Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KIRLOSKAR PNEUMATIC COMPANYLIMITED
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/05/1996
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
SEN, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCC (4) 453 JT 1996 (5) 26
1996 SCALE (4)317
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted. Heard the counsel for the parties.
This appeal is directed against, what is called,
"Minutes of the order" made by the Bombay High Court on
23rd June, 1995. The order reads:
"1 The Petitioners will file an
application for refund, in respect
of the consignments imported as
referred to in this Petition, in
the prescribed form as per the
amended section 27 of the Customs
Acts 1962, within 2 weeks from
today.
2. The Respondents will dispose of
the aforesaid Refund Claim, on
merits, within 10 weeks from the
filing of the same.
3. The Respondents shall not reject
the refund application on the
ground that it is time barred.
4. The Petition is disposed of
accordingly.
5. No order as to costs."
The Revenue is questioning the validity and correctness
of clause (3) of the said order whereby the High Court has
directed the authorities under the Customs Act not to reject
the respondent’s application for refund on the ground that
it is time barred and to dispose it of on merits.
The respondent imported certain goods between February
1983 and July 1985. There was a dispute between the
respondent and the Customs Authorities with respect to the
classification of goods. The duty as demanded by the
authorities was paid by the respondent and the goods
cleared. thereafter, the respondent filed the refund
application. The appellant says that the respondent
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preferred an appeal which was rejected by the appellate
authority and that instead of filing the further appeal, the
respondent approached the Bombay High Court. The respondent
disputes this statement. He says that he did not file any
appeal but approached the High Court straight away. Be that
as it may. The prayer in the writ petition was to issue an
appropriate writ, order and direction to the Customs
Authorities to refund the excess customs duty levied upon
the goods imported by the respondent and collected from it.
The respondent also claimed interest at the rate cf 18% per
annum on the said order. The writ petition was filed in the
year 1987.
The appellants state that they contested the writ
petition but the High Court passed the impugned ’minutes of
the order’. Indeed Mr.Hidayatullah, learned counsel for the
respondent states that the order impugned herein is the
standard order which is usually passed by the Bombay High
Court in all such matters.
In this appeal we are not concerned either with the
maintainability of the writ petition or its merits. The only
contention raised and which we are considering is whether
the direction given by the High Court that the Customs
Authorities "shall not reject the refund application on the
ground that it is time barred", is valid in law. With
respect we think that it is not.
In Collector of Central Excise, Chandigarh v. M/s.
Doaba Co-operative Sugar Mills Ltd. Jalandhar
[A.I.R. 1988 S.C. 2052 = 1988 (37) E.L.T. 478] this
Court had observed:
"6. It appears that where the duty
has been levied without the
authority of law or without
reference to any statutory
authority or the specific
provisions of the Act and the Rules
framed thereunder have no
application, the decision will be
guided by the general law and the
date of limitation would be the
starting point when the mistake or
the error comes to light. But in
making claims for refund before the
departmental authority, an assessee
is bound within four corners of the
Statute and the period of
limitation prescribed in the
Central Excise Act and the Rules
framed thereunder must be adhered
to. The authorities functioning
under the Act are bound by the
provisions of the Art. If the
proceedings are taken under the Act
by the department, the provisions
of limitation prescribed in the Act
will prevail. It may, however, be
open to the department to initiate
proceedings in the Civil Court for
recovery of the amount due to the
department in case when such a
remedy is open on the ground that
the money received by the assessee
was not in the nature of refund.
This was the view taken by the
Tribunal in a previous decision in
the case of Miles India Ltd. v. The
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Asstt. Collector of Customs but it
was assailed before this Court. The
appeal was withdrawn. This Court
observed that the Customs
Authorities, acting under the Act,
were justified in disallowing the
claim for refund as they were bound
by the period of limitation
provided therefor in the relevant
provisions of the Customs Act,
1962. If really the payment of the
duty was under a mistake of law,
the party might seek recourse to
such alternative remedy as it might
be advised. See the observations of
this Court in Miles India Ltd. v.
The Assistant Collector of
Customs,[1987 (30) E.L.T. 641
(S.C)= 289]."
Inasmuch as the earlier decision of this Court in
Miles India Ltd. v. Assistant Collector of Customs [1987
(30) E.L.T. 641 (S.C.)] has practically been reproduced in
the above extract, we do not think it necessary to refer to
that decision.
Section 27 of the Customs Act provides for claims for
refund of duty. The section has been substituted by a new
section by Central Act 40 of 1991 (with effect from
September 20, 1991). The amended Section 27 severely
curtails the right to refund but for the purpose of this
appeal, it is not necessary to refer to that aspect. Suffice
it to say that sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 27 (both
before and after amendment) provide for filing an
application for amendment within a period of six months of
the payment of duty except in a case where it has been paid
under protest. What is relevant herein is sub-section (4) of
unamended Section 27 and sub-section (3) of amended Section
27. It would be sufficient if we set out the said sub-
sections. Sub-section (4) of unamended Section 27 read as
follows:
"27(4) Save as provided in section
26, no claim for refund of any duty
shall be entertained except in
accordance with the provisions of
this section."
Sub-section (3) of amended Section 27 reads thus:
"27(3) Notwithstanding anything to
the contrary contained in any
judgment, decree, order or
direction of the Appellate Tribunal
or any Court or in any other
provision of this Act or the
regulation made thereunder or any
other law for the time being in
force, no refund shall be made
except as provided in sub-section
(2)".
According to these sub-sections, a claim for refund or
an order of refund can be made only in accordance with the
provisions of Section 27 which inter alia includes the
period of limitation mentioned therein. Mr.Hidayatullah
submitted that the period of limitation prescribed by
Section 27 does not apply either to a suit filed by the
importer or to a writ petition filed by him and that in such
cases the period of limitation would be three years. Learned
counsel refers to certain decisions of this Court to that
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effect. We shall assume for the purposes of this appeal that
it is so, notwithstanding the fact that the said question is
now pending before a larger Constitution on Bench of nine
Judges along with the issue relating to unjust enrichment.
Yet the question is whether it is permissible for the High
Court to direct the Authorities under the Act to act
contrary to the aforesaid statutory provision. We do not
think it is, even while acting under Article 226 of the
Constitution. The power conferred by Article 226/227 is
designed to effectuate the law, to enforce the Rule of law
and to ensure that the several authorities and organs of the
State act in accordance with law. It cannot be invoked for
directing the authorities to act contrary to law. In
particular, the Customs authorities who are the creatures of
the Customs Act, cannot be directed to ignore or act
contrary to Section 27, whether before or after amendment.
May be the High Court or a Civil Court is not bound by the
said provisions but the authorities under the Act are. Nor
can there be any question of the High Court clothing the
authorities with its power under Article 226 or the power of
a civil court. No such delegation or conferment can ever be
conceived. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the
direction contained in clause (3) of the impugned order is
unsustainable in law. When we expressed this view during the
hearing Mr.Hidayatullah requested that in such a case the
matter be remitted to the High Court and the High Court be
left free to dispose of the writ petition according to law.
The appeal is accordingly allowed, the order under appeal is
set aside in its entirety and the matter is remitted to the
High Court for disposal in accordance with law. We reiterate
that we express no opinion upon the maintainability or the
merits of the writ petition. That is for the High Court to
consider.
There shall be no order as to costs.