Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BRITISH INDIA CORPORATION LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/08/1962
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
SARKAR, A.K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1963 AIR 104 1963 SCR (3) 642
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC1237 (8)
ACT:
Excise Duty-Footwear-Levied on factories employing fifty or
more workmen and using power exceeding 2 H.P.-If Discrimi-
natory-Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944(1 of 1944),
Schedule Item No. 17 Constitution of India, Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
Under item No.17 of the Schedule to the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944, excise duty was levied on footwear produced
in any factory employing 50 or more workmen and using power
exceeding 2 H.P. The petitioner contended that the
imposition of duty on larger manufacturers only was dis-
criminatory and there was no reasonable basis for
differentiating between manufacturers on the basis of number
of workers or the employment of power above 2 H.P. and that
the im. position of the heavy duty gave rise to a
competition sufficient to put the big manufacturers out of
business.
Held, that item 17 of the Schedule is based upon a
reasonable classification and is validly enacted.
Manufacturers who employed 50 or more workers form a well
defined class, so also manufacturers who. use power
exceeding 2 H.P. In imposing the excise duty there is a
definite desire to make an exemption in favoui of the small
manufacturer who is unable to pay the duty as easily, if at
all, as the big manufacturer, Such a classification in the
interests of co-operative societies cottage industries and
small ’manufacturers has often the made to give an impetus
to them and save them from annihilation in competition with
large industry.
Orient Weaving Mills (P) Ltd. v. Union of India, (1962)
Supp. 3 S.C.R . 481 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 94-of 1955.
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Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
643
Bishan Narain, Rameshwarnath, S. N. Andley and P. L. Vohra,
for the petitioner.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor General of India, N. S.
Bindra and P. D. Menon, for the col respondents.
1962. August 20. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This is a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution challenging the imposition of Excise Duty on
the petitioner by virtue of item No. 17 "Footwear" of the
First Schedule to the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1
of 1944) with effect from February 28, 1954, and the
calculation of the duty advaloram by including in the price,
charges for freight, packing and distribution.-
The petitioner, the British India corporation Ltd. is a
public limited company which was formed to take-over other
companies and to amalgamate them. Among the companies which
the petitioner took-over were Cooper Allan & Company Ltd.,
and the North West Tannery Company Ltd., b )that Kanpur.
These two Companies manufature shoes and other leather goods
and operate as a single unit manufacturing the well-known
brand of "F L E X" shoes. As a result of the financial
proposals of the Central Government for the financial year
1952-55, a bill (No. 9 of 1954) was introduced in parliament
on February 27,1954. Under el. 8 of the Bill foot-wear were
proposed to be taxed at 10% advaloram if produced in any
factory as defined in the factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948).
When the Finance Act, 1954 (17 of 1954) was enacted, the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1954, was amended by the
inclusion of item 17 in the Schedule, though in a slightly
different form. The item as finally enacted read as
follows:-
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"17. FOOTWEAR, produced in any factory including the
precints thereof whereon fifty or more workers are working
or were working on any day, of the preceding twelve months,
and in any part of which manufacturing process is being
carried on with the aid of power or is ordinarily so carried
on, the total equivalent of such power exceeding two horse-
power. "Footwear" includes all varieties of footwear,whether
known boots shoes, sandals, chappals, or by any other name."
{Ten percent "advalorem"}
Under the provisions of the Provisional Collection of Taxes
Act, 1931, (XVIof 1931), the duty was leviable from February
28, 1954, by virtue of a declaration in the Bill to that
effect. On the preceding day the Superintendent of Central
Excise., Kanpur, deputed an Inspector of his department to
obtain from the petitioner a declaration of all stock of
footwear and requested that the Inspector be permitted to
verify the stocks with a view to levying the Excise Duty on
and from February 28, 1954. As a’ result of the position of
Excise Duty on footwear the petitioner was required to pay
during the remaining ten months of 1954 a sum of RE;.
9,47,630/- as Excise Duty. The petitioner produces in the
two units above-named, footwear for sale to the public and
for supplies to the Government for the use of the Army and
the Police. The petitioner contends that though the Excise
Duty paid by it was capable of being passed on to the
consumer, it could not include it in the price at which
shoes were sold to the public because of heavy competition
by those free from such duty-, though it did include the
Excise Duty in the price of the footwear supplied to
Government. Thus Rs. 2 lacs odd were passed on to
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Government but Rs. 7 lacs odd were born
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by the Company itself. The petitioner contended before the
Collector of Central Excise, Allahabad, that the calculation
of the duty advalorem should not be, based on price
including freight, packing and distribution charges paid to
it, by its distributors in the outlying parts of India.
This contention of the petitioner was not accepted by the
Collector. The petitioner then took an appeal to the
Central Board of Revenue but before the appeal could be
disposed of, the petitioner filed this petition under Art,
32 of the Constitution praying for writ or writs to quash
the order of the Collector of Central Excise, Allahabad, and
writ or writs to prohibit Union Government. The Central
Board of Revenue and the Collector and Superintendent of
Central Excise from enforcing the provisions of item 17
against petitioner and collecting the Excise Duty therein
levied.
According to the petitioner, a distinction has been made in
Item 17 above-quoted between manufacturers of footwear
employing more than 50 workers .or carrying on the
manufacturing process with the aid of power exceeding 2 H.P.
and other manufacturers. According to the petitioner this
amounts to discrimination because there is no reasonable
basis for differentiating between manufacturers on the basis
of number of workers or the employment of power above 2 H.P.
The petitioner contends that the essentials of the
manufacture of footwear are the same whether one employs 50
or more workers or less. The larger number of workers is
merely needed because the out-turn has to be greater but the
number does not change the nature of the operations or the
method of production. Similarly, the need for than 2 H.P.
arises if a larger number of mechanical units have to be
worked and there is no essential difference between a large
manufacturer
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and a small manufacturer by reason of the employment of more
power or less. It is, therefore, contended that the
imposition of Excise Duty on bigger manufacturers creates a
discrimination in the trade which is neither just nor
discernible and amounts to a violation of Art. 14 of the
Constitution. The levy of the Excise Duty in such
circumstances is said to be both illegal and
unconstitutional.
As a corrolary to this it is contended that the petitioner,
which was already carrying on its business at a loss in view
of the competition, is now further handicapped by having to
bear a heavy Excise Duty which it cannot pass on to the
consumer due to competition by those not paying the duty and
is likely to go out of its business and that the levy of the
Excise Duty in these circumstances amounts to a breach also
of Art-. 19 (1) (f) and (g) and 31 of the Constitution.
It is further contended that the duty advalorem ought to be
calculated on the ex-factory price and not on the price
charged to the distributors which includes within itself the
cost of packing and charges for freight and distribution
commission. It is contended that this is an error apparent
on the face of the order of the Collector of Excise and the
order deserves to be quashed by the issue of’ writ of
certiorari or other appropriate writ.
Lastly, it is contended that the Finance Act, 1954 received
the assent of the president on April 27, 1954, and must be
deemed to have become law ,from that date. The collection
of Excise Duty from March, 1954, before the Finance Bill
became law, is said to be illegal. We shall deal only brie-
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fly with these arguments as most of them have by now been
considered and decided in other cases of this Court.
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The contention that this duty does not amount to a duty of
excise because it cannot be passed on by the petitioner to
the consumer was not raised before us. It was mentioned in
the petition. An Excise Duty is a duty on production and
though according to the economists, it is an indirect tax
capable of being passed on to the consumer as part of the
price yet the mere passing on of the duty is not its
essential Even if borne. by the producer characteristic. or
manufacturer it does not cease to be a duty of excise. The
nature of such a duty was explained in the very first case
of the Federal Court and subsequently in others of the
Federal Court, the Privy Council and this Court, but this
ground continues to be taken and we are surprised that it
was raised again.
The contentions that the duty could not be collected before
the passing of the Finance Act, 1954, has been the subject
of an elaborate discussion in the recently decided case of
this Court, M/s. Chotabhai Jethabhai Patel and Co. vs.
Union of India (1). It is conceded that in view of the
above decision the point is no longer open.
It is also conceded that the question whether in calculating
the duty advalorem, the Collector of Excise was justified in
including in the price the cost of packing, charges for
freight and commission for distribution, or not, is a matter
for the decision of the authorities constituted under the
Act subject to such appeals and revisions as might lie but
not a matter for consideration directly under Art. 32 of the
constitution, in view of the recent decision of this Court
in Smt. Ujjam Bai vs. State of U.P. (Civil Misc. Petition
No. 79 of 1959) decided on April 10, 1962. It may be
pointed out that the present petition was filed at a time
when the appeal before the
(1) (1962) Supp. 2 S.C.R. 1.
648
Board of Revenue was pending and there was a further right
of revision to the Central Government.
This leaves over for consideration true challenge under Art.
14, 19 and 31 of the constitution. The argument under each
of these Articles is based on precisely the same facts
viewed from different angles. It is. contended that there
is a discrimination between big manufacturers of footwear
and small manufacturers which is not based on any
differential. This discrimination, it is said, leads to the
imposition of a heavy tax on the big manufacturers with a
corresponding exemption in favour of the small manufacturers
giving rise to a competition sufficient to put the big
manufacturers out of the market. The tax being illegal the
levy amounts to a confiscation of the property of the
petitioner. It will thus be seen that the imposition of the
duty is first challenged Art. 14 as a discrimination, next
it is challenged under Article 19 as a deprivation of the
right to acquire, hold and dispose of property or to carry
on a business or trade and lastly the collection’of duty is
characterised as a confiscation of property without the
authority of law under Art. 31.
The argument suffers from a fundamental fallacy in that it
assumes that there can be no classification of manufacturers
on the basis of the number of workers or the employment of
power above a particular horse-power. Manufacturers who
employ 50 or more workers can be said to form a well-defined
class. Manufacturers whose manufacturing process is being
carried on with the aid of power exceeding 2 H.P. are also a
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well-defined class. Legislation of this type depending upon
the number of workers or the extent of power employed, is
frequently to be found. The most obvious example is the
Factories Act which defines a factory with reference to the
employment of a certain number of
649
workers or the employment of power. The contention that
size makes no difference is not valid. It is well-known
that the bigger manufacturers are able to effect economics
in their manufacturing process and their out-turn being both
large and rapid they are able to undersell am-all
manufacturers. If this were not so mass production would
lose all its advantages. No doubt the manufacturers are now
required to bear burdens which previously did not exist,
like bonus, expenses on labour welfare etc. but still the
manufacturers, provided the business is well ran, can by
mass production offer the same commodity at a competitive
price as against small’ manufacturers and bear the burden as
well. Therefore, in imposing the Excise Duty, there was a
definite desire to make an exemption in favour of the small
manufacturer who is unable to pay the duty as easily, if at
all, as the big manufacturer. Such a classification in the
interests of co-operative societies, cottage industries and
small manufacturers has often to be made to give an Impetus
to them and save them from annihilation in competition with
large industry. It has never been successfully assailed on
the ground of discrimination. Recently, this Court in the
Orient Weaving Mills (P) Ltd. v. The Union of India(1)
considered a similar argument in relation to an exemption
granted to societies working a few looms on co-operative
basis as against big companies working hundreds of looms.
The. exemption was held to be constitutional and the
classification of co-operative societies was held to be
reasonable. A similar consideration applies in the present
case, where the exemption operates in respect of very small
manufacturers employing not more than 50 workers and
carrying on their manufacturing process with power not in
excess of 2 H.P. This affords a protection to small concerns
who, if they were made to pay the duty, would have to go out
of business.
(1) (1962) Supp. 3 S.C.R. 481.
650
In our judgment the Schedule which is characterised as
discriminative is based upon a reasonable classification and
is validly enacted. If the law is held to be valid the
attack under Arts. 19 and 31 must also fail.
In view of what we have said above the petition must fail.
It will be dismissed with costs.
Petition dismissed.