Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ClBATUL LIMITED
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/09/1985
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 281 1985 SCR Supl. (3) 95
1985 SCC (4) 535 1985 SCALE (2)770
CITATOR INFO :
F 1987 SC 61 (1)
R 1989 SC 516 (3)
APL 1990 SC 202 (7)
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 - Sub-s.(2) of s. 36
Manufacture of Goods - Joint programme of seller and buyer
Goods manufactured by seller - Supplied to buyer - Who is
manufacturer - ’Wholesale‘ price charged by seller - Whether
true basis for determination and levy of Excise Duty.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent - Cibatul Ltd. (the "seller") entered
into two agreements with Ciba Geigy of India Ltd. (the
"buyer") for manufacturing Resins by the seller. The joint
manufacturing programme indicated that the Resins were to be
manufactured in accordance with the restrictions and
specifications constituting the buyer’s standard and
supplied at prices to be agreed upon from time to time. The
buyer was entitled to test a sample of each batch of the
goods and after its approval the goods were to be released
for sale to the buyer. The products would bear certain
trade-marks being the property of the foreign company Ciba
Geigy of Basle. Tripartite agreements were also executed
between the buyer, the seller and the foreign company,
recognizing the buyer as the registered or licensed user of
the trademarks, authorising the seller to affix the trade-
marks on the products manufactured "as an agent for and on
behalf of the buyer and not of his own account" and the
right of the buyer being reserved to revoke the authority
given to the seller to affix the trade-marks. -
The respondent filed declaration for the purposes of
the levy of excise under the Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944 showing the wholesale prices of different classes of
goods sold by it during the period May, 1972 to May, 1975.
The declaration included the wholesale prices of the
different Resins manufactured under the two aforesaid
agreements. The Assistant Collector of Customs revised those
prices upwards on the basis that the wholesale price should
be the price for which the buyer sold the product in the
market. According to the Assistant Collector the buyer was
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the manufacturer of goods and not the seller-
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The Collector of Central Excise allowed the appeals of
the respondent and accepted the plea that the wholesale
price disclosed by the seller was the proper basis for
determining the excise- duty.
The Appellate orders were, however, revised by the
Central Government under sub-s.(2) of s.36 of the Act and
the orders made by the Assistant Collector were restored.
According to the Central Government the buyer is the person
engaged in the production of the goods and the seller merely
manufactures them on behalf of the buyer and that under the
agreements the seller is required to affix the trade-marks
of the buyer on the manufactured goods and that indicates
that the goods belong to the buyer.
The orders of the Central Govt. were challenged under
Article 226. The High Court held that the goods were
manufactured by the seller as its own goods, and therefore,
the wholesale price charged by the seller must form the true
basis for the levy of excise duty.
Dismissing the appeals of the Union of India,
^
HELD: 1. The High Court was right in concluding that
the wholesale price of the goods manufactured by the seller
is the wholesale price at which it sells those goods to the
buyer, and it is not the wholesale price at which the buyer
sells those goods to others. [101 D-E]
2. The relevant provisions of the agreements and the
other material on the record show that the manufacturing
programme is drawn up jointly by the buyer and the seller
and not merely by the buyer, and that the buyer is obliged
to purchase the manufactured product from the seller only if
it conforms to the buyer’s standard. For this purpose the
buyer is entitled to test a sample of each batch of the
manufactured product and it is only on approval by him that
the product is released for sale by the seller to the buyer.
It is apparent that the seller cannot be said to manufacture
the goods on behalf of the buyer. [100 B-C; F]
3. It is clear from the record that the trade-marks of
the buyer are to be affixed on those goods only which are
found to conform to the specifications or standard
stipulated by the buyer. All goods not approved by the buyer
cannot bear those trade-marks and are disposed of by the
sellers without the
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advantage of those trade-Larks. The trade-marks are affixed
only A after the goods have been approved by the buyer for
sale by the seller to the buyer. The seller owns the plant
and machinery, the raw material and the labour and
manufactures the goods and under the agreements, affixes the
trade-marks on the goods. The goods are manufactured by the
seller on its own account and the seller sells the goods
with the trade-marks affixed on them to the buyer.
Union of India v. Delhi Cloth and General Mills, [1963]
Supp. 1 S.C.R. 586, 592, 598, South Bihar Sugar Mills Ltd.,
etc. . Union of India and Others. [1968] S.C.R. 21 at 31,
Union of India and Others v. Free Indian Dry-Accumulators
Ltd. [1983] Excise Law Taxes 733 at 734 and Union of India
and others etc. etc. v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd. etc.
etc. [1983] Excise Law Times 1896, inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2619 of
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1977.
From the Judgment and Order dated 25.6.1977 of the
Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 1324 of
1976.
AND
Civil Appeal No. 4399 of 1985
From the Judgment and Order dated 14.12.1976 of the
Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No.. 68 of
1975.
K. Parasaran, Solicitor General, N.C. Talukdar, Suraj
Udai Singh, Dalveer Bhandari, C.V. Subba Rao and R.N. Poddar
for the Appellants.
N.A. Palkhiwala, J.C. Bhatt, D.B. Engineer, B.H. Antia,
Ravinder Narain, O.C. Mathur, Kamal Mehta, Talat Ansari,
Mrs. A.K. Verma, Ashok Sagar, hiss Rainu Walia, Sukumaran
and D.N. Misra for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J. These appeals by special leave are directed
against the judgments and orders of the Gujarat high Court
allowing two writ petitions preferred by the respondent
challenging the levy of excise duty. As they raise identical
questions of law for consideration they are disposed by a
common judgment
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The respondent is a company limited by shares. of the
total share capital, 65 per cent is owned by Atul Products
Limited, 30 per cent belongs to a foreign company known as
Ciba Geigy of Basle in Switzerland and the remaining 5 per
cent to Ciba Geigy of India Limited. The respondent Cibatul
Limited (referred to shortly as the "seller") entered into
an agreement with the Ciba Geigy of India Limited ("the
buyer") on March 24, 1971 under which certain specified
products, which included U.F. Resins and M.F. Resins, were
to be manufactured by the seller in accordance with a
manufacturing programme drawn up jointly by the seller and
the buyer. The resins were to be manufactured in accordance
with restrictions and specifications constituting the
buyer’s standard, and they were supplied at prices agreed
upon between the seller and the buyer from time to time. The
buyer was entitled to test a sample of each batch of these
goods, and it was only after it had given its approval that
the goods were to be released for sale to the buyer. Another
agreement between the two took place on June 1, 1975 in
respect of Epoxy Resins and the terms of the agreement were
similar to the terms of the earlier agreement. It was
understood that the products manufactured under the two
agreements would bear certain trade marks which were the
property of the foreign company, Ciba Geigy of Basle. In
this connection, on December 7, 1971 a tripartite agreement
was executed between the buyer the seller, and the foreign
company in respect of four trade-marks, Aerolite, Melocol,
Melolam and Resicart. The foreign company, which owned these
trade-marks, as well as the seller recognised the buyer as
the registered or licensed user thereof. The buyer
authorised the seller to affix the said trade-marks on the
products manufactured under the first contract, and the
seller was to do so "as an agent for and on behalf of the
buyer and not of his own account." The seller had also
agreed to refrain from selling or dealing in, directly or
indirectly, goods bearing the said trade-marks or any other
marks similar thereto save and except for the explicit
purpose of fulfilling the seller’s obligations under the
first agreement. The buyer reserved the right to revoke the
authority given to the seller to affix the trade-mark. A
similar tripartite agreement was executed between the three
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parties on December 1, 1973 in respect of the second
agreement between the buyers and the seller, namely, that
relating to Epoxy Resins. The trade-mark concerned was
Araldite.
The respondent filed a declaration for the purposes of
the levy of excise under the Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944 showing the wholesale prices of different classes of
goods sold by it
99
during the period May, 1972 to May, 1975. The declaration
included the wholesale prices of the different resins
manufactured under the two aforesaid agreements. The
Assistant Collector of Customs revised those prices upwards
on the basis that the wholesale price should be the price
for which the buyer sold the product in the market. The
Assistant Collector proceeded on the footing that the buyer
was the manufacturer of the goods and not the seller. The
respondent appealed to the Collector of Central Excise. The
appeals were allowed by the Collector, and he accepted the
plea that the wholesale price disclosed by the seller was
the proper basis for determining the excise duty. The
appellate orders were, however, revised by the Central
Government under sub-s.(2) of s. 36 of the Act, and the
orders made by the Assistant Collector were restored. The
respondent filed a writ petition in the Gujarat High Court
against the orders of the Central Government, and the High
Court held that the Central Government was wrong and the
appellate Collector was right on the question as to the
liability of the seller to excise duty.
The basis on which the Central Government proceeded in
holding that the wholesale price of the goods should be the
wholesale price charged by the buyer is that the goods were
manufactured by the seller on behalf of the buyer, specially
as they were embossed with the trade-mark of which the buyer
alone was the registered user in India, that the two
agreements between the seller and the buyer envisaged that
the goods were manufactured by the seller on behalf of the
buyer and that therefore the buyer itself should be regarded
as the manufacturer of the goods for the purpose of levying
excise duty. The High Court has differed from the view taken
by the Central Government and has held that the goods were
manufactured by the seller as its own goods, and therefore
the wholesale price charged by the seller must form the true
basis for the levy of excise duty.
Excise duty is levied under s. 3 of the Central Excises
and Salt Act, 1944 on goods manufactured in India and,
broadly, for the purposes of computing the duty the value of
the article is deemed under s. 4 of the Act (as it stood
before its amendment by Act XXII of 1973) to be the
wholesale cash price for which an article of the like kind
and quality is sold or is capable of being sold at the time
of the removal of the article chargeable with duty from the
factory for delivery at the place of manufacture. The words
"manufacture" and "manufacturer" have been defined by clause
(f) of s. 2 of the Act, and for the purposes of
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the present controversy what is relevant is that part of the
definition which defined "manufacturer of goods as being
any person who engages in their production or manufacture on
his own account." The appellant contends that on the facts
and circumstances of this case it must be held that the
buyer is the person engaged in the production of the goods
and the seller merely manufactures them on behalf of the
buyer.
The entire question before us is whether the goods are
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manufactured by the seller or are manufactured by the seller
on behalf of the buyer. The relevant provisions of the
agreements and the other material on the record show that
the manufacturing programme is drawn up jointly by the buyer
and the seller and
not merely by the buyer, and that the buyer is obliged to
purchase the manufactured product from the seller only if it
conforms to the buyer’s standard. For this purpose the buyer
is entitled to test a sample of each batch of the
manufactured product and it is only on approval by him that
the product is released for sale by the seller to the buyer.
In other words, the buyer has the right to reject the goods
if he does not approve of them. If the manufactured goods
are not in accordance with the buyer’s standard, they are
either reprocessed to bring them up to the requisite quality
or if that is not possible the goods are sold to the buyer
for a different purpose if they are compatible with the
specifications of some other product and provided that the
buyer has a need for that product, or the goods are sold to
others in the market as sub-standard goods at a lower price
of the goods are destroyed. It is significant to note that
the buyer is not obliged to purchase the goods manufactured
by the seller regardless of their quality, and that in the
event of rejection by the buyer the alternatives present
before the seller extent to the sale of the manufactured
goods to others or even to the very destruction of the
goods. It is apparent that the seller cannot be said to
manufacture the Roods on behalf of the buyer.
The appellant relies also on the circumstance that
under the agreements the seller is required to affix the
trade-marks of the buyer on the manufactured goods and, it
is said, that indicates that the goods belong to the buyer.
It seems to us clear from the record that the trade-marks of
the buyer are to be affixed on those goods only which are
found to conform to the specifications or standard
stipulated by the buyer. All goods not approved by the buyer
cannot bear those trade-marks and are disposed of by the
sellers without the advantage of those trade-marks. The
trade marks are affixed only after the goods
101
have been approved by the buyer for sale by the seller to
the buyer. The seller owns the plant and machinery, the raw
material and the labour and manufactures the goods and under
the agreements affixes the trade-marks on the goods. The
goods are manufactured by the seller on its own account and
the seller sells the goods with the trade marks affixed on
them to the buyer.
The appellant has invited our attention to certain
observations in Union of India v. Delhi Cloth and General
Mills [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 586 at 592 and 598., South Bihar
Sugar Mills Ltd.., etc. v. Union of India and Others, [1968]
3 S.C.R. 21 at 31., Union of India and Others v. Free India
Dry Accumulators Ltd. [1983] Excise Law Times 733 at 734.,
and Union of India & Others etc. etc. v. Bombay Tyre
International Ltd. etc. etc., [1983] Excise Law Times 1896.,
but in none of those observations do we find any acceptable
support for the proposition that the goods are manufactured
by the seller on behalf of the buyer.
In the result, we hold that the High Court is right in
concluding that the wholesale price of the goods
manufactured by the seller is the wholesale price at which
it sells those goods to the buyer, and it is not the
wholesale price at which the buyer sells those goods to
others.
The appeals are dismissed with costs.
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A.P.J. Appeals Dismissed.
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