Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, BANGALORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
WESTERN INDIA PLYWOOD MFG. CO. LTD. AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/10/1989
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
KULDIP SINGH (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 755 JT 1989 (4) 389
1989 SCALE (2)927
CITATOR INFO :
F 1990 SC 759 (1,2,4,5)
ACT:
Customs Tariff Act, 1975: Schedule Heading No. 44.01 and
Notification No. 126 of 1984--Timber imported from country
specified in Notifications under Section 25 of Customs Act,
1962 exempted from effective basic duty--Rate of auxiliary
duty--Determination of.
HEADNOTE:
Under Heading No. 44.01 of Schedule to the Customs
Tariff Act, 1975, timber was chargeable to customs duty
(basic effective duty) at 60%. However, under a Notification
issued by the Government under Section 25(1) of the Customs
Act, 1962, timber imported from certain countries was ex-
empted, but an additional duty (auxiliary duty) was payable
on Such imports in terms of Notification No. 265 dated
1.12.1982 and its successor Notifications No. 53 of 1983 and
126 of 1984.
The assessee imported logs of timber from an exempted
country, and as it was not liable to pay the basic duty, it
cleared the goods by paying the auxiliary duty at 40%, with
reference to the effective basic duty at 60%, as prescribed
under Notification No. 126 of 1984. Subsequently, however,
the assessee felt that it should have paid an auxiliary duty
of only 30%, and not 40% since no basic effective duty was
payable on the goods imported. It, therefore, applied to the
respondent for refund of the excess duty paid by it. This
claim was rejected by the Assistant Collector. On appeal,
the Collector of Customs (Appeals) held that the assessee
was entitled to the refund claimed. This order was confirmed
by the Customs Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal
(CEGAT), on the view that the explanation would come into
operation only if there was more than one notification
granting concession or exemption, in respect of basic duty,
providing for different rates in respect of articles import-
ed from different countries. Hence, the appeals by the
Department.
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: 1. The Tribunal has erred in its interpretation of
the Notification No. 126 of 1984. The assessee’s case is
clearly covered by
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780
the explanation in the notification. The auxiliary duty paid
by the assssee was perfectly in order and its refund appli-
cations are not maintainable. [783D, 785E]
2.1 The notification and the explanation make it clear
that the auxiliary duty has to be paid with reference to
each article based on the effective basic duty applicable to
such article in terms of the First Schedule read with any
relevant notification under Section 25. [785D]
2.2 No doubt, the main part of Notification No. 126 of
1984 provides for auxiliary duty at 40% where rate of effec-
tive basic duty is 60% or above i.e. rates set out in First
Schedule read with any relevant notification and at 30%
where such effective rate is nil or less than 60%. However,
the explanation to the notification has made an inroad into
this simple rule by providing that where two or more effec-
tive basic rates are applicable in respect of any article,
and the differentiation in rates is referable to the country
of origin, then the auxiliary duty payable will be the
higher of the two, or highest of the rates. [783E-G]
2.3 In the instant case, when timber is imported from
the countries specified in the notification or notifications
under Section 25(1), the rate of basic duty is nil, but if
the goods are imported from other countries, the notifica-
tion does not apply and a basic duty of 60% would be levi-
able under the entry in the First Schedule. Thus, when the
rates specified in the First Schedule are read along with
the relevant notifications, it is found that the effective
basic duty is leviable on it at two rates and this differen-
tiation in rates is attributable to the country of origin in
regard to the import. Hence, the explanation squarely comes
into operation and the auxiliary duty will have to be paid
by reference to the higher of the two rates of the effective
basic duty, namely, 60%. [783G-H; 784A]
2.4 The differentiation referred to in the explanation
need not arise on account of the existence of more than one
notification, altering the basic duty set out in the Sched-
ule. It does not matter whether the difference in the rates
is because the First Schedule applies in certain cases and a
concession notification in other cases. If there is no
notification the rate specified in the First Schedule has to
be taken into account for purpose of the notification in
question. [784D-E]
2.5 A person will have to pay an auxiliary duty even
though the effective basic duty is nil. That is the clear
intention of the statutory instrument and the explanation
is-based on good reason. It is equitable
781
that all importers should pay the additional duty at the
same rate and that they should have no advantage or disad-
vantage inter se. A grant of concession in the matter of
auxiliary duty as well would result in widening the gulf
between one importer and another and also that between such
an importer and the local trader. [784F; 785A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals No. 26A42648
of 1987:
From the Judgment and Order dated 7.5. 1987 passed by
the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal,
New Delhi, Order No. 377 to 381/1987-D in Appeal Nos.
CD/SA/A Nos. 2451, 1989 to 1991 & 1992/86-D.
V.C. Mahajan R.P. Srivastava and P. Parmeswaran for the
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Appellant.
T.A. Ramachandran and Mrs. J. Ramachandran for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. These are four appeals by the Collector
of Customs in the cases of M/s. Western India Plywood Mfg.
Co. Ltd. and Kanara Wood & Plywood Industries Ltd. (herein-
after referred to as ’the assessee’). A very short common
point is involved in these appeals.
The assessee imported logs of timber from Burma. Under
the Customs Tariff Act, 1975, timber is chargeable to cus-
toms duty at 60%. (This we shall call the basic customs
duty.) The relevant entry in the Schedule to the Customs
Tariff Act is under heading No. 44.01 which includes "wood
and timber".
The Government had, however, issued a notification under
section 25(1) of the Customs Act exempting timber imported
from certain countries of which Burma is one. The result was
that the basic customs duty payable by the assessee in
respect of its imports--we shall call this the effective
basic duty--was nil. The assessee, however, was liable to
pay an additional duty of customs in respect of its imports.
This additional duty may be referred to as the auxiliary
duty of customs. The levy of this duty is governed by the
terms of notification No. 265 dated 8.12.1982 and its suc-
cessor notifications Nos. 59 of 1983 and 126 of 1984.
782
The last of these reads as follows:
TABLE
S. No. Description of goods Rate
(1) (2) (3)
1 Goods in respect of which Forty * per cent
the rate of duty of customs of the value of
specified in the said First the goods as
Schedule, read with any determined in
relevant notification of the accordance with
Government of India for the the provisions
time being in force is 60 per of Section 14
cent ad valorem or more. of the Customs
Act, 1962
(52 of 1962).
2. Goods in respect of which the Thirty * per cent
rate of duty of customs of the value of
specified in the said First goods as deter-
Schedule, read with any relevant mined in accord-
notification of the Government ance with the
of India for .the time being in provisions of
force is nil or less than 60 per Section 14 of
cent ad valorem. the Customs Act,
1962.
(52 of 1962)
* These percentage are 30% and 20% in the
notification of 1982 and 35% and 25% in the
notification of 1983. The terms of the notifi-
cations are otherwise identical.
Explanation: For the purpose of S1. Nos. 1 and
2 in the above Table, the expression "the rate
of duty of customs specified in the said First
Schedule, read with any relevant notification
of the Government of India for the time being
in force", in relation to any article liable
to two or more different rates of duty by
reason of the country of origin of that arti-
cle, means that rate of duty which is the
highest of those rates."
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The assessee cleared the goods by paying an auxiliary duty
at
783
40%. Subsequently, however, the assessee seems to have felt
that its case falls under S. No. 2 of the above notification
and that it should have paid an auxiliary duty of only 30%
and not 40%. It, therefore, applied to the respondent for a
refund of the excess duty allegedly paid by it. This claim
was rejected by the Assistant Collector. However, on appeal,
the Collector of Customs (Appeals) held that the assessee
was entitled to the refund claimed and this order has also
been confirmed by the Customs, Excise and Gold Control
(Appellate) Tribunal (CEGAT). The Collector of Customs has
preferred these appeals.
The order of the Tribunal in the appeals preferred by
the present respondent was a very short order in which the
Tribunal followed its earlier decision in the case of M/s.
Indian Plywood Company Limited, Bombay. We have been taken
through the decision of the Tribunal in the said case which
is reported in (1987) 29 ELT page 559. We have, therefore,
had the benefit of the full reasoning of the Tribunal for
reaching its conclusion.
We are of opinion that the Tribunal has erred in its
interpretation of the notification set out above and that
the assessee’s case is clearly covered by the explanation in
the notification. It is true that the main part of the
notification provides for an auxiliary duty at 40% in cases
where the effective rate of basic duty (i.e. the rates set
out in the First Schedule read with any relevant notifica-
tion) is 60% or above and an auxiliary duty at 30% in cases
where such effective basic rate is nil or less than 60%. If
the notification had stopped here, the assessee would have
been perfectly within its rights to claim that the auxiliary
duty payable by it would only be 30% because the effective
basic rate in its case is nil.
However, the explanation has made an inroad into this
simple rule. It has provided that where there are two (or
more) effective basic rates applicable in respect of any
article and the differentiation in rates is attributable to
the country of origin of the goods imported, then the auxil-
iary duty payable will be the higher of the two (or the
highest of the) rates. In the present case, when timber is
imported from Burma and the other countries specified in the
notification or notifications under section 25(1), the rate
of basic duty is nil but if the goods are imported from
other countries, the notification does not apply and a basic
duty of 60% would be leviable under the entry in the First
Schedule. The result, therefore, is that when we read the
rates specified in the First Schedule along with the rele-
vant notifications in respect of a particular article,
namely, timber, we find that the effec-
784
tive basic duty is leviable on it at two rates and this
differentiation in rates is attributable to the country of
origin in regard to the import. Hence the explanation
squarely comes into operation and the assessee will have to
pay auxiliary duty by reference to the higher of the two
rates of the effective basic duty, namely, 60%.
The contention on behalf of the respondent--and this is
also the view taken by the Tribunal--appears to be that the
explanation comes into operation only if there is more than
one notification granting concession or exemption in respect
of basic duty providing for different rates in respect of
articles imported from different countries. We are unable to
see any warrant for reading any such restriction into the
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terms of the explanation. As we see it, the terms of the
explanation are perfectly clear. It is this: that if, in
respect of any article, there are :two or more effective
basic duties in operation and the difference is referable to
the country from which the article is imported, then the
highest of the effective rates will govern the levy of
auxiliary duty. It does not matter whether the difference in
the rates is because the First Schedule applies in certain
cases and a concession notification applies in other cases.
Clearly, the use of the words "rate ..... specified in the
First Schedule, read with any relevant notification" does
not necessarily require that there should be such a notifi-
cation; they mean: "the rates specified in the First sched-
ule read with the relevant notification, if any". If there
is no notification the rate specified in the First Schedule
has obviously to be taken into account for purpose of the
notification we are now concerned with. It is. therefore,
not necessary that the differentiation referred to in the
explanation should arise on account of the existence of more
than one notification altering the basic duty set out in the
Schedule.
Sri Ramachandran contended that the construction sought
to be placed by us would lead to this anomaly that a person
will have to pay an auxiliary duty even though the effective
basic duty is nil. This argument is without force for two
reasons. In the first place that is the direct result of the
explanation and, therefore, if that is the clear intention
of the statutory instrument, the anomaly cannot be helped.
The second and perhaps more appropriate answer to Sri Rama-
chandran’s contention is that the explanation is based on
good reason. It will be seen that in a case of this type as
well as in cases governed by more than one notification,
which make a distinction in the rate of duty based on the
country of origin, there will be different importers import-
ing goods but paying basic duty at different rates. The
intention of the statute could well be that while for pur-
poses of basic duty a
785
differentiation in rates may be justified depending upon the
country of origin that consideration would be totally irrel-
evant in the context of auxiliary duty. In the context of
auxiliary duty, it is .equitable that all importers should
pay the additional duty at the same rate and that they
should have no advantage or disadvantage inter se. A grant
of concession in the matter of auxiliary duty as well would
result in widening the gulf between one importer and another
and also that between such an importer and the local trader.
The provision, therefore, seems to have been deliberately
enacted to achieve this result which is not really an anoma-
ly as described by Sri Ramachandran.
Sri Ramachandran sought to make same point on the use of
the word ’article’ in the notification. We do not, however,
see any significance in the use of this word which has any
relevance to the point at issue. The word ’article’ is used
because though a number of articles may be included in one
item in the First Schedule, the relevant notification may
not govern all of them and it may be restricted.only to some
out of the many articles mentioned in the Schedule. The
notification and the explanation, therefore, make it clear
that the auxiliary duty has to be calculated with reference
to each article based on the effective basic rates of duty
applicable to such article in terms of the First Schedule
read with any relevant notification under section 25.
For the reasons mentioned above, we are of opinion that
the auxiliary duty paid by the assessee was perfectly in
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order and that its refund applications are not maintainable.
We, therefore, set aside the order of the Tribunal and the
Collector (Appeals) and restore the order of the Assistant
Collector refusing refund to the assessee. The appeals are,
therefore, allowed. In the circumstances of the case, we
make no order as to costs.
N.P.V. Appeals
allowed.
786