Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHIBANI ENGINEERING SYSTEMS,
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/08/1996
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
THOMAS K.T. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (7) 222 1996 SCALE (5)593
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 6TH DAY OF AUGUST, 1996
Present:
Hon’ble Mr.Justice S.P.Bharucha
Hon’ble Mr.justice K.T.Thomas
D.Tandon and P.Parmeswaran, Advs. for the appellant
L.R.Singh, Adv. for the Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
Collector of Customs, Bombay
V.
Shibani Engineering Systems. Bombay
J U D G M E N T
BHARUCHA. J.
The respondents imported two consignments of cups which
are parts of taper roller bearings. They filled bills of
entry for clearance classifying the goods under entry
8482.99 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975, and claimed the
benefit of the concessional rate of duty provided by an
Exemption Notification (No.70/89).
The relevant part of the Exemption Notification reads
thus:
"6. Parts of goods covered by Sl.No. 5 above namely
(a) Cups and Cones of roller The rate of
bearings covered by duty applicable
items (a) and (b) of to the bearings
Sl.No. 5 above are parts.
(b) Inner and outer rings of - do -
roller bearings covered
by items (a) and (b) of
Sl. No. 5 above
(c) Others 15% ad valorem"
Serial No.5 therein referred to relates to "roller
bearings of all types".
The respondents filed a writ petition in the Bombay
High Court. The goods were allowed to be cleared by the High
Court on the basis of a provisional assessment extending the
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benefit to the respondents of Sl.No. 6(c). The appellants
preferred a Special Leave Petition to this Court; therein
the appellants were directed to issue a show cause notice to
the respondents and finalise the assessment of the goods by
6th September, 1991.
A notice in this behalf was issued. The respondents
were heard and the Collector of Customs (Judicial) made an
order on 30th August, 1991. He held that the goods were
covered by Sl.No. 6(c) and not Sl. No. 6(a). For the purpose
of valuation, he rejected the transaction value of the goods
inasmuch as the goods had been imported from a trader in
Hongkong and the price list of the manufacturer of the goods
had not been produced. The transaction value of the goods
was ridiculously law when compared to the c.i.f. value of
different brands of similar goods. In the Collector’s view,
the transaction value, was in the circumstances,
unacceptable. The Collector noted the price lists of
imported bearings of Chinese, Russian, Czechoslovakian and
German origin and, by arduous reasoning, concluded that one
set of the goods should be valued at Rs.5.64 per cup and the
other set at Rs.21.38 per cup.
The respondents appealed to the Customs Excise & Gold
(Control) Appellate Tribunal against the Collector’s
findings on classification and valuation. The appellants
preferred an appeal in regard to penalty and fine (with
which we are not here concerned).
The Tribunal found, thus:
"Cups and cones of roller bearings
are two separate entities by
themselves as known in the
concerned trade and industry. Each
is a readily identifiable component
and both these parts put together
would almost constitute a bearing
without certain small parts of
bearings and this appears to be the
reason behind assessing cups and
cones when imported together at the
same rate as applicable to the
bearings, as cups and cones
imported together acquire the
essential character of a bearing."
The meaning of the words "and " and "or" as set out in law
lexicons and judgments was then adverted to . As far as the
Exemption Notification was concerned, it was clear to the
Tribunal that the imported cups did not fall within the term
"Others" against Sl.No. 6(c). It was not, the Tribunal
observed, a question of the respondents (importers) "seeking
to read the word "and" that is, in conjunctive manner".
Regarding valuation, the Tribunal found that the Collector
had compared unbranded bearings with bearings bearing
reputed brand names. He had compared the assessable value of
the cups, which he had held to be of Chinese origin, with
the price of bearings imported from Czechoslovakia as the
value of similar articles was not available in the price
list of bearings from Russia. He had, subsequently,
determined the value of Chinese bearings on best judgment
assessment based on branded bearings of Russian origin. This
determination was patently erroneous as unbraced goods could
not be compared in price to branded goods and goods of one
country of origin could not be said to be comparable to
goods manufactured in another country. There was, further,
no basis upon which the Collector could determine the valued
of cups and cones in the ratio of 30 : 70. Therefore, the
assessable value determined in the order under challenge
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before the Tribunal could not be held to be correct and had
to be discarded and the invoice value of the goods.
In sofar as classification is concerned, learned
counsel for the appellants submitted that the Tribunal ought
to have read the entry in the Exemption Notification as any
ordinary man would have read it and not have got misled by
legal interpretations of the words "and" and "or". Learned
counsel for the respondents submitted that caps and cones
and inner and outer rings of roller bearings comprised the
entirety of roller bearings and, therefore, there was no
scope for the classification of "Others" in Sl. No.6 unless
the words " cups and cones" were read as one whole; in other
words, it was only if the classification "others" was
applied to caps imported separately, cones imported
separately, inner rings imported separately and outer rings
imported separately that the classification "Other" made
sense. For this purpose learned counsel relied upon the
extract of the Tribunal’s order which we have quoted above.
All that the extracted order says is that cups and
cones are the major component parts of roller bearings. The
Tribunal does not hold that cups, cones and inner and outer
rings comprise the entirety of roller bearings.
In our view, the Tribunal mis-directed itself. There is
not question of reading the word "and" disjunctively here.
The Exemption Notification must be read plainly, as an
ordinary man would read it, and, so read, Sl.No. 6(a) says
that cups of roller bearings are liable to the duty
applicable to the bearings of which they are part and cones
of roller bearings are liable to the rate of duty applicable
to the bearings of which they are part. There is no
justification for reading the entry connectively in the
sense that the rate of duty applicable to the bearings of
which they are part will apply only when the cups and cones
of roller bearings are imported together but not if they are
imported separately.
Insofar as valuation is concerned, the Collector was
right in rejecting the transaction value of the goods
because, plainly, it was a totally unrealistic value. For
the purpose of placing a value on the goods, however, the
Collector resorted to very tenuous reasoning which we cannot
uphold. At the same time, we must say that we do not approve
of the findings of the Tribunal in this behalf, which we
have referred to above. It may in given case be necessary to
value unbranded goods on the basis of the known price of
branded goods and also the goods of the one country of
origin, but the linkage must be appreciable and approximate.
We are of the view that the matter of valuation of the
goods must go back to the Collector and the respondents and
appellants should have that opportunity to place before him
material as may enable him to arrive at their assessable
value.
The appeal is allowed, The judgment and order the
Tribunal under appeal is set aside. The matter is remanded
to the Collector of Customs (Judicial), Bombay, or an
equivalent officer. He shall proceed upon the basis that the
goods fall under Sl. No. 6(a) of the Exemption Notification.
He shall assess the value of the goods afresh, taking into
account the material placed before him, and determine the
Customs duty payable thereon.
There shall be no order as to costs.