Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
PETITIONER:
SHESHANK SEA FOODS PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/11/1996
BENCH:
S.P. BHARUCHA, K.S. PARIPOORNAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
BHARUCHA, J.
The principal judgment was delivered by a Division
Bench of the High Court of Karnataka in the case of M/s.
Kamath Packaging Limited (Civil Appeal No. 1153/92). In the
other matters the High Court followed the aforesaid
judgment.
A writ petition was filed by M/s. Kamath Packaging Ltd.
before the High Court seeking a writ or prohibition
restraining the Customs authorities from proceeding with
search and seizure operations in their premises. The writ
petition was dismissed by a learned single Judge and the
appeal therefrom by the Division Bench. The writ petition
was filed upon the basis that the Customs authorities had no
right or authority nor did the Customs Act, 1962, empower
them to go into questions relating to the utilization of the
raw materials that had been imported by the appellants under
advance incences granted to them under the Duty Exemption
Scheme. It was the case of the Customs authorities that the
raw materials had been imported by the appellants without
payment of duty by availing of the benefit of an Exemption
Notification dated 30th April, 1988 (No. 116/1988). The
terms and conditions thereof had been violated by the
appellants. Search and seizure operations in this behalf
were, therefore, within their powers.
The said Exemption Notification was issued in exercise
of powers conferred by Section 25(1) of the Customs Act and
one of the conditions thereof was that the materials
exempted thereunder would not "be sold, loaned, transferred
or disposed of in any other manner".
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
investigation by the Customs authorities was in respect of
alleged violations of the terms of the appellants’ advance
licences which incorporated the terms of the said Exemption
Notification. Only the licensing authority had the
jurisdiction to investigate the alleged violations. The Duty
Exemption Scheme under which the licences had been issued
was a code by itself and exceeded any investigation by the
Customs authorities. The bond that had been furnished by the
appellants pursuant to the licences also provided for action
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
by the licensing authority.
Our Attention was drawn by learned counsel for the
appellant in support of his aforestated submissions to the
Import and Export Policy, 1988-91, wherein Chapter XIX dealt
with the Duty Exemption Scheme. Paragraph 291 stated that
the licence holder should, before ciearance of the first
consignment of import, execute a bond with the requisite
value of bank guarantee or legal undertaking, as the case
may be, with the concerned licensing authority in the
prescribed form, Paragraph graph 243 read thus:
"If licences holder fails to
discharge the prescribed export
obligation within the permitted
time, the licensing authority shall
initiate action against the
licence-holder on the lines
indicated in Chapter XIX of the
Hand Book of Procedures, 1988-91.
This shall, however, be without
prejudice to any other action that
may be initiated by the Customs
authorities for recovery of Customs
duty or other duties and interest
thereon under Section 142 of the
Customs Act, 1962."
Learned counsel drew attention to the Hand Book of
Procedures, April 1988 - March 1991, issued by the Ministry
of Commerce, Government of India, Chapter XIX whereof also
dealt with the Duty Exemption Scheme. Paragraph 374 dealt
with the consequences of a licence holder failing to
discharge the prescribed export obligation either in full or
in part. If this happened in such circumstance that "the
licensing authority is satisfied that the exempt material
has not been sold or misutilised for domestic production"
the action that could be taken was set out. In learned
counsels submission, these provisions of the Import & Export
Policy and the Hand Book of Procedures showed that is was
only the licensing authority which could investigate alleged
cases of domestic sale of exempt material and the
jurisdiction of the Customs authorities to do so was ousted.
Learned counsel placed reliance upon a communication to
all Collectors of Central Excise issued by the central Board
of Excise & Customs on 13th May, 1969, or the subject of
whether, in the event of the contravention of a post-
importation condition of an import licence, it was open to
the Customs authorities the confiscate imported goods under
Section 111 (O) of the Customs Act. The said communication
stated that before Section 111 (o) could be attracted there
had "to be an exemption, subject to a condition, from a
prohibition. Where a valid licence has been issued, it is
not a case of an exemption from the prohibition. Therefore,
if a post importation condition of a licence is contravened,
it cannot be said that any condition of exemption is
contravened.
For the reasons stated above, the Ministry of Law have
advised that it may not be possible to take action under
Section 111 (o) with respect to the conditions of the
licence relating to the use of goods after they are cleared
from the Customs charge."
Section 111 (o) is the sheet-anchor of the respondents’
case. It reads thus:
"111. Confiscation of improperly
imported goods. etc. - The
following goods brought from a
place outside India shall be liable
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
to confiscation -
XXX XXX XXX
(o) any goods exempted, subject to
any condition, from duty or any
prohibition in respect of the
import thereof under this Act or
any other law for the time being in
force, in respect of which the
condition is not observed unless
the non-observance of the condition
was sanctioned by the proper
officer."
Section 111 (o) states that when goods are exempted
from Customs duty subject to a condition and the condition
is not observed, the goods are liable to confiscation. The
case of the respondents is that the goods imported by the
appellants, which availed of the said exemption subject to
the condition that they would not be sold, loaned,
transferred or disposed of in any other manner, had been
disposed of by the appellants. The Customs authorities,
therefore, clearly had the power to take action under the
provisions of Section 111 (o).
We do not find in the provisions of the Import and
Export Policy or the Hand Book of Procedures issued by the
Ministry of Commerce, Government of India, anything that
even remotely suggests that the aforesaid power of the
Customs authorities had been taken away or abridged or that
an investigation into such alleged breach could be conducted
only by the licensing authority. That the licensing
authority is empowered conduct such an investigation does
not by itself preclude the Customs authorities from doing
so.
The communication of the Central Board of Excise and
Customs dated 13th May, 1969, refers to the breach of the
condition of a license and suggests that it may not be
possible to take action under Section 111 (o) in respect
thereof. It is true that the terms or the said Exemption
Notification were made part of the appellants’ licences and,
in that sense, a breach of the terms of the said Exemption
Notification is also a breach of the terms of the license,
entitling the licensing authority to investigate. But the
breach is not only of the terms of the license; it is also a
breach of the condition in the Exemption Notification upon
which the appellants obtained exemption from payment of
Customs duty and, therefore, the terms of Section 111 (o)
enable the Customs authorities to investigate.
For these reasons, we find no merit in the appeals and
dismiss them with costs.