Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, MADRAS & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C.TARACHAND
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/04/1974
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1209 1974 SCR (3) 852
1974 SCC (4) 540
ACT:
Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947--S. 3--Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent had imported sewing machine needles under a
licence. Claiming that the import licence did not ’cover
the needles for domestic sewing machines the Customs
Authorities imposed a penalty and confiscated the goods.
The respondent claimed that the needles imported could be
used in both domestic and industrial sewing machines or were
interchangeable and that the prohibition was not meant for
such interchangeable needles which could be used for
"domestic" as well as "industrial" sewing machines but was
confined to needles capable of being used only for domestic
sewing machines. A single Judge of the High Court get aside
the penalty but confirmed the order of confiscation. On
appeal the Division Bench, without going into the other
question raised by the respondent, held that there was no
prohibition or restriction during the relevant period for
the import of domestic sewing machine needles. It therefore
quashed the confiscation order.
Allowing the appeal and remitting the case to the High
Court,
HELD : There was the required prohibition against import
without licence of needles specified. Sec. 3 of the imports
JUDGMENT:
prohibition and restriction of imports and cl. 3 of the
Import Control Order directly prohibits, in unambiguous and
mandatory terms that "no person shall import any goods of
the description specified in Schedule I except under and in
accordance with the licence or a customs clearance, permit
granted by. the Central Government or by any officer
specified in Schedule II". This language cannot have a
meaning other than that the prohibition was there so long as
the goods of the description given in the schedule were not
imported in accordance with the import licence. [856 E; 854
H; 855 A-B]
(2)The prohibition is conditional in as much as it can be
lifted by a licence which permits it; the question whether
the respondent’s licence covered the particular goods
imported, was not specifically considered or decided by the
division bench. The division bench did not also consider it
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necessary to decide whether any rules of natural justice
were violated at the inquiry held. If the customs
authorities had not acted in accordance with law in holding
the imported goods to be of the prohibited category the High
Court could correct this error of law. [855 D-E]
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1161 of
1973.
Appeal by Special Leave from the judgment and order dated
the 26th June, 1973 of the, Madras High Court in Writ Appeal
No. 381 of 1972 and 106 of 1973.
G. L. Sanghi and S. P. Nayar, for the appellants.
K. Jayaram, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BEG, J.-The Collector of Customs, Madras, has come up, by
grant of special leave to appeal, against the judgment of a
Division Bench of the Madras High Court quashing an order of
the Central Government which confirmed an order of the,
appellant confiscating
853
a large quantity of sewing machine needles. The respondent
had imported the needles under a licence which did not,
according to the case of the Customs’ Department, cover the
goods imported. A learned Single Judge of the High Court
had set aside a penalty of Rs. 5,000/imposed upon the
respondent as the sewing needles imported by the petitioner-
respondent were not, according to the learned judge, proved
to belong to the prohibited class, but the confiscation
order bad, rather inconsistently, been maintained. On an
appeal by the, respondent against the refusal to quash the
confiscation order, the Division Bench of the Madras High
Court came to the conclusion that there was no prohibition
at all as contemplated by Section 3 of the Import Control
Order, 1955, made under Sections 3 & 4A of the Imports &
Exports (Control) Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred to as ’the
Act’), so that no further question need be considered. The
Division Bench, therefore, did not go into the other
questions raised by the respondent, who was petitioner
before the High Court, relating to violation of rules of
natural justice or the merits of the case that the sewing
needles imported were covered by the licence. It,
therefore, held that the confiscation order could not stand
and had to be quashed with the penalty.
The Division Bench was of opinion that a prohibition or
restriction authorised by the Act should be imposed by a
Control Order such as the Control Order of 1955 duly
notified in the official Gazette and not by any other means.
It held that the prohibition relied upon by the Customs
Department in the instant case did not satisfy this
requirement.
Section 3 of the Act reads as follows :
"3. Powers to prohibit or restrict imports and
exports.
(1)The Central Government may, by order
published in. the official Gazette, make
provisions for prohibiting, restricting or
otherwise controlling in all cases or in
specified classes of cases, and subject to
such exceptions, if any, as may be made by or
under the order :-
(a) the import, export, carriage coastwise
or shipment as ships stores of goods of any
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specified description;
(b) the bringing into any port or place in
India of goods of any specified description
intended to be taken out of India-without
being removed from the ship or conveyance in
which they are being carried.
(2) All goods to which any order under sub-
section (1) applies shall be deemed to be
goods of which the import or export has been
prohibited under section 1 1 of the Customs
Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), and all the provisions
of that Act shall have effect accordingly.
(3)Notwithstanding anything contained in
the aforesaid Act, the Central Government may,
by order published in the Official Gazette,
prohibit, restrict or impose conditions on the
clearance, whether for home consumption or for
shipinent abroad of any goods or class of
goods imported into India.
854
And clause 3 of the Import Control Order 1955
lays down
"3. Restriction of Import of certain goods.-
(1) Save as otherwise provided in this Order,
no person shall import any goods of the
description specified in Schedule I,-except
under, and in accordance with, a licence or a
customs clearance permit granted by the
Central Government or by any officer specified
in Schedule 11.
(2)If, in any ease, it is found that the
goods imported under a licence do not conform
to the description given in the licence or
were shipped prior to the date of issue of the
licence under which they are claimed to have
been imported, then,’ without prejudice to any
action that may be taken against the licensee
under the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), in
respect of the said importation, the licence
may be treated as having been utilised for
importing the, said goods".
Item 288 of Schedule 1 of the Control Order
specifies
"(a) parts of sewing machines domestic.
(b) Needles for domestic sewing machines".
The case of the Customs Department is that the
imported sewing machine needles fall under
this description. The contention is that, as
they were duly notified, no question of any
failure to impose a prohibition in accordance
with the provisions of the Act arose.
The Division Bench had held :
"Our attention, however, was invited by the
learned Counsel for the Central Government to
Section 3 of the Act and the Import Control
Order, 1955. That Section merely invests the
Central Government with power to prohibit,
restrict or otherwise control specific goods
or classes of goods specified, subject to
exceptions. Such prohibition or restriction
should be made by an order published in the
official Gazette. The Imports Control Order,
1955, as applicable to the relevant year, did
not specify, as far as our attention was
drawn, the goods imported in the instant case.
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Section 3 in the order does-not prohibit the
import of, any goods whatever, if it is done
under a licence. But what it does is to
prohibit a person from importing any goods of
the description specified in Schedule 1,
except as specified and permitted by the
proper authority. It follows, therefore, that
there was no prohibition or restriction during
the relevant period to the importation of
domestic sewing machine needles. The word
nil’ in the policy book does not mean anything
in the nature of prohibition or restriction".
We regret that we are unable to concur with the reasoning of
the Division Bench. We find that Section 3 of the Act
clearly provides for prohibition and restriction of imports
and that. clause 3 of the Control Order directly prohibits,
in unambiguous and mandatory terms, that "no person shall
import any good of the description specified in Schedule I
except under and in accordance with the licence or a
855
Customs clearance permit granted by the Central Govt. or by
any officer specified in Schedule 2". This language cannot
have a meaning other than that the prohibition is there so
long as goods of the description given in the schedule are
not imported in accordance with an import licence. The case
of the Department is that the import licence of the
respondent does not cover "needles for domestic sewing
machines" which the respondent had imported.
It was urged on behalf of the respondent that it was
demonstrated that the needles actually imported could be
used in both domestic and industrial sewing machines or were
interchangeable. According to the respondent, the
prohibition was not meant for such interchangeable needles
which could be used for "domestic" as well as "industrial"
sewing machines but was confined to needles capable of being
used only for domestic sewing machines. This question,
among other questions, was not specifically considered or
decided by the Division bench. The Division Beach did not
consider it necessary to decide whether any rules of natural
justice were violated at the inquiry held. If the Customs
authorities had not acted in accordance with law in holding
the imported goods to be of the prohibited category the High
Court could correct its error of law. If they had violated
any rule of natural justice the case could be remitted to
them for decision afresh. It is agreed by learned Counsel
for both sides that the Division Bench should decide
questions of law left undecided by it if the Division Bench
was in error in holding, on a preliminary question, that no
prohibition to import needles for domestic sewing machines
without a licence had been imposed at all. As we are of
opinion that the prohibition is conditional, in as much as
it can be lifted by a licence which permits it, the real
question which will, ultimately, have to be decided is
whether the respondent’s licence covers the particular goods
imported.
Before proceeding further, we may observe that there, were
references in the order of the learned Single Judge as well
as of the Division Bench to what is known as the "Red Book"
containing the "Import Trade Control Policy" with regard to
various types of goods including needles for domestic sewing
machines. In the "Red Book" the word ’nil’ appeared against
the item in question in the column for "policy" for the
relevant year. Therefore, the learned Single Judge of the
Madras High Court had relied upon a decision of this Court
in the Joint Chief Controller of Imports & Exports, Madras
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v. M/S. Amichand Mutha etc.(1) where it was held (at page
272) :
"The last point urged was that subsequent to
October 1957, Government of India changed its
policy with respect to import of fountain pens
with which some of the present appeals are
concerned. This it was urged amounted to a
ban on the import of fountain pens and it
would not be open to the Joint Chief
Controller to issue any licence for any
period, be it January-June 1957, after the
import of fountain pens had been banned from
October 1957. Now there is no
(1) [1966] 1 SCR 262 @ 272.
856
doubt that it is open to the Central
Government under S. 3 to prohibit the import
of any article but that can only be done by an
order published in the official gazette by the
Central Government under S. 3 The High Court
has found that no such order under S.
3 of the
Act has been published. Nor has any such
order by the Central Government been brought
to our notice. All that has been said is that
in the declaration of policy as to import, the
word"nil" appears against fountain pens. That
necessarily does not amount to prohibition of
import of fountain pens unless there is an
order of the Central Government to that effect
published in the official gazette. We
therefore agree with the High Court that
unless such an order is produced it would be
open to the licensing authority to issue a
licence for the period of January, June 1957
even after October 1, 1957".
We do not think that the above mentioned reference to the
Red Book was at all necessary here or that a decision in a
case where the Customs authorities relied merely on
something found in the Red Book assists us in the case
before us. Here, we have the item No. 288 in Schedule I
read with clause 3 of the Control Order which was duly
published in the Official Gazette. This had the effect of a
categorical prohibition against needles satisfying the
description but not covered by a licence. We think that a
reference to the Red Book, in the instant case, seems to
have misled learned Judges in the High Court.
The result is that we hold that there is the required
prohibition against import without licence of needles
specified. Other questions of law which were not gone into
by the High Court can now be considered and decided by it.
Accordingly, we allow this appeal, set aside the judgment
and order of the Division Bench, so that +,he appeal is now
restored to its original number in the High Court. It may
be heard and decided in accordance with law. In the
circumstances of the case, we award no costs of the appeal
to this Court.
P.B.R.
Appeal allowed.
857