Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTS AUTHORITY OF INDIA ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S GRAND SLAM INTERNATIONAL & OM ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/02/1995
BENCH:
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
BENCH:
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC (3) 151 JT 1995 (2) 452
1995 SCALE (1)859
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
1. International Airports Authority of India (hereinafter
referred to as ’IAAI’) and the Central Warehousing
Corporation, Container Freight Station, Patparganj (in brief
’CWC’) obtained leave of this Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution of India against direction issued by the High
Court of Delhi for release of imported goods without payment
of any demurrage charges for the period for which detention
certificate had been issued by the Customs Authorities.
2. What persuaded the High Court to take this view in
favour of the respondents was founded on construction of
Section 45(2) of the Customs Act, 1962 ("Act" for short) and
issuance of detention certificate by the Customs
Authorities. What is the nature of the certificates?
Whether
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they arc binding on the IAAI? Is there any conflict in the
Public Notice issued by the Customs Authorities and
Regulations framed by the IAAI, are some of the questions
which arise for consideration in these appeals. But before
adverting to these issues facts in brief may be mentioned.
3. In Appeal No.798 of 1992 the respondent filed with
the Customs Authorities bill of entry on cargo terminal
alongwith all documents to seek clearance of goods, namely,
printing papers etc. of CIF value of Rs.17,846.00. The
valuation given in the bill of entry was objected to by
Additional Collector of Customs, and he passed an order on
8th November 1989 enhancing the value of the goods and di-
recting confiscation of the same. In appeal the Customs,
Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi
quashed the order of the Additional Collector of Customs on
3rd July 1990. Since the order enhancing the valuation and
directing confiscation was quashed the Collector of Customs
issued detention certificate from 7.8.1989 to 12.7.1990. It
was mentioned in the certificate that the detention was due
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to case of the respondent pending before the Collector and,
in the appeal. The respondent. thereupon applied for waiver
of the demurrage charged for the relevant period. On 18th
December 1990 it presented an application showing as ’out of
charge’ of the Customs. But on 9th January 1991 it was
informed by the appellant that the total liability of the
demurrage charges was Rs. 1,49, 100/- out of which
Rs.79,364/- was waived for the period of detention that is,
7.8.89 to 12.7.90. The appellant further condoned the period
from 18.12.90 to 9.1.91 as the application for waiver was
received and processed during this period. According to the
appellant the respondent was liable to pay Rs,69, 736/- as
on 9.1.91 and thereafter the liability was Rs.300/- per
package per week or part thereof The liability of the re-
spondent till 12.6.1991 was determined at Rs. 1,15,936/-.
4. In Appeal No.4227 of 1992 the respondent imported a
consignment of wool waste. It was seized by the Collector
of Customs under Section 1 10 of the Act as on sample
examination it appeared’ to be synthetic waste which was
restricted item which could not be imported without a valid
import licence. The respondent was issued notice to show
cause why the goods of declared value of Rs. 1,93,237/-
should not be confiscated under Section 111(d) and III (in)
of the Act and action under Section 112 be taken. The
explanation of the respondent that test being based on
sample drawn on 10% examination was not correct nor did it
represent test of entire consignment, was not accepted. And
the respondent was given an option to clear the goods on
payment of Rs.50,000/as fine and in addition penalty of Rs.
1,00,000/-. In appeal on test of 7 1 % of consignment by
the chemical examiner it was held that consignment was wool
waste. Consequently the appeal was allowed. And in
:pursuance of the order of the Tribunal the Additional
Collector of Customs passed the order dated 17th December
1990 directing release of the On 24.1.1991 the Assistant
Collector sent a letter to the appellant that since the
goods of the respondent were seized by Customs Department on
29th April, 1986 and they have been directed to be released
by the Additional Collector of Customs on 17.12.1990 the,
’demurrage/ ground rent and other charges accrued on
consignment from 29.4.1986 to 29.12.1990 may be
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waived’. The appellant replied this letter on 25.1.1991
informing the Assistant Collector of Customs that the matter
for waiver of ground rent for the period 31.1,1987 to
29.12.1990 has been referred to the Regional Office/Head
Office. But the Assistant Collector, Customs was requested
to inform the importer that they will have to bear entry
fee, handling and insurance charges and ground rent after
29.12.1990 in case the Head Office agrees for waiver.
5.In Appeal No. 3971 of 1992 the respondent had imported
multi-cable-transit/ cable sealing system. The clearance of
goods was claimed under Tariff Item No.85.47 on payment of
duty @ 135.75%. The department on the other hand directed it
to be cleared by paying duty @ 181.75% under Tariff Item
No.39. However, the claim of the respondent was ultimately
accepted. And provisional clearance was granted on payment
of demurrage charges. After the claim was accepted the
respondent wrote a letter to the appellant that since the
claim had been accepted by the Customs Authorities and IAAI
at the time of release had stated that this question of
refund shall be considered after final decision was taken by
the Customs Authorities the amount of Rs.3,26,645/- paid to-
wards demurrage may be refunded. But the respondent was
informed that the claim of refund was not admissible.
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6.In each of these cases the Customs Department had issued
Detention Certificate and informed IAAI and CWC that no
demurrage may be charged for the period during which the
goods were in custody of IAAI or the CWC due to pendency of
adjudication proceedings. But the IAAI or the CWC instead
of treating entire period as free period granted rebate and
calculated demurrage in accordance with Rate Schedule framed
by them. The amount of demurrage in each case came to be
two or three times more than the value of the goods,
therefore, the respondents approached the High Court by way
of writ petitions under Article 226 of the Constitution of
India. The petitions were allowed and it was held that the
IAAI or the CWC being custodian of the Customs Department
could not ignore the Detention Certificate, therefore, no
demurrage could be charged for the period the proceedings
were pending. The High Court relied on M/s Trishul Impex v.
Union of India [1991(2) Delhi Lawyer 1]. This decision in
its turn relied on an earlier decision given ’in Trans Asia
Carpets v. Union of India, CCP No. 97/87. The decision in
Trans Asia (supra) proceeded on the basis that Airports
Authority being an agent of the Collector of Customs was
bound by the Detention Certificate granted by the Collector
of Customs. In Trishul Impex (supra) it was held that the
container depot where the goods were deposited being the
custodian for Customs Authorities it was bound by the
certificate and was liable to release the goods without any
demurrage,
7. It is the correctness of this view that has been
assailed in these appeals. The learned counsel for the
appellants urged than the power to levy demurrage by the
IAAI is derived from the International Airports Authority
Act, 197 1. It could not be regulated or controlled by any
other Statute. It was submitted that the Customs
Authorities could neither levy demurrage nor waive it.
Therefore, the Detention Certificate could not compel the
appellants to treat the entire period during which the goods
remained in their custody to be free
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period. According to learned counsel in any case the Rate
Schedule for demurrage having been made in exercise of
statutory power and the appellants having been granted
waiver to the extent of 80% under the Policy framed by the
IAAI the respondents were not entitled to any relief.
8.The word ’demurrage’ defined in clause (g) of Regulation 2
of the Regulations framed by the IAAI is extracted below:-
"Demurrage means the rate or amount payable to
the airport by a shipper or consignee or
carrier for not removing the cargo within the
time allowed."
Similar word used in Port Trust of Madras Act, 1905 came up
for interpretation before this Court in Trustees of the Port
of Madras v. M/s Aminchand Pyarelal & Ors., (1976) 1 SCR
721. It was explained that the word was not used in the
strict mercantile sense, ’but merely to signify a charge
which may be levied on goods after expiration of ’Free
Days’. This ratio has been reiterated in The Board of
Trustee of the Port of Bombay v. Indian Goods Supplying Co.
(1977) 3 SCR 343 and Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay
v. Jai Hind Oil Mills Company & Ors (1987) 1 SCR 932. The
dispute, thus is. whether the days or period during which
adjudication proceedings were pending before the Customs
Authorities could be considered to be free days on any
principle of law, statutory or otherwise, Or it can be held
to be so on construction of Regulations and policy framed by
the MM read with the Act and the Public Notice issued under
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it. ’But before coming to it, it appears necessary to state
that the basic controversy that arose in Aminchand Pyarelal
(supra) and Indian Goods Supplying Co. (supra) centered
round whether a consignee could claim immunity from paying
any demurrage when the detention of the goods was not due to
any fault or negligence of the importer. It was answered in
the negative. In the latter decision that is Indian Goods
Supplying Co. (supra) the Court after referring to the
earlier decision in Aminchand Pyarelal (supra) and some
English decisions held:
"The position therefore is that even though
the delay in clearing the goods was not due to
the negligence of the importer for which he
could be held responsible yet he cannot avoid
the payment of demurrage as the rates imposed
are under the authority of law the validity of
which cannot be questioned.
But that is not the issue in these appeals. The respondents
did not claim any immunity from payment of demurrage because
their goods were detained for no fault on their part. What
was claimed and accepted was that the IAAI or CWC being a
custodian of Customs Department the intimation given by it
that no demurrage should be charged from the respondent for
the period mentioned in the detention certificate should
have been accepted and acted Pon by it. To examine the
correctness of this claim it is necessary to ascertain the
nature of relationship between the Customs Department and
IAAI and notice certain provisions in the Act, the Public
Notice issued under it, the Regulations by the MM and the
rate schedule framed by it. Section 45 of the Act is
reproduced below:
"45. Restrictions on custody and removal of imported goods.
-
(1) Save as Otherwise provided in any
law for the time being in force, all imported goods unloaded
in a customs area shall remain in the custody of such person
as may be approved by the Collector of Customs until they
are cleared for home consumption or are warehoused or are
transshipped in accordance with the provisions of Chapter
VIII.
(2) The person having custody of any imported goods in a
customs area, whether under the provisions of sub-section
(1) or under any law for the time being in force, -
(a) shall keep a record of such goods and
send a copy thereof to the proper officer;
(b) shall not permit such goods to be
removed from the customs area or otherwise
dealt with, except under and in accordance
with the permission in -writing of the proper
officer."
This section ’permits removal of imported goods from the
’customs area’ which under clause (II) of Section 2 of the
Act means
"2. (11) "customs area" means the area of a customs station
and includes any area in which imported goods or exported
goods arc ordinarily kept before clearance by Customs
Authorities;"
It is thus clear that the imported goods are kept at the
airport or the Warehousing Corporation in the customs area
over which it is the Customs Department which exercises
control. No goods can be removed from there either by the
importer or even the Custodian. The detention is to enable
the Customs Department to proceed in accordance with law and
determine if the valuation disclosed was correct or the
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goods had been properly imported etc. A person importing
the goods is required to comply with rules and notification
issued by the Government permitting, prohibiting or
regulating import. Whether the importer is complying with
the rules or not and acting in accordance with law is
entrusted to the Customs Department. No goods can be
cleared except with permission of the Customs Department.
Therefore, it is by operation of the statutory provision
that an area specified as customs area is under control of
the Customs Department. In fact fictionally it is the
Customs Department which for purposes of imported goods, its
checking, storage, release etc. is in control of it.
9. The imported goods are detained in the customs area
either for assessment of duty under Section 17(3) and 17(4)
of the Act or for clearance under Sections 45 to 47 of the
Act. These appeals arc concerned with detention for
clearance. The levy of demurrage for detention at the in-
stance of Customs Department during adjudication proceedings
engaged attention of the p 161 Government even in past. In
Indian Goods Supplying Co.’s case (supra) the Central
Government issued a letter requesting the Port Trust
Authorities to modify its rates as it was unreasonable to
charge an importer any demurrage once it was accepted that
clearance was delayed on account of reasons beyond his
control. But since this was only a letter of request and
the Board in pursuance of it opted for graded scale the
court was of opinion that it could not be treated as a
direction binding on the Port Trust.
10. It appears the Collector of Customs, New Delhi in
order to overcome this difficulty and for maintaining and
regulating control over goods which arc unloaded at Indira
Gandhi International Airport, issued
464
Public Notice in 1986 in exercise of powers vested under
Sections 8, 33, 34 and 45 of the Act read with Rules 56, 57,
58 and 59 of the Aircraft Rules, 1920. Paragraph (a) of it
specifies the limits of customs area as whole of existing
area constituting the Indira Gandhi International Airport,
New Delhi including domestic arrival and departure area,
Cargo Terminal New International Terminal Complex (’CTNITC’
for short) and the entire premises of the Central
Warehousing Corporation located at Gurgaon Road, New Delhi
excluding M/s IAAI’s Import Cargo Warehouse (Monkey torn).
Paragraph (b) approves all places where parking/halting of
aircraft is permitted by the Civil Aviation Depart. merit,
the International Airport Authority of India for
unloading/loading of imported/ export goods. Paragraph (c)
assigns functions under Sections 33 and 34 of the Act to the
officers of the Customs/Air Customs posted at IGI Airport.
Paragraph (d) approves M/s IAAI as custodian of the cargo
under Section 45 of the Act. The cargo is required to be
stored in IAAI’s CTNITC subject to the conditions - (i) that
the cargo shall be subject to the control of customs; (ii)
that M/s IAAI shall maintain detailed account of all
imported and exports goods received by them as ’custodian’
and shall produce such account for inspection by a gazetted
officer of customs.
11. Sub-paragraph (vii) of paragraph (d) which is
material reads as under:
"(vii) In case of goods detained/seized etc.
by customs, the wirehousing/storage charges
shall be calculated by M/s. IAAI for the
period due minus the chances for the period of
detention at the instance of Customs as
certified by the Assistant Collector of
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Customs
The language of the sub-paragraph is clear and unambiguous,
Unlike the letter of request sent by Central Government in
Indian Goods Supplying Co.’s case (supra) it is a direction
by the Collector of Customs to the custodian of goods at the
airport or the warehouse not to charge any warehousing or
storage charges for the period the goods detained or seized
by the Customs Department are kept in custody subject to
the issuance of a certificate by the Assistant Collector of
Customs that the goods were detained at the instance of Cus-
toms Department. But what was urged by the learned counsel
for the appellants was that this Public Notice was not
binding on the appellants as they were independent statutory
bodies. To examine the merit of this submission, the
question that arises is whether the Notice was issued in
valid exercise of power. If it be so then what consequence
flow out of it? It will then have to be examined whether it
is binding on the appellants. And lastly even if it is not
binding the Public Notice issued by the Collector of Customs
and rate schedule framed by the appellants being parallel
legislation occupying the same field how should they be
construed? The validity of the Notice was not challenged by
the appellants. As a matter of fact it was not adverted to
either by the High Court nor any reliance was placed on it
by the respondents. But reference of it was found in one of
the decisions rendered by the High Court and thereafter on
our request, the learned counsel for the appellants sup
plied copies of it. Even when the appeals were listed for
further hearing the learned counsel for the appellants did
not urge and probably rightly that it was issued in vio-
lation of statutory power or the Collector of Customs
exceeded its jurisdiction yet it appears necessary to trace
the source of
465
power of this Notice as it shall have important bearing on
the legal effect of it. It purports to have been issued
under Sections 8, 33, 34 and,45 of the Act and Rules 56 to
59 of the Aircraft Rules, 1920. Each paragraph of the
Notice appears to have been issued to carry out the purpose
of the Sections mentioned in it. For instance, Section 8 of
the; Act empowers the Collector to approve proper places in
the airport for unloading of goods and clause (b) of it
empowers the Collector to specify the limits of customs
area. Paragraph (a) of the Notice achieves this purpose.
Paragraphs (b) and (c) of the Notice have been issued to
carry out the objective of Sections 33 and 34 of the Act and
Rules 57 to 59 of the Aircraft Rules which provide for un-
loading of goods at approved places with permission of the
proper officer of the Customs Department. Paragraph (d) and
its various sub-paragraphs achieve the objective, of Section
45 by spelling out details of restriction subject to which
the custodian may carry out its activities of warehousing
imported goods. It is thus obvious that the Notice was
issued to carry out purposes of the Act. Section 156
empowers the Central Government to frame rules and Section
157 empowers the Board to make regulations consistent with
the Act to carry out the purposes of the Act. Section 152
empowers the Central Government to issue notification that
any power exercisable by the Board under the Act may be
exercised by the Collector of Customs. It is not claimed
that no notification was issued by the Central Government
empowering the Collector to exercise the powers of the
Board. Therefore, the Collector could exercise the same
power as the Board. Consequently, the Notice issued by him
cannot be said to be invalid. It must be assumed to have
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been issued in
exercise of powers under Section 157 to carry out the
purposes of the Act.
12.The next question is what is the consequence of it.
Clause (b) of sub-section (2) of Section 45 of the Act
extracted earlier provides that the persons having custody
of the imported goods in customs area, that is, IAAI or CWC
shall not permit such goods to be removed from the customs
area or otherwise deal, with except in accordance with the
permission in writing of the proper officer. : The word
’otherwise’ is defined in Standard Dictionary to mean, ’in a
different manner, in another way’. In Webster dictionary it
is defined to mean, ’in a different manner, in other
respects’. The expression, ’otherwise dealt with’,
therefore, widens the ambit of the restriction placed on the
custodian. It places complete embargo on the IAAI or CWC to
deal with the imported goods placed in its custody in any
manner. The two restrictions.that is prohibition to remove
goods and dealing with it in any manner otherwise completely
debar the custodian from exercising any right or control
except with the permission of the proper officer of Customs
Department. No discussion is needed to explain the ex-
pression that the custodian of the goods shall not be
entitled to remove the imported goods but it appears
necessary to explain the scope of expression ’otherwise
dealt with’. How it has to be understood in the context in
which it has been used? That would obviously depend on the
nature of functions of the custodian, in respect of imported
goods. Section 16 of the International Airports Authority
Act, 1971 is the only Section which lays down the functions
which are required to be performed by the IAAI. Clause (d)
of subsection (3) of Section 16 empowers the.
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IAAI to establish warehouses at the airport for the storage
or processing of goods.This would include providing for levy
of charges for storing of goods, handling it, insurance etc.
And on failure to pay the charges to dispose of the goods.
The IAAI has in fact framed Regulations to carry out its
function of warehousing. It shall be adverted to later.
But in view of clause (b) of sub-section (2) of Section 45
of the Act it cannot deal with goods placed in its custody
in any manner except with the permission of the Customs
Department. The function of the appellants in respect of
warehousing of the goods would, thus, be covered in the
expression, ’otherwise dealt with’ used by clause (b) of
sub-section (2) of Section 45 and, therefore, the appellants
could not deal with the imported goods or perform any
function without obtaining an order in writing by the proper
officer. This would obviously include the right of the
appellants to sell the goods for non-payment of demurrage.
That is the appellants even though independent statutory
bodies are precluded from dealing with the goods or selling
it without obtaining permission of the proper officer. This
restriction on the right and power of the appellants has
been statutorily regulated by issuing Public Notice. It
does not interfere with the right of the appellants to frame
their rate schedule and charge demurrage. Nor does it
interfere with right to charge dues for keeping the goods in
the warehouse. It only provides that where the goods have
been detained or seized at the instance of the Customs
Department the dues might be calculated minus this period.
This could have been done by the Central Government or the
Board or the Collector. Therefore, the issuance of Public
Notice directing the appellants not to charge any dues for
the period the goods
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were detained would be covered in the expression, ’otherwise
dealt with’. It is further strengthened by Section 150 of
the Act which lays down precedence for sale of goods which
are not confiscated. The payments to the Custodian under
clause (d) of sub-section (2) of the Section is to be made
only after meeting the expenses of sale, freight and duty.
The appellants could not, therefore, ignore sub-paragraph
(vii) of paragraph (d) of the Notice. It is no more a
request by the Central Government but an exercise of power
by the appropriate authority under the Statute. It is not
inconsistent with any provision of the Act.
13.It would not be out of place to mention that Chapter IX
of the Act deals with warehousing. Section 63 of the Act
falls in it. It deals with payment of rent and warehousing
charges. Sub-section (1) of it requires the owner of any
warehoused goods to pay to the warehouse-keeper rent and
warehouse charges at the rates fixed under any law for the
time being in force or where no rates arc so fixed, at such
rates as may be fixed by the Collector of Customs. Sub-
section (2) of Section 63 empowers the warehouse-keeper to
sell the goods if the dues are not paid within ten days from
the date it becomes due. But the right can be exercised
only with permission of the proper officer. Therefore, it
cannot be legitimately urged that the Customs Department
could not issue a Notice which would affect the right of
appellants to fix charges etc. The Public Notice issued in
1986 does not interfere with rate schedule of the appellants
but it only fixes free period or period during which no rent
can be charged in exercise of statutory power. The
International Airports Authority Act, 1971 does not preclude
the Cus-
467
toms Department expressly or impliedly from framing any such
regulations.
14.What is apparent from a study of these various Sections
of the Act is that the provisions in the International
Airports Authority Act, 1971 and Regulations framed
thereunder cannot be read in isolation so far as the custody
of imported goods placed under it by Customs Department is
concerned. If sub-paragraph (vii) of the Notice is
understood, as urged by the learned counsel for the
appellants, as having no effect on the appellants as they
are statutory bodies then it would result in rendering the
Notice as dead letter or waste paper or it would create
conflict between two parallel provisions in two different
statutes dealing with same subject, That would not be in
consonance either with principles of interpretation or
construction. Both the Act and International Airports
Authority Act are central enactments. In either, the
Central Government is empowered to make rules to carry out
the objective of the Act. Both the legislations are
directed towards promoting social welfare. The should be
interpreted so as to advance public good and social justice,
"Just as the different words, phrases and
provisions of a statute should not be isolated
and given an abstract meaning, so the statute
itself in its entirety should not be
interpreted solely by reference to its own
terms, but rather by reference to the other
laws of the state, and particularly to those
pertaining to the same subject". Crawford’s,
Interpretation of Laws, 1989 p. 420.
15. Legislations, rules or regulations are enacted to
regulate the day to day activities. But they cannot be
exhaustive and the practical difficulties arising in working
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467
out these have to be resolved by developing principles by
the court which are justice oriented, serve public purpose
and promote social interest, of course, without doing
violence to the language of the Section and the objective of
enactment and if the provision was enacted to remedy any
event then to construe it in a manner in which it may carry
out the objective of the enactment which was intended to
suppress the mischief. The Notice appears to have been
issued in the first instance to mitigate the hardship of the
importers and therefore it should be construed so as to
remedy the mischief which was intended to be remedied.
Apart from that the court’s duty while construing two
provisions covering the same field is to harmonise the two
provisions in such a manner that none of them are rendered
otiose. But that would be the result if sub-paragraph (vii)
is ignored. The duty of the court is to effectuate the
social purpose by resorting to such construction as is
beneficial and does not cause harm to any one or is rendered
self-defeating. How such construction shall be self-
defeating shall be explained later.
16. Further, the intention and purport of the Notice is to
avoid any harassment and loss to a consignee. It attempts
to reconcile the necessity arising out of statutory
functions performed by it and yet protects an importer from
unintended and, may be in some cases, unjustified delay in
release of goods resulting in huge demur rage. For instance
in these very appeals the demurrage charges are three to
four times of value of the goods. And that too when it has
been found that delay was due to adjudication proceedings.
It is to overcome this practical difficulty yet statutory
necessity that the Customs Department is-
468
sued Public Notice in 1986. The IAAI or the CWC being only
custodian of the Customs Department could not ignore the de-
tention certificate issued in exercise of this power. No
such Public Notice issued in exercise of power under Section
45 of the Act arose for consideration in the earlier cases.
In Aminchand Pyarelal (supra) the decision turned on
validity of bye-laws framed by the Port Trust. , Clause
13(b) of it provided for graded,charges for the period goods
were detained on account of import Trade Control
Formalities. It was held by the High Court to be ultra
vires as charging demurrage,for period when consignee was
not at fault was unreasonable and unwarranted. It was this
view of the High Court which was reversed as the byelaws had
been framed by a Port Trust whose members were
representatives including a Customs Officer. The Court
found after examining Section 109 of the Act that levy of
graded demurrage was neither arbitrary nor unreasonable. In
the other decision that is Indian Goods Supplying Co.
(supra) the Court accepted the claim of the Port Trust that
it being entitled to claim demurrage under the contract
entered with the consignee the same could not be denied to
it unless it was found -that the delay in release of the
goods was due to conduct of the Port Trust. Therefore, the
ratio of these decisions is not helpful in deciding the
effect of detention certificate issued by the Assistant Col-
lector of Customs under the Public Notice issued under
Section 45 of the Act. When the goods were entrusted in the
custody of IAAI it was aware of the Public Notice. It
should be deemed to have accepted the custody subject to the
condition. In fact the statutory provisions leave no option
for the IAAI or CWC after 1986 except to act in accordance
with the provisions of the Act. The custody by the IAAI or
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CWC is not as it is popularly understood in the commercial
sense. It is a statutory custody governed by the
provisions of law. Therefore, once rules were framed or
Public Notice was issued in exercise of statutory power the
IAAI or CWC cannot set up the claim that the intimation
issued by the Customs Department could not be taken into
account for determination of free days. Even on principle
of bailment the, IAAI or CWC cannot escape from the effect
of detention certificate., Clause (6) of Procedures and
Tariff of CWC provides that subject to above terms and
conditions, the rights and liabilities of the Corporation
shall be as that of a bailee. A bailment under Section 148
of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 means ’delivery of goods,
by one person to another for some purpose, upon a contract
that they shall, when the purpose is accomplished, be
returned or otherwise disposed of according to the direc-
tions of the persons delivering them’. Here the goods were
handed over to,, the IAAI or CWC for the statutory purpose
contemplated by Section 45 of the Act. The, goods were to
be returned after completion of proceedings as directed by,
the Customs Department. Section 160 of the Contract Act
specifically provides for the bailee to return or deliver
the goods according to the bailor’s directive. The
direction not to charge any demurrage does not result in
making the IAAI as a gratuitous bailee as the IAAI is
entitled to charge insurance charges, handling charges and
demurrage except the dues mentioned for the period in the
detention certificate. Therefore, once the Customs
Department issued directive to release the goods, without
charging any ground rent in pursuance of Public Notice
issued under Section 45 the appellants as bailee could not
but to follow the direc-
469
tions which were in accordance with law. The relationship
of bailor and bailee arises out of the statutory provision
between the Customs Department and the IAAI or CWC and not
with the consignee. It does not make the IAAI or CWC a,
gratuitous bailee. In any case, even if any amount is
legally due, the IAAI may claim from Customs Department but
not from consignee.
17. The Regulations framed by the IAAI may now be examined.
The IAAI has framed International Airports Authority
(Storage & Processing of Goods) Regulations, 1980 in
exercise of the powers conferred by subsection (1) of
Section 37 of the International Airports Authority Act 1971
(43 of 1971). Clause (g) of Regulation 2 of the Regulations
defines ’demurrage’ which has been extracted earlier.
Regulation 4 empowers the IAAI to levy charges/surcharges
which may include terminal charges, storage charges,
handling charges, demurrage, charges to cover insurance.
Regulation 5 empowers the authority to fix and revise from
time to time scale of charges referred to in the Regula-
tions. Regulation 6 empowers the Chairman to waive the
charges in. deserving cases for reasons to be recorded by
him. He is further empowered to delegate his powers to
Director of Cargo and Airport General Manager.
17A. Regulation 8 is extracted below:
"Charge of cargo - The cargo will be stored in
the International Air Cargo Complex under the
control and supervision of Customs
Authorities, While the Authority would be the
custodian of the import Cargo delivered to it
by the carriers the responsibility for export
cargo would be that of die shipper or his
agent before customs examination, of the
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Customs in
469
respect of detained cargo during examination
and of the carriers after customs
examination."
Even according to these regulations the imported goods are
under the control of the Customs Department. It acts only
as custodian of the goods on behalf of the customs
Department. ’It is not the agent of the consignee. Once
the aircraft lands and the goods arc handed over to the con-
signee the agreement between the carrier and consignee comes
to an end and thereafter inspection by the Customs Depart-
ment, its detention and direction to store in the ’specified
area’ till the adjudication proceedings we over arc
statutory powers exercised under the Act. The IAAI has no
option. It cannot refuse inspection nor can it refuse to
keep the imported goods. There is no material difference in
the rules framed by the Customs Department, the Public
Notice issued by it and the regulations framed by the MM.
The IAAI is custodian under either of the Customs Department
’Therefore it could not ignore the notice or the letter
issued by the Assistant Collector of Customs in pursuance,
of it. As regards CWC it has not only been appointed
custodian under Section 45(11) of the Act but the Public
Notice issued in November 1984 provides that it, ’would be
required to comply with the provisions of Section 45(2) of
the Act ibid as well as rules and regulations and
instructions issued from time to time on the subject men-
tioned above’.
18. In pursuance of Regulation 6 IAAI has framed a policy
of waiver of demurrage charges. It is framed on principle
of ’capacity to pay’. Paragraph 2 of the Policy
incorporates the general principles. It divides the cargo
imported for purpose of free period into three classes; (1)
commer-
470
cial, (2) unaccompanied baggage, and (3) non-commercial
cargo. It allows seven calendar days from the date of
landing as free period to commercial and non-commercial
cargo whereas the unaccompanied baggage is allowed 14 days.
Clause (d) provides that unscheduled holidays declared by
Central Government would be considered as free period. And
clause (e) allows as free period the period of processing
application for waiver, of demurrage.It further allows
threedays for postal communication as free period, But Para-
graph 3 provides that beyond the period mentioned in
Paragraph 2, the cargo may be entitled to remission of
demurrage in the circumstances mentioned therein. Paragraph
3.1 provides that wherever detention certificate is
submitted from the competent authority that the detention of
the goods was for no fault of consignee, then the consignee
shall be entitled to demurrage on the scale mentioned in
sub-paragraphs (a) to (g). Clause (a) deals with detention
of goods by the Customs in connection with I.T.C.
formalities. It provides for 80% waiver for first 90 days,
50% thereafter for six months and full charges thereafter.
Clause (b) permits 80% waiver for period under detention in
transfer, ’of residents appeal where the appellate authority
decides the case in favour of the consignee without imposing
any penalty’. And clause (c) allows 80% waiver for full
period of detention where the detention certificate shows
that detention was by, customs for analytical purposes, such
detention should be for specific Analytical Test by Customs
Control Laboratory or Central Drugs Control Laboratory.
This policy was framed by the IAAI in 1979 whereas the
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Public Notice was issued in 1986. For purposes of detention
of imported goods by the Customs. Department
at Indira Gandhi International Airport, therefore, Paragraph
3.1 has to be read that where detention certificate has been
issued by the Customs Authorities in accordance with sub-
paragraph (vii) of the Public Notice no demurrage shall be
charged for the period mentioned in it.
19. Same is the result even if the policy framed by the
IAAI is examined from another aspect. The definition of
’demur rage’ has already been extracted. It mentions the
rate or amount payable by the consignee for not removing the
cargo within the time allowed. The regulation do not throw
any light on the expression ’within the time allowed.
Paragraph 3 of the Regulations provides the procedure to be
followed for the storage and processing of the goods in the
International Air Cargo Complex at the airport. Clause (b)
relates to imported goods. It provides that the goods shall
be received by-the officials of the Authority/Ground
Handling agency from the carrier in the presence of Customs
officials. The consignee will be responsible for getting
his consignment examined by Customs and obtaining ’out of
charge’ endorsement. It further provides that the officials
of the Authority will deliver the consignment to the
consignee after collecting demurrage and obtaining a valid
receipt from him. The demurrage has to be calculated in
accordance with the policy framed by the IAAI. The free
days for which no demurrage shall be charged has already
been explained. The time to calculate demurrage commences,
according to paragraph 2 of the policy, from the date of
landing after excluding free days. When Public Notice
requires the IAAI and CWC not to charge any rent for the
period detention certificate is issued then by operation of
law the expres-
471
sion ’within the time allowed’ in the policy has to be read
along with the detention certificate issued by the Customs
Department. The High Court appears to be right in taking
the view that if various clauses in the Public Notice issued
by the Customs Department are followed by the IAAI then
there appears no rationale for the view that sub-paragraph
(vii) is not binding on them as they have framed their own
rate schedule. Any other construction would result in
rendering sub-paragraph (vii) as meaningless. The learned
counsel for the appellants submitted that it acted on the
certificate and that is why it granted waiver of 80%. But
that is not what sub-paragraph (vii) requires. It
specifically provides for charging no demurrage for the
period mentioned in the detention certificate. Therefore,
the IAAI or CWC should not have levied any charge for the
period mentioned in the detention certificate. In fact in
clauses (b) and (c) of the Policy 80% waiver is allowed on
account of court cases where court has passed unconditional
order in favour of the consignee. The Policy further
provides that,all the waiver in terms of powers (a) above
shall be subject to condition that respective authority
certifying detention has not levied any fine penalty or
issued any warning to the consignee on this import’. On a
reasonable construction of the Policy, therefore,there,
would have been no difficulty in accepting the claim of the
respondents, for waiver of 80% during the entire period of
detention. An importer may be entitled to waiver in more
than one clause. In a case where appeal is allowed, in
entire and no penalty or fine is imposed the consignee might
be entitled to waiver both under. clauses (a) and (g),
therefore, the demurrage may not be chargeable more than 80%
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in such cases for the entire period of
detention.,
20. The issue, however, is not whether 80% for’ the entire
period of detention should have been waived but whether any
demurrage could have been charged for the period detention
certificate was issued by the Assistant Collector of
Customs. If the appellants’ claim that IAAI being a
statutory body it was entitled to frame its regulations and
rate schedule is accepted then it results in conflict
between sub-paragraph (vii) of Public Notice and paragraph
(3) of the Policy framed by the IAAI. The legislative
intention in enacting Act being to check and control
economic offences such as smuggling, illegal import etc.,
the provisions have to be construed to advance the purpose
sought to be achieved without sacrificing the consignee’s
interest. The provisions in the International Airports
Authority Act and the Policy framed thereunder cannot be
construed so as to be self defeating. But that would be the
result if the construction suggested by the appellants is
accepted. The adjudicatory process is time consuming. From
Assistant Collector of Customs to the Tribunal itself it may
take sufficiently long time. By the time the consignee is
able to extract himself from the cobweb of various stages he
may find himself landed in the soup of demurrage. If he is
to pay the charges which in many’ cases due to passage of
time may be many times more than the value of goods, the
entire exercise may be waste. It would be anomalous that a
person who ultimately succeeds in vindicating his claim that
the goods arc properly valued or that the import was in
accordance with law is faced with demurrage of goods which
may be not only more than the value of goods but the value
plus duty and penalty even. For instance in Appeal
472
No.798 of 1992 the total value of the goods was Rs.17,846/-
Ahereas the demurrage after allowing rebate as provided in
the Rate Schedule of the IAAI comes to Rs.1,115,936/-. If
this amount is not paid the only remedy of the IAAI would be
to dispose of the imported goods and the total value it
might be able to realise could be somewhere near
Rs.17,000/-. Therefore, except for the satisfaction of
auctioning the goods the IAAI in some cases may not be able
to compensate itself fully. And yet the consignee stands
deprived of his goods. The construction as has been sug-
gested by the appellants would, therefore, be unjust to
small importers, and as observed self-defeating for the IAAI
or CWC. To remedy from such hardship sub-paragraph (vii)
was enacted by way of Public Notice. It recognises the
legal consequences which must follow the adjudication by
directing that no demurrage should be charged for that
period as in law the decision by the Tribunal dates back to
the date of detention. And by fiction of law it is assumed
that the Customs Department clears the goods as it should
have done when the goods had landed. Even otherwise if the
policy decision of capacity pay is read along with rate
prescribed then levy of demurrage may defeat the very pur-
pose and objective of the policy. Payment of three times or
four times of demurrage of value of goods because the goods
were detained at the instance of Customs Authorities does
not accord with the policy decision. It is not in common
interest. One of the settled principles of construction is
to read a provision in such manner that it may not be self-
defeating. The levy of demurrage at the prescribed rate by
ignoring the Public Notice issued by the Customs Department
in 1986 is apt to lead to such disastrous consequences.
21. But before parting it is necessary to observe that from
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1976 to 1993 the entire Scenario of cargo traffic from air
has gone tremendous change. The busy traffic, the spate of
smuggling, manoeuvring of importing goods by camouflaging to
avoid payment of duty have multiplied putting immense
pressure on the IAAI and the Customs Department. At the
same time the honest and bona fide consignee should be
protected for sake of credibility. The Customs Department
on its part may consider the feasibility of framing a policy
by dividing the imported goods in different categories.
Where the import is not prohibited or it is against licence
or permit and the only dispute is about valuation or the
tariff item 1 under which it falls it may be released. on
furnishing of bank guarantee or security sufficient to
secure the interest of Department subject to final deci-
sion. This determination should be done at the airport. It
would obviate the necessity of storing goods, save the IAAI
or CWC from unnecessary botheration, protect the Department,
and serve the importer better. Till then the Public Notice
issued by Customs Department appears to be reasonable, and
practicable solution to the Problem. The IAAI or CWC may be
well advised to change its regulations and fall in line with
the policy decision and refrain from charging any demurrage
for the period Customs Department issues a certificate under
subparagraph (vii) of the Public Notice. It would avoid
litigation, harassment and would be, conducive to public
interest.
22. In the result, all the appeals fail and are dismissed.
BHARUCHA, J.:
C.A.Nos. 798/92 & 3971/92
473
23 These are appeals by special leave against the judgments
and orders of a Division Bench of the High Court of Delhi
allowing the writ petitions filed by: the first respondents
in each appeal and directing the appellant, the
International Airport Authority of India (the Authority), to
realise the goods imported by the’ first respondents without
charging any demurrage thereon for the periods for which
detention certificates had been issued by the Collector of
Customs
24.The first respondents had imported goods by air and filed
bills of entry with the Customs authorities at the Delhi
Airport, which is the property of the Authority. The
Customs authorities detained the goods. Ultimately, they
were released and the Collector of Customs issued detention
certificates for the periods of the detentions. The first
respondents thereupon applied to the Authority for waiver of
demurrage charges for the periods covered by the detention
certificates. The first respondents calculated demurrage,
granting for these, periods waiver on a graded scale. The
first respondents preferred writ petitions before the Delhi
High Court, impleading the Union of India and the Authority,
challenging the requirement to pay demurrage for the periods
for’ which the detention certificates had been issued. The
High Court took note of the decision of an earlier Division
Bench in the case of MI s. Trishullmpex v. Union of India
(1991(2) Delhi Lawyer 1 = 43Delhi Law Times 538). The, High
Court took the view that since the Authority was the
custodian on behalf of the Customs authorities, the
Authority was not entitled to recover any amount on account
of demurrage charges for the periods for which detention
certificates had been issued.
25. The judgments and orders under appeal, are contrary to
the judgment of: the Delhi, High :Court in the case of M/s.
Trishul Impex (ibid) as also the decisions of this Court in
the cases of Trustees of the Port of ’Madras v. M/s.
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Aminchand Pyarelal & Ors., (1976) :1 S.C.R. 721 Board of
Trustee of the Port of Bombay v. Indian Goody Supplying
Co.,, (1977) 3 S.C.R. 343, and Board of Trustees of the
Port of Bombay v. Jai Hind Oil Mills Company & Ors., (1987)
1 S.C.R. 932.
26.In the case of Trishul Impex (ibid) a writ petition
filled by an importer had been allowed and the Union of
India and the Container Corporation of India were directed
to issue a detention certificate from the date on which a
bill of entry was filed until the date of actual clearance
and to release the imported goods without payment of
demurrage charges. The Corporation, the 5th respondent,
filed and application -before the High Court in which a
declaration was sought that the liability for the demurrage
charges would have to be home by the importer. ’The
Division Bench that’ heard the application came to the con-
clusion that the Corporation was the Custodian of the goods
under Section 45(2) of the Customs Act. As a detention
certificate had, been issued by the Customs authorities, the
Corporation was bound to release the goods to the importer
and it was the Customs authorities who were responsible to
the Corporation for the demurrage charges. The Corporation
was, therefore, directed to release the goods to the im-
porter upon payment by the Customs authorities of the
demurrage charges for the period covered by the detention
certificate.
27.In the case of M/s. Trishul Impex, therefore, it was
held that the authority in
474
whose premises the goods were held pending their clearance
by the Customs authorities was entitled to recover demurrage
charges for the period that they were so held, but that,
since such detention had been at the insistence of the
Customs authorities and such insistence had been ac-
knowledged to be wrongful, it was the Customs authorities
who should pay the demurrage charges for that period to the
authority holding the goods and upon such payment the
authority should release the goods to the importer. The
writ petitions filed by the first respondents before the
Delhi High Court impleaded the Union of India and the
Authority. The High Court did not direct the Union of India
to pay to the Authority demurrage charges for the periods
covered by the detention certificates, as had been done in
the case of M/s. Trishul Impex, but directed the Authority
to release the goods without payment of demurrage charges.
28. In Trustees of the port of Madras V. M/S. Aminchand
payarelal & Ors., (1976) 1 S.C.R. 721, a detention
certificate was issued by the Customs authorities stating
that the detention of imported goods for the period 24th
April, 1963, to 21st August, 1964, was due to no fault or
negligence on the part of the importer. Acting upon the
detention certificate, the appellants the Trustees of the
port of Madras (the Board), waived demurrage for the period
covered thereby and charged Rs. 1963/ instead of Rs.
3,20,951/-, by way of demurrage. The importer paid Rs.
1963/- and cleared the goods. In January, 1965, the Board
wrote to the Customs authorities stating that the% detention
certificate had been erroneously issued. The Customs au-
thorities owned the mistake. The Board then sued the
importer the Union of India and the Customs authorities to
recover the balance of the demurrage charges. The importer
disputed its liability to pay on the ground that it could
not be penalised either for the delay caused by the Customs
authorities in clearing the goods or by reason of a wrong
detention certificate. The High Court dismissed the suit.
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It held, inter alia, that, the Board could not charge
demurrage for the period during which the goods had been
detained for no fault or negligence of the importer or his
agent, demurrage being, in its view, a charge for wilful
failure to remove goods. The Board approached this Court in
appeal. This Court noted the provisions of the Madras Port
Trust Act and, particularly, the provisions of sections 42,
43 and 43A thereof Section 42 empowered the Board to frame a
scale of rates at which and a statement of the conditions
under which the services specified therein would be
performed by the Board. One of the clauses thereof referred
to building in the possession or occupation of the Board or
at any place within the limits of the Board. Another
referred to wharfage, storage or demurrage of goods at any
such place. By reason of section 44, every scale and every
statement of conditions framed by the Board under sections
42, 43 and 43-A had to be submitted to the Central
Government for sanction and, when so sanctioned and
published in the Official Gazette, had the force of law.
Section 44 (1a) empowered the Central Government to cancel
any of the scales framed by the Board and to the call upon
the Board to modify and portion thereof. The Board was
bound to comply with such directions. Section 44(2)
conferred power upon the Board in special cases, for reasons
to be recorded in writing, to remit the whole or any portion
of the rates or of any charge leviable according to any
scale.
475
Acting in pursuance of the powers conferred by sections 42,
43 and 43A, the Board had framed a scale of rates payable at
the Port of Madras which had been duly sanctioned by the
Central Government. Chapter IV in Book 1 thereof dealt with
demurrage. Demurrage was defined as " chargeable on all
goods left in the Board’s transit sheds or yards beyond the
expiry of the free days. After demurrage begins to accrue
no allowance is made for Sundays or Board’s holidays. The
free days are fixed by the Board from time to time".
Scale’A’ of ChapterIV prescribed conditions governing ’free
days’, the normal rule being that three working days in the
case of foreign cargo, excluding Sundays and the Board’s
holidays, were treated as free after complete discharge of a
vesseGl’s cargo or the date when the last package was put
overside. Free periods also included periods during which
goods were detained by the Customs authorities for a
chemical test, which period was certified by them to be not
attributable to any fault or negligence on the part of
importers. Rule 13 (b) read thus:
"(b) where goods are detained by the Collector
of Customs, on account of Import Trade Control
formalities or for compliance of formalities
prescribed under the Drug’s Act and certified
by the Collector of Customs to be not
attributable to any fault or negligence on the
part of Importers, demurrage shall be
recovered for this period at the rate of 30
per cent of the normal rate, i.e. the rate at
which the goods would incur demurrage had ther
e
been no detention by the Customs. This
concession in demurrage shall be limited to a
period of 30 days plus one working day and
demurrage shall be recovered at the full rate
(i.e. third slab) for detention beyond the
above said period."
This Court held that Port Trusts were bodies of a public
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representatives character which were entrusted by the
legislature with authority to frame a scale of rates and
statement of conditions subject to which they would perform
certain services. Every scale and every statement of condi-
tions had to be submitted by the Board to the Central
Government for sanction and it was only when it was so
sanctioned that it had the force of law. The requirement of
such sanction was a restraint on unwise, excessive or
arbitrary fixation of rates. Section 44(2) conferred on the
Board the power, in special cases and for reasons to be
recorded in writing, to remit the whole or any portion of
rates or charges leviable according to any scale in force.
Port Trusts did not do the business of warehousing goods and
the rates which the Boards charged for storage of goods were
not levied as a means of collecting revenue. The Board was
under a statutory obligation to render services of various
kinds and those services had to be rendered not for the
personal benefit of this or that importer but in the larger
national interest. Congestion in the ports affected free
movement of ships and of essential goods. The scale of
rates had therefore to be framed in a manner which would act
both as an incentive and as a compulsion for the expeditious
removal of goods from the transit area. Ships, like wagons,
had to be kept moving and that could happen only if there
was pressure on importer to remove goods from the Board’s
premises with the utmost expedition. Section 42 had not
authorised the Board to fix rates of "demurrage" but to
frame scales of rates and a statement of conditions under
which the services specified therein would be performed.
The ordinary meaning of "demurrage" did not, therefore,
fetter the
476
Board’s powers under section 42. The High Court was,
therefore, found to be in error when it held that the
Board’s power to charge demurrage was limited to cases where
goods were not removed from its premises due to some fault
or negligence on the part of the importer.
29. In Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay v.Indian
Goods Supplying Co., (1977) 3 S.C.R. 343, the appellant
Board had framed scales of rates of demurrage of goods under
its statute, which was similar in its terms to the statute
that covered the Port of Madras. The Board claimed
demurrage and, as the amount there was not paid, the goods
in respect of which the claim was made were sold by public
auction. The importer filed a suit for the recovery of the
value of the goods; the Board denied the liability and
pleaded that it was entitled to collect demurrage and, since
the importer had failed to pay the demurrage, it was
entitled to sell the; goods by auction. The City Civil
Court at Bombay decreed the suit and the High Court in
appeal affirmed the decree. The Board appealed to this
Court. This Court said that under its statute it was the
duty of the Board to recover rates. It had a lien on the
goods and the right to seize and detail them until rates
were fully paid; also, to sell the goods to enable recovery.
The contention on behalf of the importer was that it was in
no way responsible for the delay in clearing the goods as
the goods had been detained under the Import Trade Control
Regulations. This Court said:
"It is no doubt true that before clearance is
given by the Import Trade Control authorities
and the Customs Department the goods cannot be
cleared by the respondents. Neither can the
Port Trust deliver the goods without the
consent of the
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Import Trade Control authorities. Taking into
account the hardship caused to the importer
because of the delay certain concessions in
demurrage rates are permitted. The Port Trust
has prescribed the reduced demurrage levy
which is 1/ 6th of the normal rate from the
date of expiry of free days upto the 60the
day, 1/ 3rd of the normal rate after the
expiry of the 60th day, upto the 90th day,
half the normal rate after the expiry of 90th
day upto the 120th day, 2/3rd of the normal
rate after the expiry of the 120th day, rate
after the expiry of the 120 day, 2/3rd of the
normal rate after the expiry of the 120the day
upto the 150th day and at the full rate after
the expiry of the 150th day. As the scale of
rates are framed by virtue of the statutory
powers conferred on the Board under section 43
and as the rates have been approved by the
Central Government under section 43B the rates
have the force of law and cannot be
questioned. Taking into account the hardship
to the importers certain concession has been
given but the legality of the rates which are
being levied according to law cannot be
questioned."
This court then referred to the aforementioned judgment in
the case of M/s. Aminchand Pyarelal and said that it was on
all fours with the facts of the case before it and concluded
the question. It was held that the High Court was in error
in holding that the importer of the goods could not be held
responsible for any delay not attributable to his own
default and that demurrage under the statute could never be
imposed as long as the goods were detained for the purpose
of the operation of the Import Trade Control Regulations.
30. In Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay v. Jai Hind
Oil Mills C. & Ors., (1987)1 S.C.R. 932, the provisions of
the Major Port Trusts Act, 1963, were, involved
477
and it was found that they were in para materia with the
provisions of the individual Port Trusts Acts that proceeded
it. Reliance was place upon the judgments in the case of
M/s. Aminchand Pyarelal and Indian Goods Supplying Co..,
and it was held:
"The power of a Port of Trust to fix rates of
demurrage and to recover the same from an
importer or exporter (although the question of
an exporter paying demurrage arises rarely)
under law and to show concession as regards
demurrage charges in certain specified cases
is recognised by the Court in the Trustees of
the Port of Madras v. M/S. Aminchand Pyarelal
& Others, (1976) 1 S.C.R. 721 and in the Board
of Trustees of the Port of Bombay v. Indian
Goods Supplying Co., (1977) 3 S.C.R. 343.
’Mew decisions arc no doubt based on the
relevant laws which were in force at the
material time. But the decisions are still
relevant insofar as cases arising under the
Act because the Act also contains provisions
more or less similar to the statutory
provisions considered in the said decisions.
Demurrage charges are levied in order to
ensure quick clearance of the cargo from the
harbour. They are always fixed in such a way
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that they would make it unprofitable for
importers to use the port premises as a
warehouse. It is necessary to do so because
congestion in the ports affects the free
movement of ships and the loading and
unloading operations. As stated earlier, the
Port Trust shows concession to the party
concerned in certain types of cases.
xxx xxx xxx
It is, however, to be observed that before
compelling the Customs authorities to issue a
Detention Certificate, the High Court should
have issued notice to the Port Trust which was
vitally interested in securing its own
interests as regards the demurrage charges
recoverable by it under law. This %%,as
necessary because on the production of the
Detention Certificate issued by the Customs
authorities the Port Trust was under an
obligation to permit the clearance of the
goods without payment of full demurrage
charges. If ultimately the party concerned-is
found to be at fault and becomes liable to pay
the full demurrage charges the Port Trust may
not be in a position to recover such full
demurrage charges from the party concerned,
since it would have no longer any lien as
provided by section 59 of the Act. on the
goods which are already cleared. The Port
Trust being a body corporate constituted under
the Act is entitled to be heard by the Court
before any order which affects its interests
prejudically is passed. This case serves as
an illustration to what is stated above. The
Port Trust has been asked to permit the
clearance of goods in respect of which
demurrage charges of Rs.3,53,514.75 paise are
payable in the event of the 1st Respondent
being held liable in law to pay the full
demurrage charges. The orders passed by the
High Court in the proceedings to which the
Port Trust was not a party which had the ef-
fect or prejudicially affecting the interests
of the Port Trust would not be binding on it
in view of the violation of the principles of
natural justice."
31.this Court in the cases aforementioned, therefore, held
that the Board of Trustees of a Port was, under the statute
that created it, entitled to charge demurrage even in
respect of periods during which the importer was unable to
clear goods from its premises for no fault or negligence on
his part. It was held that the Boards were entitled to
charge demurrage even in respect of periods during which the
importer was unable to clear goods because of the detention
thereof by
478
the Customs authorities or the authorities under the Import
Trade Control Regulations, which detentions were thereafter
found to be unjustified. This Court also recognised that
the Boards were entities in their own right so that the
Courts could not direct the Customs authorities to issue a
detention certificate without hearing the Board concerned.
This was because the issuance of a detention certificate had
the effect of reducing the amount of demurrage that the
Board would otherwise have charged.
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32.The International Airports Authority Act, 1971,
constitutes,under the provisions of Section 3(1),the
International Airports Authority of India (the Authority).
By reason of section 3(2) the Authority is a body corporate
having perpetual succession and a common seal, with power to
acquire, hold and dispose of property, both movable and
immovable, and to contract and to sue and be sued by the
aforesaid name. It is, by reason of section 3(3), to
consist of a Chairman, the Director General of Civil
Aviation and not less than six and not more then thirteen
members to be appointed by the Central Government, whose
names are required to be notified in the Official Gazette.
By reason of section 12 the Central Government is empowered
to-vest in the Authority, by notification in the Official
Gazette, all properties and other assets vested in it for
the purposes of airports. Section 14 empowers the Authority
to enter into and perform any contract necessary for the
discharge of its functions. Section 16(1) states that it
shall be the function of the Authority to manage airports
efficiently. Section 16(2) makes it the duty of the
Authority to provide at the airports such services and fa-
cilities as are necessary or desirable for
the efficient operation of air transport services thereat.
Specifically, the Authority is empowered by section 16(3)(d)
to establish warehouses at the airports for the storage or
processing of goods. Section 17 gives power to the
Authority to charge, with the previous approval of the
Central Government, fees or rent, inter alia, for the use
and enjoyment by persons of its facilities and other
services at any airport. Section 35 directs that the
Authority shall, in the discharge of its functions and du-
ties, be found by such directions on questions of policy as
the Central Government may give it in writing from time to
time. Section 37 gives the Authority the power to make
regulations to provide for all matters for which provision
is necessary for the purpose of giving effect to the provi-
sions of the Act. The Authority is specifically empowered
by section 37(2)d to make regulations for the storage or
processing of goods in any warehouse established by it under
section 16(3)(d) and the charging of fees for such storage
or processing.
33.By virtue of the power vested in the Authority under
section 37, the Authority has framed regulations called the
IAA (Storage and Processing of Goods) Regulations, 1980.
Under Regulation 4 the Authority is empowered to levy
charges, including storage charges and demurrage.
Regulation 5 empowers the Authority to fix and revise from
time to time the scales of charges. By reason of Regulation
6 the Chairman may in his discretion, for reasons to be
recorded, waive charges in de serving cases. The Authority
has framed a policy in regard to the waiver of demurrage
charges. It provides, in the case of imports, for a free
period of seven calendar days from the date of landing of
com-
479
mercial cargo. In regard to detention certificates the
policy provides for waiver of demurrage on a ’graded basis.
The waiver is of 80% for the first 90 days, 50% for the
period beyond 90 days and upto 6 months, and full demurrage
is required to be paid thereafter if the detention is in
connection with Import Trade Control formalities. If the
detention is by the Customs authorities for analytical
purposes, a waiver of 80% is available for the full period
of the detention.
34.The provisions of the International Airports Authority
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Act, 1971 are, therefore, similar to the provisions of the
Major Port Trusts Act, 1963, and the Port Trusts Acts that
preceded it. The regulations framed by the Authority in
regard to the storage or processing of imported goods and
the policy in regard to the waiver of demurrage are also
similar to those of the Boards of Trustees of the ports.
The ratio of the judgments of this Court in the cases of MI
s. Aminchand Pyarelal, Indian Goods Supplying Co. and Jai
Hind Oil Mills Co. applies as much to the Authority as it
does to the Boards of Trustees of the ports.
35.It was submitted by learned counsel for the first
respondents that the judgments in the cases of M/s.
Aminchand Pyarelal, Indian Goods Supplying Co. and Jai Hind
Oil Mills Company. decided only that an importer had to pay
demurrage though the delay in clearing his goods was not due
to his default or negligence. It was submitted that the
contention in these appeals was different, namely, that the
Authority was the custodian of the Customs authorities and
was obliged, by reason of the detention certificates issued
by the Customs authorities, not to charge demurrage ’for the
periods covered by the detention
certificates. The judgments aforementioned do not only hold
that an importer is liable to pay demurrage though he is not
responsible for the delay in clearing his goods. The
judgments deal ’With detention certificates issued by the
Customs authorities and hold that the importer is liable. to
pay demurrage at the reduced rate prescribed by the policy
framed in that behalf by the Boards even for the period for
which a detention certificate has been issued. The
judgments recognise that the Boards are entities in their
own right and that even the courts cannot compel the Customs
authorities to issue detention certificates without first
hearing the Board concerned, because detention certificates
have the effect of reducing the revenues of the Boards. The
Boards and the Authority being similarly placed, the
judgments determine the questions raised in these appeals.
36.During the course of the hearing reliance was placed upon
a Customs Public Notice dated 30th April 1986 and numbered
30/86. It is issued on the subject of "Unloading/loading -
custody of Import/ export cargo at Indira Gandhi
International Airport, New Delhi." It notifies, for the
information of airlines, importers, exporters and clearing
agents, that the Collector of Customs, New Delhi, in
exercise of powers vested in him under sections 8, 33,34 and
45 of the Customs Act, 1962, has specified "limits of
Customs Area as whole of existing area constituting the
Indira Gandhi International Airport, New Delhi including
domestic arrival and departure area, Cargo Terminal New
International Terminal Complex (CTNTTC for short) and the
entire premises of Central Warehousing Corporation Ltd. (CWC
for short), located at Gurgaon Road, New Delhi, excluding
M/s. IAA’s Import Cargo
480
Warehouse (monkey farm). " The said Customs public notice
approves the Authority as custodian of cargo under section
45 of the Customs Act. The cargo, it is stated, would be
stored in the Authority’s C.T.N.I.T.C. on the condition that
it would be subject to the control of the Customs
authorities. Clause (vii), which is another condition,
reads thus:
"In case of goods detained/seized etc. by
customs, the warehousing/storage charges shall
be calculated by M/s. IAAI for the period due
minus the charge for the period of detention
at the instance of Customs as certified by the
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Assistant Collector of Customs."
The said Customs public notice states that public notices
and instructions issued earlier would be deemed to have been
modified to the extent mentioned in it.
37. The said Customs public notice has not been referred to
in the pleadings before the High Court or this Court. It
was not brought to the notice of the High Court.
38. As would appear from what has been stated above, the
Authority’s policy for the waiver of demurrage still covers
Customs detention certificates and the Authority has levied
demurrage for periods covered by Customs detention
certificates even after the issuance of the said Custom’s
public notice. In the case of M/s. Trishul Impex referred
to above the issue was whether demurrage charges for the
period covered by a detention certificate should be borne by
the importer or by the Customs authorities and the Customs
authorities did not rely upon the said Custom’s public
notice to contend that the Authority could not charge
demurrage for the period covered by a detention certificate
and were
ordered to make the payment. It appears, therefore, that
the said Customs public notice has not been acted upon by
the Authority and by the Customs authorities.
39. In any event, the provisions of the Customs Act under
which the said Customs public notice was issued may be ex-
amined. Section 8 empowers the Collector of Customs to
approve proper places in any Customs port of Customs airport
for the unloading and loading of goods and to specify the
limits of any Customs area. Section 33 debars the unloading
of imported goods at any place other than a place approved
under section 8. Section 34 states that imported goods shall
not be unloaded from any conveyance except under the
supervision of a proper officer. Section 45 reads thus:
"Restrictions on custody and removal of
imported goods -
(1) Save as otherwise provided in any law
for the time being in force, all imported goods
unloaded in a customs area shall remain in
the custody of such person as may be approved
by the Collector of Customs until they are
cleared for home consumption or are warehoused
or are transhipped in accordance with the
provisions of Chapter VIII.
(2) The person having custody of any
imported goods in a customs area whether under
the provisions of sub-section (1) or under
any law for the tam being in force-
(a) shall keeps a records of such goods and
send a copy thereof to the proper officer.
(b) shall not permit such goods to be re-
moved form the customs area or otherwise dealt
with except under and in accordance with the
permission in writing
481
of the proper officer.
40. None of these provisions entitles the Collector of
Customs to debar the collections of demurrage for the
storage of imported goods. They do not entitle him to
impose conditions upon the properties of ports or airports
before they can be approved as Customs ports or Customs air-
ports. Section 45 provides that all imported goods imported
in a Customs area must remain in the custody of the person
who has been approved by the Collector of Customs until they
are cleared and such person is obliged not to permit them to
be removed from the Customs area or otherwise dealt with
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except under and in accordance with the permission of the
Customs Officer. Section 45 does not state that such person
not be entitled to recover charges from the importer for
such period as the Customs authorities direct.
41. The purpose of the Customs Act on the one hand and the
Major Port Trusts Act and the International Airports Author-
ity Act on the other hand are different. The former deals
with the collection of Customs duties on imported goods.
The latter deals with the maintenance of seaports and
airports, the facilities to be Provided thereat and the
charges to be recovered therefor. An importer must land the
imported goods at a sea-port or airport. He can clear them
only after completion of Customs formalities. For this
purpose, the sea-ports and airports are approved and provide
storage facilities and Customs officers are accommodated
therein to facilitate clearance. For the occupation by the
goods of space in the sea-port or airport, the Board or the
Authority which is its proprietor is entitled to charge the
importer. That until Customs clearance
the Board or the Authority may not permit the importer to
remove his goods from its premises does not imply that it
may not charge the importer for the space his goods have
occupied until their clearance.
42. What is stated in the quoted clause of the said customs
public notice would be effective against the Authority only
if it were shown that the Authority had, expressly or
impliedly, consented to such arrangement; that is not even
pleaded.
43. It can not be gain said that, by reason of unjustified
detention of his goods by the Customs authorities, the
importer is put to loss by having to pay demurrage charges
for the periods of such detention. The Central Government
is empowered by section 35 of the International Airports Au-
thority Act, 1971, and section III of the Major Port Trusts
Act, 1963, to issue to the Authority and the Boards of
Trustees, respectively, directions on questions of policy
after giving them an opportunity, as far as practicable, of
expressing their views. -Me Central Government can, if so
advised, after giving to the Authority and the Boards of
Trustees the opportunity of expressing their views, direct
them, under the aforementioned provisions, not to levy
demurrage charges for periods covered by detention
certificates.
C.A. No 4227/92
44. The goods of the first respondent in this appeal were
stored, pending their clearance by the Customs authorities,
at the Container Freight Station of the appellant, the
Central Warehousing Corporation at Patparganj, Delhi. The
Central Warehousing Corporation is established under the
provisions of the Warehousing Corporations Act, 1962. The
provisions of the
482
Warehousing Corporations Act are substantially similar to
those of the International Airports Authority Act, 1971, and
the Major Port Trusts Act, 1963. What has been said above
in regard to the International Airports Authority applies as
well to the Central Warehousing Corporation.
45. In the result, the appeals (C.A. Nos. 798/92, 3971/92
and 4227/92) are allowed. The judgments and orders under
appeal are set aside. The writ petitions filed. by the
first respondents in each of the appeals are dismissed.
46. There shall be no order as to costs.
ORDER
47. For reasons given by us in our separate judgments (R.M.
Sahai, J. for dismissal of the appeals whereas S.P. Bharucha
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and N. Venkatachala, JJ. for allowing the appeals) the
appeals succeed and are allowed. The orders passed by the
High Court are set aside. And the Writ Petition shall stand
dismissed. But in the circumstances of the case, there
shall be no order as to costs.
VENKATACHALA, J.:
48. The important question which is required to be
considered and answered in deciding the above civil appeals
is, whether the Collector of Customs empowered under sub-
section (1) of section 45 of the Customs Act, 1962 - "the
Act" to approve persons to be custodians of imported goods
in customs areas until they are cleared as provided for
therein, while approving the International Airports Author-
ity of India - "the MM" to be the custodian of such imported
goods in the customs area of Indira Gandhi International
Airport, New Delhi and Central Warehousing Corporation -
"the CWC" to be the custodians of such imported goods
received at the customs area - the Container Freight
Station, CWC Complex, Pragati Maidan, New Delhi, by issue of
public notice or otherwise in that regard, if by such notice
or otherwise directs such custodians not to collect custody
charges from the consignees of such goods - "the Cargo", be-
cause of detention certificates issued by him or his
delegates, will he be acting within the powers conferred
upon him under the Act, its Rules or its Regulations, and,
if not, can such direction be enforced against the
custodians ?
49. Divergent views are expressed on the said question by
my revered brethren R.M. Sahai and S.P.Bharucha, JJ. in
their separate judgments, the drafts of which I had the
advantage of going through. The said question being of
considerable importance I propose to consider it indepen-
dently, express my view thereon and decide the present
appeals accordingly.
50. Civil Appeal No. 798 of 1992 arises out of the Judgment
dated 24.9.1991 of the High Court of Delhi in Civil Writ No.
554 of 1991, by which the MM was directed to release the
goods to respondent here (petitioner in the Writ Petition)
with out collecting any demurrage charges for the period for
which the detention certificate had been issued by the
Assistant Collector of Customs. Such direction was issued
by the High Court because of its view that the MM when was
the custodian of the goods at the instance of the Collector
of Customs, the IAAI was not entitled to recover demurrage
charges from the petitioner in the Writ Petition
(respondent-1 in the appeal) the consignee, for the
483
period covered by the detention certificate issued by the
Collector of Customs or his delegates. Such view was taken
by the High Court, following its earlier Division Bench
judgment in M/s. Trishul Impex v. Union of India [1991 (2)
Delhi Lawyer 1].
51. Civil Appeal No. 3971 of 1992 arises out of the
Judgment dated 3.2.1992 of the High Court of Delhi in
Civil Writ Petition No. 3235 of 1989, whereby the IAAI - the
appellant herein, was directed to refund demurrage charges
which it had collected in respect of the goods of the
petitioner therein - respondents herein, despite the
detention certificate issued in respect of such goods by the
Asstt. Collector of Customs. Such direction, according to
the High Court, was issued following its earlier Division
Bench judgments in M/s. Trishul Impex (supra) and Grand
Slam International v. Union of India C.W. 554 of 1991
decided on 21st September, 1991.
52. Civil Appeal No. 4227 of 1992 arises out of Judgment
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dated 22.1.1992 again of the High Court of Delhi in C.W. No.
1751 of 1991, by which it directed the CWC to release the
goods of the petitioner therein without collecting the
demurrage charges from the petitioner therein in respect of
the period covered by the detention certificate issued by
the Asstt. Collector of Customs. Such direction, it is
said in the judgment, was issued following its Division
Bench judgment in M/s. Trishul Impex (supra), wherein it
was held that the custodian of the goods under section 45 of
the Customs Act being the custodian on behalf of the Customs
authorities, it was bound to release the goods in favour of
the consignee when once a detention
certificate had been issued by the Customs authorities.
53. It would be convenient to consider and answer the
aforesaid question with reference to Civil Appeal No. 798 of
1992 and Civil Appeal No.3971 of 1992 in which the
appellant, "the IAAI" is common and dispose of the appeals
accordingly, in that, the answer to be given to the said
question,, would be sufficient to dispose of Civil Appeal
No. 4227 of 1992 as well.
54. M/S. Trishul Impex case (supra), has been relied upon
by the High Court in giving the directions to the IAAI, in
its judgments under appeals, not to collect demurrage
charges in respect of the periods covered by the detention
certificates issued by the Customs authorities. As has
already been pointed out, a Division Bench of the same Court
had, in the case, expressed its view that when the container
Corporation concerned there, was the custodian on behalf of
the Customs authorities under section 45(1) of the Act, it
was under an obigation to release the goods in its custody
without collecting demurrage charges in respect of the
period covered by the detention certificate issued by the
Customs authorities. In M/s. Grand Slam International
(supra), which is another decision of the Division Bench of
the same Court relied upon by it in its judgment in C.A. No.
3971 of 1992, the view taken is that the goods for which
demurrage charges were levied by the custodian, if was
solely on account of the fault of the Customs authorities
the liability for the same would be of those Customs
authorities and not of the consignee. But, when once the
Customs authorities issued the detention certificate in
respect of such pe-
484
riod of detention of goods, the custodian who had the
custody of goods on behalf of Customs authorities had no
option but to release the goods to the consignee.
Therefore, the directions given by the High Court in the
judgments under appeals to release the goods in its custody
to the con signees without collecting demurrage charges from
them in respect of the periods covered by the detention
certificates issued by the Customs authorities is based on
its view that when the goods of the consignee had been kept
by the custodian for and on behalf of the Customs authori-
ties, the consignee cannot be made liable to Make good such
demurrage charges in respect of the periods of such
detention for which detention certificates were issued by
the Customs authorities, which was taken following the view
already taken in similar matters by its Division Benches.
As the sustainability of the said view of the High Court is
under challenge in the present appeals, the question
adverted to at the outset is required to be considered and
answered for rendering a proper decision in them.
"(vii). In case of goods seized etc. by customs, the
warehousing/storage charges shall be calculated by M/s. MM
for the period due minus the charges for the period of
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detention at the instance of
55. The provision in sub-section (1) of section 45, which
bears on the question required to be considered, reads thus
"45. Restrictions on custody and removed of
imported goods. (1) Save as otherwise
provided in any law for the time being in
force, all imported goods unloaded in a
customs area shall remain in the custody of
such person as may be approved by the
Collector of Customs until they are cleared
for home consumption or are warehoused or are
transhipped in accordance with the provisions
of Chapter VII."
56. As becomes clear from the above
sub-section all imported goods unloaded in customs areas
shall remain in custody of such person as may be approved by
the Collector of Customs until they arc cleared for the
purposes indicated therein. Therefore, under the above
provision the Collector of Customs is the person who is
empowered to approve the persons that should be in custody
of goods unloaded in customs areas. The Collector of
Customs, New Delhi who has issued Notice No. 30/86, has by
clause (d) of that Notice approved the IAAI as the custodian
of cargo to be stored in Cargo Terminal, New International
Terminal Complex - "the CTNITC", obviously exercising the
powers conferred upon him by sub-section (1) of Section 45
of the Act. But, the Collector of Customs who has approved
the IAAI as custodian of the cargo to be stored in its
CTNITC by the said clause (d) requires IAAI to comply with
condition (vii) imposed against it thereunder, thus:
"(vii). In case of goods seized etc. by
customs, the warehousing/storage charges shall
be calculated by M/s. MM
for the period due minus the charges for the
period of detention at the instance of
No doubt, as to what obligations should the custodian-- the
IAAI approved by the Collector of Customs under sub-section
(1) of section 45 by clause (d) of the said public notice,
perform, are specified in sub-section (2) thereof which
reads:
"45. Restrictions on custody and removal of
imported goods.--
(1) ..............
(2) The person having custody of any
485
imported goods in a customs area, whether
under the provisions of sub-section (1) or
under any law for the time being in force, -
(a) shall keep a record of such goods and
send a copy thereof to the proper officer;
(b) shall not permit such goods to be
removed from the customs area or otherwise
dealt with, except under and in accordance
with the permission in writing of the proper
officer."
57.But, the said sub-section (2) of Section 45 as is seen
therefrom, does not in any way impose an obligation on the
custodian approved under sub-section (1) thereof not to
collect charges leviable on the consignee by it according to
Rules or Regulations made by the Statute creating it for
keeping the imported goods in its custody.
58.That is why, it is claimed on behalf of the IAAI, the
appellant in the appeals that condition (vii) of clause (d)
of the said public Notice has been imposed by the Collector
of Customs without any power or authority conferred upon him
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in that regard under any provision of the Act or its Rules
or its Regulations and hence unenforceable.
59.Learned counsel appearing for respondents were not able
to invite Court’s attention to any provision either in the
Actor the Rules or the Regulations made thereunder which
empowered the Collector of Customs to impose by issue of
public Notice the above condition (vii) in clause (d)
thereof denying the IAAI which is approved as the custodian
of imported goods in Customs area, the right to collect the
charges from the consignee for keeping his imported goods
detained or seized by the Customs authorities nor my effort
to find any provision in the Act or its Rules or its
Regulations enabled me to find any provision which conferred
such power of imposing such condition upon the IAAI merely
because it is approved as the custodian of imported goods on
behalf of Customs Department. However, as to whether the
Parliament in enacting the Act intended that custodians to
be approved thereunder to keep the goods coming into customs
areas should relieve the owners (consignees) of such goods
of their liability for payment. of charges for such keeping
or otherwise could be gathered from the provision in section
63 of the Act, it is excerpted
"63. Payment of rent and warehouse charges. -
(1) ’The owner of any warehoused goods shall
pay to the warehouse keeper rent and warehouse
charges at the rates fixed under any law fo
r
the time being in force -or where no rates arc
so fixed, at such rates as may be fixed by the
Collector of Customs.
(2). If any rent or warehouse charges are not
paid within ten days from the date when they
became due, the warehousekeeper may, after
notice to the owner of the warehoused goods
and with the permission of the proper officer
cause to be sold (any transfer of the
warehoused goods notwithstanding) such
sufficient portion of the goods as the
warehouse-keeper may select.
60.When sub-section (1) above, does not relieve the owner of
any warehoused goods to pay to the warehouse-keeper rent and
warehouse charges at the rates fixed under any law for the
time being in force or where no rates arc so fixed, at such
486
rates as may be fixed by the Collector of Customs, although
such goods were kept by the warehouse-keeper for and on be-
half of the Customs Department and again when subsection (2)
enables the warehouse-keeper even to sell the warehouse
goods with the permission of the proper officer for unpaid
rent or warehouse charges, it is difficult to think that
there could be any provision in the Act or the Rules or the
Regulations made thereunder which confers on the Collector
of Customs power to direct the release of the goods kept in
the custody, as custodian of the Customs Department without
demanding payment of keeping charges from the consignee of
goods because of detention certificates issued in that
regard by the Customs authorities, inasmuch as, the said
provision shows the legislative intendment to’ be to the
contrary.
61. In fact, when the IAAI in exercise of its powers
conferred by sub-section (1) of section 37 of the
International Airports Authority Act, 1971 - "the IAA Act",
and with the prior approval of the Central Government have
made regulations called the International Airport Authority
(Storage and Preservation of Goods) Regulations. 1980,
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regulating levy of charges or surcharges, scale of charges
and waiver of charges payable by the owner in case of
warehoused goods with the IAAI, those Regulations not only
do not come in conflict with the Act or its Regulations or
its Rules but conform to the requirement of the provision of
section 63 of the Act. When in pursuance of the said
Regulations policy directions are issued by the IAAI in
supersession of earlier instructions on the subject of
waiver of demurrage charges on production of detention
certificate issued by the Customs authorities
showing that detention of goods was for no fault of
consignee, it can be safely concluded that any directions
issued by customs Collector contrary to such Regulations and
the policy directions as those issued without authority in
law are ultra vires his powers. Therefore, I have no
hesitation in holding that the aforesaid condition (vii) in
clause (d) of the Customs Public Notice No. 30/86 directing
the IAAI not to collect the custody charges in respect of
the goods for which detention certificates may be issued by
the Collector of Customs or his delegatee, has to be
regarded as a condition imposed by the Collector of Customs
without being conferred any power in that regard either in
the Act or the Rules or the Regulations. If condition (vii)
of clause (d) of the Customs Public Notice No.30/86 is
regarded as that imposed by the Collector of Customs without
authority of law, it having been imposed ultra vires his
powers under the Act or Rules or Regulations no Court can
direct the IAAI to release the goods of the consignee
without collecting from him demurrage charges levied
according to its Regulations in respect of the goods, which
it had taken care of as the custodian merely because there
was a detention certificate of the Collector of Customs or
his delegates issued to the IAAI which had been approved as
the custodian of such goods by the Collector of Customs
under sub-section (1) of section 45 of the Act.
62.As the above view expressed by me on condition (vii)
under clause (d) of the Customs Public Notice No. 30/86
receives considerable support from the decisions of this
Court, where this Court while dealing with the liability of
consignees of imported goods or cargo to pay demurrage
charges levied in respect of them according to
487
scales of charges prescribed under Rules or Regulations made
under respective Ports Acts because of their non-clearance
from Customs areas in Ports, notwithstanding the fact that
concerned port Authority was the approved Custodian under
the Customs Act, 1962 and the fact that Customs Collector or
his delegate had issued detention certificates which made it
clear that the goods were detained for no fault of the
consignee and the goods shall be released without collection
of demurrage charges, they shall be adverted to presently.
63.Trustees of the Port of Madras v. M/s. Aminchand
Pyarelal & Ors. [(1976) 1 SCR 721] is the first of such
decisions of this Court. That was a case, where imported
goods of M/s. Aminchand Pyarelal ’the importer’ were not
cleared from the customs area of the Port of Madras by the
Customs authorities before the expiry of free days. The
goods, therefore, continued to be in the custody of Trustees
of the Port of Madras - "the Board", as approved custodian
of such goods on behalf of the Customs authorities.
However, a detention certificate was issued to the importer
by the Customs authorities stating that the detention of the
imported goods beyond the free days was not due to fault or
negligence on the part of the importer. The Board, based on
the detention certificate waived demurrage charges payable
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by the importer amounting to Rs.3,20,951/-, and released the
goods to the importer. Later, when the Customs authorities
owned their mistake of issuing the detention certificate
wrongly, the Board,filed a suit against the importer, the
Union of India and the Customs authorities for recovery of
the demurrage charges which had not been recovered on
account of the detention certificate. But, that suit was
resisted by the importer on the plea that the delay in
clearing the goods was due to fault on the part of the
Customs authorities and hence there was no legal obligation
on its part to pay the demurrage charges. The suit was
dismissed by the High Court accepting the plea of the im-
porter. When the Board brought up the matter before this
Court in appeal, the provisions of the Madras Port Trust Act
and the scale of rates fixed by the Board with the approval
of the Central Government pursuant to the provisions of the
Act having been thoroughly examined, it was held that the
High Court was in error in its conclusion that the Board had
no power to charge demurrage where goods were not removed
from its premises not due to the fault or negligence on the
part of the importer, but due to fault of the Customs
authorities.
64. Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay v. Indian Goods
Supplying\ Co., [(1977) 3 SCR 343] is the second of such
decisions of this Court, where this Court examined the
sustainability of scales of rates of demurrage of goods
framed by the Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay "the
Board", the provisions of which were in pari materia with
the Madras Port Trust Act. This Court held that the case it
was examining being in all force with the case of M/s.
Aminchand Pyare Lal (supra) it had to be concluded on the
basis of the decision rendered therein. Consequently, it
reversed the judgment of the High Court in appeal by holding
that the High Court was in error in its view that the
importer of the goods could not be held responsible for any
delay not attributable to his own fault and that the
demurrage under the statute could never be imposed as long
as goods were detained for the purpose of
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Import Trade Control Regulations.
65. Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay v. Jai Hind Oil
Mills Co. & Ors. [(1987) 1 SCR 932] is the third of such
decisions of this Court. There, the provisions of the Major
Port Trust Act, 1963, which were under examination of this
Court having been found to be in pari materia with the
provisions of the Ports Act considered by this Court in M/s.
Aminchand Pyare Lal (supra) and Indian Goods Supplying Co.
(supra), by following the decisions rendered therein, it was
held thus :
The power of a Port Trust to fix rates of
demurrage and to recover the same from an
importer or exporter (although the question of
an exporter paying demurrage arises rarely)
under law and to show concession as regards
demurrage charges in certain specified cases
is recognised by the Court in the Trustees of
the Port of Madras V. M/s. Aminchand Pyarelal
& Others, (1976) 1 S.C.R. 721 and in the Board
of Trustees of the Port of Bombay v. Indian
Goods Supplying Co., (1977) 3 S.C.R. 343.
These decisions arc no doubt based on the
relevant laws which were in force at the
material time. But the decisions are still
relevant insofar as cases arising under the
Act because the Act also contains provisions
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more or less similar to the statutory
provisions considered in the said decisions.
Demurrage charges are levied in order to
ensure quick clearance of the cargo from the
harbour. They are always fixed in such a way
that they would make it unprofitable for
importers to use the port premises as a
warehouse. It is necessary to do so because
congestion in the ports affects the free move
-
ment of ships and the loading and unloading
operations. As stated earlier, the Port Trust
shows concession to the party concerned in
certain types of cases.
66. From the above decisions of this Court it becomes
clear that an authority created under a statute even if is
the custodian of the imported goods because of the
provisions of the Customs Act, 1961, would be entitled to
charge demurrages for the imported goods in its custody and
make the importer or consignee liable for the same even for
periods during which he/it was unable to clear the goods
from the Customs area, due to fault on the part of the
Customs authorities or of other authorities who might have
issued detention certificates owning such fault.
67. Thus, the above decisions of this Court which uphold
the power of Ports Trusts created under Ports Act to levy
and collect demurrage charges for goods they keep as
Custodians for Customs Department from the consignees
notwithstanding the detention certificates issued by the
Customs Department clearly support the view I have taken
that the IAAI, an authority constituted under the
International Airports Authority Act, 1971, when is entitled
to collect charges for keeping custody of the imported
goods by regulations made thereunder and according to its
policy, the Collector of Customs or his delegates could not
direct the IAAI by issuance of a detention certificate to
release the goods of the importer without collection of the
charges liable to be paid in respect thereof, inasmuch as
the Collector of Customs or his delegates has not been
empowered under the provisions of the Act or its Rules or
its Regulations to direct release of the imported goods
without collection of keeping charges, for the keeping of
which by the IAAI, charges are to be paid under the Rules
made under the International Airports Authority Act, 1971.
68.Since Central Warehousing Corporation created under
Warehousing Corpo-
489
ration Act, 1962 stands in the same footing as that of the
IAAI created under the International Airports Authority Act,
1971 in the matter of keeping of goods as custodians on
behalf of the Customs Department and the entitlement of both
of them under the respective Acts, Rules and Regulations to
levy and collect demurrage charges from the owners or
consignees of such goods, not being different, the view have
taken on the entitlement of IAAI to levy and collect charges
or demurrage charges for keeping goods by it as custodian on
behalf of the Customs Department, equally holds good for
Central Warehousing Corporation.
69. Therefore, my answer to the question considered by
me is in the negative i.e. the Collector of Customs
empowered under subsection (1) of section 45 of the Customs
Act, 1962 to approve persons to be custodians of imported
goods in customs areas until they are cleared as provided
for therein, while approving the International Airports
Authority of India to be the custodian of such imported
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goods in the customs area of Indira Gandhi International
Airport, New Delhi and Central Warehousing Corporation to be
the custodians of such imported goods received at the
customs area the Container Freight Station, CWC Complex,
Pragati Maidan, New Delhi, by issue of public notice or
otherwise in that regard,if by such notice or otherwise
directs such custodians not to collect custody charges from
the consignees of such goods - "the Cargo", because of
detention certificates issued by him or his delegates, will
not be acting within the powers conferred upon him under the
Act, its Rules or its Regulations and hence directions given
by the Customs Collector or his delegatees to release the
goods of importers or consignees without collecting
demurrage charges from them cannot be enforced by Courts
either, against IAAI or CWC.
70. The view I have so taken makes the judgments of High
Court of Delhi under appeals unsustainable, for the view of
its earlier decisions in M/s. Trishul Impex case (supra)
and Grand Slam case (supra) which it has followed, also
cannot be sustained.
Civil Appeal No. 422 7 of 1992
71. The Central Warehousing Corporation established under
the provisions of the Warehousing Corporation Act, 1962 is a
creature of statute as is the IAAI under the International
Airports Authority Act, 1971. The entitlement of the CWC to
recover demurrages for the goods of which it becomes the
custodian under the provisions of the Act cannot be
different from that of the IAAI, as indicated in the earlier
judgment. If that be so, what I have said in the aforesaid
appeals of the IAAI would equally apply to the CWC also.
The High Court having directed the Customs authorities to
issue detention certificates in respect of the goods of
which the CWC was the owner has relieved the importer - re-
spondent-1 in the appeal from his liability to pay demurrage
charges. Because of the view I have taken in my judgment in
the earlier appeals it has to be held that the High Court’s
direction relieving respondent-1 from his liability to pay
demurrage charges cannot be sustained.
72. In the result, Civil Appeal Nos. 798 of 1992, 3971 of
1992 and 4227 of 1992 are allowed. The judgments of the
High Court under appeals are set aside. The Writ
490
Petitions filed by respondents in each of the cases before
the High Court are dismissed. In the facts of the present
appeals, there shall be no order as to costs.
ORDER
73. For reasons given by us in our separate judgments (R.M.
Sahai, J. for dismissal of the appeals whereas S.P. Bharucha
and N. Venkatachala, JJ. for allowing the appeals) the
appeals succeed and are allowed. The orders passed by the
High Court are set aside. But in the circumstances of the
case, there shall be no order as to costs.