Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S O.R.G. SYSTEMS, BARODA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, VADODARA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/07/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, K. VENKATASWAMI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G E M E N T
K. VENKATASWAMI, J.
These two appeals arise out of a common order dated
5.7.94 of the Customs Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate
Tribunal, New Delhi (hereinafter called "the Tribunal"). The
issues that arise out of the order of the Tribunal under
appeal are no longer res integra. The decision of this Court
in PSI Data Systems Ltd. Vs. Collector of Central Excise
[1997 (89) E.L.T. 3 (S.C.)] settles the controversial issues
raised in these appeals.
Briefly stated the facts are the following :-
The appellant is engaged in the manufacture of
Computers falling under Tariff Item 33-DD from May, 1982
when they got the necessary licence. Prior to May, 1982 the
appellant got the Computers manufactured by (a) M/s Orbit
Electronics (for short ’Orbit’) by supplying raw materials
and also by supplying specifications and designs. The
computers so manufactured by the appellant, as stated above,
as well as those manufactured by the appellant after May,
1982 were marketed by M/s Adprint Services Limited, baroda
(for short ’Adprint’). At this stage, it is necessary to
make it clear that the Revenue seriously claimed all through
that DSI and Orbit were the dummy units of the appellant.
The Tribunal, as final fact finding authority, has held that
they ere not dummy units. However, the contention of the
appellant that Adprint is an independent concern, was not
accepted by the Tribunal and the Tribunal has given a clear
finding that Adprint is a dummy unit of the appellant. We
proceed on the basis of these findings given by the
Tribunal as they are binding on the parties.
The principal issues in controversy are: (a) whether
the Computers manufactured and cleared by the DSI and Orbit
are liable to be treated as the Computers manufactured and
cleared by the appellant and, therefore, liable for excise
duty at the hands of the Appellant; (b) whether the value of
peripheral devices and/or Computer systems sold by Adprint
along with Computers and includible in the assessable value
of the Computer; and (c) whether the amount or value of the
service charges recovered by the appellant under service
contracts can be included in the assessable value of the
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Computer. The other subsidiary issues are: (1) in the event
of this Court coming to the conclusion that the peripheral
devices and the amount of service charges are includible in
the assessable value of the Computer, then what is the
correct amount that would be liable to be so included and
(2) whether the penalty initially levied in a sum of Rs. 25
lacs and ultimately reduced by the Tribunal to Rs. 10 lacs,
is sustainable in the facts and circumstances of the case.
The authorities, overruling the objections raised by
the appellant, held that the Computers manufactured by DSI
and Orbit must be deemed to have been manufactured by the
appellant and as such liable for excise duty. It was also
held that the value of peripherals and systems software
supplied is includible in the value of the Computers.
Likewise, the Revenue held that non-disclosure of the values
of service charges, peripherals and systems software
attracts levy of penalty. Accordingly the demand was raised
against the appellant in a sum of Rs. 3, 32, 96,010.58 and a
penalty of Rs. 25 lacs was also levied. Before the Tribunal,
the appellant got some relief on duty part and penalty was
reduced from Rs. 25 lacs to Rs. 10 lacs.
The Tribunal, after analysing the facts, held that the
supply of raw materials alone does not make the appellant as
manufacturer of the Computers factually manufactured by DSI
and Orbit. However, the Tribunal was of the view that the
supply of specifications and designs was actually at par
with the supply of specific designs of a tailor made item
and hence will constitute manufacture. On that basis, the
Tribunal held that the case of supply of specifications and
designs for Computers will amount to manufacture and price
charged therefore shall be includible in the assessable
value. Similarly, the Tribunal held that the vale of
peripherals at the time of supply of computers would make
the appellant as computer manufacturer as, according to the
Tribunal, the supply of those peripherals and computer
systems bring into existence a new product. The value of
those supplies should also be included in the value of
computer supplied. The Tribunal declined to accept the
arguments of the appellant that the software was already
burnt in the chips of the computer to make the computer
complete and that the systems software and other peripherals
are only additions to a computer that was complete even
without those peripherals and systems software. The Tribunal
relied on its own decision in PSI Data System for rejecting
the case of the appellants, which has since been reversed by
this Court in PSI’s case (supra).
In these appeals, we heard arguments of counsel on both
sides. Naturally, the learned counsel, Mr. Ganesh, appearing
for the appellant, placed reliance on the judgment of this
Court in PSI case (supra). This Court in PSI Data system’s
case considered identical issues and Bharucha, J., speaking
for the Bench, held as follows :-
" The appellants before us have
sold only a computer, or a computer
along with software, and the
software might have been imported
or bought out. Some contracts in
this behalf are lump-sum contracts
and some are for the computer and
the software separately. Sample
contracts are on the record.
Learned counsel for the appellants
submitted that the test that had
been applied by the Tribunal in the
impugned judgements was erroneous.
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Our attention was drawn to the
judgement of this Court in State of
Uttar Pradesh V. M/s Kores (India)
Limited - (1977) 1 SCR 837, where
it was held that a typewriter
ribbon was an accessory to a
typewriter and not a part of the
typewriter though it might not be
possible to type out any matter on
the typewriter without the ribbon.
This Court quoted with approval the
following observation of the High
Court of Mysore in State of Mysore
V. Kores (India) ltd.
"Whether a typewriter ribbon
is a part of a typewriter is
to be considered in the light
of what is meant by a
typewriter in the commercial
sense. Typewriters are being
sold in the market without the
typewriter ribbons and
therefore typewriter ribbon is
not an essential part of a
typewriter so as to attract
tax as per Entry 18 of the
Second Schedule to the Mysore
Sales Tax Act, 1957."
On the same reasoning, it was
submitted, the software that was
sold by the appellants along with
their computers was not an
essential part of the computers.
What a computer was had to be
judged in the light of its
commercial sense and, in that
sense, the software was not
understood to be a part of the
Computer. Reference was made to
Section 80 HHL of the Income Tax
Act which provides for deduction of
profits from export of "computer
software". Reference was also made
to the provisions of the Copyright
Act, 1967, where a computer is
defined as including any electronic
or similar device having
information processing capabilities
and a computer programme is defined
to mean a set of instructions
expressed in words, codes, schemes
or in any other form, including a
machine readable medium, capable of
causing a computer to perform a
particular task or achieve a
particular result. interestingly,
the copyright Act defines ’literary
work ’ to include computer
programmes, tables and compilations
including computer data bases.
Reference was also made to the
aforementioned contracts which
indicate the distinction that
buyers made between the computer
and the software.
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In the appeals of wipro
Information Technology Limited and
PSI Data Systems Limited , the
charges for installation of the
computer and the training of the
purchaser’s personnel to operate
and maintain it were also included
in the assessable value of the
computer, and the argument that was
advanced in respect of the value of
the software was also advanced in
respect of these charges.
Learned counsel for the
respondent, fairly, did not dispute
that the value of the software that
the appellants might sell with
their computers, if so ordered by
the purchasers thereof, could not
be included in the assessable value
of the computers. He was, however,
at pains to urge that this did not
apply to the firm software that was
etched into the computer; this is
not even the appellant’s case.
In the first place, the
Tribunal confused a computer system
with a computer; what was being
charged to excise duty was the
computer.
Secondly, that a computer and
its software are distinct and
separate is clear, both as a matter
of commercial parlance as also upon
the material on record. A computer
may not be capable of effective
functioning unless loaded with
software such as discs, floppies
and C.D. rhoms, but that is not to
say that these are part of the
computer or to hold that, if they
are sold along with the computer,
their value must form part of the
assessable value of the computer
for the purposes of excise duty. To
give an example, a cassette
recorder will not function unless a
cassette is inserted in it, but the
two are well known and recognised
to be different and distinct
articles. The value of the
cassette, if sold along with the
cassette recorder, cannot be
included in the assessable value of
the cassette recorder. Just so, the
value of software, if sold along
with the computer, cannot be
included in the assessable value of
the computer for the purposes of
excise duty.
Having regard to the view that
we take, it becomes unnecessary to
deal with the subsidiary arguments
on behalf of the appellants and the
intervenor, M/s Digital Equipment
(India) Limited."
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The above judgment of this Court completely answers the
principal issues in controversy in favour of the appellant.
In the case on hand, it cannot be disputed that the
computers manufactured and supplied y Orbit, DSI or the
appellant (from May, 1982 onwards) were complete computers,
which had a Central processing Unit, with "etched-in" or
"burnt-in" software, a key Board (input device) the monitor
(output device) and Disc drives. The computers, as above,
were cleared after complying with all requirements under the
Excise Law and proper duty as computed was paid. The
peripheral devices and other systems software were merely
additional devices meant to increase the memory or storage
capacity of the computers and other facilities. It is also
not disputed by the Revenue that the peripheral devices were
imported by the appellant and the appellant had paid
counter-vailing duty on such imported peripherals. In the
light of these facts, we have no difficulty to apply the
ratio in the judgment of this court in PSI Data systems
(supra) and grant relief to the appellant. The Tribunal
itself has placed reliance on its earlier decision in PSI
Data Systems, which has been reversed by this Court, as
noticed above. Likewise, the value of service charges also
cannot be included in the light of the ratio laid down by
this Court in PSI Data Systems. The Tribunal went wrong in
assuming that the appellant must have given warranty to its
customers at the time of purchase of computers when it was
the case of the appellant that no such warranty was given
and no such case was specifically put forward in the show-
cause notice.
For all these reasons, we do not think that we can
accept the contentions to the contrary by the learned
counsel appearing for the Revenue.
In the result, the appeals succeed and the impugned
demand including the levy of penalty is set aside. The
appeals are accordingly allowed with no order as to costs.