Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 11651-11652 of 1995
PETITIONER:
ALPINE INDUSTRIES
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, NEW DELHI.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/01/2003
BENCH:
M.B. SHAH & D.M. DHARMADHIKARI
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2003 (1) SCR 313
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DHARMADHIKARI, J. The present two appeals have been preferred under Section
35L(b) of the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944 against the three-member
Judgement [reported in 1997 (92) E.L.T.53 (Tribunal) of the Customs, Excise
& Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal [for short ’CEGAT’] Principal Bench
’C’, New Delhi. The Tribunal by majority opinion of two against one held
against the appellant that its manufactured product with trade name ’Lip
Salve’ is classifiable for payment of excise duty under Heading 33.04 of
the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 [hereinafter referred as ’Act’] as ’a
preparation for care of skin’ and not as a ’medicament’ under Heading 30.03
of the Act.
The minority view expressed by one Member of the Tribunal in favour of the
appellant is that its manufactured product ’Lip Salve’ is classifiable as
’medicament’ under Chapter 30.03 of the Act although the sub-classification
is required to be re-determined by remanding the case to the Assistant
Collector of Central Excise.
In the impugned order of the Tribunal, the chemical composition of the
product, the manner in which it is marketed and supplied as also its common
parlance meaning have all been examined. For deciding these appeals, it is
sufficient for us to broadly explain the nature of the product for
examining the correctness of the finding reached by the Tribunal. The
learned counsel appearing for the appellant very strenuously supported the
minority view of the Tribunal. By taking us through the medical literature
on the subject, it is stressed that the product is supplied for use of
soldiers posted in high altitude areas. It is a medicament for treatment of
sore, inflamed, roughened and cracked lips. The product is manufactured in
accordance with Defence Services Specifications. Its ingredients are white
bees wax, white soft paraffin, liquid paraffin, lanolin-all ingredients
conforming to I.P. Grade; Cetyl Alcohol C.P. Grade. The other ingredients
are Stabiliser and perfume. It is pointed out from 1923 Edition of British
Pharmaceutical Codex that the chemical combination prescribed in British
Pharmacopoeia has been changed for making it suitable for use of defence
personnel in India and especially those posted in high altitude areas. On
this basis, it is contended that the product supplied exclusively to
Defence Department for use of military personnel posted in high altitude
areas is a ’medicament’ and not merely a ’skin care preparation’. It is
classifiable as ’medicament’ under Chapter 30.03 of the Act.
On behalf of the Revenue, the learned standing counsel submitted that the
drug licence obtained by the appellant under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act,
1940, itself mentions that it is a licence for ’ointment and cream for
external application as a non-pharmacopoeia item’. In the certificate of
the Deputy Director [General] of the Directorate-General of Health Services
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
issued on 09-2-1987, there is a mention that ’Lip Salve’ is a
protective/preventive cream used for treatment of chapping of lips. It
further says that chapping of lips. It further says that chapping of lips
includes sores, inflammation, characteristics, fissures and similar
diseases of mucous membrane of lips. It is a matter of common knowledge
that chapping of lips occurs because of dryness of air and in cold weather.
It is not necessarily limited to high altitude areas although such chapping
of lips is more acute in high altitude areas where there is severe cold and
sun rays. The use of the product is for protecting the skin and lips
against damages caused by natural factors such as cold and weather
conditions.
It is well established that in interpreting tariff entries in taxation
statute like Excise Act where the primary object is to raise revenue and
for that purpose various products are differently classified, the entries
are not be understood in its scientific and technical meaning. The terms
and expressions used in tariff have to be understood by their popular
meaning that is the meaning that is attached to them by those using the
product. See the decision of Supreme Court on the dispute regarding
classification for excise duty, the product-Dant Manjan Lal manufactured by
Shree Baidyanath Ayurved Bhavan Ltd. reported in the case of Shree
Baidyanath Ayurved Bhavan Ltd v. Collector of Central Excise, Nagpur and
Ors., [1996] 9 SCC 402. The manufacturer claimed the product to be an
ayurvedic medicina preparation product for dental care. The view of the
Tribunal was upheld by this court by holding that ’ordinarily a medicine is
prescribed by a medical practitioner and it is used for a limited time and
not every day unless it is so prescribed to deal with a specific disease
like diabetes’.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellant placed reliance on decision of
this court of B.P.L. Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Collector of Central Excise,
Vadodara, [1996] Supp. 3 SCC in which product with trade name ’Selsun’ used
for treatment of dandruff was held classifiable as a ’medicament’ and not a
’cosmetic product’ intended for cleansing, beautifying promoting
attractiveness or altering appearance. The learned counsel highlighted
nature of preparation of the product the method in which it supplied with
the label, literature, and the manner in which it is marketed to bring home
his point that it is not merely a skin care lotion or cream but a
’medicament specially prepared to be supplied for use of defence personnel
posted in high altitude areas or in sever weather conditions.
We have gone through the pharmaceutical and medical literature produced
before us in the course of hearing and which has been duly dealt with by
the Tribunal in its minority and majority opinion. The certificate issued
by the Army Authorities and the chemical ingredients of the product are not
decisive on the question of classification of the product for levy of
excise duty. It is firmly established that on the question of
classification of product under Central Excise Tariff Act, "commercial
parlance theory" has to be applied. It is true that the entire supply by
the appellant of its product ’Lip Salve’ has been to the Defence Department
for use of military personnel but that would also not be determinative of
the nature of the product for classifying it. It is not disputed that the
product ’Lip Salve’ is used for the care of the lips. It is a product
essentially for "care of skin" and not for "cure of skin". It is,
therefore, classifiable as a skin care cream and not a medicament. From the
nature of the product and the use to which it is put. We do not find that
the claim of the appellant is acceptable that it is primarily for
therapeutic use. What we find from the material produced before the
Tribunal is that essential the product is a protective/preventive
preparation for chapping of lips. It is not a curative product maybe that
incidentally on cracked and chapped lips, it has some curative effect. It
is also not denied that the product ’Lip Salve’ is not suitable for use
only for soldiers operating in high altitude areas but it is of use for
every one as protection from dry, cold weather or sun rays. The product,
therefore, essentially is protective of skin of lip. It is lip care product
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
and not a ’medicament’. It is neither prescribed by any doctor nor
obtainable from the Chemist for Pharmaceutical shops in the market.
The appellant seeks classification of the product as a pharmaceutical
product under Chapter 30 and as a ’medicament’ under Heading 30.03. The
rules for interpretation of the Schedule under the Central Excise Tariff
Act 1985, for the purpose of classification chapter notes can be taken as
aid for understanding their various entries under various Headings of the
tariff. What is to be noted from Chapter 30 of the Tariff Act is that under
note no l(d) preparations covered by Chapter 33 even if they have
’therapeutic or prophylactic properties’ are excluded from Chapter 30.
Medicament’ has been defined in note No.2(i) to mean ’goods which are
either products comprising two or more constituents which have been mixed
or compounded together for therapeutic or prophylactic use’. On a reading
of note No.l(d) with note No.2 (1) of Chapter 30 under Heading
’Pharmaceutical Products, ’it is clear that preparations which fall under
Chapter 33 even If they have therapeuticor prophylactic properties are not
covered under Heading 30.03 as ’medicaments’.
Note 2 of Chapter 33 has been brought to our notice and commented upon by
counsel for both the parties. It reads thus:-
"2. Heading Nos. 33.03 to 33.07 apply, inter alia, to products, whether or
not mixed (other than aqueous distillates and aqueous solutions of
essential oils), suitable for use as goods of these headings and put up in
packing with labels, literature or other indications that they are for use
as cosmetics or toilet preparations or put up in a form clearly specialised
to such use and includes products whether or not they contain subsidiary
pharmaceutical or antiseptic constituents, or are held out as having
subsidiary curative or prophylactic value.
[underlining for emphasis]
Based on note No.2. the main emphasis in the arguments advanced on behalf
of the appellant is that the product is manufactured especially for defence
personnel and packed in simple packing with labels and literatures
indicating that it is not sold as cosmetics or toilet preparation. On the
other hand on behalf of Revenue, portion of note no.2 underlined above has
been highlighted to contend that the products classifiable under Chapter 33
includes such products under it even though they contain ’subsidiary
pharmaceutical or antiseptic constituents or held out as having subsidiary
curative or prophylactic value’. This submission on behalf of the appellant
based on note no.2 under Chapter 33 overlooks note no.5 the said Chapter
which reads thus:-
"5. Heading No.33.04 applies, inter alia, to the following products :
beauty creams, vanishing creams, cold creams make-up creams, cleansing
creams, skin foods, skin tonics, face powders, baby powders, toilet
powders, talcum powders and grease paints, lipsticks, eye shadow and
eyebrow pencils, nail polishes and varnishes, cuticle removers and other
preparations for use in maincure or chiropody and barrier creams to give
protection against skin irritants.
[underlining for emphasis]
The above quoted note no.5 has to be read with entry 33.04 which reads as
under:-
"33.04. Beauty or make-up preparations and preparations for the care of the
skin (other than medicaments), including sunscreen and suntan preparations;
manicure or pedicure preparations.
[Underlining for emphasis]
Reading the above underlined portions of Note 2 and No.5 with entry 33.04,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
we find ourselves in the agreement with the majority opinion of the
Tribunal that the product ’Lip Salve’ is a kind of "barrier cream" or a
protective cream against skin irritants. It, therefore, clearly falls under
entry 33.04 and conforms to the description ’preparation of the care of the
skin other than medicaments’. The learned counsel of the appellant has not
been able to persuade us to take a different view from the one taken in the
majority opinion of the Tribunal. We confirm that the product ’Lip Salve’
is essentially a preparation for protection of lips and skin and is not a
’medicament’. Such preparations which have a subsidiary curative or
prophylactic value clearly fall under entry 33.03 to 33.07 as per note no.2
under Chapter 33. The product clearly is covered by entry 33.04 read with
note no.5 of Chapter 33, it essentially being a preparation for protection
of lips or skin. We have also gone through the minority opinion expressed
by one of the members of the Tribunal and the reasoning therein supported
before us on behalf of the appellant. For the reasons aforesaid, we are
unable to agree with the minority view. In the result, we find no merit in
these appeals and the same are hereby dismissed.