Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, KANPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KRISHNA CARBON PAPER CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/09/1988
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
CITATION:
1988 AIR 2223 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 12
1989 SCC (1) 150 JT 1988 (4) 762
1988 SCALE (2)880
CITATOR INFO :
F 1990 SC 556 (5)
R 1990 SC1579 (44)
R 1991 SC 407 (6)
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, I944: Section II-A-
Central Excise Tariff- Items 17(2), 17(3) and 68 Carbon
paper whether included in the description ‘paper subjected
to coating’.
%
Construction of Statutes: Language in a taxing statute
to be construed in popular sense as understood by that
particular trade and not in strict technical sense.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent-company was engaged in the manufacture of
Carbon Paper. It was served with a notice demanding central
excise duty on carbon papers cleared from its factory during
the period 25.3.1979 to 24.9.1979 under section 11-B of the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944. The respondent stated in
reply that the notice was without jurisdiction because it
was only after 28.2.1982 that the product was subjected to
duty under sub-item (3) of item 17 of the Central Excise
Tariff. The Assistant Collector of Central Excise, confirmed
the demand. The appellate Collector, however, accepted the
respondent’s contention. The Collector (Appeals) and the
Appellate Tribunal dismissed the Revenue’s appeals. The
Tribunal upheld the contention of the respondent that for
the period before its amendment in 1982, carbon paper fell
under Tariff item 68 and not under Tariff Item 17(2), as was
contended by the Revenue.
Before this Court the Revenue contends that (I) carbon
paper being akin to coated paper was covered since 1976
under sub-item (2) of item 17 of the Central Excise Tariff
which included paper which had been subjected to coating;
(2) the introduction of specific name ‘carbon paper’ as sub-
item (3) of item 17 in 1982 was with a view to subject it to
a different rate of duty; and (3) the amendment so far as
item 17(3) was concerned was mere clarificatory and was
introduced ex abundanti cautela. The respondent, on the
other hand, contends that if carbon paper was already
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included then there was no purpose of introducing these
subsequent amendments.
Disposing of the appeal, it was,
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PG NO 13
HELD: (1) Where no definition is provided in the statute
itself for ascertaining the correct meaning of a fiscal
entry, reference to a dictionary is not always safe. The
correct guide is the context and the trade meaning, which is
prevalent in that particular trade where that goods is known
or traded. [21D-E]
(2) If a statute contains language which is capable of
being construed in a popular sense, such a statute is not to
be construed according to the strict or technical meaning of
the language contained in it, but is to be construed in its
popular sense, meaning, of course, by the words "popular
sense" that which people conversant with the subject-matter
with which the statute is dealing would attribute to it. The
ordinary words in every day use are, therefore, to be
construed according to their popular sense. [23F-G]
(3) Paper simpliciter cannot include’ carbon paper
because that would not be in consonance with the popular
understanding of the expression "paper". [23G-H; 24A]
(4) Where paper of a special type defined in the
particular statute as one including paper which have been
subjected to various treatments such as coating,
impregnating, how that paper be understood, there must be
evidence of that understanding. [24A]
(5) There is authority of the Indian Standards
Institute’s publication "Glossary of Terms used in Paper
Trade and Industry" to the effect that carbon paper is
understood as a coated paper in trade. [23A-C]
(6) The trade notices and the tariff advices issued by
the Board are not relevant, as such, in construing items in
Tariff Schedule. [24E-F]
(7) Understood in the accepted notion of construing
entries of fiscal Statute not from a technical or scientific
point of view but from the point of view of the people in
the trade dealing with that particular type of goods and
having regard to the evidence of the Indian Standards
Institute and in the absence of any other evidence to the
contrary, on the basis of the definition of paper or it was
in the year 1976, carbon paper would come within item 17(2)
of the Tariff Items, and would not fall into the residuary
entry. [23B-C]
Sai Giridhara Supply Co. v. Collector v. Collector of
Central Excise, Bombay, [1987] 23 E.L.T. 438 Tribunal;
Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. v. M.S.N. Brothers, Kanpur,
PG NO 14
AIR 1973 S.C. 78; King v. Planters Nut and Chocolate
Company Ltd., [1951] C.L.R. Ex. 122; Union of India and Anr.
v. Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd., AIR 1963 S.C.
791; Grenfell v. I.R.C., [1876] 1 Ex. D 242; Porritts &
Spencer (Asia) Ltd. v. State of Haryana, [1979] I S.C.C. 82;
Kores (India) Ltd. Thane v. Collector of Central Excise,
Thane. 29 E.L.T. 627; State of Uttar Pradesh v. M/s. Kores
(India) Ltd., [1977] 1 SCR 837; Attorney-General v. Winstar
lay.. [1901] 6 E.R. 740; Khoday Industries Ltd. v. Union of
India, [1986] 23 E.L.T. 337; Orient Paper Mills Ltd. v.
Union of India, [1969] 1 SCR 245; M/s Colgate Palmolive
(India) P. Ltd., [1979] E.L.T. J. 567; Dunlop India Ltd. v.
Union of India, AIR 1977 S.C. 597; Md. Qasim Larry, Factory
Manager, Sasamusa Sugar Works v. Muhammad Samsuddin, [1964]
7 S.C.R. 419, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2110 of
1987.
From the Order dated 8.6.1987 of the Customs Excise and
Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi in Appeal No.
ED/SB/145/84-C in Order No. 440/87-C.
M.K. Banerjee, Solicitor General, P. Parmeshwaran, Mrs.
Radha Rangaswamy and Mrs. Sushma Suri for the Appellant.
J.S. Kapil, Krishan Kumar and Vimal Dave for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. The Collector of Central Excise,
Kanpur, is the appellant in this appeal under section 35L(b)
of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter
called ‘the Act’). The period involved in this appeal is the
assessment period from 25th March, 1979 to 24th September,
1979, a period of about six months. The respondent M/s.
Krishna Carbon Paper Company was engaged in the manufacture
of carbon papers. During the period from 25th March, 1979 to
24th September, 1979 the respondent manufactured and cleared
from its factory a quantity of 5601 boxes, 20,288 reams and
45 packets of carbon papers for a total value of
Rs.7,67,498.40 without payment of any duty under the Act.
The Superintendent of Central Excise Lakhimpur Kheri, issued
notice to the respondent demanding central excise duty on
carbon paper cleared during the aforesaid period under
section II-A of the Act. The respondent submitted a written
reply stating that the notice was without jurisdiction
because the respondent had taken out the central excise
PG NO 15
licence immediately on the direction of the department and
it was only after February 28, 1982 that the product was
subjected to duty under sub-item (3) of item 17 by the
Central Excise Budget of 1982. In support of this
contention, the respondent relied on Notifications Nos.
187/82 and 69/82, both dated 28th February, 1982. It was
contended that the carbon paper was a new item which was
specified under sub-item (3) of item 17 of C.E.T. According
to the revenue, however, that the recasting of Tariff Item
17 in 1976 was irrelevant and that the carbon being akin to
coated paper (one side or both side) was covered under sub-
item (2) of item 17 of the C.E.T. since 1976. The submission
of the respondent was that sub-item (3) of item 17 of the
C.E.T. covering the carbon paper including copy paper was
inserted by the Central Excise Budget 1982, but it does not
make any retrospective change. It was, according to the
appellant, an introduction of specific name or variety of
paper for being subjected to a different rate of duty. The
carbon paper remained a coated paper already covered under
sub-item (2) of item 17 of C.E.T. The Assistant Collector of
Central Excise, Sitapur, by his order dated 27/30th April,
1983, confirmed the demand for basic excise duty amounting
to Rs.1,15,124,76 and special excise duty of Rs.5,756.23 on
carbon paper cleared during the period from 25th March, 1979
to 24th September, 1979. The Appellate Collector, however,
set aside the order of the Assistant Collector and was of
the view that the carbon paper could not be classified under
Tariff Item 17(2) of the Act, as it was before 1982. The
Collector (Appeals) accepted the respondent’s contention
that the carbon paper was brought under the purview of
Tariff Item 17 for the first time in 1982 when it was
introduced as sub-item (3) of Item 17 of the First Schedule
to the Act with effect from 1st March, 1982. Being aggrieved
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thereby the appellant preferred an appeal before the
Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the
appeal. Hence, this appeal.
The question for decision in this appeal is whether
carbon paper before the introduction of Central Excise
Budget in 1982 and consequential amendment in tariff, fell
under item 68 of the First Schedule to the Act, as held by
the Tribunal or under item 17(2) of the Tariff Item, which
was claimed by the Collector of Central Excise. Following
its previous decision in the case of Sai Giridhara Supply
Co. v. Collector of Central Excise, Bombay, [1987] 23 E.L.T.
438 Tribunal, the Tribunal upheld the contention of the
respondent and held that for the period before the amendment
of Central Excise Budget, in 1982, carbon paper fell under
Tariff Item 68 and not under Tariff Item 17(2), as it then
was. The Tribunal did not go into the question of the
PG NO 16
limitation, namely, whether the claim was barred in any
event by the lapse of time in view of section 11-A of the
Act. The Tribunal came to the finding that the carbon paper
in question fell under Tariff Item 68 of the Central Excise
Tariff. Shri Kapil on behalf of the respondent submitted
before us that the claim, in any event, was barred by lapse
of time in view of section 11-A of the Act. In view of the
fact that the Tribunal did not decide this question if we
are persuaded to reject the revenue’s contention in this
appeal, the matter has to be remanded back to the Tribunal
to decide this question as to limitation, as there is no
decision of the Tribunal on this aspect of the matter.
Before the contentions are appreciated, it will be
appropriate to refer to the position of Tariff Item 17 at
three different phases, namely, in 1975, after the amendment
in 1976 and after the further amendment to item No. 17 by
the Finance Act of 1982. Item No. 17 was amended with effect
from 27th February, 1982 and two specific entries were
added. These were (3) and (4). It is necessary to set out in
the position at different points of time. It was as follows:
"Tariff Item 17-Position in I975
------------------------------------------------------------
Item No. Description of goods Rate of Duty
------------------------------------------------------------
17. Paper, all sorts (including paste board, mill-board,
strawboard and cardboard), in or in relation to the
manufacture of which any process is ordinarily carried on
with the aid of power
(1) Cigarette tissue Rs. 3 per Kg.
(2) Blotting, toilet, target tissue Rs. 1 and 20
other than cigarette tissue paise per kg.
teleprinter, typewritting;
manifold, bank, bond, art paper,
chrome paper, tubsized paper,
cheque paper, stamp paper,
cartridge paper, (waxed paper,
polythelene coated paper),
parchment and coated board
(including art board, chrome board
and for playing cards)
PG NO 17
(3) Printing and writing paper, 90 paise per kg.
packing and wrapping paper,
strawboard and pulp board,
including grey board, corrugated
board, duplex and triplex boards,
other sorts
(4) All other kinds of paper and Re. 1 and 20
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paper board, not otherwise paise per kg.
specified.
Position in 1976
17. Paper and Paper Board,All sorts Thirty percent
(including paste-board, mill-board ad valorem.
straw-board, cardboard and
corrugated board), in or in
relation to the manufacture of
which any process is ordinarily
carried on with the aid of power
(1) Uncoated and coated print and
writing paper (other than poster
paper) Twenty-five per cent ad
valorem
(2) Paper board and all kinds of paper
(including paper or paper hoards
which have been subjected to
various treatments such as
coating, impregnating corrugation,
creping and design printing), not
elsewhere specified.
There was further amendment to Item No 17 by the Finance
Act of l982. Item 16 was amended with effect from 27.2 1982,
and two specific entries were added. They are (3) and (4)
which are reproduced below:
------------------------------------------------------------
Item No. Description of goods Rate
of Duty
------------------------------------------------------------
17. xx xx xx
(3) Carbon and other copying papers 32 1/2% ad
(including duplicator stencils) and valorem
papers, whether or not cut to size and
whether or not put to in boxes
PG NO 18
(4) Boxes, cartons, bags and other 32 1/2% ad
packing-containers (including flattened valorem
or folded boxes and flattened or folded
cartons), whether or not printed and
whether in assembled or unassembled
conditions."
The short question with which we are concerned is,
whether during the relevant period, namely, 25th March, 1979
to 24th September, 1979 when the position mentioned above
was prevailing, whether carbon papers could be included in
"all kinds of paper including the paper which have been
subjected to coating", would come within sub-item (2) of
item 17 as mentioned hereinbefore or under residuary item 68
of the Central Excise Tariff.
The Tribunal followed a previous decision in Sai
Giridhara Supply Co. v. Collector of Central Excise, Bombay,
(supra). There, the Tribunal had discussed the various
aspects of the matter and felt itself bound by the decision
of the Karnataka High Court to which reference will be made
later. The Tribunal has referred to the observations of
Buckley L.J. where the Lord Justice observed that once a
precedent was held to be a binding one, then no deviation
therefrom was permissible within the judicial polity except
in the well accepted categories of cases enumerated in the
judgment. Those contingencies, the Tribunal found, were not
applicable to the facts of this case.
It is well-settled that in order to ascertain the
correct meaning of a fiscal entry reference to a dictionary
is apt to be a somewhat delusive guide, as it gives all the
different shades of meaning. In the instant case, our
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attention was drawn to the extract from the Oxford English
Dictionary, Volume III, page 436 where the meaning of the
word "paper" has been given. It reads as follows:
"Paper (pei’per), sb. Also 4 papure, 4-6 papir. 5
papire, papyre, (paupire, 5-6 pauper, 5-7 papyr, 6 papre.
[a. AF. papir = OF, Papier (=Pr. Papier, Cat. Paper, Sp.
papel ‘paper’, It. papira papyrus), ad. L. papyrus the
papyrus or paper-reed of the Nile, also writing-material
made of it, a Gr. nanvpos the papyrus-reed. From the
writing-sheets made of the thin strips of papyrus the name
was transferred to paper made of cotton, and thence to paper
of linen and other fibres. These extensions took place
before the word became English, so that here its application
to papyrus is only a later retrospective use.]
PG NO 19
I. The simple word. *Without a or pl. (exc. as denoting
a particular kind).
I. A substance composed of fibres interlaced into a
compact web, made (usually in the form of a thin flexible
sheet, most commonly white) from various fibrous materials,
as linen and cotton rags, straw, wood, certain grasses,
etc., which are macerated into a pulp, dried, and pressed
(and subjected to various other processes, as bleaching,
colouring, sizing, etc., according to the intended use); it
is used (in various forms and qualities) for writing;
printing, or drawing on, for wrapping things in, for
covering the interior of walls, and for other purposes."
Our attention was also drawn to the meaning of the
carbon paper in ‘Pulp and Paper Manufacture’, second
edition. volume II which has been described as follows:
"Carbon paper is made by coating paper with a mixture
consisting principally of a wax and a pigment. The color is
obtained from the pigment, usually a carbon black of low oil
absorption, plus toners, usually lake pigments or oil-
soluble dyes, which are added to increase the blackness. The
wax, which acts as a binder for the pigment, must have a
viscosity low enough to permit slight penetration into the
paper, but not so low that the wax strikes through or sweats
oil. Waxes with a melting point between 105 to 120 F. and a
viscosity of about 60 or 70 Saybolt at 210 F. are generally
used. The principal wax used is carnauba, although some
ceresin, beeswax, candelilla, ozokerite. ouricury, and
synthetic waxes are also used. Special grades of micro-
crystalline waxes may be added to soften the coating and
improve the printing qualities. In addition to the above
ingredients, non-drying oils (mineral oils) are used to
soften the coating and control the amount of coating
transferred to the copy. Oleic acid is sometimes used as a
solvent for oil-soluble dyes.
All carbon papers must be free of offset, flaking,
wrinkles, curl, or other defects, and must give a good
impression on the copy paper. The coating must be hard
enough not to smear in hot weather, but the exact degree of
hardness depends upon the intended use, that is, whether
PG NO 20
the paper is designed as a pencil carbon, a typewriter
carbon, or a one-time carbon. The amount of coating varies
from a very thin coating used in making one-time carbons to
a very heavy coating used in making high-grade typewriter
carbons for multiple use. The latter, in which the paper may
be reused up to 40 to 50 times, must have a coating of very
high color value and the coating must be compounded so that
only a small amount is transferred to the copy sheet. A
simplified formula for a typewriter carbon would be as
follows:
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Carnauba was.............................34%
Ozokerite.................................6%
Deeswax...................................7%
Petrolatum................................6%
Mineral Oil..............................25%
Carbon black.............................13%
Toners....................................6%
Oleic acid................................3%
In the coating of carbon paper, the molten was mixture
is applied to the paper at a temperature of about 200 F.
Coating is done on a carbon paper coater which consists of
an inking roll which is supplied with coating directly from
a bath or from a heated fountain. The inking roll revolves
in a direction opposite to that of the paper web. Excess
coating is scraped off the paper by an equalizer rod and the
sheet then passed over a water-cooled cylinder to chill and
harden the coating. Crystallization of the wax occurs Upon
chilling, and this process continues over a period of
several days. For this reason, it is customary for cart-on
manufacturers to age their coated paper for two to seven
days before shipping.
It is absolutely essential that the coating be absorbed
evenly by the paper. Therefore the paper must have a smooth
surface, uniformly high density, good formation and above
all, be free of pinholes. Further requirements are high
strength, low basis weight, and freedom from flaws such as
slime spots and dirt specks. Because of these rigid
requirements, the base stock for carbon tissue is difficult
to make. The best grades made from new cotton or linen rags,
or from manila hemp, whereas the cheaper grades are made
PG NO 21
from sulfate and sulfite pulps. The stock is beaten for a
considerable period of time, often up to thirty hours, in
order to develop maximum strength. The stock is only lightly
sized. Calcium carbonate is often used as a filler, but the
ash should not be over 5%. The basis weight is usually 4, 5
1/2, 7, or 10 lb. per ream (20 x 30-500). The 4- 1b. paper
is used when a large number of copies is to be made; the 5--
and 7-lb. papers are suitable for ordinary work.
Carbon paper under the specifications of the Indian
Standard Institute, is described as follows:
"Carbon Paper-paper coated (generally on one side) with a
pressure transferable pigmented layer, used for making
copies at the same time as an original manuscript or
typescript is made."
It is well-settled, as mentioned before, that where no
definition is provided in the statute itself, as in this
case, for ascertaining the correct meaning of a fiscal entry
reference to a dictionary is not always safe. The correct
guide, it appears in such a case, is the content and the
trade meaning. In this connection reference may be made to
the observations of this Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax,
U.P.v. M/s.S.N Bothers, Kanpur, AIR 1973 S.C.68 at page 80
para 5.
The trade meaning is one which is prevalent in that
particular trade where that good is known or traded. If
special type of good is subject matte of a fiscal entry then
that entry must be understood in the context of that
particular trade, bearing in mind that particular word.
Where, however, there is no evidence either way then the
definition given and the meaning following from particular
statute at particular time would be the decisive test.
In the famous Canadian case in King V. Planters Nut and
Chocolate Company Limited, [1951] C.L.R. Ex. 122 Cameron J.
observed that it is not botanist’s conception as to what
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constitutes a fruit or vegetable....but rather what would
ordinarily in matters of commerce in Canada be included
there should be the guide. Similarly, this Court has held in
Union of India and Anr.V. Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co.
Ltd., A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 791 at page 79 para 12 that the view
of the Indian Standard Institute as regards what is refined
oil as known to the market in India must be preferred in the
absence of any other reliable evidence. It must be
PG NO 22
emphasised in view of he regards what is refined oil as
known arguments advanced in this case that the meaning
should be as understood in the particular trade. In this
case, we are construing not paper as such but a particular
brand of paper with a meaning attributed to it. Sub item
(2)of item 17 as was the position in 1976 paper referred to
all kinds of paper including paper or paper boards which
have been subjected to various treatments such as coating,
impregnating. So, therefore, if all kinds of paper including
coated paper is the goods, we have to find out the meaning
attributed to those goods in the trade of those kinds of
paper where transactions of those goods take place.
It is a well-settled principle of construction, as
mentioned before, that where the word has a scientific or
technical meaning and also an ordinary meaning according to
common parlance, it is in the latter sense that in a taxing
statute the word must be held to have been used, unless
contrary intention is clearly expressed by the legislature.
This principle is well-settled by a long line of decisions
of Canadian, American, Australian and Indian cases. Pollock
J. pointed out in Grenfell v. I.R.C., [1876] I Ex. D 242 at
248 that if a statute contains language which is capable of
being construed in a popular sense, such a statute is not to
be construed according to the strict or technical meaning of
the language contained in it, but is to be construed in its
popular sense, meaning, of course, by the words "popular
sense’’ that which people conversant with the subject-
matter with which the statute is dealing would attribute to
it. The ordinary words in every day use are, therefore, to
be construed according to their popular sense. The same view
was reiterated by Story, J. in 200 Chests of Tea, [ 1824] 9
Wheaton US 435 at 438 where he observed that the legislature
does not suppose our merchants to be naturalists, or
geologists, or botanists. See the observations of Bhagwati,
J. as the learned Chief Justice then was, in Porritts &
Spencer (Asia) Ltd. v. State of Haryana,[l9791] I S.C.C. 82.
But there is a word of caution that has to be borne in mind
in this connection, the words must be understood in popular
sense, that is to say, these must be confined to the words
used in a particular Statute and then if in respect of that
particular items, an artificial definition is given in the
sense that a special meaning is attached to particular words
in the Statute then the ordinary sense or dictionary meaning
would not be applicable but the meaning of that type of
goods dealt with by that type of goods in that type of
market, should be searched. In the instant case, we have
"all kinds of papers including papers subjected to coating,
impregnating etc." If there is a market meaning or trade
meaning of that kind of a paper that should be adhered to.
In this case, there is no direct evidence how these peculiar
goods are dealt with in the particular market dealing with
PG NO 23
those goods. But there is evidence how these are to be
understood in the light of the specifications of the Indian
Standard Institute which we have mentioned before. It is
instructive to refer in this connection a passage of the
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Tribunal’s decision in Kores (India) Ltd. Thane v. Collector
of Central Excise, Thane, (29 E.L.T. 627, where the Tribunal
observed that on the point whether carbon paper is
understood as a coated paper in trade, there is authority of
the Indian Standards Institute’s publication "Glossary of
Terms used in Paper Trade and Industry"--IS: 4661.
Therefore, understood in the accepted notion of construing
entries of fiscal Statute not from a technical or scientific
point of view but from the point of view of the people in
the trade dealing with that particular type of goods and
having regard to the evidence of the Indian Standard
Institute and in the absence of any other evidence to the
contrary, the Tribunal was justified in holding that on the
basis of the definition of paper as it was in the year 1976
carbon paper would come within item 17(2)of the Tariff
Items.
Learned counsel for the respondent placed reliance on
the observations of this Court in State of Uttar Pradesh v.
M/s. Kores (India) Ltd., [977] 1 SCR 837 where this Court
was concerned with a notification under section 3-A of the
U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 The question fell for consideration
before this Court in that case was whether carbon paper was
taxable as paper and further whether ribbon was accessory or
part of typewriter. This Court reiterated that a word which
is not defined in an enactment has to be understood in its
popular and commercial sense with reference to the context
in which it occurs. The word has to be understood according
to the well established canon of construction in the sense
in which persons dealing with and using the article
understand it. For this principle this Court relied on the
observations of Lord Tenterden in Attorney-General v.
Winstanley, [1901] 6 E.R. 740 and the observations of
Pollock, J. in Grenfell v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue,
[ 1876] 1 Ex. D 242 at 248. Pollock, J. was construing the
Stamp Act, where he correctly emphasised that the words
should be construed in popular sense meaning thereby the
sense in which people conversant with the subject-matter
with which the Statute is dealing, would attribute to it.
That is the correct test. This Court observed further at
page 839 of the report that in popular parlance, the word
’paper’ is understood as meaning a substance which is used
for bearing, writing, or printing, or for packing, or for
drawing on, or for decorating, or covering the walls. Carbon
paper is not commonly understood as paper. This Court thus
held that paper simpliciter cannot include carbon paper
because that would not be in consonance with the popular
PG NO 24
understanding of the expression "paper". But where paper of
a special type defined in the particular statute as one
including paper which have been subjected to various
treatments such as coating, impregnating, how that paper be
understood, there must be evidence of that understanding. In
the absence of that evidence, the natural meaning following
from the expression used in the statute should be adhered
to. In that light, it appears to us that in view of the
facts of this c..se and in the principles of law as
prevailing in 1976 papers of all kinds including paper with
coating and impregnating and the views of the Indian
Standard Institute, would include carbon papers .
Learned counsel drew our attention to the decision of
the Karnataka High Court in Khoday Industries Ltd. v. Union
of India and Ors., [1986] 23 E.L.T. 337 where the learned
single Judge held that carbon paper is an article of
statutory classifiable under item 68 of the Central Excise
Tariff al1d not under item 17(2) as coated paper prior to
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its amendment with effect from 27th February, 1982. He took
into account the Trade Notice No. 56/76 and Tariff Advice
No. 5/76. The Trade Notice No. 5/76. The issued by the
Collector was based on the instructions issued by the Boarsl
as per Tariff Advice No .5/76. Carbon paper was commercially
recognised only as an article of stationery falling under
item 68 of the Central Excise Tariff and not under Item
17(2). This was in respect of the position as it stood prior
to 1976 when paper did not include coated paper or
impregnated paper. It appears from the said judgment of the
High Court that the Trade Notice 56/76 was issued by the
Collector on 2nd March, 1976 and Item 17 was amended on 27th
May, 11976 and sub-clause (2) as amended among other things
included coated paper. the trade notices and the tariff
advices are not relevant, as such, in construing items in
Tariff Schedule. In this connection, reference may be made
to the observations of this Court in Orient Paper Mills
Ltd. V. Union of India, [1969] 1 S.C.R. 245 where this Court
observed that a quasi-judicial body exercising quasi-
judicial power is not bound by the directions of the Board.
There is no provision in the Act empowering the Board to
issue directions to the assessing authorities or the
appellate authorities in the matter of deciding disputes
between the persons who are called upon to pay duty and the
department. Therefore, trade notices as such issued by the
Board are not relevant considerations.
The point which Shri Kapil, further, urged is that Item
No. 17 was amended by the Finance Act of 1982 and two
specific entries were added, namely, Items nos. 17(3) and
17(4) we have noted before. His contention was that if the
PG NO 25
carbon paper was already there then there was no purpose of
introducing these subsequent amendments. Shri Kapil relied
on a Full Bench decision of the Government of India in the
case of M/s. Colgate Palmolive (India) (P) Ltd., [1979]
E.L.T. J 567 where the Government of India observed that it
was well settled law that the proper rule of construction
applicable to items and entries occurring in Excise Schedule
should be to construe not in scientific or technical sense
but in the sense as understood by the parties dealing with
or commercially conversant with them. The Government of
India relied on the observations of this Court in Dunlop
India Ltd. v. Union of India, A.I.R. 1977 S.C. 597. So far
as that principle is concerned, this is applicable. It must
be understood by the persons dealing with this particular
type of goods. We are concerned here not with paper
simpliciter or how it is understood in common parlance but
paper with a particular definition at the relevant time,
namely, all kinds of paper (including paper or paper boards
which have been subjected to various treatments such as
coating, impregnating) stated in that context. In that
context, it cannot be said that carbon paper cannot be
coated paper as such. Shri Kapil submitted that if carbon
paper was there then there was no purpose for introducing
two sub-items by the Finance Act of 1982. The Finance
Minister, however, observed in his speech (extract of para
123 at page 38-39 of Part ’B’ dated 27th February, l982) as
follows:
"123. I also propose to rationalise and restructure the
tariff relating to paper and paper boards, the primary
objective being to exempt small scale paper converters from
payment of excise duty and to release them from excise
control. In order to recoup the consequent loss in revenue,
I propose to raise the basic excise duty on industrial
varieties of paper and paper boards by a small margin of 2
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1/2 per cent ad valorem. However, certain converted papers
of high value-added categories are proposed to be subject to
basic excise duty at 32 1/2 per cent ad valorem. Similarly,
specified articles made of paper and paper board are
proposed to be brought within the purview of the tariff item
but effectively restricting the levy to printed cartons and
printed boxes.
It appears that the Finance Minister was adding two
items, one was 17(3)-carbon and other copying papers and the
second was 17(4)-boxes, cartons, bags and other packing
containers. He mentioned in his speech that in order to
recoup the consequent loss in revenue, he proposed to raise
PG NO 26
the basic excise duty on industrial varieties of paper and
paper boards by a small margin of 2 1i2 per cent ad valorem.
Tariff Advice No. 5/76 contained the following statement:
"TARIFF ADVICE No. 5/76-
(BOARD’S LETTER F. No. 61/2/73-CX. 2 dated 12.2.76.)
Sub: Paper-Carbon paper and Stencil Paper-Whether
excisable under Item No. 17 of.
A doubt has been raised whether carbon/stencil paper,
produced by conversion of duty paid base paper, should be
treated as paper falling under tariff item 17(4) of Central
Excise Tariff or as on item of stationery, outside the scope
of item No. 17 of C.E. Tariff.
2. The matter was considered in the Central Excise
Tariff Conference held at Cochin on the 13th to 15th
November, 1975. It was reported that carbon paper/stencil
paper is sold in the market mostly cut to size by retail
stationers. The Indian Customs Tariff Guide has also treated
Carbon paper as an item of stationery and not as paper. The
Conference was therefore, of the view that carbon
paper/stencil paper, were commercially recognised only as
articles of stationery.
3. The Board is accordingly advised that carbon paper
and stencil paper should he treated as articles of
stationery. and therefore outside the purview of item No.
17-C.Ex . Tariff.
4 Receipl of this letter may kindly be acknowledged.
These are relevant or proper materials to apply to
construe the meaning of the Tariff Item. Moreover. in proper
light these do not militate against the view that carbon
paper in 1976, was included in the special type of paper. as
defined at that time.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, we are of the
opinion that as at the relevant time the definition of paper
PG NO 27
being paper board and all kinds of paper (including paper or
paper boards which have been subjected to various treatments
such as coating and impregnating and in the light of the
I.S. specifications as noted hereinbefore and there being no
other reliable evidence as to how coated paper is understood
in the market, except the opinion of the Indian Standard
Institute in its specifications, in our opinion, the
Tribunal was not right in the view it took .
The Tribunal in Kores (India) Ltd., Thane, v. Collector
of Central Excise, thane, (supra) expressed the view that
carbon would fall under item 17(2) of the Tariff Items
relying on ISI specifications. There was authority of the
Indian Standards Institute’s publication "Glossary of Terms
used in paper Trade and Industry"-Is 4661. In view of the
facts as appeared in paragraph 14 of the Tribunal’s judgment
in Kores (India) Lid.,Thane, v. Collector of Central
Excise,Thane, (supra), where the basis of the
classifications of ISI in its specifications is explained,
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we are of the opinion that the carbon paper fell under item
17(2) as it stood at the relevant period germane for this
appeal, before 1982, and not in residuary item No.68 of
C.E.T.
Learned Solicitor General submitted that this amendment
so tar as item 17(3) was concerned was mere clarificatory
and was introduced ex abundanti cautela. Our attention was
drawn to the decision of this Court in Md. Qasim Larry,
Factory Manager,Sasamusa Sugar Works v. Muhammad Samsuddin
and Anr., [1964] 7 S.C.R.419 where the Court was concerned
with the question whether the term "wages" as defined by
section 2(vi) of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936 including
wages fixed in an industrial dispute between the employer
and the employee. The question had to be answered in the
light of the definition prescribed by section 2(vi) before
it was amendement in 1958. The subsequent amendment
expressly provided by section 2(vi)(a) that any remuneration
payable under any award or settlement between the parties or
order of a Court. would be included in the main definition
under section 2(vi). In the view we have taken on the
construction of the expression as it stood in the relevant
time, it is not necessary to rest our decision on the
question whether the amendment was clarificatory or not.
In the light of the evidence referred to by the Tribunal
in Kores (India) Ltd. Thane v. Collector of Central Excise
Thane, (supra) and in the light of the definition of paper
in C.E.T. Item 17( l ) as it stood at the relevant time, it
is sufficient to hold that it was covered by item 17(2) of
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C.E.T. and would not fall into the residuary entry.In that
view of the matter, the decision of the Tribunal cannot be
sustained on this point and the appeal must be allowed.
However, as the point of limitation has not been decided by
the Tribunal, we remand the case back to the Tribunal to
decide that question having regard to the facts found in
this case. The appeal is, therefore, disposed of in the
light of what is stated aforesaid. In the facts of this
case, the parties will pay and bear their own costs.
R. S . S. Appeal disposed of.