Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, JAIPUR ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAJASTHAN STATE CHEMICAL WORKS DEEDWANA, RAJASTHAN ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/09/1991
BENCH:
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
BENCH:
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
OJHA, N.D. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 2222 1991 SCR Supl. (1) 124
1991 SCC (4) 473 JT 1991 (4) 6
1991 SCALE (2)602
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944: Section 2(f), Item
No. 68 of First Schedule--Notification No. 179/77, CE dated
18.6.1977--Exemption in relation to manufacture of which no
process is carried on with the aid of power--Assessees using
power to lift raw materials--Whether fails within ’process
of manufacture’-- Exemption--Whether available.
Words & Phrases: "Manufacturing Process"- Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
By way of notification dated 18.6.1977, the Central
Government exempted from duty all goods falling under Tariff
item No. 68 of the First Schedule to the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944 in or in relation to manufacture of which no
process was ordinarily carried on with the aid of power.
The respondents in the first set of appeals have been
manufacturing crude sodium sulphate. Since the respondents
used diesel pumps for pumping brine into salt pans, in the
process of manufacture, the benefit of the said notification
was denied to them on the ground that the process of manu-
facture was carried on with the aid of power. However, on
appeal, the Collector of Customs (Appeals) allowed the
benefit to the respondents. Revenue preferred an appeal and
the Tribunal affirmed the Collector’s order.
In the other appeals, the Respondents, manufacturer of
lime, used to lift the raw materials to the platform at the
head of the kiln by the aid of power and the raw materials
were mixed manually into the kiln. The benefit of the said
notification was denied to the Respondents by the Assistant
Collector. Even an appeal before the Collector of Appeals
failed. However, on appeal the Tribunal accepted the claim
of the Respondents.
In all these matters the Tribunal took the view that the
manufacturing process started from the stage of feeding raw
materials into the salt pan or the kiln as the case may be
and the transferring of the raw materials was a stage prior
to the manufacturing process and so the
125
use of power for such transfer would not disentitle the
respondents from the benefit under the said notification.
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Aggrieved by the orders of the Tribunal, the Revenue has
preferred the present appeals.
Before this Court, the Revenue contended that pumping
the brine into the pan or lifting the raw materials to the
kiln head was a process in relation to the manufacture of
the final product and since that process with the aid of
power was integrally connected with the manufacture, the
exemption would not apply.
The Respondents contended that if the process carried on
with the aid of power does not bring about any change in the
raw materials, it cannot be said that any process in or in
relation to the manufacture of an article has been carried
on with the aid of power and, therefore, mere transfer of
raw materials by the use of power cannot be considered as a
process of manufacture.
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: 1. Process in manufacture or in relation to
manufacture implies not only the production but the various
stages through which the raw material is subjected to change
by different operations. It is the cumulative effect of the
various processes to which the raw materials is subjected to
the manufactured product emerges. Therefore, each step
towards such production would be a process in relation to
manufacture. Where any particular process is so integrally
connected with the ultimate production of goods that but for
that process manufacture of processing of goods would be
impossible or commercially inexpedient, that process is one
in relation to the manufacture. [130 E-F).
2.1 The natural meaning of the word ’process’ is a mode
of treatment of certain materials in order to produce a good
result, a species of activity performed on the subject-
matter in order to transform or reduce it to a certain
stage. There is nothing in the natural meaning of the word
’process’ to exclude its application to handling. There may
be process which consists only in handling and there may be
a process which involves no handling or not merely handling
but also use. It may be a process involving the handling of
the material and it need not be a process involving the use
of material. The activity may be subordinate but one in
relation to the further process of manufacture. [130G, 131
A-B]
126
2.2 A process is a manufacturing process when it
brings out a complete transformation for the whole compo-
nents so as to produce a commercially different article or a
commodity. But, that process itself may consist of several
processes which may or may not bring about any change at
every intermediate stage. But the activities or the opera-
tions may be so integrally connected that the final result
is the production of a commercially different article.
Therefore, any activity or operation which is the essential
requirement and is so related to the further operations for
the end result would also be a process in or in relation to
manufacture to attract the relevant clause in the exemption
notification. The word ’process’ in the context in which it
appears in the notification includes an operation or activi-
ty in relation to manufacture. [132H, 133 A-B]
J.K. Cotton Mills v.S.T. Officer, [1965] 1 SCR 900;
Union of lndia v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills, [1963] Supp.
1 SCR 586, relied on.
3.1 The transfer of raw material to the reacting vessel
is a preliminary operation but it is part of a continuous
process ,but for which the manufacture would be impossible.
The handling of the raw materials for the purpose of such
transfer is then integrally connected with the process of
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manufacture. The handling for the purpose of transfer may be
manual or mechanical but if power is used for such opera-
tion, it cannot be denied that an activity has been carried
on with the aid of power in the manufacturing process. The
use of diesel pump sets to fill the pans with brine is an
activity with the aid of power and that activity is in
relation to the manufacture. It is not correct to say that
the process of manufacture starts only when evaporation
starts. The preliminary steps like pumping brine and filling
the salt pans form integral part of the manufacturing proc-
ess even though the change in the raw material commences
only when evaporation takes place. The preliminary activity
cannot be disintegrated from the rest of the operations in
the whole process of manufacture. Similarly, when coke and
lime are taken to the platform in definite proportions for
the purpose of mixing, such operation is a step in the
manufacturing process. It precedes the feeding of the mix-
ture into the kiln where the burning takes place. The whole
process is an integrated one consisting of the lifting of
the raw materials to the platform mixing coke and lime and
then feeding into the kiln and burning. These operations are
so interrelated that without anyone of these operations
manufacturing process is impossible to be completed. There-
fore, if power is used in
127
anyone of these operations or anyone of the operations is
carried on with the aid of power, it is a case when in or in
relation to the manufacture the process is carried on with
the aid of power. [133 C-G]
3.2 ’Processing’ may be an intermediate stage in manu-
facture and until some change has taken place and the com-
modity retains a continuing substantial identity through the
processing stage, one cannot say that it has been manufac-
tured. That does not, however, mean that any operation in
the course of such process is not in relation to the manu-
facture. [136 E]
Dy. Commissioner, Sales Tax; Ernakulam v. Pio Food
Packers, AIR 1980 SC 1227; Union of India v. Delhi Cloth &
General Mills, [1963] Suppl. 1 SCR 586; Standard Fireworks
Industries v. Collector, 1987 (28) ELT 56 (SC), relied on.
Nirma Chemical Works & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.,
1981 ELT 617 (Guj.); Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of
India, AIR 1981 SC 1014, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 359394
of 1989.
From the Order dated 26.5.1988 of the Customs Excise and
(;old (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi in
545-546/88-C in Appeal No. E/COD/699/87-C in Appeal No.
E/847/84-C with E/1/85-C.
WITH
Civil Appeals Nos. 642-643/91, 1723-1731/91.
A.K. Ganguli, Ms. Sushma Suri, P. Parmeshwaran and A.
Subba Rao for the Appellant.
Rajinder Sachar, Aruneshwar Gupta, Manu Mridul, P.I.
Jose and Sanjay Parekh for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FATHIMA BEEVI, J. These appeals by the Revenue under
Section 35L of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 in-
volve the interpretation of the Notification No. 179/77 CE
dated 18.6.1977. The Notification read thus:
"In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-
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rule (1) of rule 8 of
128
the Central Excise Rules, 1944, the Central
Government hereby exempts all goods failing
under Item No. 68 of the First Schedule to the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of 1944)
in or in relation to the manufacture of which
no process is ordinarily carried on with the
aid of power, from whole of the duty of excise
leviable thereon".
Tariff Item 68 during the relevant period
read:-
"All other goods, not elsewhere specified,
manufactured in a factory but excluding..."
M/s. Rajasthan State Chemical Works, the respondents in
Civil Appeals Nos. 3593-94 of 1989, are manufacturers of
crude sodium sulphate. In the process of manufacture of
common salt from brine, in the salt pans in which the proc-
ess of evaporation takes place some quantities of sodium
sulphate present in the brine also crystalise and settle at
the bottom as crust. The sodium sulphate is thus obtained as
a bye-product. For the purpose of the manufacture, brine is
pumped into salt pans using diesel pumps.
The benefit of the aforesaid notification was not given
to these respondents as pumping of brine into the pans was
carried on with the aid of power. The claim for exemption
though denied by the original authority, was allowed by the
Collector of Customs (Appeals) and that order was affirmed
by the Tribunal.
M/s. Sunderson (Minerals) Ltd., the respondents in
Civil Appeals Nos. 642-643 of 1991 and 1723-1731 of 1991 are
manufacturers of lime from coke and lime stone. The raw
materials are lifted to the platform at the head of the kiln
by the aid of power. At the kiln head, the raw materials are
mixed manually and fed into the kiln. Since power is used
for lifting the raw materials at the kiln head, these re-
spondents were denied the benefit of the notification by the
Assistant Collector. The appeal before the Collector of
Appeals was dismissed. The Tribunal, however, accepted the
claim of the respondents.
The Revenue being aggrieved has challenged the respec-
tive orders of the Tribunal in these appeals.
129
In both these set of cases, the view taken by the Tribu-
nal is that the manufacturing process starts from the stage
of feeding raw materials into the salt pan or the kiln as
the case may be. The transportation of the raw materials to
the platform at the kiln head and the pumping of brine into
the salt pan is a stage prior to the commencement of manu-
facturing process. Therefore, the transferring of the raw
materials is not a part of the process of manufacture and
the use of power for such transfer would not disentitle the
respondents from the benefit under the notification.
It has been contended before us on behalf of the appel-
lant that pumping the brine into the pan o: lifting the raw
materials to the kiln head is a process in relation to the
manufacture of the final product and since that process with
the aid of power is integrally connected with the manufac-
ture, the exemption would not apply. On the other hand, it
is reiterated for the respondents that if the process car-
ried on with the aid of power does not bring about any
change in the raw material, it cannot be said that any
process in or in relation to the manufacture of an article
has been carried on with the aid of power and, therefore,
mere transfer of raw materials by the use of power cannot be
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considered as a process of manufacture.
The Central Government has exempted all goods failing
under Item No. 68 of the First Schedule to the Act in or in
relation to the manufacture of which no process is ordinari-
ly carried on with the aid of power from the whole of the
duty of excise leviable thereon. The exemption under this
notification is available only when the goods are manufac-
tured without the aid of power at any stage of the process.
Where manufacture involves series of processes and if anyone
of such processes is carried on with the aid of power, the
case is taken out of the purview of the notification.
We have to consider what activity amounts to process in
or in relation to manufacture of goods for the application
of the notification. The word ’manufacture’ has been defined
in Section 2(1) of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944,
thus:-
"2(1). ’Manufacture’ includes any process- (i)
incidental or ancillary to the completion of a
manufactured product; and
(ii) which is specified in relation to any
goods in the Section or Chapter notes of the
Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act,
1985 as amounting to manufacture".
130
Clause (f) gives an inclusive definition of the term
’manufacture’, According to the dictionary, the term ’manu-
facture’ means a process which results in an alteration or
change in the goods which are subjected to the process of
manufacturing leading to the production of a commercially
new article. In determining what constitutes ’manufacture’
no hard and fast rule can be applied and each case must be
decided on its own facts having regard to the context in
which the term is used in the provision under consideration.
Manufacture implies a change but every change is not
manufacture, yet every change of an article is the result of
treatment, labour and manipulation. Naturally, manufacture
is the end result of one or more processes through which the
original commodities are ’made to pass. The nature and
extent of processing may vary from one class to another.
There may be several stages of processing, a different kind
of processing at each stage. With each process suffered the
original commodity experiences a change. Whenever a commodi-
ty undergoes a change as a result of some operation per-
formed on it or in regard to it, such operation would amount
to processing of the commodity. But it is only when the
change or a series of changes take the commodity to the
point where commercially it can no longer be regarded as the
original commodity but instead is recognised as a new and
distinct article that a manufacture can be said to take
place.
Manufacture thus involves series of processes. Process
in manufacture or in relation to manufacture implies not
only the production but the various stages through which the
raw material is subjected to change by different operations.
It is the cumulative effect of the various processes to
which the raw material is subjected to, manufactured product
emerges. Therefore, each step towards such production would
be a process in relation to the manufacture. Where any
particular process is so integrally connected with the
ultimate production of goods that but for that process
manufacture of processing of goods would be impossible or
commercially inexpedient, that process is one in relation to
the manufacture.
The natural meaning of the word ’process’ is a mode of
treatment of certain materials in order to produce a good
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result, a species of activity performed on the subject-
matter in order to transform or reduce it to a certain
stage. According to Oxford Dictionary one of the meanings of
the word ’process’ is "a continuous and regular action or
succession of actions taking place or carried on in a defi-
nite manner and leading to the accomplishment of some re-
sult." The activity contemplated by the definition
131
is perfectly general requiring only the continuous or quick
succession. It is not one of the requisites that the activi-
ty should involve some operation on some material in order
to its conversion to some particular stage. There is nothing
in the natural meaning of the word ’process’ to exclude its
application to handling. There may be a process which con-
sists only in handling and there may be a process which
involves no handling or not merely handling but use or also
use. It may be a process involving the handling of the
material and it need not be a process involving the use of
material. The activity may be subordinate but one in rela-
tion to the further process of manufacture.
In J.K. Cotton Mills v.S.T. Officer, [1965] 1 S.C.R 900,
this Court ’in construing the expression ’in the manufacture
of goods’ held thus:-
"But there is no warrant for limiting the
meaning of the expression ’in the manufacture
of goods’ to the process of production of
goods only. The expression ’in the manufac-
ture’ takes in within its compass, all proc-
esses which are directly related to the actual
production".
The Court further held thus:-
"The expression ’in the manufacture of goods’
would normally encompass the entire process
carried on by the dealer of converting raw
materials into finished goods. Where any
particular process is so integrally connected
with the ultimate production of goods that but
for that process, manufacture or processing of
goods would be commercially inexpedient, goods
required in that process would, in our judg-
ment, fail within the expression ’in the
manufacture of goods’."
In that case, the assessee carrying on the business of
manufacturing textile goods claimed that certain goods
namely drawing material etc. were used in the manufacture.
The Court said that if the process of designing is so inte-
grally connected with the process of manufacturing of cloth,
there is no reason to regard the process of designing as not
being a part of the process of manufacture. The process of
designing may be distinct from the actual process of turning
out finished goods but, there is no warrant for limiting the
meaning of the expression ’in the manufacture of goods’ to
the process of production of goods only. The expressions’
’in the manufacture of goods’ takes within its encompass all
processes which are directly related to the actual produc-
tion.
132
In Union of India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills, [1963]
Supp. 1 S.C.R. 586, this Court held thus:-
"The definition of ’manufacture’ as in s. 2
(13 puts it beyond any possibility of contro-
versy that if power is used for any of the
numerous processes that are required to turn
the raw material into a finished article known
to the market the clause will be applicable;
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and an argument that power is not used in the
whole process of manufacture using the word in
its ordinary sense, will not be available."
In that case, it was contended that manufacture is
complete as soon as by the application of one or more proc-
esses the raw material undergoes some change. In answering
the contention, the Court stated thus:--
"We are unable to agree with the
learned Counsel that by inserting this defini-
tion of the word "manufacture" in s. 2 (f) the
legislature intended to equate "processing" to
"manufacture" and intended to make mere
"processing" as distinct from "manufacture" in
the same sense of bringing into existence of a
new substance known to the market, liable to
duty. The sole purpose of inserting this
definition is to make it clear that at certain
places in the Act the word ’manufacture’ has
been used to mean a process incidental to the
manufacture of the article. Thus in the very
item under which the excise duty is claimed in
these cases, we find the words: "in or, in
relation to the manufacture of which any
process is ordinarily carried on with the aid
of power". The definition of ’manufacture’ as
in s. 2 (f) puts it beyond any possibility of
controversy that if power is used for any of
the numerous processes that are required to
turn the raw material into a finished article
known to the market the clause will be ap-
plicable; and an argument that power is not
used in the whole process of manufacture using
the word in its ordinary sense, will not be
available. It is only with this limited pur-
pose that the legislature, in our opinion,
inserted this definition of the word ’manufac-
ture’ in the definition section and not with a
view to make the mere ’*processing" of goods
as liable to excise duty."
A process is a manufacturing process when it brings out
a complete transformation for the whole components so as to
produce a commercially different article or a commodity.
But, that process itself may consist of
133
several processes which may or may not bring about any
change at every intermediate stage. But the activities or
the operations may be so integrally connected that the final
result is the production of a commercially different arti-
cle. Therefore, any activity or operation which is the
essential requirement and is so related to the further
operations for the end result would also be a process in or
in relation to manufacture to attract the relevant clause in
the exemption notification. In our view, the word ’process’
in the context in which it appears in the aforesaid notifi-
cation includes an operation or activity in relation to
manufacture.
The transfer of raw material to the reacting vessel is a
preliminary operation but it is part of a continuous process
but for which the manufacture would be impossible. The
handling of the raw materials for the purpose of such trans-
fer is then integrally connected with the process of manu-
facture. The handling for the purpose of transfer may be
manual or mechanical but if power is used for such opera-
tion, it cannot be denied that an activity has been carried
on with the aid of power in the manufacturing process. The
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use of diesel pump sets to fill the pans with brine is in
activity with the aid of power and that activity is in
relation to the manufacture. It is not correct to say that
the process of manufacture starts only when evaporation
starts. The preliminary steps like pumping brine and filling
the salt pans form integral part of the manufacturing proc-
ess even though the change in the raw material commences
only when evaporation takes place. The preliminary activity
cannot be disintegrated from the rest of the operations in
the whole process of manufacture. Similarly, when coke and
lime are taken to the platform in definite proportions for
the purpose of mixing, such operation is a step in the
manufacturing process. It precedes the feeding of the mix-
ture into the kiln where the burning takes place. The whole
process is an integrated one consisting of the lifting of
the raw materials to the platform mixing coke and lime and
then feeding into the kiln and burning. These operations are
so interrelated that without anyone of these operations
manufacturing process is impossible to be completed. There-
fore, if power is used in anyone of these operations or
anyone of the operations is carried on with the aid of
power, it is a case where in or in relation to the manufac-
ture the process is carried on with the aid of power.
Learned counsel for the appellant relying on the deci-
sion of the Gujarat High Court in Nirma Chemical Works &
Ors. v. Union of india & Ors., 1981 E.L.T. 617 (Guj.),
submitted that process means an operation which brings about
some change in the raw material. That in the present case,
the operation of putting the raw materials, namely, coke
,red lime
134
stone on the kiln head does not bring about any change in
the raw material but the raw materials remain in the same
shape as they were when they were brought in the truck and
were dumped separately on the ground and, therefore, this
operation can be termed only ’transportation’ and cannot be
called a ’process’. The Gujarat High Court in Nirma Chemi-
cal Works (supra) said:-
"It must be made clear that it is only at the
stage of transferring liquid raw materials
from the motor tanker to the storage tank that
power is used and at no subsequent stage is
any power used.
If no change is brought about in the raw
material until it reaches the re-action ves-
sel, then no process of manufacture can be
said to have taken place until the raw materi-
als are taken to the re-action vessel. Till
then they are all preparations made but the
raw materials continue to be the same raw
materials. Until sulphuric acid and alkyd
benzene start re-acting on each other, no
change takes place in the raw materials.
Merely because the goods are stored in one
place, may be at an elevated place above the
ground, it cannot be said that a process of
manufacture which would convert the raw mate-
rial by different stages into the final
product has been undergone. In view of the
decision in Chowgule & Co. ’s (supra) as to
what is meant by processing, it is clear that
unless and until some change takes place in
the raw material of the original commodity, no
process can be said to have been gone through.
Before any operation can be characterised as a
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process, the commodity must, as a result of
the operation, experience some change."
Counsel for the respondents submitted that a process in
or in relation to the manufacture commences as soon as the
change is brought about in the raw material and ends till
the manufactured product is marketed. Until some change
physical or chemical is brought about in the raw material,
there is no process in or in relation to the manufacture.
Mere collecting, storing or dealing with the raw material
are operations and/or activities prior to the beginning of
process. Mere physical alteration of the site or placement
of raw materials or stacking, storing the same cannot be
said to be a process in relation to manufacture. In the case
of preparation of sodium sulphate, it is said that the
process in or in relation to manufacture commences after the
brine is placed in the salt pans. The counsel
135
submits that if every operation and/or activity and/or
action is treated as a ’process’ in or in relation to manu-
facture then power is used in (i) erection of factory where
steel, cement, bricks etc. are used, (ii) day-to-day trans-
portation and (iii) use of electricity for lights, fans etc.
These arguments are far-fetched. The activity in relation to
which power is used is not to be considered into isolation
where the activity is such that it forms an integral part of
the whole process. The Gujarat High Court in interpreting
the word ’process’ has assumed that ’process’ is synonymous
to ’processing’ and has drawn support from the observations
of this Court in Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India,
A.I.R. 1981 SC 1014. We are afraid, the observations had not
been properly understood or applied in drawing inference
that process when used in relation to manufacture must be
one that produces a change in the commodity. It has been
made clear in Dy. Commissioner, Sales Tax; Ernakulam v. Pio
Food Packers, A.I.R. 1980 SC 1227 that: -
"Commonly manufacture is the end result of one
or more processes through which the original
commodity is made to pass. The nature and
extent of processing may vary from one case to
another, and indeed there may be several
stages of processing and perhaps a different
kind of processing at each stage. With each
process suffered, the original commodity
experiences a change. But it is only when the
change, or a series of changes, take the
commodity to the point where commercially it
can no longer be regarded as the original
commodity but instead is recognised as a new
and distinct article that manufacture can be
said to take place?
It has been made clear in Union of India v. Delhi Cloth
& Genera, Mills (supra) that the definition of the word
’manufacture’ in Section 2 (f) puts it beyond any possibili-
ty of controversy that if the power is used for any of the
numerous processes that are required to turn the raw materi-
als into a finished article known to the market, it would be
a case where in or in relation to manufacture process has
ordinarily been carried on with the aid of power.
It is, therefore, wrong to conclude that every operation
in the course of the manufacture should bring about a change
and if any operation with the aid of power does not result
in a change, it cannot be an integral part of the process in
or in relation to manufacture. In Chowgule & Co. Pvt. Ltd.
case, what this Court said is that:-
136
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"Wherever a commodity undergoes a change as a
result of some operation performed on it or in
regard to it, such operation would amount to
processing of the commodity."
What is necessary in order to characterise an operation
as "processing" is that the commodity must, as a result of
the operation, experience some change. The question is not
whether there is manual application of energy or there is
application of mechanical force. Whatever be the means
employed for the purpose of carrying out the operation, it
is the effect of the operation on the commodity that is
material for the purpose of determining whether the opera-
tion constitutes "processing". In drawing the distinction
between ’processing’ and ’manufacture’, this Court observed
in Delhi Cloth Mills case thus:-
"To say this is to equate "processing" to
"manufacture" and for this we can find no
warrant in law. The word "manufacture" used as
a verb is generally understood to mean as
"bringing into existence a new substance" and
does not mean merely "to produce some change
in a substance", however minor in consequence
the change may be."
Thus "processing" may be an intermediate stage in manu-
facture and until some change has taken place and the com-
modity retains a continuing substantial identity through the
processing stage, we cannot say that it has been manufac-
tured. That does not, however, mean that any operation in
:he course of such process is not in relation to the manu-
facture. While interpreting the same exemption notification
in Standard Fireworks Industries v. Collector, 1987 (28)
E.L.T. 56(SC), it was held that manufacture of fireworks
requires cutting of steel wires and the treatment of papers
red, therefore, it is a process for manufacture of goods in
question. The Notification purports to allow exemption from
duty only when in relation to the manufacture of goods no
process is ordinarily carried on with the aid of power. It
was observed that cutting of steel wires or the treatment of
the papers is a process for the manufacture of goods in
question.
We are, therefore, of the view that if any operation in
the course of manufacture is so integrally connected with
the further operations which result in the emergence of
manufactured goods and such operation is carried on with the
aid of power, the process in or in relation to the manufac-
ture must be deemed to be one carried on with the aid of
power. In this
137
view of the matter, we are unable to accept the contention
that since the pumping of the brine into the salt pans or
the lifting of coke and lime stone with the aid of power
does not bring about any change in the raw material, the
case is not taken out of the Notification. The exemption
under the Notification is not available in these cases.
Accordingly, we allow these appeals. In the facts and cir-
cumstances of the case, we make no order as to costs.
G.N. Appeals allowed.
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