Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MILAK BROTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/10/1990
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 2256 1990 SCR Supl. (2) 141
1991 SCC Supl. (1) 71 JT 1990 (4) 508
1990 SCALE (2)727
ACT:
Customs Tariff Act, 1975/Indian Tariff Act 1934 Item 13
of the Second Schedule to the Indian Tariff Act 1934/item 20
of the Second Schedule to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975:
Blanched, roasted and salted peanuts packed in vacuum con-
tainers---Liability to export duty.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants purchased groundnuts without shell in raw
form, and after subjecting them to various processes and
treatment, packed them in packets and tins which were then
exported.
The goods were charged to duty under item 13 of the
Second Schedule to the Indian Tariff Act 1934 and, later,
under item 20 of the Second Schedule to the Customs Tariff
Act, 1975 as ’groundnut kernel’. The appellant however
contended that the product exported by it was "processed
peanuts", and since the product exported by the assessee,
though basically groundnuts, had been so processed and
treated that it lost its quality of germination, it could no
longer be described as ’groundnut kernel’. Another argument
of the appellant was that groundnut kernel could be said to
be of two varieties--one an edible variety, and the other a
variety used for oil extraction purposes, and that the
tariff entry should be confined only to groundnut kernel of
the oil-yielding variety and not the variety exported by the
assessee, which could be more appropriately described as
"processed food" rather than as "groundnut kernel".
The appellant’s contentions were rejected by the Collec-
tor of Customs, on appeal by the Central Board of Excise and
Customs and, on further revision, by the Government of
India. Subsequently, the contentions were rejected by a Full
Bench of the Customs, Excise & Gold Control Appellate Tribu-
nal.
Before this Court, the appellants while reiterating the
submissions made before the authorities below, contended
that the entry in the export tariff should be given a re-
strictive interpretation and if there was any ambiguity or
doubt it should be resolved in favour of the assessee. It
was further submitted that, in matters of export and import,
the func-
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142
tional test was slowly replacing other tests.
On the other hand, it was contended on behalf of the Revenue
that: i) the expressions ’groundnut kernel and ’groundnut
shell’ used in the export entry were of widest connotation:
(ii) there was no justification whatsoever for restricting
the meaning of the word ’kernel’ on the basis of the capaci-
ty to germinate or to yield oil; (iii) the functional test
may be attracted where there was a bifurcation or classifi-
cation as in the entries, but there was no justification to
import any such test where the expression. as in this in-
stance, was broad and unrestricted; and (iv) groundnut
kernel remains groundnut kernel even after roasting and
frying and the processing and treatment did not create a
different product.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court.
HELD: (1) There is no difficulty or ambiguity in the
interpretation of the tariff entry. Groundnut is a well
known commodity which is available both in shell and as
kernel. In this context, ’kernel’ clearly means the grain,
seed or the soft matter inside the shell, whatever the use
or purpose to which it is put, eating or crushing for oil or
sowing. The tariff entry covers all groundnut and there is
no justification for confining it to the germinating or the
oil seed variety alone. [151C-D]
M/s Health ways Dairy Products Co. v. Union of India &
Ors.,[1976] 2 SCC 887, referred to.
(2) Assuming that two different commercial commodities
fall under the same entry, there is no reason why the entry
should be restricted to only one of them. It can and should
cover both unless one can say that the commodity marketed by
the appellant is not ’groundnut kernel’. [151E]
Diwan Chand Chainart Lal’s Case [1977] 39 STC 75, referred
to.
Though the raw groundnut kernel has undergone a dry-
ing, roasting and frying process, its identity as groundnut
is not lost. Even in the market to which it is exported and
where it is marketed, it is purchased as groundnuts. [I51G]
(4) The legislature must be presumed to know that, for
import purposes, for instance, groundnuts are classified
under different headings with differential rates of duty.
Those entries appear not elsewhere
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but in the First Schedule of the very enactment which sets
out the export tariff. If, in spite of such detailed classi-
fication elsewhere, the legislature decided to use a wider
expression in the Second Schedule. the intention of the
legislature must be given effect to. [152C-D]
(5) Once it is realised that both oil seeds and roasted
groundnuts exported by the assessee are capable of being
described as ’groundnut kernel’, which is what the entry
talks of, the various circumstances pointed out---that they
have different markets, that their end use is different,
that one of them has been excepted from the export ban, that
their export is done under the auspices of different Export
Promotion Councils--all fall into place and reveal no incon-
sistency with. and have no bearing on, the interpretation to
be placed on the entry. [153B-C]
Kalaivani Fabrics v. Collector, [1989] 44 ELT 219, Over-
ruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 390
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of 1979.
From the Order dated 14.2. 1978 of the Central Govt. at
New Delhi in Revision Petition No. MB/133/77.
Anil B. Dewan, S.K. Dholakia, P.C. Kapur and P. Nara-
simhan for the Appellants.
Kapil Sibbal, Additional Solicitor General (NP), Ms.
Nisha Bagchi. Ms. Sushma Suri and C.V.S. Rao for the Re-
spondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. All these appeals involve a common ques-
tion as to whether the goods exported by the appellants are
liable to export duty. There are 67 appeals which relate to
various batches of exports made by the appellants during the
period from 4.3.76 to 14.2.82. They will be disposed of by
this Common order.
The goods exported by the appellants are blanched,
roasted and salted peanuts packed in vacuum containers. The
appellants purchase groundnuts without shell in raw form
various parts of Saurashtra in the State of Gujarat. There-
after, they are sorted out into different sizes-small,
medium and big. The medium and small sizes are separated.
Dust and husk are cleaned out and other foreign material
removed. The commodity then goes to a dry roaster where it
is roasted at a
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temperature of 150 deg.C. This results in reduction of the
moisture and destruction of enzymes to a considerable ex-
tent. It is also stated that by this process any fungus or
aflotoxin is removed. After dry roasting, the product is
cooled down with the aid of a blower so that the skin of the
groundnuts become loose and the groundnut contracts. There-
after, it goes through automatic blanching machines. This
separates the skin of the groundnut and on removal of the
skin it becomes white. Thereafter, the seeds are put on
running tables and picked, according to uniform sizes, with
the aid of an electric eye sorter. The commodity thereafter
goes to a frying section for being subjected to deep oil
bath frying in an automatic fryer. They are then subjected
to anti-oxident chemicals and thereafter sent through the
blower for being cooled down. The extra oil is sucked out.
They are then subjected to a glazing process and are given
permeated chemicals and salt treatment and are packed in
packets and tins.
The goods thus exported by the appellants are charged to
duty under item 13 of the Second Schedule to the Indian
Tariff Act 1934 and. later, under item 20 of the Second
Schedule to the Customs Tariff Act. 1975. The entry is the
same under both enactments but the rate of duty is differ-
ent. The entry reads:
Item N0. Name of article Rate of duty
13 20 Groundnut:-
(i) Groundnut Kernel Rs.810/1500 per tonne
(ii) Groundnut in shell Rs.600/1125 per tonne
The appellant contended that the product exported by it
was "processed peanuts" and that it did not fail under the
tariff entries above extracted. The first line of argument
of the assessee was that the item ’groundnut kernel’ refers
to groundnut seeds, the basic characteristic of which is the
quality of germination. It was submitted that, since the
product exported by the assessee, though basically ground-
nuts, had been so processed and treated that it lost its
quality of germination, it could no longer be described as
’groundnut kernel’. The second line of argument put forward
on behalf of the appellant was that the entry in the export
tariff referred only to groundnut kernel used for oil ex-
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traction. It was pointed out that groundnut in shell as well
as groundnut kernel can be said to be of two varieties-one
an edible variety and the other a variety used for oil
extraction purposes. While it is true that it is not a
mutually exclusive classification in that perhaps all
groundnut is capable of being eaten or of being
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processed to yield oil, the submission was that these two
varieties of groundnut kernels or groundnut in shell were
two different trade commodities. They had different charac-
teristics; they were meant for different markets.; their
end-use was different; and their prices as well as mode of
pricing were totally different. Referring to entries in this
regard in the BTN (British Trade Nomenclature), the Indian
Import Tariff as well as the Indian Import Export Policy, it
was contended on behalf of the appellant that the entry
should be confined only to groudnut kernel of the oil yield-
ing variety and not the variety exported by the appellant,
which could be more appropriately described as "processed
food" rather than as groundnut kernel.
The appellant’s contention, initially put forward before
the Assistant Collector of Customs in an application for
refund, was rejected by the Collector of Customs, on appeal
by the Central Board of Excise and Customs and, on further
revision, by the Government of India under the then existing
procedure. So far as the subsequent periods of exports were
concerned, the contentions of the appellant were considered
and rejected by a Full Bench of the Customs, Excise Gold
Control Appellate Tribunal. The appellant preferred a Spe-
cial Leave Petition from the order of the Central Government
in revision dated 14.2. 1978, which was admitted and num-
bered as Civil Appeal No. 146 of 1979. Against the other
orders of the Tribunal, the appellant has preferred appeals
to this Court under section 130-E of the Customs Act, 1962.
On behalf of the appellants, a number of circumstances
have been relied upon to justify the distinction sought to
be made between groundnut kernel simpliciter and blanched
and roasted groundnuts exported by the assessee. It will be
convenient to summarise the points made on behalf of the
appellant here:
(1) In the Indian Trade Classification (I.T.C.), which has
been published by the Government of India for purposes of
foreign trade, there is a bifurcation in the classification
between the oil seeds and roasted nuts. There are various
revisions of this classification. Upto 1st April, 1972, the
I.T.C. classified oil seeds. oilnuts and oil kernels in
Division 22. The various items occurring under this Division
were as follows:
Code No. Description Unit of Quantity
Group 221--Oil seeds, oilnuts and oil kernels
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221.1 Groundnuts (Peanuts), green.
whether or not shelled (excluding
flour and meal)
221.1001 Groundnut kernels. H.P.S.
221.1002 Groundnut kernels. N.E.S.
221.1003 Groundnut in shell. H.P.S. TONNE
221.1004 Groundnut in shell. N.E.S.
As against the above. in group No. 053. roasted nuts are
specified as below:
053.9009 Others (roasted nuts including groundnuts)
In a revised alphabetic index to the commodities, the
relevant code numbers for various commodities pertaining to
groundnuts are as follows:
Commodity Code No.
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Groundnut in Shell HPS 221.1003
Groundnut in Shell NES 222.1004
Groundnut kernels HPS 222.1001
Groundnut kernels NES 222.1002
Groundnut oil, crude 423.4001
Groundnut oil purified 423.4002
Groundnut oil, deodorized 423.4003
Groundnut oil, hydrogenated 431.2001
Groundnut oil cake and meal 1081.3201
Groundnut roasted 058.9107
In the more recent classification heading No. 12.02
refers to groundnuts, not roasted or otherwise cooked,
whether or not shelled
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or broken. The unit of quantity in which these goods are
sold is tonne. This chapter deals with various types of oil
seeds like soya beans copra, linseed, rape or colza seeds,
sunflower seeds, palm nuts and kernels and other oil seeds
and oleaginous fruits. On the other hand edible nuts come
under heading 20.08, which reads thus:
"Fruit, nuts and other edible parts of plants, otherwise
prepared or preserved, whether or not containing added sugar
or other sweetening matter or spirit, not elsewhere speci-
fied or included
-- Nuts, ground-nuts and other seeds, whether or not
mixed together:
-- Ground-nuts Kg.
-- Other, including mixtures
-- Cashew nut, roasted Kg.
-- Nuts, prepared or preserved Kg.
-- Other roasted nuts and seeds n .e.s. Kg."
(2) A similar classification has also been made under
the BTN. Chapter 12 deals with oil seeds and oleaginous
fruit, miscellaneous grains, seeds and fruit, industrial and
medical plants, straw and fodder. Note i under this Chapter
reads thus:
1. Heading No. 12.01 is to be taken to apply, inter alia, to
ground-nuts, soya beans, mustard seeds, oil poppy seeds,
poppy seeds and copra. It is to be taken not to apply to
coconuts or other products of heading No. 08.01 or to olives
(Chapter 7 or Chapter 20).
Heading 12.01 reads:
"Oil seeds and oleaginous fruit, whole or broken--This
heading covers seeds and fruit of a kind used for the ex-
traction (by pressure or by solvents) of edible or industri-
al oils and fats, whether they are imported for that pur-
pose, forsowing or for other purposes. It does not, however,
include olives (Chapter 7), coconuts (heading 08.01) or
certain seeds and fruits from which oil may be extracted but
which are primarily used for other purposes, e.g. walnuts
and almonds (heading 08.05), apricot, peach and plum kernels
(heading 12.08) and cocoa beans (heading 18.01)".
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It is also stated that the heading covers, inter alia,
ground-nuts (except roasted ground-nuts--heading 20.06). As
against this heading 20.06, which deals with fruit otherwise
prepared or preserved, whether or not containing added sugar
or spirit, carries the following sub-heading:
(3) Almonds, ground-nuts, areca (or betel) nuts and other
nuts, dry-roasted, oil-roasted or fat-roasted, whether or
not containing or coated with vegetable oil, salt, flavours,
spices or other additives.
(3) Even under the Customs Tariff, the first Schedule,
which deals with import, contains a similar classification.
Chapter 12 and note 1 to the Chapter are the same as in BTN.
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Item 12.01 reads--oil seeds and oleaginous fruit, whole or
broken--(1)not elsewhere specified (2) Copra. Chapter 20
deals with preparations of vegetables, fruit or other parts
of plants. It contains a note that the Chapter covers edible
plants. parts of plants and roots of plants conserved in
syrup (for example, ginger) and roasted groundnuts.
(4) It is pointed out that the goods of the appellant
are exported through the medium of Processed Foods Export
Promotion Council, Delhi, whereas groundnuts intended for
oil extraction purposes are exported through the Indian Oil
and Oil Produce Exporters’ Association, Bombay. This indi-
cates that the customers for two types of goods are totally
different.
(5) 0n 14th July, 1976, the Government of India decided
to ban with immediate effect export of HPS (Hand Picked
Seeds) groundnuts (both in shell and kernel), which is
canalised through Indian Oil and Oil Produce Exporters’
Association. However, by an export trade notice dated
8.9.76, the Government of India clarified that the item
"blanched and roasted groundnut kernels", does not fall
within the purview of Exports Control Order, 1968 and its
export is allowed without any licensing formalities.
(6) It has been pointed out that the Collector of Cus-
toms used to levy and recover an agricultural cess on the
goods in question until the Government of India, by an order
of 1976, held that the roasted and salted peanuts/groundnuts
exported by the assessee were not liable to cess under the
Agricultural Produce Cess Act, 1940.
(7) It is pointed out that the packed roasted seeds
exported by the appellants are more value added than raw
groundnut kernel used
149
for other purposes. The assessee’s product is packed in
vacuum containers and sold in terms of kilograms, whereas
other groundnuts are exported in bags or drums and sold in
tomes. It would not be correct to bring both of them under
same classification for export purposes.
Relying on the above points of difference, Shri Divan
and Dholakia, appearing on behalf of the appellant vehement-
ly contend that the entry in the export tariff should be
given a restrictive interpretation. Reliance is placed in
this context on a judgment of the Madras High Court in
Kalaivani Fabrics v. Collector, [1989] 44 E.L.T. 219 a
direct decision on the present issue. Reference is made also
to the cases cited therein and, in particular, to the ruling
of this Court in M/s. Healthways Dairy Products Co. v. Union
of India & Ors., [1976] 2 S.C.C. 887. Shri Divan submits
that if there is any ambiguity or doubt it should be re-
solved in favour of the assessee. He contends that, while
the taxing authorities, on whom the onus lies, have merely
rested on the dictionary meaning of the .word ’groundnut
kernel’, the assessee has placed a lot of material show that
there are two different commercial varieties of groundnut
kernel. He submits that, in matters of export and import,
the functional test is slowly replacing other tests, an
approach clearly indicated by the classifications under the
BTN, ITC and the import tariffs. Shri Dholakia, appearing on
behalf of the appellant in one of the appeals, very strongly
urges that the commodity known as groundnut kernel consists
of two entirely different varieties or classes particularly
in matters of trade. There is a sea of difference between
the groundnut kernel which is exported as an oil producing
variety and the roasted peanuts which are exported more or
less as a ’processed food’ by the appellant. The produce
exported by the appellants has no oil content; it is incapa-
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ble of being used for germinating purposes; its market, its
unit of quantity of sale, itS price and even its exporters
are totally different viewed from the commercial point of
view, it is impossible to mix up these two varieties under
one common heading and this could not have been the inten-
tion of the export tariff. He, therefore, submits that the
export tariff item should be restricted only to one of these
varieties, namely, the oil seed variety or the germinating
variety and should not be extended to the roasted items sold
by the assessee.
Shri Dholakia also raised a point that the appellant’s
factory was located in a free trade zone trod that, having
regard to the various notifications of the Government of
India, the Government was estopped from levying any export
duty on its products. This last contention of Shri Dholakia
is, however, a totally new one. The necessary facts to
150
found any such promissory estoppel have not been put forward
or considered by any of the assessing or appellate authori-
ties. We, therefore, decline to permit Shri Dholakia to
raise this question at this belated stage. His application
for urging additional grounds in this regard is rejected.
On the other hand Ms. Nisha Bagchi, who argued the case
on behalf of the Union of India very ably, submitted that
the expressions ’groundnut kernel’ and ’groundnut shell’
used in the export entry. were of the widest connotation.
She referred to the dictionary meanings of the word ’kernel’
and submitted that there is no justification whatsoever for
restricting its meaning on the basis of the capacity to
germinate or to yield oil. She submitted that the reliance
placed on behalf of the appellants on the BTN, ITC and
Import Tariff classifications was totally misplaced. In
fact, she contended, the very fact that the export tariff
avoids all these classifications and uses a wide expression,
which is capable of taking in both the edible as well as the
oil seed varieties of the groundnuts, supports her conten-
tion that, so far as export tariff is concerned, the legis-
lature intended no limitations whatsoever. In support of her
contention as to the wide meaning of the expression ’ground-
nut kernel’, she relied on certain observations of this
Court in State v. Shanmagha Vils Cashewnut Factory, [1953] 4
S.T.C. 205 and of the Madras High Court in Binod Cashew
Corporation v. Deputy Commercial Tax Officer, [1986] 61
S.T.C. 1. She submitted that the interpretation sought to be
placed on the entries in the export tariff by the appellant
will carve away a substantial category of the goods de-
scribed in the wide tariff entry from its scope. So far as
agricultural cess is concerned, she pointed out, .rightly,
that it was leviable only in respect of "seeds", an expres-
sion that imports a concept of a capacity to germinate,
particularly, in an agricultural context. Obviously, the
groundnut kernel, roasted and salted, could not be described
as ’seeds’ and. therefore, the Government of India had
rightly exempted them from agricultural cess. The very fact
that the export tariff uses the expression ’groundnut ker-
nel’ instead of ’seed’ also points to the distinction be-
tween the two. According to counsel, the functional test may
be attracted where there is a bifurcation or classification
as in the tariff entries referred to on behalf of the appel-
lant but there is no justification to import any such test
where the expression, as in this instance, is broad and
unrestricted. Referring to the exemption from export ban,
learned counsel submitted that the very fact that it was
considered necessary to exempt the blanched and roasted
peanuts from the export ban indicates that otherwise they
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would have been included in the export ban. I.earned counsel
took us through the
151
orders of the appellate authorities and the tribunal and
submitted that they have taken a correct view in the matter
which does not call for any interference. She submitted that
groundnut kernel remains groundnut kerneI even after roast-
ing and frying. The process, though described elaborately on
behalf of the appellant, does not create a different
product. This, she pointed out, was the finding of the
appellate authorities. There is no justification, therefore.
counsel contended. to read any limitation into the export
entry. She urged that we should accept the conclusion ar-
rived at by the departmental authorities and the tribunal
and dismiss these appeals.
Having considered the submissions of both parties, we
are of opinion that the contention of the Revenue should
prevail. To our mind, there is no difficulty or ambiguity in
the interpretation of the tariff entry. Groundnut is a well
known commodity which is available both in shell and as
kernel. In this context, ’kernel’ clearly means the grain,
seed or the soft matter inside the shell, whatever the use
or purpose to which it is put, eating or crushing for oil or
sowing. The tariff entry covers all groundnut and there is
no justification for confining it to the germinating or the
oil seed variety alone. On behalf of the appellant, it is
emphasised that the goods exported by the assessee and
groundnut oil seeds are totally different commercial commod-
ities. It is submitted that Diwan Chand Chaman Lal’s case
[1977] 39 S.T.C. 75 says so and that the various classifica-
tion lists produced prove this. Even the acceptance of this
argument does not carry the appellant’s case to the desired
result. Assuming that two different commercial commodities
fail under the same entry, there is no reason why the entry
should be restricted to only one of them. It can and should
cover both unless one can say that the commodity marketed by
the appellant is not ’groundnut kernel’.
We are not convinced that the goods exported by the
assessee have ceased to be groundnuts in the ordinary accep-
tation of the term or that they have become a different
commodity, say, a processed food (indeed, there is no such
classification in the tariff entry). The decision in Diwan
Chand (Chaman Lal, [1977] 39 STC 75 turned on the descrip-
tion of groundnuts in Schedule C of the Punjab Sales Tax Act
as a species of oil seeds and it was held that parched
groundnuts constituted a different commodity. But the fact
is that, though the raw groundnut kernel has undergone a
drying. roasting and frying process, its identity as ground-
nut is not lost. Even in the market to which it is exported
and where it is marketed, it is purchased only as groundnuts
(or peanuts, as they are called in the U.S.A.). May be there
are two
152
different commodities but both are known only as ’ground-
nuts’. The argument that the scope of the entry should be
restricted because of the two-fold classification existing
elsewhere between groundnuts as "oil-seeds" and groundnuts
as "fruits, nuts and edible substances" does not appeal to
us. In the first place, it does not meet the argument that
basically both items are only varieties of groundnuts and
hence not taken out of the relevant entry. Secondly, there
is force in the argument of State counsel that the legisla-
ture has, deliberately, not adopted, for the purposes of the
Second Schedule, the minute multiclassification of the First
Schedule and allied classifications. Unlike the Import
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Tariff, the BTN and the ITC, there is no sub-classification’
attempted in the export entry. The legislature must be
presumed to know that, for import purposes, for instance,
groundnuts are classified under different headings with
differential rates of duty. Those entries appear not else-
where but in the First Schedule of the very enactment which
sets out the export tariff. The First Schedule to the Indian
Tariff Act refers to seeds, oil-seeds and oil in section II
and talk only of canned fruits and vegetables in section IV
(dealing with products of food-preparing industries). The
entries in the Customs Tariff relating to imports have
already been touched upon. If, in spite of such detailed
classification elsewhere, the legislature decided to use a
wider expression in the Second Schedule, the intention of
the legislature must be given effect to. Shri Dholakia
submitted that while the need to restrict imports necessi-
tated a detailed enumeration and precise classification, the
export duty is levied only on a short list of items. This
may be so but this point of distinction is not enough to
explain why, when an entry finds a place in the export
tariff, it should not receive its normal interpretation but
should receive one circumscribed by the entries in the
import tariff or other classifications.
A point was also made by Sri Dholakia that, since the
export duty is on the basis of tonnes and it is only the
groundnut oil seed that is exported in units of tonnes, the
entry should be confined to this commodity alone. This, we
are afraid, is a very precarious basis for the interpreta-
tion of the body of the entry. In this context, we should
also point out that no difficulty, anomaly or absurdity
arising out of the computation of export duty in terms of
tonnes on these goods was brought to the notice of the
authorities at any stage. It may perhaps have helped if
material had been placed before the authorities as to the
nature and magnitude of the exports of the two classes of
groundnuts, their relative prices and the duty impact there-
on. In the absence of any such material, we find it diffi-
cult to hold that the commodity in question should be ex-
cluded because of the mode of computation of duty
153
prescribed by the tariff entry. ’
Once it is realised both oil seeds and roasted ground-
nuts exported by the assessee are capable of being described
as ’groundnut kernel’, which is what the entry talks of. the
various circumstances pointed out--that they have different
markets, that their end use is different, that one of them
has been excepted from the export ban. that their export is
done under the auspices of different Export Promotion Coun-
cils--all fall into place and reveal no inconsistency with,
and have no bearing on, the interpretation to be placed on
the entry.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the stand of
the Revenue has to be upheld and the decision of the Madras
High Court in Kalaivani Fabrics (supra) overruled. These
appeals, therefore, fail and are dismissed. We, however,
make no order as to costs.
R.S.S. Appeals dis-
missed.
154