Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S NORTHERN PLASTICS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HINDUSTAN PHOTO FILMS MFG.CO. LTD
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/1997
BENCH:
S.P. BHARUCHA, S.B. MAJMUDAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Majumdar.J,
M/s Northern Plastics Ltd. is the common appellant in
these two appeals moved by it after obtaining special leave
to appeal from this Court against a common judgement dated
9th March 1990 passed by the High Court of Delhi in two
Civil Writ Petitions, one moved by M/s Hindustan Photo Films
Mfg.Co.Ltd. (’HPF’ for short), respondent no.1 in C.A. No.
2035 of 1990, and the other the Union of India, respondent
no.1 in the companion Civil Appal No. 2036 of 1990. The
question companion Civil Appeal No. 2036 of 1990. The
question posed for our consideration is as to whether 1st
respondents in these Civil writ appeals could be said to be
’persons aggrieved’ within the meaning of Section 129-A of
the Customs Act, 1962 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’)
so that they could challenge before the customs, Excise and
Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal (’CEGAT’ for short) the
order passed by the Additional Collector of Customs, Bombay
dated 5th June 1989 agreeing with the notings made by the
Assistant Collector of Customs dated 31st May 1989
recommending release of the imported goods to the common
appellant on payment of full customs duty. The CEGAT took
the view the respondent no.1 in both these appeals had no
locus standi to prefer appeals against the said order. The
High Court of Delhi by the impugned judgment has taken a
contrary view and has ruled in favour of the locus standi of
these respective respondents.
Before we deal with the aforesaid question it will be
necessary to not the relevant background facts leading to
the present controversy between the parties. The project a
chequered history. The common appellant, Northern Plastics
Ltd., which will hereinafter be referred to as ’the
appellant’ for the sake of convenience, is said to have
obtained Small Scale Industries Registration (SSI
Registration) on 24th August 1985 for slitting and
confectioning of jumbo rolls of various types of films. The
said registration, according to the appellant, was obtained
under The Industries (Development & Regulation) Act, 1951
(’IDR Act’ for short). A notification was issued by the
competent authority under the said Act on 18th July 1986
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effectively taking away the exemption fro requirement of
licence in respect of Item 20 of 1st Schedule to the IDR
Act thus making it obligatory for owner of industrial
undertaking to have licence within six months. It is the
case of the appellant that although it was not the owner of
industrial undertaking as defined by the IDR Act, under a
mistaken belief it applied for COB licence on 8th December
1986. On 7th July 1988 a notification was issued by the
Central Government in exercise of its powers under sub-
section (i) of Section 25 of the Act exempting jumbo rolls
of graphic art films and jumbo rolls of photographic colour
paper, of width 1 meter or more and of length 600 meters or
more, falling within Chapter 37 of the First Schedule to the
Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975), when imported into
India, from so much of that portion of the duty of customs
leviable thereon under the said First Schedule as was in
excess of the amount calculated at the rate of 60 per cent
ad valorem, subject to the following conditions:
(i) the importer undertakes conversion of the said
jumbo rolls by slitting confectioning into
finished products;
(ii) the importer holds an industrial licence under the
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951
(65 of 1951), for slitting and confectioning of
photo-sensitised materials from jumbo rolls.
According to the appellant the benefit of the this
concession in import duty on the jumbo rolls of various
types of films which were being imported by the appellant
was available to it. The appellant had imported various
consignments of articles of X-Ray films and graphic art
films through the port at Bombay between January 1989 and
May 1989. The shipments concerned for the same consignments
were made in favour of the appellant by the foreign
exporters between 15th December 1988 and 20th April 1989.
According to the appellant the goods were worth Rs. 246 lacs
approximately in foreign exchange. That the appellant had
paid customs duty amounting to Rs. 196 lacs on these
consiqnments and the additional duty if the exemption was
not available to the appellant on these consignments would
have become payable to the extent of Rs. 130 lac. The total
value of the goods imported at Bombay port by the appellant
during the aforesaid period worked up to Rs.572 lacs
according to the appellant. The Assistant Collector of
Customs (Bombay) had not granted the requisite relief of
concessional import duty payable for the imported
consignments of the appellant. Hence a writ petition being
Civil Writ Petition No. 2021 of 1988 was moved by the
appellant in the High Court of Delhi where principal relief
sough was for the grant of benefit of the aforesaid customs
exemption notification. A prayer was also made for issuance
of COB licence by the competent authorities under the IDR
Act. Initially the appellant had not joined M/s. ’HPF’, a
public sector undertaking in the said writ petition as a
respondent as it was merely a business rival of the
appellant. However on an application by the HPF a Division
Bench of the High Court by its order dated 8th May 1989
allowed it to be a party-respondent in the appellant’s
petition. In the aforesaid writ petition filed by the
appellant before High Court of Delhi initially an order was
passed by a learned Single Judge directing removal and
release of the jumbo rolls imported by the appellant at
Bombay at concessional rate of customs duty. However this
interim order set aside by a Division Bench of the High
Court by its order dated 8th May 1989. Pending this writ
petition on the Delhi High Court, upon an application by the
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appellant, an order was proposed to be passed by the
Assistant Collector of Customs (Bombay) on 31st May 1989
permitting the clearance of the imported consignment of the
appellant upon payment of full rate of customs duty. The
said proposed order was placed for approval before the
Additional Collector of Customs (Bombay). Below the said
proposal the Additional Collector of Customs (Bombay) put
his endorsement agreeing to the said proposal on 1st June
1989. The said order which came to be communicated to the
appellant on 5th June 1989 entitled the appellant to clear
the imported goods on payment of full customs duty without
availing of the benefits of the concessional rate of import
duty pursuant to the earlier referred notification dated 7th
July 1988.
Having come to know about the order of the Additional
Collector of Customs, HPF which is a public sector
undertaking wholly owned by Government of India, which was
already joined as a party, at its own request, to the
appellant’s pending, petition, moved an interim relief
application in that petition for staying the clearance and
removal of the goods imported by the appellant. The High
Court by its order dated 9th June 1989 in vacation granted
ex-parte stay of the Collector’s order. The interim relief
application of HPF was subsequently heard another Vacation
Judge in the High Court on 21st June 1989 and after
completion of the arguments on behalf of the HPF on 26th
June 1989 a request was made for not pronouncing the
judgment in the said interim relief application. However the
said request was not granted and the interim relief
application of HPF was dismissed on 26th June 1989 by the
high Court. That thereafter HPF filed a writ petition in the
High Court of Bombay on that very day, that is, 26th June
1989 praying for similar interim relief against release of
the imported goods to the appellant. The High Court rejected
the request for exparte interim relief. A Special Leave
Petition was also moved by the HPF before this Court against
the Delhi High Court order dated 26th June 1989 vacating the
exparte stay granted against the releases of imported goods
in favour of the appellant. The said Special Leave Petition
was dismissed as withdrawn by this Court. After HPF’s
Special Leave Petition was dismissed as withdrawn by this
Court on 27th June 1989 a writ appeal was moved by the HPF
before a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court against the
order of learned Single Judge refusing to grant ex parte
stay in writ petition of HPF, but no interim relief was
granted by the High Court even in this writ appeal. Under
these circumstances HPF filed an appeal to CEGAT on 28th
June 1989 against the order of Additional Collector of
Customs (Bombay) dated 5th June 1989. An exparte interim
order was obtained from CEGAT for a week up to 6th July
1989. HPF then withdrew the writ petition before the Bombay
High Court. In the meantime the status quo order granted by
CEGAT expired on 6th July 1989 and it was not extended. HPF
then filed a writ petition before the High Court of Delhi
being Writ Petition No.1932 of 1989 against the order dated
7.7.1989 passed by CEGAT and the Division Bench of the High
Court passed an ex parte stay of the order of the Additional
Collector of Customs dated 5th June 1989 on 12th July 1989.
The High Court of Delhi by its order dated 17th July 1989
disposed of Writ Petition No. 1932 of 1989 moved by the HPF
against the Additional Collector’s order and directed CEGAT
to dispose of the appeal of the HPF. The High Court,
however, further directed that till the final disposal of
the appeal by the CEGAT the stay granted on 12th July 1989
would continue. Before HPF’s appeal could be heard by the
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CEGAT an appeal being No. 2072 of 1989 was filed by the
Ministry of Industries, New Delhi before CEGAT under Section
129-A of the Act against the very same order of Additional
Collector dated 5th June 1989. A Bench of CEGAT by its order
dated 31st July 1989 dismissed the appeal of HPF against
Collector of Customs on the ground that HPF being a business
rival of the appellant was not ’person aggrieved’ as
contemplated by Section 129-A of the Act and hence the
appeal was not maintainable. Thereafter on 8th August 1989
the other appeal filed by Ministry of Industries against the
very same order of Additional Collector of Customs was also
dismissed as not maintainable, the Ministry of Industries
being held not an ’aggrieved person’ within the meaning of
Section 129-A of the Act. Under these circumstances HPF
filed another Writ Petition No. 2286 of 1989 in the Delhi
High Court on 9th August 1989 challenging two orders- (i)
the order of CEGAT dated 31st July 1989 holding its appeal
as not maintainable; and (ii) the order of Additional
Collector of Customs (Bombay) ordering release of the
imported goods to the appellant. A Division Bench of the
High Court while admitting the writ petition restrained
clearance of the goods in favour of the appellant pending
the writ petition. In the said writ petition Ministry of
Industries was also permitted on its application to be
impleaded as party-respondent. The Union of India
representing Ministry of Industries in its turn filed
another write petition being Civil Writ Petition No. 3023 of
1989 on 24th October 1989 before the High Court of Delhi
against the order dated 8th August 1989 passed by CEGAT
against it. That petition was also admitted by the High
Court of Delhi. Both these writ petitions were heard
together and by a common order dated 9th March 1990 a
Division Bench of the High Court took the view that the
appeals filed by the respective first respondents i n these
appeals were maintainable before the GEGAT as they could be
said to be ’persons aggrieved’ within the meaning of Section
129-A of the Act and that they had sufficient locus standi
in public interest to maintain their appeals. In the result
the Division Bench of the High Court partly allowed the writ
Petition of both the first respondents in these appeals
moved by the Union of India as well as HPF and passed the
following order:
"We have held that the Union of
India and M/s. Hindustan Photo
Films Ltd. are ’aggrieved person’
and can maintain an appeal under
Section 129-A of the Customs Act.
The main question in the writ
petition at the root of the entire
controversy between the parties is
whether the said importation of the
photo-sensitized material at Bombay
was legal or not would now be
decided by the Appellate Tribunal.
But assuming that M/s. Northern
Plastics Ltd. takes an appeal
against our order to the Supreme
Court and our decision is reversed,
still the question of the legality
of the importation would be open to
the parties to be argued in this
writ petition before us. Thus, till
the main question of legality of
importation is finally disposed of,
in the interests of justice, it is
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necessary that the subject-matter,
of the controversy, viz. the
imported goods, are preserved in
the custody of the Customs
Authorities and are not released.
Since the goods are now stored
under the suitable conditions of
storage with M/s. Northern Plastics
Ltd. there is no likelihood of
their deteriorating. No variation
in our order dated 9.8.89 in regard
to the release of goods is,
therefore, called for.
The writ petition is partly
allowed to the extent indicated
above."
As already noted the aforesaid common order of the Division
Bench of the High Court of Delhi has resulted in present two
appeals on grant of special leave by this Court. Pending
these appeals it was felt by this Court that the imported
goods in question were likely to deteriorate with passage of
time and if the happened the contesting parties would stand
to suffer irretrievably. Consequently by an order dated 25th
April 1990 a Bench of two learned Judges of this Court was
pleased to direct that Chief Controller of Imports and
Exports may be appointed as Court Receiver for disposing of
the goods in question by sale in auction as expeditiously as
possible and at the maximum price they will fetch in the
market. It was further directed that the amount of the sale
proceeds of the auction shall forthwith be deposited by the
receiver in this court to the credit of these appeals.
Accordingly the goods were auctioned. By a further order
dated 21st September 1990 another Bench of two learned
Judges of this Court accepted the offer of four purchasers
who had offered to purchase all the disputed goods for a
total sum of Rs. 1,40,00,000/-. Four action sales were
confirmed in favour of the concerned auction purchasers. By
the same order it was directed that the auction amount shall
be deposited by this Court in a Fixed Deposit Account and
the amount so deposited shall remain in the custody of the
Court and shall be disposed of in accordance with the final
judgment in the appeals pending before the Customs, Excise
and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal. The aforesaid order
was passed for the obvious reason that by that time under
the common judgment under appeal CEGAT was directed by the
High Court to dispose of the appeals of Union of India as
well as HPF pursuant to its judgment. However as these
appeals are being disposed of finally by us by the present
judgment appropriate order will have to be passed by us in
connection with this deposited amount. We shall do so after
considering the main question involved in controversy
between the parties in these appeals.
For the purpose of these appeals we shall assume that
the order of Assistant Collector of Customs (Bombay), as
approved by the Additional Collector of Customs (Bombay), of
1st June 1989 was in itself appealable to CEGAT under
Section 129-A of the Act being a decision and order passed
by an adjudicating authority under Section 122 of the Act.
We assume as aforesaid for the simple reason that Shri Dave,
learned senior counsel for the appellant has vehemently
contended that the said endorsement of the Additional
Collector of Customs was of an administrative nature and was
not appealable. Neither CEGAT nor the High Court of Delhi
has considered that question and as that question strictly
does not arise for our consideration in the present appeals
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for deciding the controversy between the parties we have
assumed as aforesaid.
Rival Contentions
Shri Dave, learned senior counsel for the appellant has
vehemently contended that the Division Bench of the High
Court had patently erred in taking the view in the impugned
common judgment that HPF as well as Industries Ministry of
the Union of India were ’aggrieved person’ within the
meaning of Section 129-A of the Act. According to Shri Dave,
the only parties which could prefer appeal to CEGAT could be
either the aggrieved importer or the Collector of Customs
after following the procedure of Section 129-D of the Act.
That save and except these two parties no third party had a
right to appeal under the Act. That right of appeal under
the appeal under the Act. That right of appeals under the
Act is a creature of statute. Therefore, we have to look at
the relevant provisions of the statute with a view of
finding out whether an appeal lies at the instance of any
third parties like the present first respondents in both
these appeals. Shri Dave in this connection placed strong
reliance on Section 129-A sub-section (1) as well as sub-
section (3) thereof. In support of his submission he placed
reliance on judgment of this Court to which we will make a
reference at an appropriate stage. Shri Dave submitted that
the concept of locus standi as expanded be decisions of this
Court in connection with public interest litigations moved
before this Court under Article 32 or before the High Court
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India had no
application to the statutory right of appeal to be culled
out for the express language of the statute creating the
appellate forum and also confirming the right of appeal to
the parties mentioned therein. In the alternative submitted
Shri Dave, neither the Industries Ministry nor the HPF,
which is a rival commercial concern, can be said to be
aggrieved by the order of the Assistant Collector of Customs
(Bombay) directing release of the imported goods in favour
of the appellant on payment of full customs duty. Shri Dave
also tried to submit that it could not be urged by the
contesting respondents that the import of the goods in
question was unauthorised as for additional import licence
purchased by the appellant actual user test was not
applicable. For resolving the present controvesy it is not
necessary to consider this alternative contention of Shri
Dave. We will confine our decision to the limited question
whether appeals moved by each of the first respondents in
these appeals before CEGAT were maintainable or not.
Learned counsel Shri Subba Rao appearing for the Union
of India as well as learned counsel appearing for HPF on the
other hand tried to support the decision rendered by the
High Court of Delhi and submitted that on the express
language of Section 129-A sub-section (1) of the Act the
Industries Ministry of the Union of India as well as HPF
could be said to be ’persons aggrieved’. That according to
the Industries Ministry of Union of India the appellant had
imported goods which were liable to confiscation under the
Act and, therefore, the order of the Additional Collector of
Customs (Bombay) was patently erroneous. That it affected
the public revenue as well as the effective implementation
of IDR Act and, therefore, it could not be said that the
Industries Ministry did not represent sufficient public
interest to maintain the appeal before CEGAT. Learned
counsel for HPF in his turn submitted that HPF which is
wholly owned Government company where more than Rs. 400
crores are sunk by Central Government from public coffers is
a limb of the Union of India itself and when such large
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extent of public funds are involved in the working of HPF it
cannot be said that it did not represent sufficient public
interest to maintain the appeal against the order of
Additional Collector of Customs by which huge quantity of
illegally imported goods were sought to be released in
favour of the appellant. That such goods, if permitted to be
imported, would result in flooding the local market and
would severely prejudice the working of HPF which is a
public concern that has now gone sick and hence the High
Court had committed no error in holding that the HPF had
sufficient locus standi to maintain its appeal before CEGAT.
In the light of these rival contentions we now proceed
to consider the question posed for our decision.
At the outset it must be kept in view that appeal is a
creature of statute. The right to appeal has to be exercised
by persons permitted by the statute to prefer appeals
subject to the conditions regarding the filing of such
appeals. We may in this connection usefully refer to a
decision of four learned judge of this Court in the case of
The Anant Mills Co. Ltd. etc. etc. v. State of Gujarat &
others etc. etc. [AIR 1975 SC 1234 = (1975) 2 SCC 175]. In
that case Khanna, J., speaking for the Court had to consider
the question whether the provision of statutory appeal as
per Section 406(2)(e) of the Bombay Provincial Municipal
Corporation Act, 1949 which required the appellant to
deposit the disputed amount of tax before appeal could be
entertained could be said to be in any way violative of
Article 14 of the Constitution of India. Repelling the
aforesaid challenge to the vires of the said provision the
following pertinent observations were made in para 40 of the
Report :
"...The right of appeal is the
creature of a statute. Without a
statutory provision creating such a
right the person aggrieved is not
entitled to file an appeal. We fall
to under stand as to why the
Legislature while granting the
right of appeal cannot impose
conditions for the exercise of such
right. In the absence of any
special reasons there appears to be
no legal or constitutional
impediment to the imposition of
such conditions. It is permissible,
for example, to prescribe a
condition in criminal cases that
unless a convicted person is
released on bail, he must surrender
to custody on bail, he must
surrender to custody before his
appeal against the sentence of
imprisonment would be entertained.
Likewise, it is permissible to
enact a law that no appeal shall
lie against an order relating to an
assessment of tax unless the tax
had been paid. Such a provision was
on the statute book in Section 30
of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
The proviso to the section provided
that ’..........no appeal shall lie
against an order under sub-section
(1) of Section 46 unless the tax
had been paid’. Such conditions
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merely regulate the exercise of the
right of appeal so that the same is
not abused difficulty in the
enforcement of the order appealed
against in case the appeal is
ultimately dismissed. It is open to
the Legislature to impose an
accompanying liability upon a party
upon whom legal right is conferred
or to prescribe conditions for the
exercise of the right. Any
requirement for discharge of that
liability or the fulfilment of that
condition in case the party
concerned seeks to avail of the
said right is a valid piece of
legislation, and we can discern no
contravention of Article 14 in it
........."
It has also be noted that the wider concept of locus
standi in public interest litigation moved before this Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution of India which itself
is a fundamental right or under Article 226 before High
Courts which also offers a constitutional remedy cannot be
imported for deciding the right of appeal under the
statutory provisions contained in the Customs Act. Whether
any right of appeal is conferred on anyone against the
orders passed under the Act in the hierarchy of proceedings
before the authorities has to be judged from the statutory
settings of the Act and not before them. Therefore, in our
view, the High Court in the impugned judgment had erred in
drawing the analogy from the more elastic concept of locus
standi under Article 32 of Article evolved by this Court by
its decisions on the subject. It is also to be appreciated
that the decision of this Court in Bar Council of
Maharashtra v. M.V. Dabholkar etc. etc. AIR 1975 SC 2092 was
based on an entirely different statutory scheme. For judging
the competence and locus standi of the Union of India or the
HPF for moving appeals before CEGAT against the order of
Additional Collector of Customs passed under Section 122 of
the Act the answer must be found from within the four
corners of the Act itself.
We have, therefore, to turn to the Scheme of the Act
providing for appeals. Provision of appeals is found in
Chapter XV of the Act. Section 128 deals with ’Appeals to
Collector (Appeals)’ and Section 128-A deals with ’Procedure
in appeal’. The Appellate Tribunal is constituted as per
Section 129 of the Act. Sub-section (1) thereof lays down
that, ’the Central Government shall constitute an Appellate
Tribunal to be called the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control)
Appellate Tribunal consisting of as many judicial and
technical members as it thinks fit to exercise the powers
and discharge the functions conferred on the Appellate
Tribunal by this Act’. It is, therefore, obvious that the
Appellate Tribunal CEGAT is a creature of statute and
derives its jurisdiction and powers only from the statute
creating it and not outside the same. Then follows Section
129-A dealing with ’Appeals to the Appellate Tribunal’. The
relevant provisions thereof read us under :
"129-A. Appeals to the Appellate
Tribunal.- (1) Any person aggrieved
by any of the following orders may
appeals to the Appellate Tribunal
against such order _
(a) a decision or order passed by
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the Collector of Customs as an
adjudicating authority;
(b)... ... ... ...
(c)... ... ... ...
(d)... ... ... ..."
Sub-sections (2) and (3) of Section 129-A are relevant for
our present purpose. The read as under :
"129-A(2). The Collector of Customs
may, if he is of opinion that an
order passed by-
(a) the Appellate Collector of
Customs under Section 128, as
it stood immediately before
the appointed day, or
(b) the Collector (Appeals) under
Section 128-A,
is not legal or proper, direct the
proper officer to appeal on his
behalf to the Appellate Tribunal
or, as the case may be, the Customs
and Excise Revenues Appellate
Tribunal established under Section
3 of the Customs and Excise
Revenues Appellate Tribunal Act,
1986, against such order.
(3) Every appeal under this section
shall be filed within three months
from the date on which the order
sought to be appealed against is
communicated to the Collector of
Customs, or as the case may be, the
other party preferring the appeal."
Section 129-D(1) of the Act also deserves to be noted at
this stage. It reads as under:
"129-D. Powers of Board or
Collector of Customs to pass
certain orders.-(1) The Board may,
of its own motion, call for and
examine the record of any
proceeding in which a Collector of
Customs as an adjudicating
authority has passed any decision
or order under this Act for the
propose of satisfying itself as to
the legality or propriety of any
such decision or order and may, by
order, direct such Collector to
apply to the Appellate Tribunal or,
as the case may be Customs and
Excise Revenues Appellate Tribunal
established under Section 3 of the
Customs and Excise revenues
Appellate Tribunal Act, 1986, for
the determination of such points
arising out of the decision or
order as may be specified by the
Board in its order."
Section 129-DA gives powers of revision to Board or
Collector of Customs in certain cases and as we are
concerned here with further proceedings against the order of
Collector of Customs sub-section (1) of Section 129-DA would
be relevant. It reads as under:
"129-DA. Powers of revision of
Board or Collector of Customs in
certain cases.- (1) The Board may,
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of its own motion or on the
application of any aggrieved person
or otherwise, call for and examine
the record of any proceeding in
which a Collector of Customs has
passed any decision or order not
being a decision or order passed
under sub-section (2) of this
section of the nature referred to
in sub-section (5) of Section 129-D
for the purpose of satisfying
itself as to the correctness,
legality or propriety or such
decision or order and may pass such
order thereon as it thinks fit."
Similarly Section 129-DD gives powers of revision to Central
Government to entertain revision petitions against certain
orders of the Collector (Appeals). It provides as under:
129-DD. Revision by Central
Government.-
(1) The Central Government may, on
the application of a person
aggrieved by any order passed under
Section 128-A, where the order is
of the nature referred to in the
first proviso to sub-section (1)
of Section 129-A, annul of modify
such order.
Explanation .-for the purposes of
this sub-section, ’order passed
under Section 128-A’ includes an
order passed under that section
before the commencement of Section
40 of the Finance Act, 1984,
against which an appeal has not
been preferred before such
commencement and could have been,
if the said section had not come
into force, preferred after such
commencement to the Appellate
Tribunal."
The aforesaid provisions of the Act leave no room for doubt
that they represent a complete scheme or code for
challenging the orders passed by the Collector (Customs) in
exercise of his statutory powers. It is axiomatic that the
importer against whom the collector has passed the impugned
order of adjudication and who is called upon to pay the
customs duty which, according to him, is not payable an
appeal under Section 129-A(1) of the Act. So far as
departmental authorities themselves are concerned including
the Collector of Customs no direct right of appeal is
conferred on Collector to prefer appeal against his own
order before the CEGAT. However there is sufficient
safeguard made available to the Revenue by the Act for
placing in challenge erroneous orders of adjudication as
passed by the Collector of Customs by moving the Central
Board of Excise and Customs under Section 129-D(1) for a
direction to the Collector to apply to the CEGAT for
determination of such point arising out of the decision or
order as may be specified by the Board of Revenue in this
connection. Similarly a statutory remedy is provided to the
Collector of Customs in connection with orders of the
Appellate Collector of Customs passed immediately before the
appointed day and also in connection with the orders passed
by Collector of Customs under Section 128-A, to direct
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proper officer to appeal on his behalf as laid down by
Section 129-DA(1) as well as on the Central Government under
contingencies contemplated by Section 129-DA(1). These are
the only statutory modes contemplated by the Act by resort
to which the orders of Collector (Customs) could be brought
in challenge before higher statutory authorities including
the CEGAT. In the light of this statutory scheme, therefore,
it is not possible to agree with the contention of learned
counsel for the contesting respondents that sub-section (1)
of Section 129-A entitles any and every person feeling
aggrieved by the decision or order of the Collector of
Customs as an adjudicating authority, to prefer statutory
appeal to the Appellate Tribunal. Neither the Central
Government, through Industries Department, nor the rival
company or industry operating in the same field as the
importer can as a matter or right prefer an appeal as
’person aggrieved’ is wider than the phrase ’party
aggrieved’. But in the entire context of the statutory
scheme especially sub-section (3) of Section 129-A it has to
be held that only the parties to the proceedings before the
adjudicating authority Collector of Customs could prefer
such an appeal to the CEGAT and the adjudicating authority
under S.122 can prefer such an appeal only when directed by
the Board under Section 129-D(1) and not otherwise. It is
easy to visualise that even a third party may get
legitimately aggrieved by the order of the Collector of
Customs being the adjudicating authority if it is contended
by such a third party that the goods imported really
belonged to it and not to the purported importer or that he
had financed the same and, therefore, in substance he was
interested in the goods and consequently the release order
in favour of the purported importer was prone to create a
legal injury to such a third party which is not actually
arraigned as a party before the adjudicating authority and
was not heard by it. Under such circumstances such a third
party might perhaps be treated to be legally aggrieved by
the order of the Collector of Customs as an adjudicating
authority and may legitimately prefer an appeal to the CEGAT
as a ’person aggrieved’. That is the reason why the
Legislature in its wisdom has used the phrase ’any person
aggrieved’ by the order of Collector of Customs as
adjudicating authority in Section 129-A(1). But it order to
earn a locus standi as ’person aggrieved’ other than the
arraigned party before the Collector of Customs as an
adjudicating authority it must be shown that such a person
aggrieved being third party has a direct legal interest in
the goods involved in the adjudication process. It cannot be
a general public interest or interest of a business rival as
is being projected by the contesting respondents before us.
In this connection we may refer to a Constitution Bench
judgment of this Court in the case of Adi Pherozshah Gandhi
v. H.M. Seervai, Advocate General of Maharashtra, Bombay
[(1970 (2) SCC 484]. Question before the Constitution Bench
in that case was as to whether Advocate General of the High
Court who was be to issued a notice in disciplinary
proceedings by the Bar Council as per the provisions of
Section 35(2) of the Advocate Act, 1961 had locus standi to
prefer an appeal against the order of the disciplinary
authority under Section 37 of the Advocates Act before Bar
Council of India. A majority of the Constitution Bench took
the view that the Advocate General had no such locus standi.
He could not be said to be a ’person aggrieved’ by the
decision of the disciplinary authority exonerating the
concerned delinquent advocate. Mitter, J., speaking for the
majority considered the question in the light of the
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statutory settings of the Act and observed that to decide
the question one had to look at the proceedings of this
kind. We may refer to the pertinent observations in this
connection made in paras 9 and 10 of the Report of the said
judgment of Mitter, J.:
"Generally speaking. a person can
be said to be aggrieved by an order
which is to his detriment.
pecuniary or otherwise or causes
him some prejudice in some form or
other. A person who is not a party
to a litigation has no right to
appeal merely because the judgment
or order contains some adverse
remarks against him. But it has
been held in a number of cases that
a person who is not a party to a
suit may prefer an appeal with the
leave of the appellate court and
such leave would not be refused
where the judgment would be binding
on him under Explanation 6 to
Section 11 of the Code of civil
procedure. We find ourselves unable
to take the view that because a
person has been given notice of
some proceedings wherein he is
given a right to appear and make
his submissions, he should without
more have a right of appeal from an
order rejecting his contentions or
submission. An appeal is a creature
of statute and if a statute
expressly gives a person a right to
appeal, the matter rests there.
Innumerable statutes both in
England and in India give the right
of appeal to ’a person aggrieved’
by an order made and the provisions
of such statutes have to be
construed in each case to find out
whether the person prefering an
appeal falls within that
expression. As was observed in
Robinson v Currey [7 QBD 465] the
words ’person aggrieved’ are
’ordinary meaning put upon them’.
According to Halsbury’s Laws of
England (Third Edition, Vol.25),
page 293, footnote ’h’:
’the expression is nowhere
defined and must be contrued by
reference to the context of the
enactment in which it appears and
all the circumstances.’
Attempts have however from time to
time been made to define the
expression in various cases. In Ex
parte Sidebotham In re Sidebotham
[14 Ch D 458 at 465] it was
observed by James.L.J.:
’But the words ’person
aggrieved’ do not really mean a man
who is disappointed of a benefit
which he might have received if
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some other order had been made. A
’person aggrieved’ must be a man
who has suffered a legal grievance,
a man against whom a decision has
been pronounced which has
wrongfully deprived him of
something, or wrongfully refused
him something, or wrongfully
affected his title to something."
A Bench of four learned Judges of this Court in the case of
Jasbhai Motibhai Desai v. Roshan Kumar Haji Bashir Ahmed and
others [(1976) 1 SCC 671] had to examine the scheme of
Bombay Cinemas Regulation Act 1953 and a rule therein with a
view of finding out whether a rival cinema owner could
appeal against a No objection Certificate grated to an
applicant who wanted to establish a cinema theatre of his
own. Sarkaria, J., speaking for the Court observed that
under the relevant provisions of the Regulations no right
was conferred by way of special interest on such a rival
cinema owner as he did not satisfy the test of ’person
aggrieved’. Nor could he be treated to be a valid objector
being resident of the locality or person to whom any special
right of objection was conferred by the statutory scheme.
Thus he was merely a rival cinema owner who was likely to be
adversely affected in his commercial interest if another
cinema theatre got established and came to be run in the
light of the No objection Certificate. That such an interest
was considered to be too remote to clothe the objectors with
a right to object to the No Objection Certificate to run a
cinema under the Rules. Paras 47 and 48 of the Report in
this connection deserve to be noted:
"Thus, in substance, the
appellant’s stand is that the
setting up of a rival cinema house
in the town will adversely affect
his monopolistic commercial
interest, causing pecuniary harm
and loss of business from
competition. Such harm or loss is
not wrongful in the eye of law,
because it does not result in
injury to a legal right or a
legally protected interest, the
business competition causing it
being a lawful activity.
Juridically, harm of this
description is called damnum sine
injuria, the term injuria being
here used in its true sence of an
act contrary to law [Salmond on
Jurisprudence, 12th Edn. by
Fitzgerald, p.357, para 85]. The
reason why the law suffers a person
knowingly to inflict harm of this
description on another, without
holding him accountable for it, is
that such harm done to an
individual is a gain to society at
large.
In the light to the above
discussion, it is demonstrably
clear that the appellant has not
been denied or deprived of a legal
right. He has not sustained injury
to any legally protected interest.
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In fact, the impugned order does
not operate as a decisions against
him, much less does it wrongfully
affect his title to something. He
has suffered no legal grievance. He
has no legal peg for a justiciable
claim to hang on. Therefore he is
not a ’person aggrieved’ and has no
locus standi to challenge the grant
of the no-objection certificate."
Shri Subba Rao, learned counsel for Union of India contended
that the Central Government through the Industries Ministry
had interest in the litigation in question as large public
revenue was involved and the protection to be conferred on
the local manufactures and those dealing in local markets
had to be guarded against the onslaught of mushroom
importers. That this public interest was sought to be
vindicated by the Union of India by raising the present
dispute. If the concerned import was found to be illegal the
goods would be liable to confiscation. That when more than
Rs.400 crores were sunk by the Union of India in its company
HPF it could not be said that the Union of India through the
Ministry of Industries was a total stranger and had no locus
standi whatsoever to challenge the order of the Additional
Collector of Customs. So far as the Union of India is
concerned we may proceed on the basis that it may have to
subserve a larger public interest by raising the present
dispute and may legitimately feel aggrieved by the order of
the Additional Collector of Customs. But even if it is so,
the statutory procedure laid down by the Parliament in its
wisdom for enabling the challenge to the adjudication order
of the Collector of Customs by way of appeals or revisions,
to which we have made a mention, has got to be followed in
such an eventuality. Bypassing the said statutory procedure
a direct frog leap to CEGAT is contra-indicated by the
statutory scheme of the Act. If such direct appeals are
permitted the very scheme of Section 129-D(1) would get
stultified. It must, therefore, be held that direct appeal
filed by the Union of India through Industries Ministry to
CEGAT under Section 129-A(1) was clearly incompetent. It may
by added that the Union of India could have used the mode
set out in section 129D, but it did not do so.
So far as the appeal filed by HPF is concerned it is
still on a weaker footing. Even though HPF may be a public
limited company wholly owned by the Central Government and
even if Central Government might have sunk more than Rs.400
crores in constituting it, its function would still remain
in the domain of commercial enterprise. It may be a limb of
the Central Government or its alter ego so far as Article 13
of the Constituting is concerned and may be treated end to
answer challenges about violation of constitutional
guarantees or statutory provisions under which it may be
acting, but that would not clothe it with a legal locus
standi to prefer a statutory appeal before CEGAT under
Section 129-A(1). From the point of view of that provision
it is no more than a business rival and cannot be said to be
a ’person aggrieved’ by the adjudicatory order of the
Collector of Customs releasing imported goods to the
appellant on payment of full customs duty. It has also to be
noted that the Customs Act nowhere provides for any special
interest of such public concerns which may be operating as
rivals in the same commercial field in which the importer
may be operating. In the absence of any special statutory
provision for protecting the interest of such Government
concerns or public sector undertakings no statutory locus
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standi can be called out in their favour on the express
language of the relevant provisions of the Act noted by us
earlier. It must, therefore, be held that HPF was a mere
business rival operating in the same commercial field and
carrying on the same commercial activities as the appellant.
Its locus standi to challenge the order of Additional
Collector of Customs in favour of the appellant, therefore.
gets squarely ruled out by the ratio of the decision of this
court in the case of Jasbhai Motibhai Desai (supra). Learned
counsel for the HPF in this connection submitted that if
imported goods of the appellant were allowed to enter the
market HPF’s commercial interest would be materially
prejudiced and by now it has already become a sick unit.
That is neither here nor there. The said grievance would
still be in the realm of damnum since injuria as indicated
in Jasbhai Motibhai Desai’s case (supra) by this Court.
Consequently the appeal filed by HPF before the CEGAT also
must be treated to be incompetent and could not be covered
by the sweep of Section 129-A(1) of the Act.
Learned counsel for HPF invited our attention to a
decision of a two-member Bench of this court in the case of
K.Ramadas Shenoy v. The Chief Officers. Town Municipal
Council. Udipi and others [(1975 (1) SCR 690]. In that case
a resident in a locality wherein a cinema building was being
constructed contrary to be binding Town Planning Scheme, was
held to be entitled to challenge the said building. Said
decision is rendered on its own facts. The statutory Scheme
was for the benefit of persons residing in the locality.
Under the said Scheme the Municipal authorities owed a
public duty and obligation under the statute to see that the
residential area is not spoiled by unauthorised
construction. Under these circumstances it was held that the
aggrieved party had sufficient locus standi under Article
226 of the Constitution of India of move the High Court
against the violation of the statutory scheme by the
municipal authorities. It is easy to visualise that in that
case this Court was concerned with the locus standi of an
’aggrieved party’ under Article 226 of the Constitution of
India which is of a wider nature as compared to the
statutory right of appeal under a given statutory scheme
before a statutory authority created by that very statute.
The said decision is, therefore, of no avail to HPF.
As a result of the aforesaid discussion it must be held
that the High Court had committed a patent error of law in
taking the view that the concerned writ petitioners before
it had sufficient locus standi to prefer appeals before
CEGAT. The decision of CEGAT holding that they had no such
locus standi was perfectly justified on the scheme of the
Act and it was wrongly set aside by the High Court.
Consequently the appeals will be required to be allowed.
However a further question survives for our
consideration. As the High Court has noted in the impugned
judgment, the other contentions in the writ petitions filed
by the contesting respondents were not considered by it in
view of its decision on the right of appeal which was made
available to the concerned writ petitioners before the
CEGAT. We have, however, to observe in this connection that
the High Court was not at all justified in presuming what it
should do in case the appellant’s appeal succeeded before
the Court. Proper direction in that connection should have
been left to be given by this Court in such an eventuality.
High Court could not have been pre-empted the same by the
impugned judgment. However in view of the fact that other
contention in the writ petitions were not examined by the
High Court in any case they will now have to be examined by
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it. As the decision on the right to appeal to CEGAT made
available to the contesting respondents by the High Court is
being set aside by us, the question remains as to what
further appropriate orders can be passed in the connection.
So far as this question is concerned it may be noted that
tow writ petitions were moved, one by Union of India being
Civil Writ Petition No. 3023 of 1989 and another by HPF
being Civil Writ Petition No.2286 of 1989. As we have taken
the view that HPF being a business rival of the appellant
had no right to challenge the order of Additional Collector
of Customs, Bombay passed in favour of the appellant its
writ petition being Civil Writ Petition No.2286 of 1989
filed before the High Court will stand dismissed. However
writ Petition No.3023 of 1989 will have to be permitted to
proceed further on remaining controversy before the High
Court in so far as Union of India seeks of challenge the
order of Collector of Customs, Bombay dated 1st/5th June
1989. As we have taken the view that Union of India could
legitimately challenge the said order before appropriate
forum in public interest and as it has wider locus standi at
least in proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution
of India if not before CEGAT, its challenge in the writ
petition under Article 226 against the said order cannot be
told off the gates. That challenge will have to be examined
by the High Court under Article 226 on its own merits. It is
obvious that it will be open to be appellant as contesting
respondents to try to support the impugned order of the
Assistant Collector/Collector of Customs on all legally
permissible grounds. In short the said controversy between
the Union of India on the one hand and the appellant on the
other in Union of India’s Writ Petition No.3023 of 1989 will
have to be examined by the Division Bench of the High Court
on its own merits. AS the proceedings are pending since long
before the High Court so far as the aforesaid challenge is
concerned it would be in the interest of justice to request
the High Court to decide the said writ petition on the
merits of the question regarding the legality and propriety
of the order of Collector/Assistant Collector of Customs
dated 5th June 1989 as expeditiously as possible preferably
within a period of four months from the date of receipt of a
copy of this order at its end.
Now remains the last question as to what is to be done
about the amount fetched in auction of the goods pursuant to
the interim order of this Court dated 24th September 1990.
We cannot accede to the request to the learned counsel for
the appellant that the said invested amount with accrued
interest may be permitted to be withdrawn by the appellant
at this stage by furnishing bank guarantee. In our view as
the amount is lying deposited and invested by this Court
since more than six and half years by now and as we are
requesting the High Court to decide the pending writ
petition of Union of India on the surviving question as
aforesaid within four months from the date of receipt of
copy of the present order it would be in the interest of all
concerned to continue the investment of the deposited amount
of the auction price by this Court and to direct that the
withdrawal of that amount shall abide by the final result of
the writ petition of the Union of India before the High
Court and shall also remain subject to the result of further
appeal, if any, against the High Court’s judgment in the
said writ petition.
The appeals are accordingly allowed. The common
judgment under appeal as rendered by the High Court is
quashed and set aside with a direction to the High Court to
decide on merits the Union of India’s Writ Petition No.3023
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of 1989 on the remaining grounds in the light of the
observations made in this judgment. There will be no order
as to costs in the facts and circumstances of these cases.