Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2415 of 2005
PETITIONER:
M/s Channy Enterprises
RESPONDENT:
Commissioner of Central Excise, Chandigarh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/04/2005
BENCH:
Ruma Pal & C.K. Thakker
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP ) No. 14175 of 2003)
RUMA PAL, J.
Leave granted.
The appellant has two mills in which it
manufactures hot rolled steel products. With effect
from 1st September 1997, the Government of India
notified ingots and billets under Section 3-A of the
Central Excise Act, 1944 for levy of excise duty on the
basis of the annual capacity of production (ACP) of the
factory. To give effect to the scheme, Rules were
framed for determination of the annual capacity of
production of a factory producing such notified goods
known as the Induction Furnace Annual Capacity
Determination Rules 1977. By the Rules, the ACP of a
factory was taken to be a fixed multiple of the total
capacity of the furnaces installed in the factory. The
manner of levy and collection of duty was governed by
Rule 96(ZP) of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 also
issued under Section 3A of the Act. Circular dated
26th February 1998 had been issued by way of a
clarification in answer to questions raised in connection
with the operation of the Rules. One of the questions
so raised was:
"How would the annual capacity of
production be determined if a unit
has more than one rolling mill in
the same premises but operates
only one rolling mill at a time."
In answer to this, it was clarified that:
"If a unit has one re-heating furnace
with two rolling mills, then the
capacity of the higher of the two
mills should be taken as the
assessed annual capacity for the
unit. However, if each rolling mill
has a reheating furnace, the
capacity of the unit would be the
sum total of the capacity of each
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rolling mill in the unit".
Prior to 1st September 1999, the appellant had
one heating furnace and the appellant’s ACP was fixed
on that basis. The appellant then installed a second
furnace but, according to the appellant, there was only
one electric motor which meant that the both furnaces
could not be operated simultaneously. The appellant
notified the change to the Commissioner under Rule 4
of the Rules. According to the appellant, the approval
was communicated to the appellant by the
Commissioner’s letter dated 25th August 1999 after
which the appellant filed a revised declaration on
1st September 1999. Response was given to this on
17th October 2000 by the Commissioner’s office which
sought to club the capacity of both the rolling mills
since the second heating furnace had been installed on
the basis of the circular dated 26th February 1998. The
appellant’s submission that the circular did not have
any application to the appellant’s case because both
the furnaces could not be operated simultaneously was
rejected by the Commissioner who then proceeded to
fix the ACP by clubbing the capacity of both the rolling
mills. An appeal was preferred by the appellant to the
Customs Excise and Gold Control Appellate Tribunal
(CEGAT) which rejected the appellant’s appeal and
affirmed the Commissioner’s order. The appellant filed
a Reference Petition under Section 35-H (I) of the Act
as well as a writ petition contending that the
respondents were not justified in determining the ACP
of the appellant by taking the capacity of both the mills
together. The High Court dismissed the Reference
Application and the Writ Petition holding that no
question of law arose from the order of the Tribunal. It
was also found that the CEGAT had considered all
aspects of the matter and had correctly determined the
question raised.
The appellant has contended that all the fora had
erred in overlooking the formula provided under Rule 3
for determination of the ACP which showed that a vital
element of the formula included the revolutions per
minute of the drive. This, according to the appellant,
showed that the formula for calculating the ACP was on
the basis of one motor per unit. It is therefore
submitted that despite having two electric furnaces
since there was only one motor which was common to
both, then in terms of the circular issued by the Board
itself the capacity of the higher of the mills should have
been taken as the ACP. The second submission is that
the appellant had submitted a certificate from the
National Institute of Secondary Steel Technology, a
Government Institute, which certified that the two mills
could not be run simultaneously with the same motor
and common flywheel. It is contended that the
Commissioner could not discard the opinion of an
expert and determine the technical issue on the basis
of his own opinion. It was finally submitted that the
Commissioner had himself approved the setting up of
the second furnace within the ACP of the units.
Learned counsel appearing for the respondents
has submitted that the circular dated
26th February 1998 relied upon by both the parties had
been misconstrued by the appellant. It is submitted
that the question of taking the higher capacity of the
two mills would only arise if there was one re-heating
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furnace. According to the respondents, the installation
of the two rolling mills and two heating furnaces had
not been disputed by the appellant before the
Commissioner. It is said that the Commissioner had
applied his mind to the expert’s certificate but had
rejected it because it was issued after a lapse of nine
months from the date of the withdrawal of the capacity
based assessment scheme on 31st March 2000. The
Commissioner in fact determined the issue on the basis
of the admitted facts and on an interpretation of the
1998 circular.
The respondent’s contentions are correct. It is not
the appellant’s case that the 1998 circular was
incorrect. On the contrary it has been relied on to claim
that the ACP should have been determined with
reference to the mill which had the higher capacity
alone. The circular in answer to a query which exactly
reflects the issue in this case, clearly says that the
capacity of the higher of the two mills would be taken
for assessing the ACP only if each rolling mill did not
have a separate re-heating furnace. If each rolling mill
had a separate heating furnace, as the appellant
admittedly does, then the capacity of the unit would be
the sum total of the capacity of each rolling mill in the
unit irrespective of the fact that only one mill operated
at a time. The language could not be plainer. What the
appellant’s argument overlooks is that the scheme did
not operate on the basis of the actual production but on
the capacity of the rolling mills to produce. We,
therefore, see no reason to differ with the view
expressed by the Commissioner, CEGAT and the High
Court.
The criticism of the action of the Tribunal in
Hindustan Ferodo Ltd. v. Collector of Central
Excise:1997 (89) ELT 16(SC) where the Tribunal
had entered into the arena of dispute and in effect
given evidence on behalf of the Revenue before itself,
would not apply here. The Revenue in that case had
led no evidence in support of its case. The assessee
had. In the present case CEGAT proceeded on the
basis of the admitted facts and relied on the language
of the circular to reject the appellant’s appeal.
The appellant has also sought support from a
decision of the Kolkata Bench of CEGAT in Aditya
Steel Industries Ltd. v. CCE & C, Bhubaneswar:
2002 (53) RLT 1068. The Tribunal relied upon the
Board’s circulars No.325/41/97-CX dated 25.7.1997
and 326/42/97-CX to hold that where it was not
technically possible to run two mills simultaneously
because of a common power supply, the capacity of the
stand by mill was not to be taken into consideration for
determining the ACP.
We do not agree. Separate schemes were
formulated under Section 3A of the Act in relation to
induction furnaces and hot re-rolling mills. Circular 325
dated 25.7.1997 dealt with induction furnaces and
specifically provided:
"In this context, it is understood that
some induction furnace units have, what
they call "idle" crucible. It is reported
that at any point of time only one
crucible is used and the other remains
idle. In such cases, it is claimed, the
induction furnace unit has one
transformer and one electrical panel. As
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such the capacity of the induction
furnace is relatable to crucible(s),
excluding the "idle (separate or stand
by)" crucible. This aspect may kindly be
examined on basis of facts of each such
case and the furnace capacity may be
ascertained accordingly".
Circular No. 326 also dated 25.7.1997 dealt with
the capacity of production of hot re-rolling mills. There
is no paragraph in this circular similar to the quoted
paragraph relating to the ACP of induction furnaces.
Paragraph 18 of Circular No. 326 says that the
paragraphs in the circular explain the salient features of
Section 3A scheme as applicable to re-rolling mills. It
also says that the scheme, in general terms, is on the
same lines as that for the Induction Furnace units and
that therefore the explanation on some of the common
features are the same as those contained in circular No.
325. This does not tantamount to saying that all the
features of the induction furnace scheme were to be
incorporated into the hot rolling mill scheme.
The appellant’s contention that the second mill
was set up after the approval of the Commissioner is of
no consequence. The approval granted by the
Commissioner did not in any way affect the assessment
required to be made in accordance with the Rules.
In the circumstances, the appeal is dismissed but
without any order to costs.