Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
F. N. ROY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, CALCUTTA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/05/1957
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
DAS, S.K.
MENON, P. GOVINDA
CITATION:
1957 AIR 648 1957 SCR 1151
ACT:
Sea Customs-Import without licence-Confiscation of
goods--Validity of Order-Discretion of Customs-authorities-
Validity of Enactment--Sea Customs Act, 1878 (VIII of 1878),
ss. 167(8), 183 Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947
(XVIII Of 1947), S. 3(1) (2)-Constitution of India, Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
Section 167, item 8, of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, provides
that if any goods the importation of which is for the time
being prohibited or restricted by or under Ch. IV of the
Act, which Chapter includes s. 19, be imported into India
contrary to such prohibition or restriction, such goods
shall be liable to confiscation and any person concerned in
such importation shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding
three times the value of the goods or not exceeding one
thousand rupees. By s. 183 of this Act it is provided:"
Whenever confiscation is authorised by this Act, the officer
adjudging it shall give the owner of the goods an option to
pay in lieu of confiscation such fine as the officer thinks
fit. " The Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947, by s.
3(1) empowers the Central Government by an order to make
provision for prohibiting, restricting, or otherwise
controlling, the import, export, carriage coast-wise or
shipment as ships’ stores of goods of any specified
description. Sub-section (2) of that section provides that
all goods to which any order under sub-s. (1) applies, shall
be deemed to be goods of which the import or export has been
prohibited or restricted under s. 19 of the Sea Customs Act,
1878, and all the provisions of that Act shall have effect
accordingly,
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except that s. 183 thereof shall have effect as if for the
word ’shall’ the word ’may’ are substituted.
The petitioner imported certain goods the import of which
had been prohibited by the Central Government under S. 3(1)
Of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act. By an order of
the Collector of Customs, made under s. 167, item 8, of the
Sea Customs Act, these goods were confiscated and a penalty
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of Rs. 1,000, was imposed on the petitioner. The petitioner
challenged the validity of this order.
Held-: (1) Section 3(2) of the Imports and Exports (Control)
Act, 1947, does not offend Art. 14 of the Constitution. It
does not by its own force give any discretion to the
Customs-authorities at all, and its only effect is to apply
the Sea Customs Act, 1878,. to certain cases.
(2) Section 183 Of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, does not
authorise confiscation of goods. It assumes that a power to
confiscate under other provisions of the Act exists. It is
not a statutory provision in two parts with regard to which
it may be said that one part offends Art. 14 while the other
part does not. The section contains only one statutory
provision.
(3) Section 167, item 8, of the Sea Customs :’Act, 1878,
does not offend Art. 14 of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 438 of 1955.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
H. J. Umrigar and N. H. Hingorani, for the petitioner.
Porus A. Mehta, B. Ganapati Iyer and R. H. Dhebar, for the
respondents.
1957. May 16. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKAR J.-By a notification dated March 16, 1953, the
Government of India gave general permission to all persons
to import into India from certain countries any goods of any
of the descriptions specified in the schedule annexed to the
notification. Among the goods specified in the Schedule
were the following:
Iron and steel chains of all sorts assessable under item 63
(28) of the Indian Customs Tariff, excluding chains for
automobiles and cycles whether cut to length or in rolls.
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The petitioner is an importer of goods. He states that
relying on the notification mentioned above he placed an
order with a company in Japan sometime in August, 1953, for
the supply of certain goods called in the trade, Zip Chains.
The goods arrived in the port of Calcutta in due course and
the petitioner’s bank paid the price of the goods amounting
to Rs. 11,051-4-0. Before the goods could be cleared from
the port of Calcutta, the petitioner received a
communication from the Assistant Collector of Customs for
Appraisement, Calcutta, dated November 19, 1953, in which it
was stated that it had been found that the petitioner did
not possess valid import licence for the goods and requiring
him to show cause why the goods should not be confiscated
and action taken against the petitioner under s. 167, item
8, of the Sea Customs Act. The communication also enquired
if the petitioner wanted to be heard in person. The
petitioner submitted in answer a written explanation stating
that the Zip Chains imported by him were chains of the kind
free import of which had been permitted by the notification
of March 16, 1953, and therefore no licence to import them
was necessary. He was thereafter again asked by the
Customs-authorities whether he wanted a personal hearing to
which he replied that he did not. Thereafter on December
25, 1953, the Collector of Customs made an order
confiscating the goods and imposing a penalty of Rs. 1,000
on the petitioner. This order bore an endorsement that it
had been despatched to the petitioner on February 1, 1954.
It reached him on February 3, 1954. The order stated that
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an appeal would lie against it to the Central Board of
Revenue, New Delhi, within three months from the date of its
despatch as noted on it. The petitioner preferred an appeal
and posted the memorandum of appeal on May 4, 1954. The
memorandum reached the Central Board of Revenue on May 6,
1954, and was dismissed on the ground that it had been
preferred after the expiry of the time limited for the
purpose. The petitioner then made an application to the
Government of India for revision of the order of the Central
Board of Revenue but this application was
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rejected. The petitioner thereafter applied to the High
Court of Punjab under Art. 226 of the Constitution for an
appropriate writ to quash the order confiscating his goods
and imposing the fine on him but this application too was
dismissed.
The petitioner has now applied to this Court under Art. 32
of the Constitution challenging the validity of the order
made against him. Learned counsel for the petitioner did
not challenge the decision of the Customs-authorities that
the goods were not covered by the notification of March 16,
1953. He conceded that he could not do so in this
application. Nor did he challenge the Customs-authorities’
power to confiscate the goods. Learned counsel however
challenged the order of confiscation because it did not give
the petitioner an option to pay a fine in lieu of
confiscation. This contention was based on s. 183 of the
Sea Customs Act which provides as follows:
Whenever confiscation is authorised by this Act, the officer
adjudging it shall give the owner of the goods an option to
pay in lieu of confiscation such fine as the officer thinks
fit.
This section undoubtedly requires an option to pay a fine in
lieu of confiscation, to be given and this was not done. A
difficulty however is caused in the way of this argument by
s. 3 of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947. The
relevant portion of s. 3 is set out below:
3. (1) The Central Government may, by order published in
the official Gazette, make provision for prohibiting,
restricting or otherwise controlling, in all cases or in
specified classes of cases, and subject to such exceptions,
if any, as may be made by or under the order,-
(a) the import, export, carriage coastwise or shipment as
ships’ stores of goods of any specified description ;
(b)...............................
(2) All goods to which any order under subsection (1)
applies shall be deemed to be goods of which the import or
export has been prohibited or restricted under section 19 of
the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (VIII
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of 1878), and all the provisions of that Act &hall have
effect accordingly, except that section 183 thereof shall
have effect as if for the word "shall" therein the word
"may" were substituted.
It is admitted that the Imports and Exports (Control) Act
applies to the goods with which we are concerned and in this
case the action that was taken was by virtue of this Act.
That being so, s. 183 of the Sea Customs Act became
applicable because of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act
and it could hence be applied only as modified by the latter
Act. So applied the section did not make it obligatory on
the Customsauthorities when ordering confiscation, ’to give
an option to the owner to pay a fine in lieu of confiscation
but gave them a discretion whether to do so or not. The
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order of confiscation was not therefore bad even though it
had not given the petitioner an option to pay a fine in lieu
of confiscation. Learned Counsel for the petitioner then
contended that the portion of s. 3(2) of the Act of 1947
which read "except that section 183 thereof shall have
effect as if for the word " shall " therein the word " may "
were, substituted ", left an uncontrolled discretion in the
Customs-authorities to give or not to give an option to pay
a fine in lieu of compensation and consequently offended
Art. 14 of the Constitution. He therefore said that this
portion of the section should be struck out of it. He said
that after the offending portion was deleted from s. 3(2) of
the Act of 1947 it would require s. 183 of the Sea Customs
Act to be applied without any modification at all and
therefore it would be obligatory on the Customs-authorities
when making an order of confiscation to give an option to
the petitioner to pay a fine in lieu of compensation even
where the Act of 1947 applied. Learned counsel said that as
this had not been done, the order of confiscation made in
this case was bad.
This argument is based on the contention that a portion of
s. 3(2) of the Act of 1947 offends Art. 14 and has therefore
to be deleted. This contention is wrong. By its own force
no part of s. 3(2) purports to give any discretion to the
Customs-authorities at all. There
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is nothing in it therefore to offend Art. 14. The only
effect of s. 3(2) is to apply the Sea Customs Act to certain
cases. It is impossible to say that a statute which only
makes another statute applicable to certain cases, offends
Art. 14. Such a statute has obviously nothing to do with
Art. 14. It is true that s. 3(2) of the Act of 1947 makes
s. 183 of the Sea Customs Act applicable with a
modification. It was said that s. 183 so modified offends
Art. 14. Assume that s. 183 as modified infringes Art. 14.
What then? Clearly on this assumption s. 183 as modified
becomes ultra vires and illegal and it goes out of the
statute book. But that does not affect the question before
us at all. It does not make the order of confiscation
without an option to pay a fine in lieu thereof bad. The
confiscation is not made under s. 183. It is made under
another section of the Sea Customs Act, namely, s. 167, item
8, which so far as is relevant is in these terms:
167. The offences mentioned in the first column of the
following schedule shall be punishable to the extent
mentioned in the third column of the same with reference to
such offences respectively:
Sections of the Act to Penalties
Offences Wich offence has
reference
8, If any goods, thei 8 & 19 Such goods shall
importation or expor- be liable to con-
tatipn of which is for fication; and any
the time being prohi- such offence shall
bited or restricted by be liable to a pe-
or under Chapter IV of nalty not exceed-
this Act, be imported ing theree times
into or exported from the value of the
Indiacontrary to such goods, or not exc-
prohibition or restric- eeding one thousa-
tion. nd rupees.
Chapter IV of the Sea Customs Act contains s. 19. It has to
be remembered that s. 3(2) of the Act of 1947 states that
all goods to which any order under sub.s. (1) applies shall
be deemed to be goods of which the import has been
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prohibited under s. 19 of the Sea Customs Act. Admittedly
sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of the Act of 1947 applies to the goods
with which this case is concerned. Under s. 3(2) of the Act
of 1947 the import
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of these goods is to be deemed to have been prohibited under
s. 19 of the Sea Customs Act. It follows that action under
s. 167, item 8, of the Sea Customs Act can be taken in
respect of these goods and they can be confiscated and the
person concerned in the illegal import made liable to a
penalty. Resort to s. 183 of the Sea Customs Act is not
necessary to justify the order of confiscation made in this
case at all. Indeed s. 183 does not authorise confiscation.
It assumes a confiscation authorised by other provisions of
the Sea Customs Act and provides that on a confiscation
being adjudged, an option to pay a fine in lieu of it shall
be given. It cannot therefore be said, even on the assump-
tion that learned counsel was right in his contention that
s. 183 as modified offends Art. 14 that the order of
confiscation is bad. As to whether the contention of
learned counsel is right or not we decide nothing as it is
not necessary to do so.
It was then contended that the effect of Art. 14 of the
Constitution on s. 183 of the Sea Customs Act, as modified
by the Act of 1947, was not to make the entire s. 183
illegal but to invalidate the amendment in it as it was this
amendment alone which offended Art. 14, so that s. 183 as it
stands in the Sea Customs Act had to be applied to this case
and therefore again it was obligatory on the Customs-
authorities to give an option to the petitioner to pay a
fine in lieu of confiscation. To accept this argument we
would have to say that s. 3(2) of the Act of 1947 itself
offends Art. 14, and it cannot modify s. 183 of the Sea
Customs Act as it purports to do. We are unable to say
this. In order to say that a statutory provision offends
Art. 14, we have to examine that provision. We have here
two statutory provisions. One is s. 3(2) of the Act of 1947
and that does not offend Art. 14. The reasons for this view
we have stated earlier. The other is s. 183 of the Sea
Customs Act as modified by the Act of 1947. As so modified
we have for the present purpose assumed that it offends Art.
14. If it does it goes out as a whole. It is not really a
statutory provision in two parts with regard to which it
might have been possible to say that one part offends Art.
14
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while the other part does not. Section 183 with or without
the modification really contains one statutory provision and
therefore it must go out of the statute book as a whole or
not at all. This contention on behalf of the petitioner
must therefore fail.
Learned counsel said that s. 183 was bad also for the reason
that it left it to the uncontrolled discretion of the
Customs-authorities to decide the quantum of the’ fine to be
imposed in lieu of confiscation. On the facts of this case,
it is an academic argument. Even if it was right the entire
s. 183 would have to be ignored but that would not have the
effect of making the order of confiscation passed in, this
case invalid. All that the petitioner is concerned with is
to show that the order of confiscation was bad. The present
argument does not touch that point and therefore it is not
necessary to consider it at all. Another similar argument
was that s. 167, item 8, of the Sea Customs Act itself
offended Art. 14 in that it left to the uncontrolled
discretion of the Customs-authorities to decide the amount
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of the penalty to be imposed. The section makes it clear
that the maximum penalty that might be imposed under it is
Rs. 1,000. The discretion that the section gives must be
exercised within the limit so fixed. This is not an
uncontrolled or unreasonable discretion. Furthermore, the
discretion is vested in high Customs officers and there are
appeals from their order. The imposition of the fine is
really a quasijudicial act and the test of the quantum of it
is in the gravity of the offence. The object of the Act is
to prevent unauthorised importation of goods and the
discretion has to be exercised with that object in view.
Learned counsel then contended that the order of
confiscation had been made mala fide. It was said that it
had been passed ex-parte. This is not correct for the
petitioner had been asked before the order was made whether
he wanted a personal hearing and he had stated in reply that
he did not and had ample confidence in the authorities. It
is not therefore open to the petitioner to contend that he
had no opportunity of being heard before the order against
him was
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passed. He had been given an opportunity and had not
availed himself of it. It was also stated that in deciding
not to give the petitioner an option to pay a fine in lieu
of confiscation the Customs-authority had gone into certain
other transactions without giving any notice to the
petitioner that this would be done. It was said that the
petitioner was not given an opportunity of being heard in
respect of these transactions. The notice which the
Customs-authorities gave to the petitioner to show cause why
the goods should not be confiscated also informed him
necessarily that an order for confiscation might be made
without an option to pay a fine in lieu of confiscation
being given and therefore it was his fault if he did not
appear at the hearing and showed cause why the order of
confiscation should not be absolute but should give him an
option to pay a fine. It was also said that he had been
deprived of the option because of the differences that
existed between him and the Public Relations Officer of the
Customs Department in Calcutta. This point of view was
sought to be supported by citing the cases of two other
persons who had imported similar goods at or about the same
time, and who had been given the option. The facts of these
other cases were however substantially different. There was
nothing to show in these that goods had been imported in
deliberate violation of the order of the Government while in
the case of the petitioner there are materials on which such
a view could be formed. It appears that the petitioner as
the Manager of a firm called Federal Clearing Agency had
received a communication from the Customs-authorities on
July 30, 1953, that Zip Chains were not covered by the
notification of March 16, 1953, and within a fortnight of
that communication he had placed the orders for identical
goods which he now claims to be within the notification. It
was not unreasonable for the Customs authorities to think
that the petitioner had deliberately imported the goods in
breach of the order of the Government and without specific
licence for that purpose, and on that ground to think it
proper not to give him the option. This would be so even if
it was
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assumed that in the dispute with the Public Relations
Officer the petitioner was in the right.
It was then stated that the petitioner had not been given
personal hearing of the appeal that he preferred to the
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Central Board of Revenue and the application in revision to
the Government. But there is no rule of natural justice
that at every stage a person is entitled to a personal
hearing. Furthermore, the appeal was out of time. The
memorandum of appeal to the Central Board of Revenue was
posted on May 4, 1954. The time to file the appeal,
however, expired on May 1, 1954, so that even if the date of
the posting is taken as the date of the appeal the
petitioner was out of time. The petitioner states that he
received the order of confiscation on February 3, 1954.
Even so, on May 4, 1954, he would not be within time. The
memorandum of appeal however was received by the Central
Board of Revenue on May 6, 1954. That must be taken to be
the date when the appeal was filed, and that being so the
appeal must be taken to have been filed clearly out of time.
The petitioner stated that the Customs authorities
wrongfully and maliciously procured his arrest on May 1,
1954, and he obtained his release on May 2, 1954. It was
suggested that this arrest was procured in order to prevent
him from filing his appeal in time. This contention is
entirely idle. Admittedly, the petitioner had time from
February 3, 1954, till May 1, 1954, to file his appeal but
he did not take advantage of this long period. He waited
till the end for filing the appeal. There is nothing to
show that the arrest was wrongful or that at the date of the
arrest the Customs-authorities had any knowledge that the
petitioner had not filed his appeal. The contentions that
the order complained of was malafide or that the appeal had
not been filed out of time are entirely untenable.
The result is that this application fails and it is
dismissed with costs.
Petition dismissed.
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