Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1813 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Commnr. of Income Tax & Anr
RESPONDENT:
M/s. Distillers Co. Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/04/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1813 OF 2007
(Arising out of SLP (C) No. 11380 of 2006)
S.B. SINHA, J.
Leave granted.
Respondent carries on business of arrack bottling, manufacture of
industrial alcohol and their marketing. He obtained a licence from the State
of Karnataka for the aforementioned purposes in terms of the provisions of
Karnataka Excise Act, 1965. Indisputably, the matter relating to
manufacture and bottling of arrack is governed by the said Act and the rules
framed thereunder by the State of Karnataka known as Karnataka Excise
(Manufacturing & Bottling of Arrack) Rules, 1987 (for short "the Rules").
Rule with which we are concerned herein is sub-Rule (3) of Rule 14 which
reads as under:-
"(3) Arrack after blending shall be matured in such
manner and for such period as may be specified by the
Commissioner from time to time."
The Commissioner of Excise, however, issued a circular stating:
"It is hereby specified that the arrack shall be matured in
wooden vats for a minimum period of 15 days before
bottling the same."
A period of 15 days, thus, had been prescribed for the aforementioned
purpose. A question, however, arose as to what would happen to the excise
article, if for circumstances beyond one’s control, said directives cannot be
carried. With a view to meet that contingency, it was stated:
"In case the bottling unit for any reason beyond his control
is not able to mature the arrack in the manner and to the
extent specified above, the unmatured arrack may be
bottled with the prior permission of the officer in-charge of
the bottling unit. The penalty for supplying unmatured
arrack as specified above would be 29 paise per bulk litre."
Indisputably, Respondent obtained permission of the appropriate
authority in terms thereof as he was not in a position to comply with the first
part of the said circular on paying certain additional amount therefor. He, in
his income tax return, claimed deduction for the said amount from his gross
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income.
The Assessing Authority was of the opinion that as the amount
payable by the assessee was in the nature of penalty, he was not entitled to
any deduction. It was further opined that even if the expenditure is
deductible, in view of the fact that the amount in question had not been paid
during the period relevant to the assessment year, the same had to be
disallowed in terms of Section 43B of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (for short
"the Act").
The Assessee paid certain amounts for not affixation of labels on the
bottles. He preferred an appeal against the order of assessment and the
Appellate Authority, being the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals),
allowed the same opining that the amount claimed is neither in the nature of
’excise duty’ nor a penalty.
In regard to the applicability of Section 43B of the Act, it was held
that as the amount, in question, is neither penalty nor excise duty, Section
43B of the Act would not be attracted.
Appellant preferred an appeal thereagainst before the Income Tax
Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal opined that the payments made
by the respondent were in the nature of an additional levy. In regard to the
applicability of Section 43B of the Act, the Tribunal held it in the negative.
An appeal thereagainst preferred by the Revenue under Section 260A
of the Act, has been dismissed by the High Court by reason of the impugned
judgment. Before the High Court, the following purported questions of law
were framed:
"(i) Whether the Appellate Tribunal were correct in
holding that the amount of Rs. 13,25,572/- levied by the
Deputy Commissioner of Excise (Breweries &
Distilleries), Bangalore, for failing to affix adhesive labels
on arrack bottles and failing to mature the arrack for the
prescribed period as per Karnataka Excise (Manufacturing
& Bottling of Arrack) Rules, 1997 was an allowable
deduction despite the penalty levied having arisen due to
infraction of law?
ii) Whether the penalty of Rs. 13,25,572 levied by the
Deputy Commissioner of Excise (Breweries &
Distilleries), Bangalore and not paid by the assessee during
the assessment year could be disallowed u/s 43 of the Act?
Relying upon a decision of the said Court in Ugar Sugar Works Ltd.
v. State of Karnataka passed in Writ Petition No. 5008 of 1991 disposed of
on 5th September, 1991, the High Court held:
(i) The amount in question was not a penalty;
(ii) It was also not to be treated either as a fee or excise duty.
(iii) The payment made for non-affixation of labels also is not a penalty;
stating:
"10. Therefore, in the absence of labels not being
available, if the assessee was made liable to pay the
amount to the Department towards the cost of the labels for
getting the bottled arrack released, it is not possible to take
the view that such payment was made by way of fees as
contended by Sri Seshachala. The language employed in
the Rule makes it explicit that the amount required to be
paid to get the bottled arrack released for sale without
labels is by way of cost of labels to the Government.
When the language in the Rule in explicit terms provide
that the amount required to be paid towards the cost of
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labels and the Rule also impose an obligation on the
licensee to get the labels affixed at his cost in the presence
of the Warehouse Officer, it will not be correct to consider
that the amount paid is not as a cost towards the value of
labels, but as a fee. Therefore, the third submission of Sri
M.V. Seshachala is also liable to be rejected."
Mr. Mohan Parasaran, learned Additional Solicitor General appearing
on behalf of the appellants, submitted that the Tribunal and consequently the
High Court went wrong in passing the impugned Judgment insofar as they
failed to take into consideration that the amount in question having been
levied for non-compliance of certain statutory provisions, would amount to
penalty and in any event as Section 43B of the Act postulated that the
payments in respect whereof deduction are claimed must be the amount
actually paid during the assessment year, the impugned orders cannot be
sustained.
Mr. Dhruv Mehta, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondent, however, supported the judgment.
Penalty and Excise Duty vis-‘-vis levies which are made on
manufacture of an excisable article stand on different footings. Ordinarily,
Excise Duty is a tax on manufacture. The same is in the Union List. An
exception, however, is made only in respect of the potable alcohol by reason
of Entry 51, List II of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India
which reads as under:-
"51. Duties of excise on the following goods
manufactured or produced in the State and countervailing
duties at the same or lower rates on similar goods
manufactured or produced elsewhere in India:
(a) alcoholic liquors for human consumption;
(b) opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and
narcotics,
but not including medicinal and toilet preparations
containing alcohol or any substance included in sub-
paragraph (b) of this entry."
Thus, levy of excise duty on alcohol must have a source in a statute
legislated in terms of Entry 51, List II of the Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution of India. It must have a direct relationship with manufacture of
Arrack. By reason of Sub-rule (3) of Rule 14 of the Rules, no period of time
has been specified. It has been so done under an executive order issued by
the Commissioner of Excise. The Authority did not and in fact could not
levy a tax on manufacture in terms of the said circular or otherwise. As no
time limit has been specified by reason of a statute, the question of imposing
any penalty for non-compliance of the statutory provisions does not arise. It
contemplates an additional levy. Source for such additional levy having
regard to the nature of the circular must be found in terms and conditions of
the licence. Such terms and conditions of licence are fixed by the State by
reason of the provisions of the Act made in terms of Entry 8 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India. Such payments are,
therefore, made in pursuance of or in furtherance of the terms of the licence
which is referable to Entry 8 and not as a tax on manufacture. This aspect of
the matter has been considered by a Constitution Bench of this Court in State
of Kerala and Others v. Maharashtra Distilleries Ltd. and Others [(2005) 11
SCC 1] stating:
"79. In this connection we may usefully refer to the
decision of this Court in State of Punjab v. Devans
Modern Breweries Ltd. In that case the State of Kerala
was also a party. The State had imposed tax on import of
potable liquor manufactured in other States. The stand of
the State was that it was within the province of the State
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to impose restriction on import of potable liquor by
imposing import duty. The aforesaid duty had not been
imposed by the State in exercise of its statutory power
conferred upon it in terms of Entry 51 List II of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution but regulatory
power as envisaged in Entry 8 thereof. The contention
raised on behalf of the respondents was that the
requirements of Articles 301 and 304 of the Constitution
were to be complied with in view of the fact that the duty
of import must conform to the provisions of Entry 51 of
List II. The submission of the respondents was rejected
and those advanced on behalf of the State of Kerala were
accepted. This Court observed that the word fee is not
used in the strict sense to attract the doctrine of quid pro
quo. This was the price or consideration which the State
Government had charged for parting with its privilege
and granting the same to the vendors. Therefore, the
amount charged was neither a fee nor a tax but was in the
nature of price of a privilege which the purchaser had to
pay in any trading and business in noxious article/goods.
This Court held that the permissive privilege to deal in
liquor is not a right at all. The levy charged for parting
with its privilege is neither a tax nor a fee. It is simply a
levy for the act of granting permission or for the exercise
of power to part with that privilege. This Court referred
to numerous decisions of this Court which have clearly
held that the State has a right to exercise all forms of
control in relation to all aspects regarding potable alcohol
and the State Legislature has exclusive competence to
frame laws in that regard. The State has exclusive right in
relation to potable liquor and there was no fundamental
right to do trade or business in intoxicants. The State in
its regulatory power has the right to prohibit absolutely
every form or activity in relation to intoxicants its
manufacture, storage, export, import, sale and possession
and all these rights are vested in the State and indeed
without such vesting there can be no effective regulation
of various forms of activities in relation to intoxicants."
A levy is imposed by the State in exercise of its monopoly power.
Even such monopoly power of the State is restricted. [See Kerala
Samsthana Chethu Thozhilali Union v. State of Kerala and Others, (2006) 4
SCC 327]
There is another aspect of the matter. The time period fixed for
blending is not under a statute. 15 days’ time is not necessary for the
purpose of manufacture of excisable articles. It is a time fixed by the
Commissioner. Furthermore, levy is not on manufacture. Blending even
otherwise is not prohibited. No time limit was fixed under the statute.
Public health was not the subject matter of the said Circular. It laid down
only a process of bottling. It was, thus, issued with a view to regulate the
trade. It would, however, not be an additional duty and, therefore, not a tax
on manufacture. What would be a tax on manufacture has recently been
considered in Commnr. Of Central Excise v. M/s. Indian Aluminium Co.
Ltd. [2006 (10) SCALE 34].
We, therefore, are of the opinion that the Tribunal and the High Court
were correct in their views that Section 43B of the Act was not attracted in
the case.
An excise duty which is in the nature of tax can be imposed only by a
statute which answers the description of Article 265 of the Constitution of
India.
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We, therefore, are of the opinion that the Tribunal and the High Court
have not committed any error in passing the impugned judgment. The
appeal is dismissed with costs. Counsel’s fee assessed at Rs. 25,000/-.