of certain medicines with
the aid of substances like tincture, spirit etc. The
tincture and spirit in their turn contain alcohol. The
Superintendent of Excise called upon the appellant to pay
duty under the Act on the medicinal preparation on the
ground that they contain alcohol. The appellant resisted
the demand on the ground that the medicines in question were
not prepared by adding pure alcohol; the fact that the
tincture which is a component of that preparation contains
alcohol does not make it a preparation containing alcohol.
That contention was rejected by the Superintendent of Excise
as well as by the High Court in the Writ petition brought by
the appellant.
It is admitted that alcohol though it was not directly added
is a component of the medicinal preparations in question.
The alcohol has not undergone any chemical change into some
other substance. It is present in a liquid form in those
preparations. The question for decision is whether the
preparation in question do not attract duty because alcohol
was not directly added to the solution. The contention of
the appellant is that unless alcohol is added into the
preparation in its free condition, a medicinal preparation
does not become dutiable. For deciding this question we may
now read the relevant provisions of the Act.
Section 3(1) of the Act says
"There shall be levied duties of excise, at
the rates specified in the Schedule, on all
dutiable goods manufactured in India."
"Dutiable goods" is defined in s. 2(c) as meaning the
medicinal and toilet preparations specified in the Schedule
as being subject to the duties of excise levied under this
Act: "Medicinal Preparation" is defined in S. 2(g) in these-
words :
" "medicinal preparation" includes all drugs
which are a remedy or prescription prepared
for internal or external use of human beings,
or animals and all substances intended to be
used for or in the treatment, mitigation or
prevention of disease in human beings or
animals."
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Item 1 of the Schedule, the only item with
which we are concerned in this case reads as
follows :
Item No. Description of Dutiable goods Rate
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of Duty
Medicinal preparation.
Medicinal preparations, being patent or
Ten
proprietary medicines, containing alcohol
Percent
and which are not capable of being ab
valouem
consumed as ordinary alcoholic
beverages.
The only other provision which we need
consider is s. 4 of the Act. That section
reads thus :
Where alcohol, opium, Indian hemp or other
narcotic drug or narcotic had been supplied to
a manufacturer of any suitable goods for use
as an ingredient of such goods by, or under
the authority of, the collecting Government
and a duty of excise on the goods so supplied
had already been recovered by such Government
under any law for the time being in force, the
collecting Government shall, on an application
being made to it in this behalf, grant in
respect of the duty ’of excise leviable under
this Act, a rebate to such manufacturer of the
excess, if any, of the duty so recovered over
the duty leviable under this Act."
It was conceded that the preparations with which we are con-
cerned in this case are medicinal preparations. They are
proprietary medicines and that they are not capable of
being consumed as ordinary alcohol beverages. The only
question that has to be decided is whether those
preparations contain alcohol. It is admitted that tincture
is a component of that preparation and alcohol is a
component of tincture. Therefore we fail to see how it can
be urged that those preparations do not contain alcohol. In
order to attract duty all that is required is that a
medicinal preparation should contain alcohol. Alcohol may
be a part of the preparation either because it is directly
added to the solution or it came to be included in that
medicinal preparation because of one of the components of
that preparation contained alcohol. According to the plain
language of the provision all that is required is that the
preparation should contain alcohol. In interpreting a tax-
ing provision, the courts should not ordinarily concern
themselves with the policy behind the provision or even with
its impact. As observed by Rowlatt J. in Cape Brandy
Syndicate v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue(1) in a taxing
Act one has to look at
(1) [1921] 1 K. B. 64.
593
what is clearly said. There is no room for any intendment.
There is no equity about a tax. There is no presumption as
to a tax. Nothing is to be read in, nothing is to be
implied. One can only look fairly at the language used. It
was urged on behalf of the appellant that if we hold that
even indirect introduction of alcohol into a medicinal
preparation brings that preparation within the scope of s.
3(1) of the Act, it would mean multipoint taxation. Coming
to the medicinal preparations with which we are concerned in
this case, it was urged that if the view taken by the High
Court is correct then, first the tincture used became
dutiable and thereafter the medicinal preparations in which
tincture was used became dutiable. It was said that that
could not be the intention of the parliament. We are unable
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to appreciate this contention. Multipoint taxation is not
unknown to us.
Our attention was invited to S. 4 of the Act in support of
the Contention that the legislature did not intend to levy
multi-point tax. Section 4 provides for rebate of duty on
alcohol supplied to the manufacturer of dutiable goods for
use as an ingredient of such goods by or under the authority
of the collecting government and a duty of excise on goods
so supplied bad already been recovered by such Government
under any law for the time being in force. In our opinion
this provision instead of supporting the appellant goes to
show that multi-point tax on medicinal preparations
containing alcohol was within the contemplation of the
leigslature; otherwise there was no purpose in incorporating
S. 4 into the Act. if section 3 did not impose any levy on
medicinal preparations of which pure alcohol is not a
component, there was no need for S. I. There can be no
question of any rebate if there was no levy at all. Every
rebate presupposes an imposition of tax or duty. But the
rebate under s. 4 is confined only to those goods which
directly come within the scope of s. 4 and not to others.
That was the will of Parliament. If Parliament desired to
give rebate only in certain cases and not to others, it
cannot be said that as regards the other medicinal
preparations there can be no levy. In our judgment the
language of-the provision imposing the levy is plain and
unambiguous. It imposes duty on all medicinal preparations
containing alcohol. At the hearing our attention was
invited to the decision of the Madras High Court in M/s.
Pharm Products Ltd. Thanjavur & ors. v. Dist. Rev.
Officer(1). The conclusion reached by that High Court
accords with our conclusion.
In the result this appeal fails and the same is dismissed
with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal
dismissed.
(1) A.I.R. 1969 Mad. 448.
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