Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
A. V. VENKATESWARAN, COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAMCHAND SOBHRAJ WADHWANI AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/04/1961
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1506 1962 SCR (1) 753
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1962 SC1621 (90,137)
F 1963 SC1319 (7)
R 1964 SC1451 (7)
E 1964 SC1519 (7)
R 1966 SC 142 (6,13)
RF 1973 SC 194 (8)
RF 1990 SC 772 (22,32)
ACT:
Customs Duties-Fountain pens with nibs and caps plated with
gold-Rate of duty-Indian Tariff Act, 1934 (32 of 1934), Sch.
1, Items 45(3), 6(8).
Writ--Principles governing issue of-Alternative remedy
time barred--Application for writ, if lies-Constitution of
India, Art. 226.
HEADNOTE:
Under a licence granted for the import of fountain pens at
not less than Rs. 25 C.I.F. value, the respondent imported
Sheaffer pens from Australia, which had nibs which were gold
plated and also caps and clips of similar composition. The
imported goods were assessed to duty by the customs
authorities under item 61(8) of the First Schedule to the
Indian Tariff Act, 1934, dealing with "Articles, other than
cutlery and surgical instruments, plated with gold or
silver" which provided for a duty Of 781 per cent. ad
valorem, while the respondent claimed that the goods fell
within item 45(3) which related to the article described as
"Fountain pens, complete", the rate of duty being 30 per
cent. ad valorem. Section 191of the Sea Customs Act, 1878,
enabled any person aggrieved by an order of the Collector of
Customs to file a revision to the Central Government, but
the respondent, without resorting to this remedy filed a
writ application in the High Court of Bombay under Art. 226
of the Constitution of India to quash the imposition of the
duty at the higher rate and to direct the release of the
goods on payment of duty at 30 per cent. The Single judge
who disposed of the application took the view that fountain
pens did not cease to be fountain pens though they contained
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parts which were plated with gold, that so long as they were
"Fountain pens, complete" only duty under item 45(3) could
be levied and that, in the context of the items in the
Tariff Schedule, it was not reasonably possible for any
person to take a contrary view. Accordingly, the customs
authorities were restrained from enforcing payment of any
duty higher than 30 per cent. On appeal, the Appellate
Bench of the High Court agreed with the interpretation of
the tariff items and held that, though it was not the
practice to entertain writ petitions by parties who had not
exhausted their statutory remedies, as the remedy of
applying in revision to the
95
754
Central Government had become time-barred by the date of
hearing of the appeal, it would not interfere with the order
of the Single judge.
Held, that the High Court was in error in its view that
though the respondent had failed to exercise his statutory
remedy, the fact that it had become time-barred at the date
of the hearing of the appeal against the order in the
petition under Art. 22 6, was a good ground for the Court
to exercise its discretion in granting the relief prayed for
by the respondent in his petition.
Held, further (Sarkar, J., dissenting): (i) that the
consignment imported by the respondent was liable only to a
duty of 30 per cent. under item 45(3) in the First Schedule
to the Indian Tariff Act, 1934, and that the tariff items in
the Schedule were not reasonably capable of any other
construction.
(2) that as in the present case the levy of the duty under
entry 61(8) was manifestly erroneous, and the Central Board
of Revenue had issued a ruling to the effect that fountain
pens with nibs or caps which were gold-plated fell with
entry 61(8), it could not be said that the High Court had
exercised its discretion improperly in entertaining the writ
application so as to justify interference in an appeal under
Art. I36 of the Constitution.
Per Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo, Das Gupta and Rajagopala
Ayyangar, JJ.-The rule that a party who applies for the
issue of a high prerogative writ should, before he
approaches the court, have exhausted other remedies open to
him under the law, is not one which bars the jurisdiction of
the Court to entertain the petition or to deal with it, but
is rather a rule which courts have laid down for the
exercise of their discretion.
Union of India v. T. R. Varma, [1958] S.C.R. 499 and The
State of Uttar Pradesh v. Mohammad Nook, [1958] S.C.R. 595,
relied on.
Per Sarkar, J.-Item 61(8) in the First Schedule to the
Indian Tariff Act, 1934, is intended to apply to all gold
plated articles other than cutlery and surgical instruments,
while item 45(3) is applicable to fountain pens simpliciter,
that is, without gold plating. Such a view would harmonise
the different items in the Tariff Schedule and carry out the
intention of the legislature. The customs authorities were
correct in assessing gold plated fountain pens under entry
61(8).
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 388 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the August 19, 1955, of the Bombay High Court in Appeal No.
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53 of 1955.
755
C. K. Dhaphtary, Solicitor-General of India, K. B.
Choudhuri and B. H. Dhebar, for the appellant.
N. S. Bindra and R. S. Narula, for respondent No. 1.
B. H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 2.
1961. April 4. The Judgment of P. B. Gajendragadkar, IC.
R. Wanchoo, K. C. Das Gupta and N. Rajagopala Ayyangar, JJ.,
was delivered by Ayyangar, J. A. K.- Sarkar, J., delivered a
separate judgment.
AYYANGAR, J.-This appeal by special leave is against the
judgment and order of a Division Bench of the Bombay High
Court by which a writ of mandamus or certiorari granted to
the respondent was confirmed on appeal preferred by the
appellant now before us.
A few facts are necessary to be stated to understand the
matters in controversy and the points raised for our
decision. The respondent carries on business in Bombay and
he was granted on August 18, 1954, a licence under the
Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947, for the import of
fountain-pens at not less than Rs. 25 C.I.F. value each from
soft currency area, up to a defined amount. He placed an
order for the import of Sheaffer pens from Australia and a
consignment of these was received by air in Bombay in Octo-
ber 1954. The fountain-pens thus imported had nibs which
were gold plated and also caps and clips of similar
composition. The question in controversy relates to the
rate of duty to be charged on these im. ported pens. The
Schedule to the Indian Tariff Act, 1934, has an item
numbered 45(3) in relations to the article described, as
"fountain pens complete", the rate of duty being 30 per cent
and valorem. It was the case of the respondent that the
imported goods fell within this item and were liable to be
charged with duty at that rate’. The Custom authorities,
however, considered that the consignment fell within the
description "articles plated with gold or silver" being item
61(8) on which duty was payable at 781 per cent.
756
The Assistant Collector of Customs adjudicated the duty on
this latter basis and thereafter the respondent having
filed an appeal to the Collector of Customs, the levy was
upheld by order dated February 22, 1955.
Section 191 of the Sea Customs Act enables any person
aggrieved by an order of the Collector of Customs to file a
revision to the Central Government. The respondent, without
resorting to this remedy, filed a writ application in the
High Court of Bombay to quash the imposition of the duty at
the higher rate (certiorari) and to direct the release of
the goods on payment of duty at 30 per cent. (mandamus).
The application was resisted by the Collector of Customs,
who raised substantially two points: (1) that on the merits
the goods imported were "gold-plated articles"
notwithstanding their being fountain-pens and that the
proper rate of duty was that which had been determined by
the Assistant Customs Collector, (2) that the respondent had
another remedy open to him, viz., to file a revision to the
Central Government and that he was, therefore., disentitled
to move the High Court under-Art. 226 of the Constitution
before availing himself of the remedy specially provided by
statute. The writ petition came on for hearing before
justice Tendolkar, who by his order dated July 5, 1955,
recorded that on any reasonable construction of the items in
the Schedule to the Indian Customs Tariff, fountain-pens did
not cease to be fountain-pens" because they contained parts
which were plated with silver or gold and that so long as
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they were "fountain-pens complete", subject to any
exceptional cases of which this was not one, only duty at 30
per cent. under item 45(3) could be levied. The learned
Judge further held that the interpretation that he placed
upon item 45(3) in the context of the other entries in the
Tariff Schedule can "only be one and it is not reasonably
possible for any person to take a contrary view". In other
words, the learned Judge was of the opinion that the
construction put upon the entry by the Customs authorities
was unreasonable or perverse.
757
The objection to the writ petition based upon the petitioner
before him not having exhausted the statutory remedies
available to him was repelled by the learned Judge on the
ground that on the facts the decision to levy duty at 783
per cent. was without jurisdiction. The petition was,
therefore, allowed and the Customs authorities were, by
order of Court, restrained from enforcing payment of any
duty higher than 30 percent.
The Collector of Customs filed an appeal against this order
which was disposed of by a judgment delivered on behalf of
the Bench, by Chagla, C. J. The learned Chief Justice was
equally emphatic that no reasonable person could, on the
construction of the relevant items in the Schedule to the
Tariff Act, hold that the consignment of fountain-pens could
fall under any item other than 45(3) or be charged a duty
other than the 30 per cent. provided under that item.
Dealing with the other point about the writ petitioner not
having exhausted his statutory remedy of Revision to the
Government, the learned Chief Justice disagreed with the
view of the learned Single Judge that the Customs
authorities lacked or exceeded their jurisdiction in
assessing duty at a higher figure than was justified by the
relevant items of the Schedule to the Tariff Act. The
learned Chief Justice, after pointing out that it was the
settled practice of the Bombay High Court not to entertain
writ petitions by parties who had not exhausted their
statutory remedies, however, held that in the case before
the Bench the remedy of applying in Revision to the Central:
Government had become time-barred by the date’ of the
hearing of the appeal, and that on that ground he would not
interfere with the order of the learned Single Judge. The
appeal was, therefore, dismissed. The Collector of Customs
having obtained special leave from this Court has brought
this appeal before US.
The learned Solicitor-General appearing for the appellant
argued the appeal on the basis that the view of the learned
Judges of the Bombay High Court that on any reasonable
interpretation of the items in
758
the Schedule to the Tariff Act the consignment imported by
the respondent could have been liable only to a duty of 30
per cent. under item 45(3) was correct. We might add that
even apart from this concession bay for the purpose of
argument, we entirely agree with the learned Judges that the
tariff items in the Schedule are not reasonably capable of
any other construction.
In reaching this conclusion we have taken into account the
fact that "fountain-pens complete" were taken out of the
general item 45 ’Stationery etc.’ under which they were
originally included, by an amendment effected in 1949 in
pursuance of an international agreement and that though the
duty on stationery was thereafter increased from 30 to 37-
1/2 per cent., under the provisions of the Finance Act,
1949, --the duty of 30 per cent. fixed on fountain-pens re-
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mained unchanged. This at least showed that they were
treated as a specialized class of stationery which required
separate treatment. The only question therefore is whether
a fountain-pen in which certain of its essential parts are
gold or silver-plated falls outside the category of
"fountain-pens complete". It cannot be again said that anib, cap and clip are essential p
arts of a fountain-pen and
not more accessories, and that without them there would be
no question of having a "fountain-pen complete". Next it is
a well-known and recognized fact that most fountain-pens in
ordinary use have nibs ’Which are gold-plated. In this
connection it should not be overlooked that gold, apart from
being a store of value, is a metal which has industrial uses
by its malleability and its resistance to oxidation on
contact with acids and chemicals which enter into the
composition of ink. The use of gold plating for nibs is
therefore for increasing the utility of the nib for its
primary function of writing and not with a view to enhancing
its value by the cost of the metal. In the case before us
it would be noticed that the pens permitted to be imported
had to be not less than Rs. 25 each C.I.F. value, presumably
with a view to protect the market for cheaper pens of
indigenous manufacture. Most pens of the
759
value specified in the licence, it need hardly be added,
would have gold-plated nibs. It could certainly not be that
it was the intention of the authorities that notwithstanding
Entry 45(3) reading "fountain-pens complete" there could
practically be no import of pens under that item, because
with the limit of-value prescribed in the licence, the
permitted pens would mostly have gold-plated nibs.
Different considerations might arise when gold or gold
plating is used not for poses essential for the utility of
the pen as such, Purmerely as an addition to its value.
These cases have been excepted by Justice Tendolkar and we
endorse his remarks on this point. No such question arises
on the pens imported by the respondent and it was obviously
because of this, that the learned Solicitor General did not
address us on the correctness of the interpretation placed
on relative scope of entries 45(3) and 61(8), by the learned
Judges of the High Court.
The only point, therefore, requiring to be considered is
whether the High Court should have rejected the writ
petition of the respondent in limine because he had not
exhausted all the statutory remedies open to him for having
his grievance redressed. The contention of the learned-
Solioitor-General was that the existence of an alternative
remedy was a bar to the entertainment of a petition under
Art. 226 of the Constitution unless (1) there was a complete
lack of jurisdiction in the officer or authority to take the
action impugned, or (2) where the order prejudicial to the
writ petitioner has been passed in violation of the
principles of natural justice and could, therefore, be
treated as void or non est. In all other cases, he sub-
mitted, Courts should not entertain petitions under Art.
226, or in any event not grant any relief to such
petitioners. In the present case, he urged, the-High Court
in appeal had expressly dissented from the reasoning of the
learned Single Judge as regards the lack of jurisdiction of
the Customs Officers to adjudicate regarding the item under
which the article imported fell and the duty leviable
thereon. Nor was there any complaint in this case that the
order had been passed without an opportunity to the importer
760
to be heard, so as to be in violation of the principles of
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natural justice. The learned Solicitor-General questioned
the correctness of the reasoning of the learned Chief
Justice in condoning the conduct of the respon dent in not
moving the Government in revision by taking into account
the time that had elapsed between the date of the impugned
order and that on which the appeal was heard. The
submission was that if this were a proper test, the rule as
to a petitioner under Art. 226 having to exhaust his
remedies before he approached the Court would be practically
a dead letter because in most cases by the date the petition
comes on for hearing, the time for appealing or for applying
in revision to the departmental authorities would have
lapsed.
We see considerable force in the argument of the learned
Solicitor-General. We must, however, point out that the
rule that the party who applies for the issue of a high
prerogative writ should, before he approaches the Court,
have exhausted other remedies open to him under-the law, is
not one which bars the jurisdiction of the High Court to
entertain the petition or to deal with it, but is rather a
rule which Courts have laid down for the exercise of their
discretion. The law on this matter has been enunciated in
several decisions of this Court but it is sufficient to
refer to two cases: In Union of India v. T. R. Varma(l),
Venkatarama Ayyar,J., speaking for the Court said:
"It is well-settled that when an alternative
and equally efficacious remedy is open to a
litigant, he should be required to pursue that
remedy and not invoke the special jurisdiction
of the High Court to issue a -prerogative
writ. It is true that the existence
of another remedy does not affect the juris-
diction of the Court to issue a writ; but, as
observed by this Court in Rashid Ahmed v.
Municipal Board, Kairana (’a), ’the existence
of an adequate legal remedy is a thing to be
taken into consideration in the matter of
granting writs’. Vide also
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 499 503,504.
(1a) [1950] S.C.R. 566.
761
K.S. Rashid and Son v. The Income-tax
Investigation Commission(’). And where such
remedy exists, it will be a sound exercise of
discretion to refuse to interfere in a
petition under Art. 226, unless there are good
grounds therefore."
There is no difference between the above and the formulation
by Das, C. J., in The State of Uttar Pradesh v. Mohammad
Nooh (2), where he observed:
"............ It must be borne in mind that
there is no rule, with regard to certiorari as
there is with mandamus, that it will lie only
where there is no other equally effective
remedy. It is well established that, provided
the requisite grounds exist, certiorari will
lie although a right of appeal has been
conferred by statute. The fact that the
aggrieved party has another and adequate
remedy may be taken into consideration by the
superior court in arriving at a conclusion as
to whether it should, in exercise of its
discretion, issue a writ of certiorari to
quash the proceedings and decisions of
inferior courts subordinate to it and
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ordinarily the superior court will decline to
interfere until the aggrieved party has
exhausted his other statutory remedies, if
any. But this rule requiring the exhaustion
of statutory remedies before the writ will be
granted is a rule of policy, convenience and
discretion rather than a rule of law and
instances are numerous where a writ of
certiorari has been issued in spite ,of the
fact that the aggrieved party had other ade-
quate legal remedies."
After referring to a few cases in which the existence of an
alternative remedy had been held not to bar the issue of a
prerogative writ, the learned Chief Justice added:
"It has also been held that a litigant who has
lost his right of appeal or has failed to
perfect an appeal by no fault of his own may
in a proper case obtain a review by
certiorari."
In the result this Court held that the existence of other
legal remedies was not per se a bar to the issue
(1) [1954] S.C.R- 738.
96
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 595, 605-607.
762
Of a writ of certiorari and that the Court was not bound to
relegate the petitioner to the other legal remedies
available to him.
The passages in the judgments of this Court we have
extracted would indicate (,I) that the two exceptions which
the learned Solicitor-General formulated to the normal rule
as to the effect of the existence of an adequate alternative
remedy were by no means exhaustive, and (2) that even beyond
them a discretion vested. in the High Court to have
entertained the petition and granted the petitioner relief
notwithstanding the existence of an alternative remedy. We
need only add that the broad lines of the general principles
on which the Court should act having been clearly laid down,
their -application to the facts of each particular case must
necessarily be dependent on a variety of individual facts
which must govern the proper exercise of the discretion of
the Court, and that in a matter which is thus preeminently
one of discretion, it is not possible or even if it were, it
would not be desirable to lay down inflexible rules which
should be applied with rigidity in every case which comes up
before the Court.
The question that we have now to consider is has the
discretion which undoubtedly vested in the Court been so
improperly exercised as to call for our interference with
that order. We might premise this discussion by expressing
our opinion on two matters merely to prevent any
misunderstanding. First we entirely agree with Chagla, C.
J. that the order of the Assistant Collector of Customs in
assessing duty at 781 per cent. or of the Collector of
Customs in confirming the same, was not void for lack of
jurisdiction. The interpretation they put on the relevant
items in the Tariff Schedule might be erroneous, even
grossly erroneous, but this error was one committed in the
exercise of their jurisdiction and had not the effect of
lacing the resulting order beyond their jurisdiction.
Secondly, as we have already indicated, we must express our
dissent from the reasoning by which the learned Judges of
the High Court held that the writ petitioner was absolved
from the normal obligation to
763
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exhaust his statutory remedies before invoking the
jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution. If a petitioner has disabled himself from
availing himself of the statutory remedy by his own fault in
not doing so within the prescribed time, he, cannot
certainly be ’ permitted to urge that as a ground for the
Court dealing with his petition under Art. 226 to exercise
its discretion in his favour. Indeed, the second pass age
extracted from the judgment of the learned C. J. in Mohammad
Nooh’s case. (1) with its reference to the right to appeal
being lost "through no fault of his own" emphasizes this
aspect of the rule.
The question, however, still remains whether in the
circumstances of this ease we should interfere with the
decision of the High Court. In considering this, we cannot
lose sight of three matters: (1) that the levy of the duty
at 78-3/4 per cent. was manifestly erroneous and cannot be
supported on any reasonable construction of the items in the
Tariff Schedule, (2) it was stated by the Customs
authorities in answer to the writ petition, in the grounds
of appeal to the High Court under the Letters Patent, as
also in the statement of case before us, that the Central
Board of Revenue had issued a ruling to the effect that
fountain-pens with nibs or caps which were gold-platled fell
within item61(8). This might be some indication that the
adjudication by the Assistant Collector of Customs and by
the Customs Collector on appeal was in pursuance of a
settled policy of the entire hierarchy of the department.
Without going so far as to say that a Revision to the
Central Government might in the circumstances be a mere
futility, we consider that this is not a matter which would
be wholly irrelevant for being taken into account in
disposing of the appeal before us. After all, the basis of
the rule by which Courts insist upon a person exhausting his
remedies before making application for the issue of a
prerogative writ is that the Court’s jurisdiction ought not
to be lightly invoked when the subject can have justice done
to him by resorting to the remedies prescribed by statutes.
(3) Lastly, the learned
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 595, 605-607.
764
Solicitor-General does not dispute the correctness of the
principle of law as enunciated by Chagla, C. J., his
complaint is that the law as laid down by the learned Chief
Justice has not. been properly applied to the facts of the
case before him. If the challenge to the judgment of the
High Court were of the former type, this Court might have to
interfere to lay down the law correctly lest error creep
into the administration of justice. But where the error is
only in the application of the law correctly understood to
the, facts of a particular case, we should be persuaded that
there has been a miscarriage of justice in the case before
us before being invited to interfere; and this the learned
Solicitor-General has not succeeded in doing. It would be
remembered that the question is not whether if the
respondent’s application were before us, we should have
directed the writ to issue, but whether the learned Judges
of the High Court having in their discretion which they
admittedly possessed made an order, there is justification
for our interfering with it. The two matters set out
earlier should suffice to show that no interference could
be called for in this appeal.
We consider, therefore, on the whole and taking into account
the peculiar circumstances of this case that the High Court
has not exercised its discretion improperly in entertaining
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the writ application or granting the relief prayed for by
the respondent and that no care for interference by us in an
appeal under Art. 136 of the Constitution has been made out.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
SARKAR, J.-In this case the respondent had imported a
certain number of fountain-pens plated with gold. The goods
were assessed to import duty by an assessing officer of the
Indian Customs under item 61(8) of the first schedule to the
Customs Tariff which dealt with "Articles, other than
cutlery and surgical instruments, plated with gold or
silver" and provided for a duty of 78-3/4 per cent. ad
valorem. The respondent appealed from this assessment to
the Collector of Customs under a. 188 of the Sea Customs
Act, 1878, on the ground that the assessment should have
been
765
under item 45(3) of that schedule which dealt with
"Fountain-pens, complete" and provided for a duty of 30
percent ad valorem. He did not dispute that the fountain-
pens imported by him were, gold plated. His appeal was
dismissed. The respondent then moved the High Court at
Bombay for a writ to quash the order of assessment under
item 61(8). The application was allowed by Tendolkar T. who
issued a writ of mandamus directing the Collector of Customs
to release the goods upon payment of the duty specified in
item 45(3). The appeal by the Collector of Customs from the
order of Tendol’kar, J., to an appellate bench of the High
Court was dismissed. The Collector has therefore filed the
present appeal.
The first question is, whether the writ should have been
refused on the ground that the respondent had another
remedy, namely, an application to the Central Government
under s. 191 of the Sea Customs Act to revise the order of
the Collector. Tandolkar, J., held that the writ could
issue though the other remedy had not been pursued, as the
order of assessment under item 51(8) was without
jurisdiction. This was clearly wrong. The Collector had
ample jurisdiction to decide under which item in the
schedule the fountain-pens had to be assessed to duty, and
if he made a mistake in his decision that did not make his
order one without jurisdiction: cp. Gulabdas & Co. v.
Assistant Collector of Customs (1). The learned Judges of
the appellate bench held that the writ was properly issued,
not because the assessing authority had no jurisdiction to
assess the goods under item 61(8), but because at the date
the matter had come before them, the other remedy had
become barred. This again is,in my view, plainly erroneous
for a party who by his own conduct deprives himself of the
remedy available to him, cannot have a better right to a
writ than a party who has not so deprived himself.
Normally and the present has not been shown to be other than
a normal case a writ of mandamus is not issued if other
remedies are available. There would be stronger reason for
following this rule where the obligation
(1) A.1,R. 1957 S-C- 733-
766
sought to be enforced by the writ is created by a statute
and that statute itself provide,% the remedy for its breach.
It should be the duty, of the courts to see that the
statutory provisions are observed and, therefore, that the
statutory authorities are given the opportunity to decide
the question which the statute requires them to decide.
The fact that the Central Government had on a prior occasion
decided, as appears in this case to have happened, that
fountain-pens of the kind which the respondent had imported,
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were liable to ditty under item 61(8) cannot furnish any
reason justifying a departure from the normal rule or the
issue of a writ without that government having been moved
under s. 191. This prior decision of the Central Government
could be a reason for such departure only on the presumption
that it would not change its view even if that view was
shown to be incorrect. I cannot imagine that a court can
ever make such a presumption. Therefore, it seems to me
that it would have been proper to refuse the writ on the
ground that the respondent had another remedy available to
him which he had not pursued. On the present occasion,
however, I do not wish’ to decide the case on that ground.
Next, I feel the gravest doubt if the case is one for the
issue of a writ of mandamus. It is of interest to observe
that the respondent had in his petition to the High Court
himself asked for a writ of certiorari. A writ of mandamus
issues in respect of a ministerial duty imposed by a
statute; it cannot issue where the duty to be performed is
of a judicial nature, except for the purpose of directing
that the judicial duty should be performed, that is, a
decision should be given on the question raised. In John
Shortt’s book on Informations, Mandamus and Prohibition it
is stated at p. 256:
"If the duty be of a judicial character a
mandamus will be granted only where there is a
refusal to perform it in any way; not where it
is done in one way rather than another,
erroneously instead of properly. In other
words, the Court will only
767
insist that the person who is the judge shall
act as such; but it will not dictate in any
way what his judgment should be.
If, however, the public act to be performed is
of a purely ministerial kind, the Court will
by mandamus compel the specific act to be done
in the manner which to it seems lawful."
It does not seem to me that the duty which the Sea Customs
Act created and the performance of which was sought to be
enforced by a writ in the present case, can properly be said
to be a ministerial duty. That duty was to decide which
item in the Customs Tariff was applicable to the respon-
dent’s goods and to realise the customs duty specified in
that item. In so far as the statute required the officer to
realise the Customs levy, I find it difficult to see how it
can be said to be a public duty to the performance of which
the respondent had a legal right and without this right he
was not entitled to the mandamus: see Ex parte Napier(’).
In so far again, as the Act required the Customs Officer to
choose the proper item in the Customs Tariff for assessment
of the customs levy on goods, it in my view involves
performance of work of a quasi-judicial nature. The
observation of Das, J., in Province of Bombay v. K. S.
Advani (), which I am about to read, fully fits this case:
"If a statutory authority has power to do any act which will
prejudicially affect the subject, then, although there are
not two parties apart from the authority and the contest is
between the authority proposing to do the act and the
subject opposing it, the final determination of the
authority will yet be a quasi-judical act provided the
authority is required by the statute to act judicially."
’Now the Sea Customs Act empowers the Customs authorities to
impose a certain duty on goods imported and this no doubt
prejudicially affects the importer. The Act, further
clearly requires the authorities to proceed judicially in
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imposing that duty when a dispute arises, that is, after
giving a hearing to the party affected: see as. 29, 31 and
32 of the Act. In this case a hearing
(1) (1852) 18 Q.B. 692.
(2) [1950] S.C.R. 62I, 725.
768
was in fact given to the respondent. This taken with the
provisions as to a right of appeal from the decision Of the
first assessing officer and as to the right to move the
government in revision from the decision in the appeal,
would clearly indicate that the authorities have to act
judicially. In Gulabdas & Co. v. Assistant Collector(1)
this Court proceeded on the basis that the duty of
assessing the customs levy was of a judicial nature.
Therefore I feel the gravest doubt, if the present is a case
where a mandamus could at all issue.
No doubt if a mandamus could not issue because the act which
the statute required to be performed was not a ministerial
one but judicial in its character, the case might be a fit
one for the issue of a writ of certiorari. But that writ
cannot, in any event, issue unless the proceedings disclosed
an error apparent on their face. In issuing a certiorari
again, the Court does not examine the judicial act
questioned as if it was hearing an appeal in respect of it:
see Satyanarayan Laxminarayan Hegde v. Mallikarjun
Bhavanappa Tirumale(2). I do not propose to discuss this
question further in the present case, for it was not
considered by the High Court nor raised at our bar. I
proceed on the basis that it was a case where an application
for a mandamus Jay.
The respondent, in substance, asked for and obtained a writ
directing the Customs authorities to release the goods on
payment of duty at the rate of 30 per cent. ad valorem as
prescribed by item 45(3). This was on the basis that the
duty should have been levied under that item and not under
item 61(8) as the Customs authorities had done.
The question then is, was there a clear duty on the
assessing authorities to assess the goods under item 45(3)
dealing with "Fountain-pens, completed and not to do so
under item 61(8) dealing with "Articles, other than cutlery
and surgical instruments, plated with gold". All the
learned Judges of the High Court agreed that this clear duty
had to be established before the respondent could be held
entitled to a mandamus and they found that the Act created
such
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 733.
(2) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 890, 901.
769
a duty. They said that item 45(3) was a specific provision
and therefore it had to be applied in preference to item
61(8) which was a general provision. I am unable to agree
with this view.
What, apparently, the learned Judges had in mind and
applied, was the rule of construction of statutes that when
two provisions in an Act are inconsistent with each other,
if one is specific and the other general, the specific
provision prevails over the general. Now, this rule like
all other rules of construction, derives its justification
from the fact that it assists in ascertaining the intention
of the legislature. The reason why it so assists is this.
When two provisions enacted by the legislature, are
inconsistent and one cannot operate at all if the other is
given full effect, a question arises as to what the
legislature intended. Clearly, it could not have intended
that a provision that it enacted should have no operation at
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all. Therefore it is to be presumed that the legislature
intended that both the provisions would at least have some
effect, if they could not have their full effect. The rule
under discussion gives effect to this presumed intention of
the legislature. In order to give effect to this intention,
the rule provides that the provision with a narrower scope
of operation should have effect so far as it goes, in
preference to the provision with the larger scope of
operation so as to restrict the operation of the latter
which, without such restriction, would have wiped the
narrower provision out of the statute book altogether. This
rule permits both the provisions to have effect; it reduces
the scope of one and prevents the other from becoming a dead
letter. This aspect of the rule would, I believe, appear
clearly from a statement of it by Sir John Romillyn pretty
v. Solly(1) which I now set out:
"The rule is, that wherever there is a
particular enactment and a general enactment
in the same statute, and the latter, taken in
its most comprehensive sense, would overrule
the former, the particular enactment must be
operative, and the general
(1) (1859) 26 Beav. 6o6; 53 E.R. 1032.
770
enactment must be taken to affect only the
other parts of the statute to which it may
properly
apply."
The test of the applicability of the rule, therefore, is
that one enactment must overrule the-other. The one
overruled is called specific only in comparison with the
other which is in the same way only, called general. There
need be nothing inherent in the nature of the enactments
which, apart from a consideration of their comparative
scopes, mark one out as specific and the other as general.
When one overrules the other, it must include within its
scope that other and so becomes general in comparison with
the other. If two provisions were merely in conflict with
each other, each affecting the other and none overruling the
other and itself remaining in force, no question of calling
one general and the other specific would arise.
I should suppose, when Sir John Romilly talked of one
enactment overruling the other. he meant completely
overruling. That would make the rule sensible for, then it
would clearly be a guide to the intention of the legislature
which is that, all tile provisions are intended to have
effect. This reason to support the rule would not exist if
it was applied to a case where the provisions only partially
affected each other for, then, both the provisions would
have at least some operation. It would further be
impossible to say from a comparison of the degrees of the
effect of each on the other, if such comparison was
possible, what the intention of the legislature was. I am
not aware that it has ever been said that when two pro.
visions partially affect each other, without one completely
overruling the other, the legislature intended the one less
affected should yield to the other or even the other way
about. To such a case the rule would, in my view, have no
application.
The present is a case of that kind. I now confine myself
only to items 45(3) and 61(8) for, no question as to any
other item in the Tariff arises for applying the rule. If
gold plated fountain-pens were assessed under item 61(8),
there would still be plenty of scope left for item 45(3) to
operate upon, for, there would
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771
be many kinds of complete fountain-pens without gold
plating. Likewise also if gold plated fountain-pens were
assessed under item 45(3), there might be many other gold
plated articles for being assessed under item 61(8). Item
61(8) cannot be said to overrule item 45(3) completely.
Item 61(8) cannot be said to be a general provision and item
45(3) a specific one. There is no scope here of applying
the rule giving effect to a specific enactment in preference
to the general.
What then should be done? Under which item should the gold
plated fountain-pens then be assessed to duty? In my view,
they were properly assessed under item 61(8). The item is
clearly intended to apply to all gold plated articles other
than the two expressly excepted, namely, cutlery and
surgical instruments. There is no reason why this intention
should not be given effect to. The Customs Tariff Schedule
no doubt makes separate provisions for various individual
articles. A fountain-pen is one of such articles. If a
gold plated fountain-pen is for the reason that fountain-
pens are separately provided for, to be taken out Of item
61(8), all other articles separately dealt with in the
schedule would have for the same reason, to be taken out of
that item even though they happen to be plated with gold.
The result of that would be that item 61(8) would apply to
those articles which are not ,separately provided, and as
Customs Tariff Schedules are made as exhaustive as they can
be, there would be very few articles, if any, left to which
item 61(8) might be applied. It does not, seem to me that
this could have been intended.
Item 61(8), as already stated, is intended to take in all
gold plated articles except cutlery and surgical
instruments. A proper construction of this item must give
effect to this intention. Item 45(3) applies to fountain-
pens. Now it is not necessary for a fountain-pen to be gold
plated at all. Indeed the large majority of them are not
gold plated. It is true that a fountain pen does not cease
to be a fountain pen because it is plated with gold. It is,
however, equally true that a gold plated fountain-pen is an
article plated with gold. A fountain-pen may or may not be
772
gold plated but a gold plated article can only be a gold
plated article. Therefore, it seems to me that item 45(3)
was intended to apply to fountain pens simpliciter, that is,
without gold plating or other embellishments which might
properly bring them under another item in the schedule.
This, in my view, would best harmonise the different items
in the Tariff schedule and carry out the intention of the
legislature. This can be illustrated by an example.
Suppose a fountain-pen was Studded with diamonds. Could it
then be said that the legislature intended to pose on them a
duty of 30 per cent. ad valorem under item 45(3) and the
diamonds were not intended to be assessed under item 61(10)
which deals with jewels and provides for a higher duty. I
do not think that a possible view to take.
I think, therefore, that the assessment in the present case
under item 61(8) was proper. I would hence allow the
appeal.
By COURT: In accordance with the opinion of the majority,
this appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.