Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P. AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DELHI CLOTH MILLS & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/10/1990
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 735 1990 SCR Supl. (2) 168
1991 SCC (1) 454 JT 1990 (4) 131
1990 SCALE (2)719
ACT:
U.P. Excise Act, 1910---Sections 28 and 29 and Notifica-
tion dated 26th March 1979--Excise duty--Countervailing
excise duty--Minimum limits of wastage in transit--Provision
for--Charging up of duty on excess wastage--And imposition
of excise duty on liquor before its issue from the distill-
ery--Whether valid.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents are manufacturers of high strength
spirit. They also used to manufacture and bottle military
rum under a licence and supply the same to the defence
personnel inside and outside the State of U.P. The excise
duty on military rum for export was Rs.7 per L.P. Litre
while the rate for consumption within the State was Rs.21
per L .P. Litre. An allowance upto 0.5 per cent for wastage
during transit by leakage, evaporation etc. was provided.
Against a proper permit the respondents supplied rum to the
Officer Commanding Rail Road Depot. A.S.C., Pathankot at the
distillery premises and the consignments were taken by the
consignees under the seal of the railway authorities to
their respective destinations.
By a notification dated March 26, 1979, issued in super-
session to earlier notification, the Governor was pleased to
direct that with effect from April 1, 1970 duty shall be
imposed on country spirit at the rates mentioned in the
schedule and that the duty was payable before issue from the
distillery or bonded warehouse concerned save in the case of
issued under bond. Accordingly a notice was issued to the
respondents demanding Rs.4,295.55P on the wastage which was
termed as "excess transit wastage" of rum calculated at the
maximum rate of Rs.21 per L .P. Litre. The representation
against the demand having been rejected, they filed a writ
petition before the High Court challenging the validity of
the orders and praying for a mandamus commanding the State
of U.P. not to realise or adjust any amount of duty towards
wastage from the respondents’ advance duty account and
restraining them from giving effect to the impugned orders.
The High Court allowed the respondents’ writ petition
holding that the State of U.P. and the Excise authorities
were not entitled to levy
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169
excise duty on the wastage of liquor in transit. Hence this
appeal by the State.
On the question, whether differential duty is leviable.
under the Act and the Rules.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: The Act having provided for fixed wastage allow-
ance also in effect provided that the excess above the
allowable wastage will be taxed. It cannot therefore be said
that no such charging up of excise duty on the excess wast-
age in transit could be validly made. [179E]
Absolute equality and justice is not attainable in
taxing laws. Legislature must be left to decide the State
policy within constitutional limitations. [179F]
Rules 636 and 814 are of regulatory character and they
are precautionary against perpetration of fraud on the
excise revenue of the exporting State. A statute has to be
construed in the light of the mischief it was designed to
remedy. [180D]
In the instant case, the military rum was obtained for
the purpose of export and the lower export duty was paid and
only when the rum did not result in export the question of
imposing the differential duty arose. The notion of the
excise duty being changed or cancelled on account of what
transpires later is not foreign to excise law. [182H]
Drawback means the repayment of duties or taxes previ-
ously charged on commodities, from which they are relieved
on exportation. [183B]
The system of charging up the duty on the subsequent
event of non export cannot, therefore, be said to be irre-
spective of production or manufacture. [183C]
In the instant case, if it is proved to the satisfaction
of the appropriate authorities that counter-vailing duty had
been paid on the entire consignment irrespective of the
wastage then the question would arise as to whether the
wastage could be ignored altogether by the exporting State
as was done by the importing State. [183D]
A.B. Abdulkadir v. State of Kerala, [1962] 2 Suppl. SCR
741; Bimal Chandra Banerjee v. State of Madhya Pradesh,
[1970] 2 SCC
170
467; State of Mysore & Ors. v. M/s. D. Cawasji and Co.,
[1970] 3 SCC 710; M/s. Mohan Meakin Breweries Ltd. v. Excise
JUDGMENT:
M/s. Mc Dowell and Co. Ltd. v. Commercial Tax Officer, VII
Circle, Hyderabad, [1977] 1 SCR 914; Kalyani Stores v. State
of Orissa and Ors., [1966] 1 SCR 865; Excise Commissioner,
U.P. v. Ram Kumar, [1976] 3 SCC 540 and State of Madhya
Pradesh v. Firm Gappulal, AIR 1976 SC 633, referred to.
Mls. Ajudhia Distillery Rajaka, Sahaspur v. State of
U.P. and Anr., [1980] Taxation Law Repons 2262, overruled.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4297 of
1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 26.10.1979 of the
Allahabad High Court in C.M.W. No. 7168 of 1972.
Raja Ram Agarwal and A.K. Srivastava for the Appellants.
K.K. Venugopal, Rajinder Sachher, Satish Chandra, K.C.
Dua, and J.P. Misra for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K.N. SAIKIA, J. The State of U.P. by special leave
appeals from the Judgment of the High Court of Allahabad
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dated 26.10.1979, allowing the respondents’ writ petition
and holding that the State of U.P. and the Excise authori-
ties were not entitled to levy excise duty on the wastage of
liquor in transit. The respondents are manufacturers of high
strength spirit classified as other sorts of spirit not
otherwise specified’ under Section 28 of the United Prov-
inces Excise Act, 19 10, hereinafter referred to as ’the
Act’. After manufacture they transport those spirit in big
containers from the distilleries to their warehouses, trans-
porting them on passes issued under section 16 of the Act.
In the bonded warehouses the same are sometimes diluted,
separately bottled and sold. They also used to manufacture
and bottle military rum under a licence and supply the same
to the defence personnel inside and outside the State of
U.P. The Officer Commanding Rail Head Depot A.S.C., Pathan-
kot having obtained permits from the State of Punjab for the
import of military rum, against those permits the respond-
ents exported military rum from their distillery, under
different passes. The excise duty on military rum for export
was Rs.7 per L.P. Litre while the rate for consumption
within the State was
171
Rs.21 per L.P. Litre. If the exported military rum was under
bond thereupon duty was realised by the importing State from
the importer thereof. The respondents bottled the rum ac-
cording to rules and supplied the same to the consignees at
the distillery premises and the consignments were taken by
the consignees under the seal of the railway authorities to
their respective destinations.
It appears by Notification dated March 26, 1979 in
exercise of the powers under Sections 28 and 29 of the Act,
read with section 21 of the U.P. General Clauses Act, 1904,
and in supersession of the earlier Government Notification
the Governor was pleased to direct that with effect from
April 1, 1979 duty shall be imposed on country spirit at the
rates specified in the schedule thereto and the duty was
payable "before the issue from the distillery or bonded
warehouse concerned save in the case of issued under bond".
By order dated 13.10.1970 notice was issued to the respond-
ents demanding Rs.4,295.55p. on the wastage which was termed
as "excess transit wastage" of rum calculated at the maximum
rate of Rs.21 per L.P. Litre. A representation of the re-
spondents dated November 9, 1970 was rejected by order dated
15.1.1972. Another representation through the All India
Distillers Association was also rejected by order dated
August 28, 1972.
Several writ petitions challenging similar orders were
filed by others before the Allahabad High Court for quashing
the orders. The respondents also filed Civil Miscellaneous
Writ No. 7168 of 1972 under Article 226 of the constitution
of India praying for appropriate writ, order or direction
quashing the impugned orders dated 13.10.1970, 9.11.1970,
15.1.1972 and 28.8.1972 and for a mandamus commanding the
State of U.P. not to realise or adjust any amount of duty
towards wastage from the respondents’ advance duty account
otherwise than in accordance with law and restraining them
from giving effect to the impugned orders. The High Court by
the impugned judgment dated 26.10.1979 relying on an earlier
Division Bench decision of the same High Court in M/s. Mohan
Meakin Breweries Ltd. and Anr. v. State of Uttar Pradesh and
Ors., (Writ Petition No. 2604 of 1973, decided on 11.9.1979)
allowed the writ petition and quashed the impugned orders
thereby holding that no excise duty could legally be levied
on the excess wastage the occurred during the transport of
liquor in course of export, that is, taking out of U.P.
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otherwise than across a customs frontier as defined by the
Central Government.
Mr. Raja Ram Agarwal, the learned counsel for the appel-
lants, submits that the duty has been levied keeping in mind
the fact that in
172
U.P. excise duty is levied at two different rates--at a
higher rate when the liquor is sold inside the State, and at
a lower rate when it is exported outside the State. Counter-
vailing duty is paid by the importer on the quantity actual-
ly received in the importing State. If there is excess
wastage on transit the result is that the quantity actually
received by the destination State is less than the quantity
on which the State of U .P. charged the lower rate and,
therefore, on the quantity shown as wastage the State of
U.P. ought to recoup its differential duty by charging
excise duty at the higher rate; and that this is clearly
envisaged by the Act and the United Provinces Excise Manual
Rules, hereinafter referred to as ’the Rules’. Counsel
further submits that it has a wholesome purpose, namely, to
discourage evasion of duty and that there is no question of
levying excise duty twice on the same article inasmuch as
the amount of export duty actually paid is always deducted
from the demand; and that it is a duty of regulatory charac-
ter meant to guard against perpetration of fraud or decep-
tion on excise revenue which the State is entitled to re-
ceive. It is said to be a realisation of escaped duty justi-
fied by the implied presumption.
Mr. K.K. Venugopal, the learned counsel for the respond-
ents, submits that in this case while the exporting State,
that is, U.P., levied export duty at a concessional rate the
importing State levied countervailing duty on the quantity
of rum imported; and the quantity exported and subjected to
excise duty by the exporting State being the same as the
quantity whereupon countervailing duty was imposed by the
importing State, there could be no question of collecting
differential duty on the excess wastage by the exporting
State and if that was done it would amount to double taxa-
tion. Explaining the procedure for export from U.P. counsel
states that after export duty is paid, the exporter gets the
alcohol released and transport it to the importing States in
bottles or casks. In the importing State countervailing duty
is paid on full consignment at its destination and the seals
of the bottles transported are intact. So the entire con-
signment is taxed less the wastage. The impugned demand
notices have, submits counsel, rightly been quashed by the
High Court and the appellants have rightly been restrained
from levying such differential duty on excess wastage on
transit in course of export.
The only question to be decided, therefore, is whether
the differential duty is leviable under the Act and the
Rules. For answering the question we may refer to the Act
and the Rules. Included in Chapter V of the Act, which deals
with duties and fees, Section 28 of the Act provides that an
excise duty or a countervailing duty, as the
173
case may be, at such rate or rates as the State Government
shall direct may be imposed either generally or for any
specified local area on any excisable article stated in that
section.
"Excise duty" and "countervailing duty" as defined in
Section 3(3a) of the Act means any such excise duty or
countervailing duty, as the case may be, as is mentioned in
entry 51 of List II in the Seventh Schedule to the Constitu-
tion. That entry reads as follows:
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"51. Duties of excise on the following goods manufactured or
produced in the State and countervailing duties at the same
or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or produced
elsewhere in India:
(a) alcoholic liquors for human consumption;
(b) opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and narcot-
ics; but not including medicinal and toilet preparations
containing alcohol or any substance included in subparagraph
(b) of this entry."
The original Section 28 of the Act now re-numbered as
subsection (1) thereof, and sub-sections 2 and 3 inserted by
section 2 of the U.P. Act 7 of 1970 clearly covers Indian
made foreign liquors. There could be no dispute as to mili-
tary rum being one of the Indian made foreign liquors ex-
cisable under the Act. A duty of excise under Section 28 is
primarily levied upon a manufacturer or producer in respect
of the excisable commodity manufactured or produced irre-
spective of its sale. Firstly, it is a duty upon excisable
goods, not upon sale or proceeds of sale of the goods. It is
related to production or manufacture of excisable goods. The
taxable event is the production or manufacture of the liq-
uor. Secondly, as was held in A.B. Abdulkadir v. The State
of Kerala. reported in 1962 (2) Suppl. SCR 741: AIR 1962 SC
922, an excise duty imposed on the manufacture and produc-
tion of excisable goods does not cease to be so merely
because the duty is levied at a stage subsequent to manufac-
ture or production. That was a case on Central Excise, but
the principle is equally applicable here. It does not cease
to be excise duty because it is collected at the stage of
issue of the liquor out of the distillery or at the subse-
quent stage of declaration of excess wastage. Legislative
competence under entry 51 of list II on levy of excise duty
relates only to goods manufactured or produced in the State
as was held in Bimal Chandra Banerjee v. State of Madhya
Pradesh, [1970] 2 SCC 467. In the instant case there is no
174
dispute that the military rum exported was produced in the
State of U.P. In State of Mysore & Ors. v. M/s. D. Cawasji &
Co., [1970] 3 SCC 7 10, which was on Mysore Excise Act, it
was held that the excise duty must be closely related to
production or manufacture of excisable goods and it did not
matter if the levy was made not at the moment of production
or manufacture but at a later stage and even if it was
collected from retailer. The differential duty in the in-
stant case, therefore, did not cease to be an excise duty
even it was levied on the exporter after declaration of
excess wastage. The taxable event was still the production
or manufacture.
It is settled law as was held in Bimal Chandra Banerjee
v. State of Madhya Pradesh (supra), a case under the Madhya
Pradesh Excise Act, that no tax can be levied by the State
Government in the absence of specific authorisation by
statute. In that case the levy of duty on liquor which the
contractor failed to lift was held to have been an attempt
to exercise a power which the State Government did not
possess.
Mr. Agarwal refers us to Rule 636 of the Rules which at
the relevant time said:
"636. A distiller holding licences for bottling
Indianmade foreign liquor of his own manufacture and for
selling it by wholesale may export such foreign liquor
bottled on his wholesale premises, to any other State or
Union Territory in India subject to the following condi-
tions:
(1) The exporter shall obtain from the importer a
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permit authorizing the import signed by the Chief Revenue
Authority of the importing State or Union Territory or by an
officer duly authorized in this behalf.
(2) The permit shall specify:
(a) the name and address of the person of firm authorized to
import;
(b) the description and quantity of the foreign liquor to be
imported;
(c) the rate of duty chargeable in the importing State or
Union Territory in case the Indian-made foreign
175
liquor is imported in State or Union territory with which
the state of Uttar Pradesh has entered into reciprocal
arrangements for the adjustment of the excise duty by book
transfer.
(d) the rate of duty charged in the importing State or Union
Territory and the fact that it has been realized in advance
in cases of import other than those covered by clause (c).
(3) On receipt of the permit the exporter shall deposit
into the treasury;
(a) Export duty on the total quantity of liquor to be ex-
ported; and
(b) Where the export is made to a State or Union Territory
with which the State of Uttar Pradesh has entered into a
reciprocal arrangement for the adjustment of the excise duty
by book transfer, and the rate
higher than that enforced in the State of Uttar Pradesh, and
that payable in the importing State or Union Territory on
the total quantity of liquor to be exported.
(4) On receipt of the permit and the treasury receipt
the wholesale vendor shall prepare a pass in form F.L. 23 in
quadruplicate and submit it to the Excise Inspector, in-
charge of the distillery. The Excise Inspector shall after
satisfying himself that duty has been correctly realized,
affix his signature to the pass. The exporter shall then
send one copy of the pass to the Collector of the district
of export, one copy to the Chief Revenue Authority of the
place of import or such other officer as may be authorised
in this behalf. One copy to the consignee and shall retain
the fourth copy. The treasury receipt shall always accompany
the copy of the pass sent to the Collector of the exporting
districts.
(5) The pass in form F.L. 23 shall state clearly:
(a) the name and address of the consignor;
176
(b) the name and address of the consignee;
(c) the exact description and quantity of each kind of
foreign liquor despatched under the pass;
(d) the route by which it is despatched;
(e) the date of despatch; and
(f) in case of export against duty paid permit, the fact
that the duty has been prepaid in the State of import.
(6) A separate pass in form F.L. 23 shall be issued
in respect of each consignment. The Chief Revenue Authority
or other officer of the place of import should send the copy
of the pass received by him, duly countersigned, to the
Excise Commissioner, Uttar Pradesh, in support of the claim
for’ refund of duty annually after the close of the excise
year.
(7) Should the rate of duty in the importing State
be lower than that in force in Uttar Pradesh, exporter shall
be entitled to a refund of the difference in duty. If the
duty has been prepaid in the State of import at the rate in
force at the time of issuing import permit, the exporter
shall be entitled to a refund of duty deposited by him in
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the State of export on verification of the claim by the
Excise Inspector incharge of the distillery on the basis of
export passes in form F.L. 23 duly countersigned by the
Chief Revenue Authority of the State or Union Territory of
import or the officer appointed in this behalf in token of
receipt of the consignment of Indian-made foreign liquor"
Rule 637 provided than the duty, other that export duty,
on foreign liquor manufactured at any distillery in Uttar
Pradesh and exported therefrom on prepayment of duty to any
State or Union Territory of India shall be credited by book
transfer to the Government of the importing State or Union
Territory after the close of the excise year. Rule 637-A
provided for registration of claims for refund or export of
Indian-made foreign liquor and provided that every distiller
making exports of Indian-made foreign liquor to other
States, shall submit a statement showing all such exports
made during the proceeding quarter, in form P.D. 31 to the
Excise Commissioner, duly
177
verified by the officer incharge, distillery, despatching
simultaneously a copy thereof to the Assistant Excise Com-
missioner of the charge. Rule 37-B provided for maintenance
of register of refunds against exports of Indian-made for-
eign liquor and said that the Excise Inspector incharge of
the distillery shall enter all the details given by the
distillers in the statement in form P.D. 31, in a register
to be maintained by him in form P.D. 31-A. As and when
refunds are allowed by the Excise Commissioner, he shall
make entries about refund in this register in relevant
columns under his signature. Similar entries shall also be
made by the office of the Assistant Excise Commissioner
concerned, on the copies of P.D. 31 statement received from
the exporters, and be initialled by the Assistant Excise
Commissioner after verification.
Thus it is seen that though not specifically mentioning
charging up of differential export duty on excess wastage,
the above rules definitely envisaged refund of excise duty
of countervailing or equalising nature.
Mr. Agarwal also brings to our notice R.ale 8 14 which
substituted the old Rule by the Excise Commissioner’s Noti-
fication No. 10909/IX. 241-A, dated February 8, 1978. It
provided as under:
"Allowance for loss in transit. An allowance upto 0.5 per
cent will be made for the actual loss in transit by leakage,
evaporation or other unavoidable cause, or spirit transport-
ed or exported under bond in wooden casks or metal vessels.
The allowance to be made under this rule will be determined
by deducting from the quantity of spirit despatched from the
distillery, the quantity received at the place of destina-
tion, both quantities being stated in terms of alcohol. The
allowance will be calculated on the quantity contained in
each wooden cask metal vessels comprised in a consignment.
If the report of the officer by whom the consign-
ment of spirit has been gauged and proved at its destination
shows that the wastage has occurred above the limit allowa-
ble the person executing the bond shall be liable to pay
duty on so much of the deficiency as in excess of the allow-
ance. The rate of duty leviable shall be the highest rate of
duty leviable on such spirit in this State.
178
When the wastage does not exceed the prescribed
limit, no action need be taken by the Officer-in-charge of
the Distillery or bonded warehouse, as the case may be, but
when the wastage exceeds the allowable limit, the
Officer-in-charge of the Distillery shall obtain the expla-
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nation of the Distillers or the person executing the bond
and forward the same together with a full report of the
circumstances to the Assistant Excise Commissioner or the
Deputy Excise Commissioner of the charge in which the Dis-
tillery is situated. The Assistant Excise Commissioner or
the Deputy Excise Commissioner shall charge duty on excess
wastage provided that when the total wastage in a consign-
ment is within the allowable limit. Deputy/Assistant Excise
Commissioner of the charge may write off the excess wastage
in any particular wooden cask or metal vessel:
Provided further that the Deputy Excise Commis-
sioner may write off the duty upto Rs.500, if he is satis-
fied that the excess wastage in a consignment was on account
of an accident or other unavoidable cause but in other
cases, the matter shall be referred to the Excise Commis-
sioner for orders. Cases in which the Deputy Excise Commis-
sioner writes off duty shall be reported by him to the
Excise Commissioner."
It is emphasised by Mr. Agarwal that this provision is meant
to discourage evasion of duty. If any part of the lower
export duty charged liquor is not in fact exported it should
be made to pay the higher excise duty as payable on home
consumed liquor. It does not impose any new duty. We are
inclined to agree. This rule does not authorise imposition
of any new tax but only authorises charging up excise duty
on the excess wastage of liquor in course of export which
was charged at concessional rate. The old Rule 814 of the
Rules was made by B.O. No. 423/V-284-B, dated September 6,
1910 and No. 20/8 V-E 980B, dated May 28, 1918 providing for
allowance for Joss in transit. It said:
"An allowance will be made for the actual loss in transit,
by leakage, evaporation or other unavoidable cause, of
spirit transported or exported under bond. The allowance is
subject to the following maximum limits."
Limits were prescribed differently for wooden casks and
metal vessels, keeping in mind the duration of transport.
179
Thus, we find that the minimum limits of wastage in
transit was prescribed even under the old rule. This by
implication enjoined that the excess wastage would be taxed
as if not wasted.
The question may arise as to the date of the new Rule
814, to decide whether the impugned notices would be covered
by it or by the old Rule. Section 77 of the Act provides the
answer. It says:
"77. Publication of rules and notifications.--All rules made
and notifications issued under the Act shall be published in
the Official Gazette, and shall, have effect as if enacted
in this Act from the date of such publication or from such
other date as may be specified in that behalf."
(The two provisos are not relevant for the purpose of this
case)
Both the old and the new Rule 8 14 must, therefore, have
effect from the date of publication in the Official gazette
or from such other date as may be specified in that behalf
as if enacted in the Act. The object of this ancient formu-
la, namely, "as if enacted in this Act" was to emphasise the
fact that the notifications were to be as effective as the
Act itself. Its validity could be questioned in the same way
as the validity of the Act could be questioned. It is an
ancient form of rule making still to be found in the Act.
Thus the Act having provided for fixed wastage allowance
also in effect provided that the excess above the allowable
wastage will be taxed. It can not, therefore, be said that
no such charging up of excise duty on the excess wastage in
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transit could be validly made. The validity of Rule 814 had
not been questioned before the High Court. Absolute equality
and justice is not attainable in taxing laws. Legislature
must be left to decide the State policy within Constitution-
al limitations.
In M/s. Mohan Meakin Breweries Ltd. v. Excise & Taxation
Commissioner, Chandigarh, reported in 1976 Suppl. SCR 5 10:
1976 3 SCC 42 1, the appellant company carried on the busi-
ness of manufacture, storage and sale of liquors. Between
June, 1967 and April 1969,. it transported various quanti-
ties of liquor from its distilleries in U.P. to its bonded
warehouse at Chandigarh. On arrival, the consignments were
examined by the Officer-in-Charge of the warehouse, and a
shortage was found, exceeding the wastage allowance permis-
sible under rule 8 of the Punjab Bonded Warehouse Rules,
1957. The Excise and Taxation Commissioner, exercising the
powers of the . Financial Commissioner. issued a show cause
notice and then ordered
180
the appellant to pay duty on the wastage in excess. The show
cause notice required the appellant to pay duty on excess
wastage in course of import of liquor from U.P. and the
rules governing the appellant’s licence provided for a
wastage allowance not exceeding 1% of the actual loss in
transit by leakage or breakage of vessels or bottles con-
taining liquor, and if the wastage exceeded the prescribed
limit the licensee should be liable to pay duty at the
prescribed rate as if the wastage in excess of the pre-
scribed limit had actually been removed from the Warehouse,
and it was also provided that the Financial Commissioner
could in his discretion on goods cause being shown remit the
whole or a part of the duty leviable on such wastage, and
these provisions were challenged. This Court held that the
impugned rules did not impose any new duty or create any
liability and that they were in essence and substance of a
regulatory character meant to guard against perpetration of
fraud or deception on the revenue. "They provide for and
regulate the storage and subsequently the removal of liquor
from the bonded warehouse, on payment or otherwise of the
duty which is chargeable under the Fiscal Rules of 1937." We
agree with Mr. Agarwal that the instant Rules 636 and 814
are also a regulatory character and they are precautionary
against perpetration of fraud on the excise revenue of the
exporting State. If out of the quantity of military rum in a
consignment, a part or portion is claimed to have been
wastage in transit and to that extent did not result in
export, the State would, in the absence of reasonable expla-
nation, have reason to presume that the same have been
disposed of otherwise than by export and impose on it the
differential excise duty. A statute has to be construed in
light of the mischief it was designed to remedy. There is no
dispute that excise duty is a single point duty and may be
levied at one of the points mentioned in Section 28.
The submission of the respondents that they paid duty on
the entire quantity of rum to be exported under excise
passes issued to the importer and that after payment of the
export duty the rum bottled under the conditions enumerated
in the Rules was supplied to the consignee at the distillery
premises and the consignments were taken by the consignees
under their seals and under the seal of the Railway authori-
ties and the consignments reached their destination with
seals intact would not go to support the contention that the
State Government was not competent to levy any duty on the
excess wastage that is shown to have occurred during transit
inasmuch as only a concessional rate of duty was levied on
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the liquor which was supposed to be exported out side the
State of U.P. and if the entire quantity on which such
concessional duty was paid did not reach its destination,
and the
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shortage is shown as wastage in transit, it surely meant
that the short delivery was not exported. The reason of the
wastage would not be material so far as this conclusion is
concerned. Had this quantity been not exported but consumed
locally the State would have derived higher duty of which it
has been deprived.
The argument that countervailing duty is paid by the
importers in the importing State on the quantity actually
received, would also be immaterial for this conclusion
though that may be of some importance for the purpose of
revenue of the importing State as well as the consignee. In
case countervailing duty has been paid on the entire quanti-
ty of the consignment in the importing State there may be
room for adjustment in accordance with the provisions of
Rules 636, 637, 637-A and 637-B of the Rules. The only
material question may be whether the wastages was caused
while the bottles were on transit but still within the
territory of the exporting State or in transit inside the
importing State. If as a matter of fact it is found that the
exported liquor actually crossed the territory of the ex-
porting State intact there may not be any justification for
demanding differential duty. That will of course be a ques-
tion of fact in no way affecting the right to demand the
differential duty. The decision in M/s. Ajudhia Distillery
Rajaka, Sahaspur v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr., report-
ed in 1980 Taxation Law Reports 2262, quashing such a demand
and holding that the exporting State had no jurisdiction to
charge duty on the liquor wastage in transit cannot be said
to have been correctly decided and the impugned judgment in
the instant case suffers from the same infirmity, and has to
be set aside. Rule 814 envisages the levy of such differen-
tial duty. There is no question of double charging or multi-
ple point charging in this case. It is only a question of
recovery of the difference on proof of the purposes for
which lower duty was earlier levied having failed to be
achieved entailing liability to make good the difference.
The Rules 636, 637-A and 637 are also relevant to this
extent.
It was reiterated in M/s. Mc Dowell and Co. Ltd. v.
Commercial Tax Officer, VH Circle, Hyderabad, [1977] 1 SCR 9
14: AIR 1977 SC 1459, following Abdul Kadir (supra) that
excise duty is a duty on the production or manufacture of
goods produced or manufactured within the country though
laws are to be found which impose a duty of excise at stages
subsequent to the manufacture or production. Similarly what
was stated in Kalyani Stores v. The State of Orissa and
Ors., [1966] 1 SCR 865, was reiterated in M/s Mohan Meakin
Breweries Ltd. (supra) that a countervailing duty is meant
"to counter balance; to avail
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against with equal force or virtue; to compensate for some-
thing or serve as equivalent or substitute for". A counter-
vailing duty is "meant to equalise the burden on alcoholic
liquors manufactured or produced in the State." They may be
imposed at the same rate as excise duty or at a lower rate
so as to equalise the burden after taking into account the
cost of transport from the place of manufacturing to the
taxing State. Countervailing duties are meant to equalise
burden on alcoholic liquors imported from outside the State
and the burden placed by excise duties on alcoholic liquors
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manufactured or produced in the State. Countervailing duties
can only be levied if similar goods are actually produced or
manufactured in the State on which excise duties are being
levied. Thus, countervailing duty paid in the importing
State does not ipso facto affect the excise revenue of the
exporting State.
The fact that the importer is required to pay counter-
vailing duty on the imported military rum could, therefore,
ipso facto be no ground for opposing the levy of differen-
tial duty on the excess wastage of exported rum that duty
being levied with a view to safeguard the excise revenue of
the exporting State. If the excess wastage was actually lost
to consumers while in the importing State no justification
of such a duty may arise, that, however, would be an entire-
ly different question without in any way affecting the
competence of the legislature of the exporting State to
impose such a duty. The fact that the exported rum was on
payment of export duty or on bond would not again be materi-
al inasmuch as when the rum meant for export failed to be
exported, there may be a presumption, may be rebuttable one,
that what is shown as the excess has merged in mass of rum
consumed within the State and was not separated from such a
mass. The imposition of differential duty was only deferred
to this moment and it still continued to be a duty on pro-
duction or manufacture of rum. It could not be regarded as a
duty not connected with the taxable event of manufacture or
production.
There is also no similarity with the excise duty sought
to be levied only on the unlifted quantity of liquor by
contractors which was held to be impermissible under Sec-
tions 28 and 29 of the Act in Excise Commissioner, U.P. v.
Ram Kumar, [1976] 3 SCC 540 and State of Madhya Pradesh v.
Firm Gappulal, AIR 1976 SC 633: 1976 (2) SCR 1041. In the
instant case the military rum was obtained for the purpose
of export and the lower export duty was paid and only when
the rum did not result in export the question of imposing
the differential duty arose. The notion of the excise duty
being changed or cancelled on account of what transpires
later is not foreign to excise law. Generally speaking
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the imposing of the differential duty i.e. charging up the
duty on the report of the excess wastage is the opposite of
the system of drawback prevalent in some systems. Drawback
means the repayment of duties or taxes previously charged on
commodities, from which they are relieved on exportation.
For example, in the customs laws of some countries an allow-
ance is made by the Government upon the duties due on im-
ported merchandise when the importer, instead of selling it
within the country-re-exports it, and then the difference of
duty is refunded, if already paid. Similarly, in England
there is a provision of refund of duties on British wine
when the wine incidentally is spoilt or otherwise unfit for
use or when delivered to another person has been returned to
the maker as so spoilt or unfit. The system of charging up
the duty on the subsequent event of non export can not,
therefore, be said to be irrespective of production or
manufacture.
In the instant case if it is proved to the satisfaction
of the appropriate authorities that countervailing duty had
been paid on the entire consignment irrespective of the
wastage then the question would arise as to whether the
wastage could be ignored altogether by the exporting State
as was done by the importing State. Counsel for the parties
had no objection to the idea that if the explanation for
wastage was satisfactory and the countervailing duty was
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paid in the importing State on the entire consignment irre-
spective of the wastage, there would be room for adjustment
by reducing the duty to similar extent.
For the foregoing reasons, the impugned Judgment is set
aside and the appeal is allowed, but under the facts and
circumstances of the case, without any order as to costs.
Y. Lal Appeal
allowed.
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