Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, BARODA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S COTSPUN LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/09/1999
BENCH:
S.S.Mohammed Quadri, V.N.Khare, S.P.Bharucha, B.N.Kirpal
JUDGMENT:
Bharucha, J.
This appeal has been referred to a Constitution Bench
for the reason that there are two conflicting three Judge
Bench decisions of this Court on the point at issue.
Briefly stated, the facts are : The
assessee-respondent manufactures NES yarn. It had filed
classification lists with the Excise authorities, the
appellants, which had been approved under the provisions of
Rule 173B of the Central Excise Rules, 1944. The approval
classified the NES yarn under old Tariff Item
19-I(2)(a)(2)(e). On 28th September, 1977, a notice was
issued by the Excise authorities to the assessee to re-open
the assessment for the period February, 1977 to May, 1977.
The reason for so doing was that the NES yarn ought to have
been correctly classified under old Tariff Item 19- I(2)(F).
A demand for differential duty was made. A second show
cause notice was issued by the Excise authorities to the
assessee on 18th November, 1977 for the period 1st June,
1977 to 17th June, 1977. The assessment for this period was
sought to be re-opened for the same reason. Again, a demand
for differential duty was made. These show cause notices
were amended by corrigenda dated 28th February, 1978 and 1st
April, 1978. The assessee replied to the show cause notices
on 24th May, 1978. It contended that the count of the NES
yarn was determinable and it had been correctly classified.
It also contended that the approved classification lists
could not be re-opened and, therefore, the demands for
differential duty could not be enforced. The Assistant
Collector upheld the assessees contention that the duty
liability having been ascertained on the basis of an
approved classification list, the question of short levy of
duty did not arise. The Appellate Collector allowed the
appeal of the Excise authorities, reclassified the NES yarn
and confirmed the demands for differential duty. The
assessee approached the Tribunal in appeal. 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. Accordingly, the demands
were quashed.
The Excise authorities are in appeal against the order
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of the Tribunal. The assessee had not appeared at the stage
when the matter was before a two and then a three Judge
Bench. Amicus Curiae were appointed, and we are beholden to
them for assisting us.
Rule 10 of the Central Excise Rules, as it read at the
relevant time and so far as it is relevant for our purposes,
is set out :
10. Recovery of duties not levied or not paid, or
short levied or not paid in full or erroneously refunded.
--- (1) Where 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.
A proviso to the above increases the period of six
months to five years where there has been fraud or the like
on the part of the assessee.
Rule 173B falls in the Chapter of the Central Excise
Rules that deals with the self- removal procedure. It
requires an assessee to file before the proper Excise
Officer for approval a list of the goods that he proposes to
clear. The list is required to contain a description of the
goods produced or manufactured by him, the goods that he
intends to remove and of excisable goods already deposited
or likely to be deposited without payment of duty in his
warehouse, and to indicate the tariff entry under which the
goods that he intends to remove fall, the rate of duty
leviable thereon and such other particulars as may be
required. Sub-rule (2) reads thus:
(2) The proper Officer shall, after such inquiry as
he deems fit, approve the list with such modification 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 duty payable on the goods
intended to be removed in accordance with such list.
Provision for a dispute as to the approved rate of
duty is made in Clause (3). Clause (4) deals with any
alterations that may become necessary in the approved list.
Sub-rule (5) needs to be set out in extenso. (5) When the
dispute about the rate of duty has been finalised 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.
It is the submission of the learned Additional
Solicitor General that the Tribunal was in error in the view
that it took; that, by reason of Rule 10, the
reclassification of the NES yarn would operate
retrospectively and that, therefore, the assessee was liable
to pay excise duty on the basis of the modified
classification list for the period that commenced six months
before the date on which the reclassification was made.
In support of the case of the Excise authorities is
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the judgment of this Court in Ballarpur Industries Ltd. vs.
Asstt. Collector of Customs & Central Excise and Ors.
(1995 Suppl (3) SCC 429). Since it makes reference to a
judgment of a Bench of two learned Judges that took a
contrary view, we think it appropriate to refer first
thereto.
In Rainbow Industries (P) Ltd. vs. Collector of
Central Excise, Vadodara (1994 (6) SCC 563) the appellant
was a manufacturer of dyestuff. He had filed a price list
as required by Rule 173 C of the Central Excise Rules which
was approved by the Excise authorities with effect from 1st
October, 1975. About a year thereafter, the Assistant
Collector issued a notice requiring the appellant to show
cause why the net assessable value should not be revised and
differential duty recovered. The appellant replied to the
show cause notice but his contentions were not accepted upto
the stage of the Tribunal. In the challenge before this
Court to the order of the Tribunal it was contended that the
price list submitted by the appellant having been accepted
and acted upon, the Excise authorities were precluded from
challenging the same and, therefore, from claiming that the
appellant was liable to pay the differential duty. A bench
of two learned Judges of this Court said:
(O)nce 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.
In the case of Ballarpur Industries (supra) decided by
a Bench of three learned Judges, the observations in the
judgment in Rainbow Industries were confined to the facts
of that case. The Bench placed reliance upon Rule 10 and
held that, on a plain reading of that provision as also of
Section 11A, 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, 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 is that under Section 11-A past dues cannot be
demanded. We must, therefore, reject that contention.
The order of reference cites the decision of a Bench
of three learned Judges in Collector of Central Excise vs.
Indian Oxygen Ltd. (1991 (51) ELT A36). By that brief
order the appeal of the Excise authorities against a
decision of the Tribunal was dismissed because the Bench was
of the opinion that the decision of the Tribunal was correct
in the facts and circumstances set out in that judgment.
That judgment (1990 (47) ELT 449) says, that a
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reclassification could take effect only from the date of the
show cause notice seeking to re-classify the product. It
cites with approval an earlier decision of the Tribunal
(1985 (22) ELT 487) to the same effect.
Reference, for the purposes of completeness, should
also be made to the decision of a Bench of two Judges of
this Court (to which one of us, S.P. Bharucha, J. was a
party). This is the decision in Collector of Central
Excise, New Delhi vs. Bhiwani Textile Mills (1996 (88) ELT
639). This Court held that until the proposal for
the proper officer of Excise of the classification was
mooted, the earlier classification would operate.
Rule 173 B deals with classification lists. It
entitles the proper officer of Excise to make such inquiry
thereon as he deems fit and requires him to approve the list
only thereafter, and that with such modifications as are
considered necessary. The assessee must determine the
excise duty that is payable by him on the goods he intends
to remove in accordance with the approved classification
list. Sub-rule (5) provides for modification of an approved
classification list.
Rule 10 is a provision for recovery of duties that
have not been levied or paid in full or part. So far as is
relevant for our purposes, it provides that where any duty
has been short-levied, the Excise officer may, within six
months from the relevant date, serve notice on the assessee
requiring him to show cause why he should not pay the amount
that had been short-levied. Rule10 does not deal with
classification lists or relate to the re-opening of approved
classification lists. That is exclusively provided for by
Rule173 B.
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.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the judgment in
Ballarpur Industries, which did not advert to Rule 173B,
does not lay down the law correctly and it is over-ruled.
The decision in Rainbow Industries, on the other hand,
correctly lays down the law. It was delivered in the
context of Rule 173C dealing with approved price lists and
the provisions of Rule 173C and 173B are analogous.
We are informed that the position in law has changed
since the year 1995 or thereabout. We have not considered
these altered provisions. Nothing that we have said in this
judgment shall ipso facto apply thereto.
The appeal is dismissed. Having regard to the fact
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that the assessee does not appear, there shall be no order
as to costs.