Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DABUR INDIA LTD AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/07/1990
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1814 1990 SCR (3) 294
1990 SCC (4) 113 JT 1990 (3) 109
1990 SCALE (2)29
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944: Sections 3,
11B--Homeodent tooth paste--Whether homeopathic medicine or
toilet preparation-Whether liable to excise duty.
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 263--Dispute under
two different central legislations---Under one--State au-
thorities to realise and impose taxes--Under the other
Central Government--Refund to be paid or adjusted---Should
be subject matter of settlement by the proposed Council.
Medicinal & Toilet Preparations (Excise Duties) Act,
1955: Sections 3(1) and 4 ’Homeodent’ tooth paste--Liabili-
ty to excise duty.
HEADNOTE:
M/s Dabur India Limited, petitioner in one set of peti-
tions, is a public limited company engaged in the manufac-
ture of Ayurvedic as well as Allopathic medicaments, along
with cosmetics. It used to manufacture for and on behalf of
M/s Sharda Boiren Laboratories--The petitioner in the second
set of petitions--a Homeopathic tooth paste called ’Homeo-
dent’ out of the raw-materials supplied by M/s Sharda, on
job basis. It accordingly manufactured Homeodent during 1985
to 1988, duly paying duties of excise on Homeodent under the
Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944.
The Superintendent of State Excise visited the factory
of M/s Dabur on 18th January, 1988 and enquired about the
excisability of Homeodent under the Medicinal & Toilet
Preparations (Excise Duties) Act, 1955. He was told that
Homeodent had been classified under the 1944 Act in view of
the orders passed by the Central Excise authorities. Howev-
er, when it was revealed that the Homeodent tooth paste was
toilet preparation containing alcohol, within the meaning of
section 2(k), read with Item 4 of the Schedule, referred to
in section 3 of the 1955 Act, the District Excise Officer
caused a common notice dated 17.3.1988 to be served on M/s
Dabur requiring it to pay duty aggregating to
Rs.68,13,334.20 under the provisions of the 1955 Act on such
295
goods manufactured and cleared between January 1985 and
January 1988. This order was passed without issuing any
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notice to show cause, and without affording any opportunity
of hearing, to the petitioner.
The Petitioner sent a representation requesting for
compliance with the principles of natural justice and also
disputing the amount claimed as duty. On 18th March, 1988
the Superintendent of State Excise modified the earlier
order and confirmed the demand of duty amounting to Rs.46.67
lakhs, on provisional basis. On that day the petitioner
deposited a sum of Rs. 11.66 lakhs and further executed a
bank guarantee for the balance. Simultaneously, the peti-
tioner appealed against the order dated 18th March, 1988.
The Excise Commissioner dismissed the appeal. No appeal was
filed by M/s Sharda against the demand notice of excise duty
under the 1955 Act.
The petitioner moved the High Court. On 13th May, 1988
the High Court directed the petitioner to file a revision
petition with the Central Government. Both the petitioners
then approached the Central Government in revision. On 22nd
September, 1988 the Additional Secretary to the Government
of India in exercise of his revisional powers allowed the
revision filed by M/s Dabur and declared the orders of the
District Excise Officer and the Excise Commissioner as null
and void having been passed in violation of the principles
of natural justice. The revision filed by M/s Sharda was not
entertained by the Central Government on the ground that a
right of appeal was vested in Sharda, which was not availed
of. The High Court dismissed Sharda’s petition challenging
the order of the Central Government declining to entertain
its review. Against the order of the High Court M/s Sharda
have filed the special leave petition in this Court.
On the basis of the revision order, the petitioners
called upon the District Excise Officer to refund the amount
of Rs.46.67 lakhs recovered from it by way of cash payment
and encashment of bank guarantee. The State Excise authori-
ties however failed to grant the refund, and instead issued
a fresh show-cause notice to the petitioners jointly on 2nd
November, 1988.
In December 1988, M/s Dabur moved the High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution for quashing and setting
aside the showcase notice dated 2.11.1988 and for refund of
duty amounting to Rs.46.67.
The High Court dismissed the writ petition. The High Court
was
296
of the opinion that the question whether Homeodent tooth
paste was sans alcohol could not be adjudicated upon under
the extraordinary writ jurisdiction. The High Court however
came to the conclusion that both the 1944 and 1955 Acts
operated in different fields and there was no overlapping
between the two. The High Court further observed that where
the parties fully acquiesced with the matter and subjected
themselves to the statutory procedure, no action should be
allowed to be taken under Article 226 of the Constitution
unless the case was patently without jurisdiction. In this
connection, it was emphasised by the High Court that once
the parties chose the statutory procedure they must go to
the logical end.
It was inter alia urged before this Court on behalf of
the petitioner that it was not seeking to circumvent the
alternative remedy provided under the Act but in view of the
conflicting claims of the Central and State Excise authori-
ties seeking to classify Homeodent tooth paste under the
respective Acts of 1944 and 1955, the petitioner was left
with no other alternative but to challenge the actions by
way of writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution.
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It was further contended that Homeodent did not contain
alcohol but contained ingredient "mother tincture" contain-
ing alcohol, which had a tendency to evaporate during the
process of manufacture of Homeodent; that no test result as
required under the 1955 Act was obtained to establish wheth-
er Homeodent contained alcohol or not; and that on 31st
August, 1987 the Assistant Collector of Central Excise had
already passed an order classifying Homeodent under the Act
of 1944 which order had been upheld by the Collector of
Central Excise (Appeals). The main point that the petitioner
sought to emphasis was that the High Court ought to have
appreciated that Homeodent tooth paste having been subjected
to duty under the provisions of the 1944 Act, the question
of levying and recovering duty under the 1955 Act did not
and could not arise.
Dismissing the petitions, this Court,
HELD: (1) Homeodent is a homeopathic preparation but it
is also a tooth paste. Therefore, it is a toilet prepara-
tion. Whether or not such Homeodent would not be dutiable
under the Medicinal & Toilet Preparations (Excise Duties)
Act, 1955 would depend upon whether it contained alcohol or
not. [315E]
(2) It is undisputed that mother-tincture was one of the
components that was used in the preparation of Homeodent and
it has been found that alcohol was there and mother tincture
was added in the
297
medicinal preparation as its component. [315G]
M/s Baidyanath Aryurved Bhawan (Pvt.) Ltd. Jhansi v. The
Excise Commissioner U.P., [1971] 1 SCR 590, referred to.
(3) The authorities charged with the duties of enforcing
a particular Act are enjoined with the task of determining
the question whether alcohol is contained therein or not.
[310D]
(4) It has been determined by the authorities enjoined
to enforce the 1955 Act that Homeodent was a medicinal and
toilet preparation and liable to excise duty, and such
finding has not been assailed on any cogent ground in any
proper manner. If that is the position, then it must be
upheld that Homeodent was dutiable. [317D]
Union of India v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd., [1984]
1 SCR 347; Mohanlal Magan Lal Bhavsar v. Union of India,
[1956] 1 SCC 122 and N.B. Sanjana, Assistant Collector of
Central Excise, Bombay v. The Elphinston Spinning and Weav-
ing Mills Co. Ltd., [1971] 3 SCR 506, referred to.
(5) Provisions for rebate of duty on alcohol contained
in section 4 of the 1955 Act show that multipoint tax on
medicinal preparations containing alcohol was within the
contemplation, otherwise there was no purpose in incorporat-
ing section 4 into the Act. [316B]
(6) Justice requires that provisions for claiming refund
of this duty should be made more clear. However, in the view
of the facts and the circumstances that have happened, it is
directed that if the petitioners are entitled to any refund
of the duty already paid to the Central Government in view
of the duty imposition now upheld against them in favour of
the State Government such refund application should be
entertained and considered in accordance with law. [316E-F]
(7) In a case of this nature, where there is some doubt
as to whether duty was payable to the Central Government
under the 1944 Act or whether the item was dutiable under
the 1955 Act, it would be just and proper and in consonance
with justice infiscal administration that the Central Gov-
ernment should consider in the light of the facts found, if
an application is made under section 11B of the 1944 Act,
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and circumstances of this case, the limitation period under
section 11B of the 1944 Act should not apply. This direction
must be confined in the facts and the circumstances of this
case only. [316G-H; 317A]
298
Citadel Fine Pharmaceuticals Pvt. Ltd. v. D.R.O., [1973]
Mad. Law Journal 99; Union of India v. Bombay Tyre Interna-
tional Ltd., [1984] 1 SCR 347 and Assistant Collector of
Central Excise v. Madras Rubber Factory Ltd., [1986] supp.
SCC 751, referred to.
(8) Government should consider feasibility of a machin-
ery under a Council to be formed under Article 263 of the
Constitution to adjudicate and adjust the dues of the re-
spective Governments. [318D]
(9) This Court would not like to hear from a litigant in
this country that the Government is coercing citizens of
this country to make payment which the litigant is contend-
ing not leviable. Government, of course, is entitled to
enforce payment and for that purpose to take all legal steps
but the Government, Central or State, cannot be permitted to
play dirty games with the citizens to coerce them in making
payments which-the citizens were not legally obliged to
make. If any money is due to the Government, the Government
should take steps but not take extra legal steps or manoeu-
vre. Therefore, the right of renewal of the petitioner of
licence must be judged and attended to in accordance with
law and the occasion not utilised to coerce the petitioners
to a course of action not warranted by law and procedure.
[318A-C]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No. 426 of
1989 etc. etc.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
P. Chidambaram, K.K. Venugopal, Dushyant Dave, R. Karan-
jawala, Ms. Meenakshi Arora, Mrs. Manik Karanjawala (N.P.),
C.S. Vaidyanathan and S.R. Setia for the Petitioners.
Yogeshwar Prasad, R.S. Rana and Ashok Srivastava for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, CJ. The challenge in these writ
petitions and special leave petitions is basically to the
order dated 18th January, 1989, passed by the District
Excise Officer, Gaziabad, seeking to recover duties of
excise on Homeodent under the Medicinal & Toilet Prepara-
tions (Excise Duties) Act, 1955 (hereinafter called ’the
1955 Act’), even though the product was classifiable under
the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter called
’the 1944 Act’) and was, in
299
fact, assessed to duty under the said. Act between 1985 and
1988. Necessarily, the question arises as to whether, in the
facts and circumstances of the case, the 1944 Act would
apply or the 1955 Act would apply. The factual dispute is
whether in the facts, as enumerated hereinafter, alcohol was
present in Homeodent and further whether Homeodent was
Homeopathic medicine or toilet preparation and further
whether the same was dutiable under the 1944 Act. We must
recapitulate the basic facts in the several matters involved
herein.
M/s. Dabur India Limited which is the petitioner in
special leave petition No. 1610/89 arising out of judgment
and order dated 20th December, 1988 in civil miscellaneous
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writ petition No. Nil of 1988 connected with civil miscella-
neous writ petition No. Nil of 1988 of the High Court of
Allahabad, and also the petitioner in writ petition No.
426/89, is a public limited company engaged in manufacture
of Ayurvedic medicaments and Allopathic medicaments along
with cosmetics. It had agreed to manufacture for and on
behalf of M/s. Sharda Boiron Laboratories Ltd. (hereinafter
called ’the company’)--being the petitioner in special leave
petition Nos. 135-36/89, used to manufacture and/or produce
a Homeopathic tooth paste called ’Homeodent’ out of the
raw-materials supplied by the company on job work basis. The
petitioner states that it accordingly manufactured Homeodent
during 1985 to 1988, duly paying duties of excise on Homeo-
dent under the 1944 Act at appropriate leviable rates and
recovered the same from the company. According to the peti-
tioner, Homeodent did not contain alcohol but contained
ingredients "mother tinctures" containing alcohol. It is
stated that alcohol, due to various reasons, has a tendency
to evaporate during the process of manufacture of Homeodent.
It is further the case of the petitioner company that
during the period from 1979 to 1988 it also manufactured
certain other medicinal products containing alcohol which
were classifiable under the 1955 Act. The petitioner company
held at all material times licence as required under the
1955 Act to manufacture these products. The State Excise
authorities enforcing the provisions of the Act had perma-
nently posted an Inspector as also a peon in the factory of
the petitioner where these dutiable products were manufac-
tured. The bonded manufactory in which these products were
manufactured was under lock and key of the said officers,
according to the petitioner. The activities of the petition-
er, the petitioner asserts, were clearly within the knowl-
edge of the State excise authorities for over a considerably
long period. During the period from 1985-1988, the company
supplied
300
to the petitioner amongst other ingredients, "mother tinc-
tures" under BM-9 forms, stating clearly that such mother
tinctures were intended to be used in manufacture of Homeo-
dent in the factory of the petitioner. These BM-9 forms,
according to the petitioner, were filed with the State
excise authorities regularly. Therefore, the petitioner
asserts that the State excise authorities were aware of the
manufacture of Homeodent by the petitioner and the activity
of the company in getting the same manufactured in the
factory of the petitioner out of mother tinctures. However,
the State excise authorities did not object to the same nor
did they call upon either the petitioner or the company to
pay duty under the 1955 Act.
On 1st January, 1985, the petitioner states, the peti-
tioner filed classification list classifying Homeodent under
the Act of 1944, declaring therein the ingredients of Homeo-
dent. On 17th January, 1985, the classification list filed
by the petitioner on 1.1. 1985 was approved finally and
Homeodent was held to be classifiable under the Act of 1944.
On 31st August, 1987 the Assistant Collector of Central
Excise passed an order which was an appealable one classify-
ing Homeodent under the Act of 1944. The petitioner asserts
that this order had subsequently been upheld by the Collec-
tor of Central Excise (Appeals), New Delhi, on an appeal
filed by the company. However, on 18th January, 1989 the
Superintendent of State Excise, Bulandshahr visited the
factory of the petitioner and after inspecting the same,
enquired about Homeodent. It is the case of the petitioner
that it had explained that Homeodent was classified under
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the Act of 1944 in view of the orders passed by the Central
Excise authorities. However, it is stated that the Superin-
tendent of State Excise, Bulandshahr called upon the peti-
tioner to furnish details in respect of Homeodent including
its ingredients and total value of clearances etc. On 20th
January, 1988 the petitioner addressed a detailed letter to
the Superintendent of State Excise, Bulandshahr, explaining
its stand, and that duty had been paid thereon. State Excise
authorities, thereafter, did not take any action against the
petitioner nor did they take out samples of Homeodent tooth
paste to get appropriate results as required under the Act
of 1955 and the rules framed thereunder. However, on 17th
March, 1988 the Superintendent of State Excise, Bulandshahr
passed a demand order directing the petitioner to deposit a
sum of Rs.68,13,334.20 being the alleged duty payable on
’Homeodent’ manufactured and cleared between January, 1985
and January, 1988. This order was passed without issuing any
notice to show cause and, according to the petitioner,
without affording the petitioner any opportunity of hearing.
The petitioner on the same day sent a rep-
301
resentation requesting for compliance with the principles of
natural justice and disputing the claim for duty. On 18th
March, 1988 the Superintendent of State Excise, Bulandshahr,
modified his earlier order and confirmed the demand of duty
amounting to Rs.46.67 lakhs on provisional basis. Once again
the petitioner was neither served with a show cause notice
nor was afforded an opportunity of personal hearing, accord-
ing to the petitioner. While passing either of the orders,
no test result, it is asserted, was obtained to establish
whether Homeodent contained alcohol or not. However, on 18th
March, 1988 the petitioner deposited a sum of Rs.11.66
lakhs. The petitioners also executed a bank guarantee in
favour of the District Magistrate, Ghaziabad, for a sum of
Rs.35 lakhs.
On 6th April, 1988 the petitioners filed an appeal
before the Excise Commissioner, U.P. against the illegal
orders of the District Excise Officer. The petitioners also
appeared for personal hearing before the Excise Commissioner
through their advocate on 23rd April, 1988. On 5th May, 1988
the Excise Commissioner, U.P., passed an order dismissing
the appeal of the petitioners. However, petitioner No. 1
states that copy of the order was not served upon it. The
petitioner No. 1 further asserts that without serving a copy
of the order on it and without intimating whether the order
had been passed or not, the District Excise Officer ap-
proached M/s. Grindlays Bank for encashment of the bank
guarantee of Rs.35 lakhs and coerced, according to the
petitioners, the bankers to encash the same forthwith.
Thereafter, the petitioner moved the High Court of Allahabad
against the illegal actions of the respondents. The High
Court directed the authorities to serve a copy of the order
and restrained the respondents from encashing the bank
guarantee. It is stated that while the High Court of Allaha-
bad was considering the writ petition of the petitioner and
had granted stay as aforesaid, the respondent District
Excise officer encashed the bank guarantee of Rs.35 lakhs
without even calling upon the petitioner first to pay the
amount. On 13th May, 1988 the High Court of Allahabad di-
rected the petitioner to file a revision petition with the
Central Government. A revision petition was filed along with
stay application on 28th May, 1988. Thereafter, the Central
Government granted stay against recovery of the balance
amount of Rs.21.46 lakhs. On 22nd September, 1988 the Addi-
tional Secretary to the Government of India in exercise of
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his revisional powers allowed the revision of the petition-
ers and declared the orders of the District Excise Officer
dated 17th and 18th March, 1988 as upheld in appeal by the
Excise Commissioner as null and void having been passed in
violation of principles of natural justice. Thereupon it,
the petitioners state,
302
called upon the District Excise Officer and the District
Magistrate to refund the amount of Rs.46.67 lakhs recovered
from it by way of cash payment and encashment of bank guar-
antee in view of the revision order. The case of the peti-
tioner is that the State Excise authorities failed to grant
the petitioner refund as prayed for despite the order of the
revisional authorities. On 2nd November, 1988 the District
Excise Officer issued a show-cause notice requiring the
petitioner to show cause as to why an amount of Rs.68.13
lakhs be not recovered from it in respect of Homeodent
manufactured and cleared during January, 1985 to January,
1988. In December, 1988 the petitioner moved the High Court
of Allahabad under Article 226 of the Constitution of India,
inter alia, praying for a writ of mandamus for quashing and
setting aside the show-cause notice dated 2.11.1988 and for
refund of duty amounting to Rs.46.67 lakhs. On 20th Decem-
ber, 1988 the High Court of Allahabad dismissed the writ
petition filed by the petitioner. It is stated that on 10th
January, 1989 this Court upon special leave petitions Nos.
135-36/89 filed by the company was pleased to issue notice
and directed stay of operation of the notice of demand.
Thereafter, on 20th January, 1988 the District Excise Offi-
cer directed the petitioner to appear for personal hearing
in response to the show cause notice. The petitioner ap-
peared before the District Excise Officer without prejudice
and submitted a detailed reply to the show cause notice and
also contended during personal hearing that the notice was
required to be withdrawn. In its reply the petitioner cate-
gorically stated that the reply was being submitted without
prejudice to petitioner’s right to move this Court by way of
a special leave petition. Thereafter, the petitioner moved
this Court on 21st January, 1989. It is, therefore, neces-
sary to refer to the judgment and order dated 20th December,
1988 in civil writ petition No. Nil/88 connected with civil
miscellaneous writ petition No. Nil/88 in the High Court of
Allahabad.
It appears that M/s. Dabur India Limited had filed the
said writ petition in the High Court challenging the show-
cause notice dated 2nd November, 1988 by the District Excise
Officer. Ghaziabad. Another writ petition being writ peti-
tion No. 1160/88 which is the subject matter of special
leave petition Nos. 135-36/89 was filed by M/s. Sharda (the
company) for quashing the order of the Central Government
dated 3.6.1988 which was annexure-1 to the writ petition.
These two were disposed of by the said judgment. The ques-
tion that was mainly involved therein was that the conten-
tion of the petitioner that the Homeodent did not contain
alcohol, though one of the ingredients of such preparation
was mother tincture containing alcohol and the same was
assessable under Item 14FF of the 1944 Act. The Asstt.
303
Collector of Central Excise, Ghaziabad, had taken the view
that the Homeodent was classifiable Under sub-heading No.
3306-02 of the Chapter 33 of the Central Excise Tariff Act,
1985 and on that duty @ 15% ad valorem was leviable. This
duty computed at the said rate by the Central Excise author-
ities was paid, according to the petitioner, on the goods
manufactured from 1.1.1986. On 18th January, 1988 the Dis-
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trict Excise Officer made a surprise inspection of the units
of the petitioner and when it was revealed that the Homeo-
dent tooth paste manufactured by M/s. Dabur was toilet
preparation containing alcohol within the meaning of Section
2(k), read with Item 4 of the Schedule, referred to in
section 3 of the 1955 Act, and was therefore assessable to
duty @ 100% ad valorem. The District Excise Officer, Ghazia-
bad, therefore had caused a common notice dated 17.3.1988 to
be served on the petitioner requiring it to pay duty aggre-
gating to Rs.68,13,334.20 under the provisions of the 1955
Act on such goods manufactured from 1st January, 1985 till
the date of notice. As mentioned hereinbefore, against this
notice some representation was made by the petitioner to the
District Excise Officer and thereupon the petitioner was
directed to deposit provisionally the excise duty to the
tune of Rs.46,55,45 1.45 under the 1955 Act and the same was
deposited by the petitioner. Such demand wad. challenged by
M/s. Dabur in appeal before the Excise Commissioner. The
Excise Commissioner affirmed the order of the District
Excise Officer and dismissed the appeal. No appeal was filed
by M/s. Sharda against the demand notice of excise duty
under the 1955 Act. However, both the petitioners approached
the Central Govt. in revision under Rule 128 of the 1956
Rules. The revision of M/s. Dabur was disposed of by the
Central Govt. and the result was communicated by the Addi-
tional Secretary to the Govt. of India by the order dated
22.9.1988. The contention of M/s. Dabur that the demand was
raised on it without any opportunity of being heard and in
violation of principles of natural justice, was accepted and
a direction was given that the case be adjudicated upon de
nove after giving a show cause notice and proper opportunity
of being heard to the party. The revision filed by M/s.
Sharda was also not entertained by the Central Government on
the ground that a right of appeal was vested in M/s. Sharda
which could have been exercised upto 17.6.1988, which was
not done.
However, pursuant to the order of the Central Govern-
ment, the District Excise Officer issued the impugned show-
cause notice dated 2.11.1988 to the petitioners jointly,
validity of which was challenged by them in the writ peti-
tion and the other writ petition I. as been filed by M/s.
Sharda only to challenge the order of the Central Govt.
refusing
304
to entertain its revision. The learned Judges in the judg-
ment under appeal noted that the petitioner did not advance
any argument on the merits of the question; whether Homeo-
dent tooth paste is assessable to duty under the 1944 Act or
under the 1955 Act and rightly so because that involved a
factual scrutiny which could hardly be gone into by the High
Court. The High Court was of the opinion that the question,
whether Homeodent tooth paste is sans alcohol, cannot be
adjudicated upon under the extra-ordinary writ jurisdiction.
On behalf of the petitioners before the High Court two
contentions were raised. Firstly that the Central Govt.
having set aside the order of District Excise Officer,
Ghaziabad, whereunder excise duty to the tune of
Rs.46,66,451.45 was paid, there was no justification for the
respondents to retain that amount thereafter and a writ of
mandamus be issued against the respondents directing them to
refund this amount; and secondly, that under Rule 11 of the
1956 Rules when duties are short levied, a written demand by
the proper officer being made within six months from the
date on which the duty was paid, the short fall could be
recovered. The submission was that no duty can be recovered
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for the period anterior to six months to be reckoned from
the date of payment of duty. It was, therefore, urged that
the show cause notice was invalid, inasmuch as the District
Excise Officer, Ghaziabad, had exceeded the jurisdiction in
having recovered the duty beyond limitation.
The High Court addressed itself to the question whether
Article 226 of the Constitution of India was a proper reme-
dy. We are not really concerned with this question. The High
Court, however, came to the conclusion that both the 1944 &
1955 Acts operate in different fields and there is no over-
lapping between the two. If the Homeodent tooth paste is
found to be assessable to duty under the 1955 Act then it
will not amount to review of the order of the Central Excise
authorities. It was emphasised before the High Court that
adjudication by the Central Excise authorities does not stop
the State Excise authorities from considering the case under
the provisions of the 1955 Act. Both the Acts are mutually
exclusive and the authorities thereunder are fully empowered
to consider the assessability separately, according to the
High Court. The High Court came to the conclusion that where
the parties fully acquiesced with the matter and subjected
themselves to the statutory procedure, no action should be
allowed to be taken under Article 226 of the Constitution
unless the case is patently without jurisdiction. The orders
having been made under the statutory provisions, the Court
should be loath to interfere under Article 226 of the Con-
stitution of India. It was emphasised by the High
305
Court that once the parties choose the statutory procedure
they must
to the logical end. The Central Govt. had directed the
State Excise authorities to adjudicate the case de novo and,
therefore, the District Excise Officer, Ghaziabad, had no
option but to issue show-cause notice. So the show-cause
notice dated 22nd November, 1988 was jointly given to the
petitioner pursuant to the direction of the Central Govern-
ment much after the orders had been passed initially or in
appeal. Therefore, the common show-cause notice to the
parties cannot, according to the High Court, be characte-
rised as a sparking point and from the backdrop of the case
stated above, it is amply clear that the Excise authorities
had not assumed jurisdiction to proceed against the peti-
tioner for the first time by way of a show-cause notice
dated 2nd November, 1988 rather it had been issued at much
subsequent stage pursuant to the direction of the Central
Government. The High Court came to the conclusion that the
show-cause notice having been issued in accordance with the
directions of the Central Govt. in the revisional jurisdic-
tion which the petitioner itself subjected to, cannot be
assailed under Article 226 of the Constitution. So this
show-cause notice dated 2nd November, 1988 cannot be equated
with the showcause notice given at the initial stage to
assume jurisdiction in the matter. The High Court also came
to the conclusion that no writ can be issued in favour of
the parties who remain sitting on the fence and took a
chance of the proceedings taken up under the statutory
provisions going in their favour. The High Court held the
petitioner who had resorted to statutory remedies on its own
could not be permitted to take recourse under Article 226 of
the Constitution of India, in the event of their having
become successful under the former.
Coming to writ petition No. 1160/88 wherein the order of
the Central Government refusing to entertain the revision
had been challenged. The Central Government had refused to
entertain the revision on the sole ground that the right of
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appeal that vested in M/s. Sharda could not be exercised
thereby. The High Court, however, came to the conclusion
that the case of M/s. Dabur was that it is manufacturing
Homeodent tooth paste on job basis under the loan licence of
M/s. Sharda as per the specifications and control and the
raw-material of the latter but factually both the petition-
ers are different entities under the law and therefore each
petitioner had to pursue its own remedy. Therefore, on an
analysis of the material, the High Court found that there
was nothing to interfere with the order of the Central
Government.
Therefore, the questions that fall for determination are
firstly,
306
whether the High Court was justified in dismissing the writ
petition of the petitioner on the ground of alternative
remedy particularly when the writ petition challenged the
actions of the respondents in seeking to levy and recover
duties of excise under the 1955 Act as being without juris-
diction and/or without authority of law. The next question
that arises is whether the High Court was justified in
dismissing the writ petition challenging particularly in two
sets as has already been subjected to duty of excise under
the 1944 Act. The next question that fails for consideration
is whether the High Court was justified in dismissing the
writ petition of the petitioner which had prayed for refund
of duties of excise amounting to Rs.46.67 lakhs illegally
recovered from the petitioner on Homeodent tooth paste under
the 1955 Act in pursuance of the order which was declared
null and void in revision by the Central Government. It is
also necessary to consider whether the High Court was justi-
fied in dismissing the writ petition of the petitioner
particularly when it challenged levy and recovery of duty
under 12 of the 1956 Rules framed under the 1955 Act when
the said rules have already been declared to be invalid and
without jurisdiction by a Division Bench of the Madras High
Court in the case of Citadel Fine Pharmaceuticals Pvt. Ltd.
v. D.R.O., [1973] Madras Law Journal p. 99.
The next main question requiring consideration is wheth-
er the respondents were acting within their jurisdiction
while levying duty of excise on Homeodent under the 1955 Act
when in the manufacture of Hemeodent alcohol had not been
used as a raw material but mother tinctures containing
alcohol had been used and particularly when at the final
stage of manufacture Homeodent did not contain any trace of
alcohol.
The question that has really to be determined in this
case is, whether firstly Homeodent was classifiable under
the 1944 Act or 1955 Act and who will determine that; and
secondly, which Act will prevail in the facts and circum-
stances of the case.
In this connection, it may be mentioned that M/s. Sharda
had applied for a licence and was granted a loan licence to
manufacture tooth paste as per the provisions of Drugs &
Cosmetics Act, 1944 and the Rules framed thereunder. The
said licence was granted under rule 139B and was in Form 31A
for manufacture of cosmetics. Subsequently, Homeodent was
envisaged by the Drug authorities as a homeopathic medica-
ment and licence had been granted accordingly. It is the
case of the petitioner that tooth pastes were manufactured
by the petitioner company for and on behalf of the loan
licensee from the
307
following chemicals and ingredients:
"Potassium Chlorate BPC 73 Sodium Benxoate IP Sodium Flou-
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ride BP Plantago Offionle Mt HP 1 Cochloric Armorocie MT NP
1 Cochloric Officincie MT HP 1 Phytolecca Decandra NT Methyl
Parehudron Benxoate IP Prophyle Paraphydroxy Benxoate IP
Calcium Carbonate IP Sodium Alginete USP NF 1980 Titenium
Oxide BP Precipitate Silico USP NF Liquid Sodium Socicylate
15 381: 1972
Sodium Leuryle Sulphate (High Purity) Saccharine IP"
It is further to be noted that the final product i.e.
the tooth paste is a homeopathic semi-solid compound in
which mother tincture was completely absent or present in
fractionally negligible quantity, depending upon the manu-
facturing conditions, vacuum and the temperature. It is the
case of the petitioner that at the time the tooth paste is
manufactured, packed and is ready for delivery, the alcohol
would diminish completely and would not be left at all. Nor
can it be so traced upon any chemical testing. In this
connection, the petitioner sought to crave leave to several
documents and some test examination reports. According to
the Laboratory test which the petitioner produced, the
alcohol content was absent in the nine samples sent by the
loan licensee. It was further stated that the Govt. of India
had issued instructions vide letter dated 19th December,
1957 requiring for determination of alcohol content of any
product the samples must be sent to specified laboratories.
Despite the said position, it is the case of the petitioner
that the Excise authorities acting under the 1955 Act, had
never withdrawn any sample of tooth paste manufactured by
the petitioner within their knowledge between 1985 and 1988
a sufficiently long period during which their inspector-in-
charge was physically present in the factory of M/s. Sharda
and had not only access but knowledge of the activities
including the manufacture of the said tooth paste. The
Superintendent of Excise, Bulandshahr, visited the factory
of the petitioner-company on 18th January, 1988 and after
inspecting the same enquired about the exciseability of
Homeodent tooth paste. The petitioner’s officers explained
that Homeodent was classified under the 1944 Act and the
duty had been paid accordingly. Subsequently, the Superin-
tendent (Excise) called upon the petitioner to furnish
details about the quantity and value of Homeodent manufac-
tured and cleared between 1985 and 1988. In pursuance there-
of, tile petitioner replied vide his letter dated 20th
January, 1988 and in
308
details explained the reasons by Homeodent was not liable to
duty under the 1955 Act. In pursuance of the reply of the
petitioner no action was taken and the petitioner assumed
that the matter had been closed. The petitioner has given
detailed episodes of harassment.
The main point that the petitioner seeks to emphasis in
this case is that the High Court ought to have appreciated
that the petitioner’s product Homeodent tooth paste having
been subjected to duty under the provisions of the 1944 Act,
the question of levying and recovering duty under the 1955
Act did not and cannot arise. Therefore, the impugned ac-
tions of the respondents were required to be set aside by
issuing appropriate writ of mandamus. The High Court was,
therefore, in error, according to the petitioner, in dis-
missing the writ petition without appreciating this conten-
tion. The High Court ought to have appreciated that the
petitioner was not seeking to circumvent the alternative
remedy provided under the Act but in view of the conflicting
claims of the Central and State Excise authorities seeking
to classify Homeodent tooth paste under the respective Acts
of 1944 and 1955, the petitioner was left with no other
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alternative but to challenge the actions by way of writ
petition under Article 226 of the Constitution. It is con-
tended that the High Court ought to have appreciated the
actions of the State authorities were ex facie and without
authority in law in so far as they sought to levy and recov-
er duty on Homeodent tooth paste under the 1955 Act. There-
fore, the petitioner was justified in challenging such
actions by way of a writ petition before the High Court. It
was further urged that the High Court had committed an error
on the ground of alternative remedy before the High Court as
also the demand raised against it could not be justified
under Rule 12 beyond a period of six months as prescribed
under Rule 11 particularly in view of the fact that Rule 12
as had been declared to be invalid and without jurisdiction
as per the judgment of the Madras High Court. It is further
contended that the High Court committed an error in dismiss-
ing the writ petition of the petitioner challenging the
demand of duty made by the State Excise authorities amount-
ing to Rs.68 lakhs particularly in view of the fact that as
per S.4 of the 1944 Act which is made the basis of valuation
even under the Act of 1955 as per the Explanation II to the
Schedule as interpreted by this Court in the cases of Union
of India & Ors. v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd. etc.,
[1984] 1 SCR 347 and Asstt. Collector of Central Excise &
Ors. v. Madras Rubber Factory Ltd etc., [1986] Suppl. SCC 75
1 the duty liability could not exceed the sum of Rs.26
lakhs. It was further emphasised that the High Court commit-
ted error in not directing the State Excise authorities to
refund the amount of Rs.46.67 lakhs which was recovered from
309
the petitioner under Orders dated 17/18.3. 1988 which were
declared to be null and void having been passed without
giving any opportunity of hearing.
The Sahibabad factory of M/s. Dabur India Ltd. was set
up in the year 1979. From the very beginning the petitioner
had undertaken the job of manufacturing various products
covered under the 1955 Act. The petitioner had obtained the
necessary licence and fell under the purview of the 1955
Act. Section 6 of the 1955 Act stipulates that the Central
Govt. may, by notification in the Official Gazette, provide
that from such date as may be specified in the notification,
no person shall engage in the production or manufacture of
any dutiable goods or of any specified component parts or
ingredients of such goods or of specified containers of such
goods or of labels of such containers except under the
authority and in accordance with the terms and conditions of
a licence granted under this Act. Dutiable goods have been
defined in the Act vide Clause (c) of s. 2 i.e. meaning
thereby the medicinal and toilet preparations specified in
the Schedule as being subject to the duties of excise levied
under the Act.
It is stated that the State Excise authorities had
posted an officer in the factory of the petitioners at
Sahibabad for physical control on a part-time basis. In the
year 1985, an officer in the rank of an Inspector was posted
at the said factory on full time basis for physical supervi-
sion and control. Hence, all the activities of the petition-
er were within the knowledge of the respondent Excise au-
thorities. The version of the petitioner is that on an
inquiry from M/s. Sharda Bairon Laboratories Ltd. for manu-
facturing of Homeodent tooth paste on job work basis out of
the raw-material and packing materials to be supplied by the
said loan licensee, M/s. Sharda, petitioner No. 1 undertook
the job. The petitioner-company had filed a list classifying
the said Homeodent tooth paste under Tariff item 14FF of the
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1944 Act as the said tooth paste did not contain any alcohol
directly. The classification list was filed in the pre-
scribed Form and with all the particulars. It was further
checked up by the Inspector Range Inspector and it was
subsequently approved by the Assistant Collector, Central
Excise, according to the petitioner.
On 31st August, 1987 there is indeed an order of the
Asstt Collector of Central Excise, Division II, Ghaziabad,
stating that the tooth paste in question was classifiable
under the 1944 Act and not under the 1955 Act. It has to be
understood that under the 1955 Act the duties go to the
State Govt. while under the 1944 Act the duties go
310
to the Central Govt., though both these Acts are central
legislations. The authorities charged with the duties under
the 1944 Act are Central Govt. employees and Central Govt.
authorities are different and distinct from the authorities
of the State Govt. under the 1955 Act. The basic question
that has to be decided is whether in such a situation who or
which authority will decide if the product in question would
be leviable to duty under the 1944 Act and go to the coffers
of the Central Government or whether it will be leviable
under the 1955 Act and the realisations go to the State
Govt.
In the facts and circumstances of this case, that will
depend on the question whether alcohol was used as any of
the ingredients in production of the product or manufacture
thereof. That there was production and/or manufacture and as
such excise was leviable, there is no dispute. The question
is, whether in the process any ingredient was used contain-
ing alcohol in respect of a product which is medicinal in
nature and as such would be dutiable under the 1955 Act.
(Homeodent is a homeopathic preparation but it is also a
tooth paste. Therefore, it is a toilet preparation. Whether
or not such Homeodent would be dutiable under the 1955 Act,
would depend upon whether it contained ’alcohol’ or not. The
authorities charged with the duties of enforcing a particu-
lar Act are enjoined with the task of determining the ques-
tion whether alcohol is contained therein or not. It is the
case of the petitioner that they had paid duties of excise
on Homeodent tooth paste manufactured by it on behalf of
loan licensees under the 1944 Act. The total amount of duty
claimed to have been paid for the said period amounted to
Rs.6,26,570.47. The petitioners rely heavily on the test
certificates issued by the Homeopathic Pharmacopia Laborato-
ries of the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Govt. of
India, which state that they had failed to detect any alco-
hol in the 9 batches of the tooth paste given to them for
testing. The petitioner asserts that tooth paste is a homeo-
pathic semi-solid compound in which mother tincture is
completely absent or is present in negligible quantity with
any alcohol that may be present in pheropest completely and
that there are no traces of the same in the final product
upon chemical testing. In January, 1988 there was an inquiry
about the exciseability of Homeodent tooth paste by the
Superintendent of Central Excise, under the 1955 Act. The
gravamen of the charge is the order issued by the Distt.
Excise Officer, Ghaziabad, on 17th March, 1988 which was
issued without notice to the petitioner and without giving
it any opportunity. The Distt. Excise Officer, however, on
demand from the petitioner had modified the earlier order of
17th March, 1988 and had issued on 18th March, 1988 a demand
notice for
311
RS.46,66,451-45- It is the grievance of the petitioner that
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as it was carrying on the manufacture under the 1955 Act, it
had applied for licence and the respondent authorities
without assigning any reason, refused to renew the licence
of the petitioner company. The implication of such absence
of renewal is that the petitioner was being called to pay an
illegal demand- It, therefore, was forced to close down ’its
manufacturing operations. The petitioner avers that in the
meeting which took place between the Excise Commissioner and
the Managing Director of the petitioner-company on 14th
March, 1988 the petitioner was orally informed that the
licence would be renewed upon payment of dues under the
orders dated 17th and 18th March, 1988, as aforesaid. The
petitioner further states that it was told by the Excise
Commissioner to deposit 1/3rd of the amount forthwith and
execute a bank guarantee for the remaining amount. According
to the petitioner, it had deposited the sum of Rs. 11,66,000
and consequently the L-I licence was renewed for a period
from 25.3.1988 to 31.3.1988. Then on 1st April, 1988 the
petitioner was once again forced to close down its manufac-
turing activity in the absence of further renewal of licence
for the period from 1.4.1988 to 7.4.1988.
It is stated that the petitioner-company had filed an
appeal before the Commissioner under rule 127 of the 1956
Rules and upon compliance with the conditions of the State
authorities, the licence was renewed from 7.4.1988 on ad hoc
basis for a period of 3 months upto 30th June, 1988. The
case of the petitioner is that the hearing of the appeal
before the Excise Commissioner was over on 23.4.1988. Howev-
er, no order thereupon was passed. On 7th March, 1988 M/s.
Grindlays Bank, who are the bankers of the petitioner,
issued a bank guarantee inquiring whether any orders had
been passed by the Excise Commissioner and whether the sum
covered under the bank guarantee had become due. The peti-
tioner was informed by the bankers that the District Excise
Officers and other officers present in the bank had served
an order requiring the Bank to clear the bank guarantees.
The petitioner states that at that time it had no informa-
tion as to the order of the Excise Commissioner but later on
it came to learn that the Excise Commissioner had passed an
order on 5th May, 1988 but the same was not communicated to
it; and the bank guarantees were enforced without giving the
petitioner any opportunity of filing any revision petition.
The petitioner thereafter moved a writ petition before the
Allahabad High Court which directed that the said bank
guarantee should not be encashed until 13th May, 1988.
According to the petitioner, the bankers under-coercion were
compelled to encash the bank guarantee on 9th May, 1988 and
issue a draft for an amount of Rs.35 lakhs. The
312
writ petition of the petitioner came up for hearing before
the Allahabad High Court and it was directed to file a
revision petition within two weeks from 13.5. 1988 and the
same should be considered on merits. The High Court had
stayed the recovery of an amount of Rs.21,46,134.20 till the
disposal of the stay application.
On 22nd September, 1988 the Additional Secretary to the
Govt. of India allowed the revision petition of the peti-
tioner and set aside the orders of the District Excise
Officer, dated 17-18th March. 1988. Thereupon the petitioner
called upon the District Excise Officer, to refund the
amount of Rs.46,47,000 but the respondents failed to refund
and neglected it. The respondents had issued a show-cause
notice calling upon the petitioner as to why an amount of
Rs.68.13 lakhs be not recovered on Homeodent tooth paste
manufactured and cleared between 1985 and 1988. The High
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Court had dismissed the writ petition which is the subject-
matter of another special leave petition. Respondent No. 3
i.e. the District Excise Officer. Ghaziabad. vide his order
dated 19.1. 1989 had confirmed the show-cause notice issued
by him on 2nd November, 1988 and also confirmed the demand
for Rs.68,50,745.20. The said order dated 19th January, 1989
is the subject-matter of challenge in writ petition No.
426/89.
Therefore, the basic question now is, whether the au-
thorities under the 1955 Act were entitled and authorised to
levy duties under the Act. In the orders dated 18-19th
January, 1989 passed by the District Excise Officer which is
in vernacular and a translation of which is given in Annex-
ure XIV to the writ petition, states that in reference to a
confidential letter dated 13th January, 1988 of the Deputy
Excise Commissioner, Meerut Division, during the surprise
inspection of the premises of M/s. Dabur India Ltd. and M/s.
Sharda, Ghaziabad on 18th January, 1988 by Sri Lal Ji Rai,
the then Distt. Excise Officer & Excise Superintendent,
Bulandshahr, it was found that M/s. Dabur India Ltd. had
been manufacturing a toilet preparation i.e. Homeodent tooth
paste containing, according to the said order, alcohol for
M/s. Sharda Boiron. The question is, did they do so. How
does one find it out? As stated in the order, there is no
dispute but if it was, then calculating the duty u/s 3 of
the 1955 Act a sum of Rs.68, 13,334.28 would be found due.
The Officer found that there was a conspiracy and without
knowledge of the officer-in-charge in a clandestine manner
this production was carried on. This is an answer, according
to the impugned order, u/s 7 of the 1955 Act. Section 7
deals with the offences and penalties under the Act and
provides that if any person contravenes any of the provi-
sions of a notification issued u/s 6
313
or evades the payment of any duty of excise or fails to
supply any information which he is required to supply, he
shall for every such offence be punishable to the punishment
mentioned in the section. The officer has further found that
as against an outstanding sum of Rs.68, 13,334.28. Rs.
11,67,000 had been deposited. After narrating the incident
and the presence of the counsel and lawyers the officer was
of the opinion that nothing has been brought to his notice
which required revision of the previous order. So, there-
fore, a break up was given and out of Rs.68,50,745.20,
the actual duty payable Rs.46,67,000 has already been
realised and, therefore, the balance duty is Rs.21,83,745.28
and they have failed to realise the same.
In view of this Court’s order dated 10th January, 1989,
whereby this Court had directed that the proceedings might
go on but the demands will not be enforced, inasmuch as
orders dated 18-19th January, 1989 reiterate the order of
17th March, 1988 it is necessary to refer to the order dated
17th February, 1988 passed by the District Excise Officer,
Ghaziabad. Therein it stated that both the units were joint-
ly and severally inspected on surprise visits i.e. the units
bonded laboratories, and on the basis of the information
collected it was revealed that Dabur India Ltd. was manufac-
turing a suitable toilet preparation containing alcohol
named Homeodent without obtaining necessary licence. Accord-
ing to the said order the product had been manufactured
outside the bonded premises approved under the L-I licence
and the duty payable on this product had not been paid. The
order further states that on the basis of the information
and the stock a sum of Rs.68,13,334.20 was payable and a
challan to that effect was issued. In the first letter dated
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13th March, 1988, Dabur India Ltd. wrote to the Distt.
Excise Officer, that the classification of Homeodent tooth
paste made by the Excise Officer as toilet preparation was
erroneous, as this preparation, according to Dabur India
Ltd., should be classified under Item 2 of the Schedule to
the 1955 Act as a Homeodent preparation and not under Item
4. Item 3 to the Schedule of 1955 Act contains the follow-
ing: "Homeopathic preparations containing alcohol". Item No.
4 is "Toilet preparations containing alcohol or narcotic
drugs or narcotic". So the question raised here is whether
the tooth paste is primarily a toilet preparation or a
homeopathic preparation. Such a question really, in our
opinion, must be justiciable by the authorities enjoined to
enforce the provisions. On the basis that the product was a
homeopathic item, a sum of Rs.6245.29 was paid. The peti-
tioner further stated as follows:
"Assuming and not admitting that your classification is
314
correct, even then your calculation of duty of the product
is erroneous on the following points:
a. The total wholesale value of the goods manufactured as on
18.1.88 is Rs.65,93,91.63.
b. A trade discount @ 20% has to be deducted from this
wholesale price Rs. 13,26,373.27.
The balance amount comes to Rs.52,67,542.36. The excise duty
element in this amount comes to Rs .26,33,77 1.18.
The assessable value comes to Rs.26.33.77 1.18. The
calculation chart showing these calculations is attached as
Annexure ’B’.
3. Kindly note that for central Excise purpose the excise-
able value declared to the CE Deptt. on the total goods
manufactured upto 18.1.88 is only Rs.46,66,45 1.45 and the
wholesale price of these goods is Rs.66,31,866.35 only. This
too is evident from Annexure ’B’.
We would, therefore, request you to kindly amend your demand
notice accordingly.
Please note that the foregoing is without any prejudice
whatsoever to any arguments that may be raised by us at the
time of hearing with the Commissioner UP, Excise, Allahabad
or during any legal proceedings arising out of your afore-
mentioned demand notice or adjudicatory order of the Commis-
sioner. We also reserve the right to adduce further grounds
in our defence and support at any/all future occasions in
this connections."
On 18th March, 1988 there was further amendment by the
Distt. Excise Officer, Ghaziabad, he stated as follows:
"With reference to this office’s notice No. 185/1-2 dated
18.3.88 both the units are jointly and severally informed
that in the application letters dated 17.3.88 received
separately from both the units, the total wholesale price of
the total Homeodent tooth paste manufactured has been de-
clared as Rs.65,739, 15.63.1t has also been informed that
315
for the purpose of Central Excise Duty, the total assessable
value of the total quantity of Homeodent tooth paste manu-
factured until 19.1.88 is Rs.46,66,45 1.45 and that the
total wholesale price on this quantity has been declared as
Rs.66,31,866.35 to the Central Excise Deptt.
Based on your declaration and clarification given in your
above application and. on the basis of statistics and decla-
rations that exciseable value on a provisional basis for the
total quantities of the cosmetics homeodent tooth paste
containing alcohol, which has been sold until 18.1.88 and
which in stock on 18.1.88 has accepted as Rs.46,66,45 1.45
instead of Rs.6,81,334.20. This does not mean that this
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value has been finally accepted.
One to the fore mentioned, the amount of Rs.68, 13,33 1.20
is amended to Rs.46,66,451.45 in the office’s notice No.
185/1-2 dated 18.1.88. On this partial amendment, both the
units are jointly and severally ordered to provisionally
deposit Rs.46,66,45 1.45 instead of Rs.68, 13,324.20 as duty
in the State Treasury, Ghaziabad immediately on receipt of
this notice, under the appropriate account head and to
produce a copy of the receipted Treasury Challan as proof of
deposit in this office."
In view of the facts alleged and found by the District
Excise Officer, Ghaziabad, as mentioned hereinbefore, it
appears to us that the Homeodent was a medicinal and toilet
preparations and liable to excise duty. This Court in M/s
‘Baidyanath Ayurved Bhawan (Pvt.) Ltd., Jhansi v. The Excise
Commissioner, U.P. & Ors., [1971] 1 SCR 590 has held that in
order to attract duty under the 1955 Act, all that is re-
quired is that a medicinal preparation should contain alco-
hol. Alcohol may be part of the preparation either because
it is directly added to the solution or it came to be in-
cluded in it because one of the components of that prepara-
tion contained alcohol. It is undisputed that mother-tinc-
ture was one of the components that was used in the prepara-
tion of Homeodent and it has been found that alcohol was
there and mother tincture was added in the medicinal prepa-
ration as its component. That was not the case before any
authorities in this case but being present it was found in
liquid form which incidentally again was disputed because
test reports were not accepted by the petitioner but accord-
ing to the respondent authorities, indicated the presence of
alcohol. Section 3(1) of the 1955 Act was attracted. This
Court in the
316
aforesaid decision further reiterated that even if the
imposition of excise duty under section 3(1) of the said Act
on preparations in which alcohol was indirectly introduced
attracts multipoint taxation that by itself would not render
the duty illegal. The provisions for rebate of duty on
alcohol contained in Section 4 of the said Act show that
multipoint tax on medicinal preparations containing alcohol
was within the contemplation of the legislature otherwise
there was no purpose in incorporating section 4 into the
Act. In this connection, section 4 of the 1955 Act may be
referred to which is as follows:
"4. Rebate of duty on alcohol, etc., supplied for manufac-
ture of dutiable goods--Where alcohol, narcotic drug or
narcotic had been supplied to a manufacturer of any dutiable
goods for use as an ingredient of such goods by, or under
the authority of, the collecting Government and a duty of
excise on the goods so supplied had already been recovered
by such Government under any law for the time being in
force, the collecting Government shall, on an application
being made to it in this behalf, grant in respect of the
duty of excise, leviable under this Act, a rebate to such
manufacturer of the excess, if any, of the duty so recovered
over the duty leviable under this Act."
In this case, however, the case of the petitioner is
that duty has been recovered under the 1944 Act; if any
refund has to be made, it must be made in accordance with
law. There is a question of limitation for claiming refund
of this duty. The provisions are not clear. In such a situa-
tion, it appears to us that the justice requires that provi-
sions should be made more clear and in the ’view of the
facts and the circumstances that have happened, we would
direct that if the petitioners are entitled to any refund of
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the duty already paid to the Central Government in view of
the duty imposition now upheld against them in favour of the
State Government such refund application should be enter-
tained and considered in accordance with law. We are con-
scious in giving this direction, we are not strictly follow-
ing the letter and the provisions of the Act. But in a case
of this nature, where there is some doubt as to whether duty
was payable to the Central Government under the 1944 Act or
whether the item was dutiable under the 1955 Act, it would
be just and proper and in consonance with justice in fiscal
administration that the Central Government should consider
in the light of the facts found, if an application is made
under section 11B of the 1944 Act and pass appropriate
order. Such application should be made within four months
from the date of the judgment. In the facts
317
and the circumstances 01’ this case, the limitation period
under section 1 lB of the 1944 Act should not apply. This
direction, in our opinion, must be confined in the facts and
the circumstances of this case only.
Our attention was drawn to the observations of this
Court in Union of India & Ors. etc. etc. v. Bombay Tyre
International Ltd. etc. etc., (supra) in respect of the
valuation. But the point not having been taken at any stage
before the authorities, it is not proper for us at this
stage to go into this question. We will proceed in view of
the facts and the circumstances of this case and to do
justice between the parties on the basis that the duty has
been correctly imposed. We have looked into the order of the
District Excise Officer, Ghaziabad and we find that all
relevant facts have been considered and no facts were
brought before us contrary to the findings nor any conten-
tions of substance raised which can induce us to hold to the
contrary.
Reference may also be made to the observations of this
Court in Mohanlal Maganlal Bhavsar & Ors. v. Union of India
& Ors., [1986] 1 SCC 122 for the test to determine whether
an item of medicinal preparation falls under Item 1 of the
Schedule to the 1955 Act. It has been determined by the
authorities enjoined to enforce that Act and such finding
has not been assailed on any cogent or reliable ground in
any proper manner. If that is the position, then that order
must be upheld but it must be upheld that Homeodent was
dutiable and as such the impugned order was correctly passed
by the District Excise Officer.
Our attention was drawn to the observations of this
Court in N.B. Sanjana, Assistant Collector of Central Ex-
cise, Bombay & Ors. v. The Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving
Mills Co. Ltd., [1971] 3 SCR 506. But in view of the facts
on which the parties rested their case before the authori-
ties, it is not necessary at this stage to go into this
controversy.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, we are of the
opinion that the impugned order dated 18th January, 1989
passed by the District Excise Officer, Ghaziabad, must be
given effect to and thereafter the petitioner’s application
for refund, if any, made before the authorities under sec-
tion 4 of the 1944 Act within the time indicated as before
should be disposed of in the manner indicated above, if
made.
Before we part with this case, two aspects have to be
adverted to--one was regarding the allegation of the peti-
tioner that in order to compel the petitioners to pay the
duties which the petitioners con-
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tended that they were not liable to pay, the licence was not
being renewed for a period and the petitioners were con-
stantly kept under threat of closing down of their business
in order to coerce them to make the payment. This is unfor-
tunate. We would not like to hear from a litigant in this
country that the Government is coercing citizens of this
Country to make payment of duties which the litigant is
contending not to be leviable. Government, of course, is
entitled to enforce payment and for that purpose to take all
legal steps but the Government, Central or State, cannot be
permitted to play dirty games with the citizens of this
country to coerce them in making payments which the citizens
were not legally obliged to make. If any money is due to the
Government, the Government should take steps but not take
extra legal steps or manoeuvre. Therefore, we direct that
the right of renewal of the petitioner of licence must be
judged and attended to in accordance with law and the occa-
sion not utilised to coerce the petitioners to a course of
action not warranted by law and procedure. Secondly, in a
situation of this nature, we are of the opinion that the
Government should consider feasibility of setting up of a
machinery under a Council to be formed under Article 263 of
the Constitution to adjudicate and adjust the dues of the
respective Governments. In these peculiar facts, it appears
that the dispute is under two different central legislations
and under one the State authorities will realise and impose
the taxes on finding on certain basis and under the other
the same transaction may be open to imposition by Central
Government authorities on a particular view of the matter.
In such a situation, how and wherein the refund should be
made of any duty paid in respect of part of a transaction to
one of the authorities, the State or the Centre, to be
adjusted should be the subject matter of a settlement by the
Council to be set up under Article 263 of the Constitution.
This is a matter on which we draw the attention of the
concerned authorities for examination because section 3 of
the 1955 Act and section 3 of the 1944 Act may overlap
similar transaction in certain cases.
Writ petitions are disposed of with the aforesaid direc-
tions. Special leave granted in SLP (Civil) No. 1610 of 1989
(M/s. Dabur India v. State of U.P. & Ors., ) and SLP (Civil)
Nos. 135-36 of 1989 (Sharde Bairon Laboratories v. State of
U.P. & Ors.). Appeals are disposed of in the light of the
directions given hereinbefore. Save as aforesaid all interim
orders are vacated.
In the facts and the circumstances of the case, the
parties will pay and bear their own costs.
R.S.S. Petitions disposed of.
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