Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION CARBIDE INDIA LIMITED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/04/1986
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
SEN, A.P. (J)
MADON, D.P.
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1097 1986 SCR (2) 162
1986 SCC (2) 547 JT 1986 453
1986 SCALE (1)530
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC1153 (7)
R 1990 SC 59 (6)
R 1990 SC1893 (4)
ACT:
Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, s. 3 and Entry 27 of
First Schedule - Aluminium cans for torch bodies - Whether
excisable goods.
Words & Phrases - "Excisable goods" - Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a public limited company, carries on the
business of the manufacture and sale of flashlights
(torches). It used to purchase aluminium slugs and produce
aluminium cans or torch bodies at its factory by a process
of extrusion. The Superintendent of Central Excise required
the appellant to submit a price list in respect of the
aluminium cans for the purpose of levying excise duty under
section 4 of the Act. The appellant, anxious to avoid
coercive action, filed a price declaration in which the
price of aluminium cans was calculated at the cost of
production plus a margin of profit of 5% of the cost.
However, it contended before the Excise Authority (i) that
aluminium cans cannot be described as "goods" for the
purposes of excise duty inasmuch as they are not marketable
and are prepared for the flashlights manufactured by it; and
(ii) that the preparation of aluminium cans out of aluminium
slugs did not amount to manufacture, and that aluminium cans
were merely an intermediate product in the manufacture of
flashlights. These contentions before the Excise Authority
having failed, it filed a writ petition in the High Court. A
Single Judge allowed the writ petition but a Division Bench
of the High Court allowed the appeal of the respondent
holding that the production of aluminium cans from aluminium
slugs amounted to manufacture and that the aluminium cans
could be described as "goods" for the purposes of the Act.
Allowing the appeal,
163
^
HELD: 1. The aluminium cans produced by the appellant
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are not capable of sale to a consumer. They cannot be
described as excisable goods and, therefore, do not fall
within the terms of section 3 of the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944 read with Entry 27 of the First Schedule
thereto. [167 G]
2. The excise duty is an indirect tax in which the
burden of the imposition is passed on to the ultimate
consumer. In that context, the expression "goods
manufactured or produced" must refer to articles which are
capable of being sold to a consumer. [166 B-C]
Union of India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills, [1963]
Supp. 1 S.C.R. 586 and South Bihar Sugar Mills Ltd. etc. v.
Union of India & Ors., [1968] 3 S.C.R. 21, relied upon.
In the instant case, the aluminium cans prepared by the
appellant are employed entirely by it in the manufacture of
flashlights, and are not sold as aluminium cans in the
market. The record discloses that the aluminium cans, at the
point at which excise duty has been levied, exist in a crude
and elementary form incapable of being employed at that
state as a component in a flashlight. The cans have sharp
uneven edges and in order to use them as a component in
making flashlight cases the cans have to undergo various
processes such as trimming, threading and redrawing. After
the cans are trimmed, threaded and redrawn they are reeded,
beaded and anodised or painted. It is at that point only
that they become a distinct and complete component, capable
of being used as a flashlight case for housing battery cells
and having a bulb fitted to the case. Therefore, it is
difficult to believe that the elementary and unfinished form
in which they exist immediately after extrusion suffices to
attract a market. No satisfactory material to the contrary
has been placed by the respondents. The record discloses
that whatever aluminium cans are produced by the appellant
are subsequently developed by it into a completed and
perfected component for being employed as flashlight cases.
[166 E-H; 167 A-C;]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1103 of
1972.
From the Judgment and Order dated 22nd February, 1972
of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal No. 307 of
1971.
164
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, T.M. Ansari, P.K. Ram and D.N. Mishra
for the Appellant.
R. Thyagarajan, A. Kumar and R.N. Poddar for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J. This appeal by certificate granted by the
High Court of Allahabad raises the question whether the
manufacture of aluminium cans or torch bodies is liable to
excise duty under Entry 27(e) of the First Schedule to the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944.
The appellant, The Union Carbide India Limited, is a
public limited company and carries on the business of the
manufacture and sale of flashlights (torches), dry cell
batteries, chemicals and plastics. The flashlights are
manufactured by one of its Divisions, the Eveready
Flashlight Campany, Lucknow. The appellant purchases
aluminium slugs from the manufacturers of aluminium in India
and produces aluminium cans or torch bodies at its factory
by a process of extrusion. Before March 1, 1970 aluminium
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cans were subjected to basic excise duty at 20 per cent ad
valorem plus special duty at 20 per cent of the basic duty
on a value of Rs. 8,600 per metric tonne fixed as the tariff
value by the Government of India by a Notification dated
January 21, 1969. By an amendment incorporated in the
Finance Act 1970 with effect from March 1, 1970 the basic
duty was fixed at 25 per cent ad valorem plus special duty
at 20 per cent of the basic duty. By Notification No. 65/70
dated March 1, 1970 the Notification of January 21, 1969 was
rescinded.
The appellant recceived a letter dated March 3, 1970
from the Superintendent of Central Excise, Lucknow stating
that the tariff rate of duty on extruded shapes and sections
of aluminium had been raised and that aluminium cans would
be subjected to duty on ad valorem basis on the value as
determined under section 4 of the Act, and that the
appellant should send price lists for approval. The
appellant, anxious to avoid coercive action, filed price
declarations in which the price of aluminium cans was
calculated as the cost of
165
production plus a margin of profit of 5 per cent of the
cost. The appellant, however, took the position that
aluminium cans were neither sold nor were capable of being
sold in the market, and therefore could not be described as
’goods’ for the purposes of the Central Excises and Salt
Act, 1944. It was also asserted that the preparation of
aluminium cans out of aluminium slugs did not amount to
manufacture, and that aluminium cans were merely an
intermediate products in the manufacture of flashlights. The
contentions of the appellant did not find favour with the
excise authorities.
The appellant filed a writ petition in the High Court
of Allahabad for a mandamus directing the excise authorities
not to levy and collect excise duty on aluminium cans, and
to refund the excise duty levied and collected from the
appellant on aluminium cans from March 1, 1965. A learned
Single Judge of the High Court allowed the writ petition by
his judgment and order dated April 15, 1971, but on appeal
by the Union of India a Division Bench of the High Court
reversed the judgment and order of the learned Single Judge
and dismissed the writ petition on February 22, 1972. Before
the learned Judges an attempt was made by the appellant to
show that the process employed in the preparation of the
aluminium cans could not be described as a process of
"extrusion" but in fact should properly be described as a
process of "impact extrusion". The learned Judges were not
impressed by the distinction attempted by the appellant and
held that the manufacture of the aluminium cans fell under
Entry 27(e) of the First Schedule to the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944, which refers to "extruded shapes and
sections including extruded pipes and tubes". The learned
Judges pointed out further that even otherwise the aluminium
cans would fall under Entry 27(d) which mentions "pipes and
tubes other than extruded pipes and tubes", and inasmuch as
the rate of duty was the same the point raised by the
appellant was of no significance. The learned Judges also
held that the production of aluminium cans from aluminium
slugs amounted to manufacture and that the aluminium cans
could be described as "goods" for the purposes of the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944.
The only contention urged by the appellant before us is
that the aluminium cans produced by the appellant cannot be
166
described as "goods" for the purposes of excise duty
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inasmuch as they are not marketable and are prepared
entirely by the appellant for the flashlights manufactured
by it.
It does seem to us that in order to attract excise duty
the article manufactured must be capable of sale to a
consumer. Entry 84 of List I of Schedule VII to the
Constitution specifically speaks of "duties of excise on
tobacco and other goods manufactured or produced in
India...", and it is now well accepted that excise duty is
an indirect tax, in which the burden of the imposition is
passed on to the ultimate consumer. In that context, the
expression "goods manufactured or produced" must refer to
articles which are capable of being sold to a consumer. In
Union of India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills, [1963] Supp.
1 S.C.R. 586, this Court considered the meaning of the
expression "goods" for the purposes of the Central Excises
and Salt Act, 1944 and observed that "to become ’goods’ an
article must be something which can ordinarily come to the
market to be brought and sold", a definition which was
reiterated by this Court in South Bihar Sugar Mills Ltd.,
Etc. v. Union of India & Ors., [1968] 3 S.C.R. 21.
The question here is whether the aluminium cans
manufactured by the appellant are capable of sale to a
consumer. It appears on the facts before us that there are
only two manufaturers of flashlights in India, the appellant
being one of them. It appears also that the aluminium cans
prepared by the appellant are employed entirely by it in the
manufacture of flashlights, and are not sold as aluminium
cans in the market. The record discloses that the aluminium
cans, at the points at which excise duty has been levied,
exist in a crude and elementary form incapable of being
employed at that stage as a component in a flashlight. The
cans have sharp uneven edges and in order to use them as a
component in making flashlight cases the cans have to
undergo various processes such as trimming, threading and
redrawing. After the cans are trimmed, threaded and redrawn
they are reeded, beaded and anodised or painted. It is at
that point only that they become a distinct and complete
component, capable of being used as a flashlight case for
housing battery cells and having a bulb fitted to the case.
We find it difficult to believe that the elementary and
unfinished form in which they exist immediately
167
after extrusion suffices to attract a market. The appellant
has averred on affidavit that aluminium cans in that form
are unknown in the market. No satisfactory material to the
contrary has been placed by the respondents before us.
Reference has been made by respondents to the instance when
aluminium cans were ordered by the appellant from Messrs.
Krupp Group of Industries. This took place, however, in 1966
as a solitary instance, and what happened was that aluminium
slugs were provided by the appellant to Messrs. Krupp Group
of Industries for extrusion into aluminium cans. The facts
show that the transaction was a works contract and nothing
more. Apparently, the appellant made use of the requisite
machinery owned by that firm for extruding aluminium cans.
Not a single instance has been provided by the respondents
demonstrating that such aluminium can have a market. The
record discloses that whatever aluminium cans are produced
by the appellant are subsequently developed by it into a
completed and perfected component for being employed as
flashlight cases.
Much emphasis has been laid by the respondents on the
circumstance that the appellant had in the past treated the
aluminium cans produced by it as excisable goods and had
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submitted price lists to the excise authorities which
included a margin of profit in the specified price. It is
clear that the appellant did so under the mistaken belief
that the aluminium cans attracted excise duty. The margin of
profit included in the price was arrived at notionally, in
order merely to comply with the demand of the excise
authorities for the submission of price lists. The conduct
of the appellant in the past, having regard to the
circumstances of the case, cannot serve as evidence of the
marketability of the aluminium cans. Indeed, subsequent
price lists were submitted under "protest" by the appellant,
who maintained that the article did not attract excise duty.
We are satisfied upon the material before us that the
aluminium cans produced by the appellant cannot be described
as excisable goods and therefore do not fall within the
terms of s.3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 read
with Entry 27 of the First Schedule thereto.
In the result, the appeal is allowed, the judgment and
order dated February 22, 1972 of the Division Bench of the
168
High Court of Allahabad are set aside and the judgment and
order dated April 15, 1971 of the learned Single Judge of
that High Court are restored. The appellant is entitled to
its costs of this appeal.
M.L.A. Appeal allowed.
169