Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TATA OIL MILLS CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/08/1989
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 27 1989 SCR (3) 839
1989 SCC (4) 541 JT 1989 (3) 382
1989 SCALE (2)313
CITATOR INFO :
R 1991 SC 754 (13)
RF 1991 SC2049 (6)
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944: Central Excise Rules
1944 Sections 3, 4 and 35L/Rule 8(1) and Notification No.
46/72, 153, 73 and 25/75--Rice Bran Oil converted into
hydrogenated oil used in manufacture of soap-Whether enti-
tled to rebate scheme in respect of excise duty.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner-appellant is engaged in the manufacture
of various varieties of soaps. The dispute arose as to the
eligibility of the appellants to the concession under rule
8(1) of the Central Excise Rule 1944 through Notification
No. 46 of 1972 subsequently amended by Notification Nos. 153
of 1973 dated 24.7.73 of 25 of 1975 dated 1.3.75.
Resolving the dispute as to the interpretation of rules
whether rice bran fatty acid is different from the rice Bran
Oil as held by the Tribunal the Court came to the conclusion
that the view taken by the Excise authorities as well as by
the Tribunal proceeded upon too narrow an interpretation of
the notification and erred in not granting the exemption to
the assessee. While allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: Rice bran oil contains glycerol and other impuri-
ties which have to be removed by a process of hydrolysis or
hydrogenation and it is only the resultant purified rice
bran oil that is actually used in the manufacture of soap.
[843G]
A factory which consumes rice bran oil in the manufac-
ture of soap in its factory first converts the oil into
hydrogenated oil or fatty acid and then manufactures soap
out of the latter. [844A]
In trying to understand the language used by an exemp-
tion notification one should keep in mind two important
aspects; (a) the object and purpose of the exemption and (b)
the nature of the actual process involved in the manufacture
of the commodity in relation to which exemption is granted.
[843F]
Construing the notifications literally but reasonably in the
light of
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840
the process of manufacture as explained by the Tribunal, the
soap manufactured by the assessee is "soap made from indige-
nous rice bran oil" and is entitled to the exemption under
the notifications to the extent permissible thereunder.
[844H-845A]
The terms of the notification do not have the effect of
excluding cases where the manufacture of soap is done out of
rice bran oil but the entire process is not carried out by
the assessee itself. [849A]
Tungabhadra Industries Ltd. v. C.T.O., [1961] 2 SCR 14
and Collector of Central Excise v. Jayant Oil Mills etc., CA
729 of 1983 and 2479 of 1987) decided by this Court on
31.3.89, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 13041305
of 1987.
From the Judgment and Order dated 7.1.1987 of the Cus-
toms Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi
in Appeal No. 1120/83-C and 1806 of 1983-C.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Ravinder Narain, A.N. Haksar, P.K. Ram
and D.N. Misra for the Appellant.
A.K. Ganguli, P. Parmeshwaran, A. Subba Rao and Ms.
Sushma Suri for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. These are appeals under section 35L of
the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter referred
to as ’the Act’). The appellant, Tata Oil Mills Company
Limited, is engaged in the manufacture of various varieties
of soaps. The present dispute has arisen in relation to its
factory at Ghaziabad in the State of Uttar Pradesh.
The dispute pertains to the eligibility of the appellant
to the concession granted by the Central Government under
Rule 8(1) of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 through notifi-
cation No. 46 of 1972, subsequently amended by the notifica-
tion nos. 153 of 1973 dated 24.7.73 and 25 of 1975 dated
1.3.75. Even though there are three notifications, the point
is common and both the appeals involve the same question.
841
The question arises this way. Ad Valorem excise duty at
20% is levied on soap which falls under item 15 of the first
schedule to the Act. Notification No. 46 of 1972 exempts
"such soap as is made from indigenous rice bran oil or or
from a mixture of such oil with any other oils from so much
of the duty of excise leviable thereon as is equivalent to
the amount of duty calculated at the rate of one rupee and
fifty paise per metric tonne of such soap for each addition-
al percentage point increase in the use of such rice bran
oil which is in excess of fifteen per cent of the total oils
used in the manufacture of such soap." To put it in simpler
words, the notification intends to grant a concession where
the percentage of the rice bran oil used in the manufacture
of soap exceeds fifteen per cent of the total oil consump-
tion in the manufacture. The extent of exemption is graded
according to the percentage of rice bran oil in excess of
fifteen per cent. For example, if the rice bran oil is
twenty per cent of the total oils used in the manufacture,
the duty exemption will be Rs.7.50 per metric tonne of soap
manufactured. The 1973 notification is on the same lines
with the only difference that the duty exemption per metric
tonne is Rs.7.50 instead of Rs. 1.50. The notification of
1975 raised the percentage of rice bran oil referred to in
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the 1972 notification from fifteen per cent to twenty five
per cent but reduced the duty rebate from Rs.7.50 to Rs.3.50
per metric tonne. Another notification No. 118/75 has been
referred to in the papers before us but it has no relevance
to the question that falls to be decided here and is left
out of account.
The difficulty in the interpretation has arisen because
the process of manufacture of soap in the assessee’s factory
at Ghaziabad did not involve the use of rice bran oil as
such. This factory manufactured soap from rice bran fatty
acid. The rice bran fatty acid was extracted from rice bran
oil in the assessee’s factory elsewhere. Incidentally, it
may be mentioned that the other factory is also licensed
under the Excise Act for the manufacture of rice bran fatty
acid. The excise authorities rejected the appellant’s plea
for exemption under the first three notifications on the
ground that rice bran fatty acid and rice bran oil are
technically and commercially two separate commodities. It
was pointed out that the concession under the notifications
is available only where soap is made from indigenous rice
bran oil and other oils. This meant that rice bran oil must
form part of the process of manufacture of soap in the
factory which is manufacturing the soap and claiming the
exemption. The notification will not apply merely because
the soap is manufactured out of rice bran fatty acid which
in turn has been obtained by hydrolysis of rice bran oil in
a different factory (may be one belonging to the same asses-
see which is a separate
842
unit of manufacture for purpose of excise duty).
The Tribunal confirmed this view. It considered the
terms of notification No. 25/75 and held:
"We observe that the concession given under
notification No. 25/75 is apparently with a
view to encourage the use of rice bran oil in
the soap industry. The point for consideration
is whether the rice bran oil for the purpose
of benefit of notification should be brought
into the factory of manufacturer as such and
then subjected to various pretreatments re-
quired for its use in the soap industry or
whether the same could be treated outside the
factory and the necessary fraction of the rice
bran oil namely rice bran fatty acid required
for the manufacture of soap alone could be
brought into the factory as raw material and
concession availed. It is not denied that for
the use of rice bran oil, the same has neces-
sarily to be pre-treated first and rice bran
fatty acid is required to be separated from
glycerine. The appellants in the instant case
have only brought in the rice bran fatty acid
which has been obtained from rice bran oil by
a process of pre-treatment in one of their
other factories. It is seen that the Govern-
ment of India have clarified vide their letter
No. P/92/2/72-CH. III dated 18.7.74 that rice
bran oil as such sometimes cannot be used
directly and has to be subjected to pre-treat-
ment before use in the manufacture of soap and
that the exemption will be admissible in
respect of rice bran oil even after pretreat-
ment for use in the manufacture of soap. Thus
we find that the pre-treatment of rice bran
oil is required to be done as a matter of
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necessity for its use in the manufacture of
soap. The short point therefore is whether
such treatment should be done in the factory
of the manufacturer or could be arranged to be
done outside. In the scheme of Central Excise,
the various concessions, levies etc., are in
respect of products manufactured by a particu-
lar licencee in the manufacturing unit so
licensed and the necessary mechanism of con-
trols and accountability is with reference to
a particular licensee and the manufacturer.
The eligibility to or the concessional assess-
ment of a product manufactured by the manufac-
turer has to be determined with reference to
the particular manufacturer subject to the
fulfilment of the conditions as may be set out
in the rele-
843
vant concessional notification. In the instant
case, a verification will be required to be
done in respect of the following:
(1) The nature of the oil used--whether rice
bran oil or otherwise;
(2) The quantum used;
(3) the processes of pre-treatment carried out
on ,the rice bran oil and the fraction thereof
used for the soap making.
Now, if the rice bran oil has been pre-treated
outside the appellant’s factory, it is not
possible for (the) jurisdictional authority to
verify the facts in regard to above."
The Tribunal observed that concessional rates are allowed as
incentives for use of certain raw materials and these rates
are determined after taking into consideration the economics
of operation involving the use of the said material in the
manufacturing process in the manufacturer’s factory. Holding
that the notification did not envisage the use of rice bran
fatty acid and it is the rice bran oil which is required to
be used in the manufacture of soap for concessional assess-
ment purposes, the Tribunal dismissed the appeals of the
assessee. Hence these appeals.
We are of opinion that the view taken by the Excise
Authorities as well as by the Tribunal proceeds upon too
narrow an interpretation of the notification. It is true, as
Mr. Ganguli contended, that an assessee claiming relief
under an exemption provision in a taxing statute has to show
that he comes within the language of the exemption. But, in
trying to understand the language used by an exemption
notification, one should keep in mind two important aspects:
(a) the object and purpose of the exemption and (b) the
nature of the actual process involved in the manufacture of
the commodity in relation to which exemption is granted. So
far as (b) is concerned, it is common ground before us that
rice bran oil as such is not directly used in the manufac-
ture of soap. Rice bran oil contains glycerol and other
impurities which have to be removed by a process of hydroly-
sis or hydrogenation and it is only the resultant purified
rice bran oil that is actually used in the manufacture of
soap. In fact, the Tribunal has given a clear finding that a
pre-treatment to rice bran oil is required to be done as a
matter of necessity for its use in the manufacture of soap.
844
Thus even a factory which consumes rice bran oil in the
manufacture of soap in its factory first converts the oil
into hydrogenated oil or fatty acid and then manufactures
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soap out of the latter. So far as (a) is concerned, the
object of the notification--as even the Tribunal finds-is to
grant a concession to a manufacturer of soap who manufac-
tures soap from rice bran oil to a substantial extent and
thus discourage the use of edible oils in the manufacture.
If these two aspects are considered together, it is clear
that the emphasis in the notification is not that rice bran
oil should be used as raw material in the very factory which
produces the soap. The requirement is that the soap manufac-
ture should, to a prescribed extent, be from rice bran oil
as contrasted with other types of oil. The contrast is not
between the use of rice bran oil as opposed to rice bran
fatty acid or hydrogenated rice bran oil; the contrast is
between the use of rice bran oil as opposed to other oils.
That is the ordinary meaning of the words used. These words
may be construed literally but should be given their fullest
amptitude and interpreted in the context of the process of
soap manufacture. There are no words in the notification to
restrict it to only to cases where rice bran oil is directly
used in the factory claiming exemption and to exclude cases
where soap is made by using rice bran fatty acid derived
from rice bran oil. The whole purpose and object of the
notification is to encourage the utilisation of rice bran
oil in the process of manufacture of soap in preference to
various other kinds of oil (mainly edible oils) used in such
manufacture and this should not be defeated by an unduly
narrow interpretation of the language of the notification
even when it is clear that rice bran oil can be used for
manufacture of soap only after its conversion into fatty
acid or hydrogenated oil.
The position will perhaps become clearer if we consider
a case where an assessee manufactures soap out of hydroge-
nated rice bran oil (which process of hydrogenation, again,
is akin to the process of hydrolysis which yields rice bran
fatty acid). The assessee will then be clearly entitled to
the exemption under the notification inasmuch as the hydrog-
enated rice bran oil does not cease to be rice bran oil. See
in this connection: Tungabhadra Industries Ltd. v. C.T.O.,
[1961] 2 S.C.R. 14 and Collector of Central Excise v. Jayant
Oil Mills etc.,(CA 729 of 1983 and 2479 of 1987, decided by
this Court on 31.3.89). The answer cannot be different where
rice bran oil is treated to yield rice bran fatty acid
before soap is manufactured even if it be assumed that,
unlike hydrogenated oil the fatty acid is, commercially
speaking, a different commodity. We are, therefore, of
opinion that, construing the notifications literally but
reasonably in the light of the process of manufacture is
explained by the Tribunal, the soap manufactured by
845
the assessee is "soap made from indigenous rice bran oil"
and is entitled to the exemption under the notifications to
the extent permissible thereunder.
Reference was made, in the course of the arguments
before us, to a tariff advice issued as early as July, 1974
by the Ministry of Finance in relation to the notification
of 1972. It reads as under:
"I am directed to invite a reference to this
Ministry’s notification No. 46/72 C.E. dated
the 17th March, 1972, which grants exemption
from duty on soap which is produced from rice
bran oil or from a mixture of rice bran oil
and other oils. It has been brought to the
notice of this Ministry that the benefit of
exemption is not being allowed by the Central
Excise Officers where rice bran oil or
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oil mixture is hydrogenated or pre-treated
before the soap is produced. The matter has
been considered in detail with the concerned
authorities and keeping in view the technical
opinion tendered by them that rice bran oil as
such sometimes cannot be used directly and has
to be pre-treated before use in the manufac-
ture of soap, it is hereby clarified that the
exemption will be admissible when the rice
bran oil is, after processing or pre-treat-
ment, used in the manufacture of soap. In this
connection it may be stated that the exemption
Notification does not preclude any processing
or pre-treatment including hydrogenation in
the manufacture of soap if such processes are
incidental and ancillary to the manufacturing
operating."
(Underlining
ours)
This circular clarifies that the exemption will be admissi-
ble when the rice bran oil after processing or pre-treat-
ment--that is to say, when hydrogenated rice bran oil or
rice bran fatty acid--is used in the manufacture of soap.
But the counsel for the Union of India would have it that
the circular postulates such exemption only where the pre-
treatment or processing is done is the same factory. He
invites attention to the last sentence of the circular,
underlined by us above. We do not think this is the correct
interpretation of the circular. In the first place, it will
be noticed that the circular does not specifically say that
the pre-treatment or processing should be in the same facto-
ry of the assessee. Secondly, no clarification by a circular
or tariff advice is at all necessary to cover cases where
the conversion from rice bran oil into rice bran fatty acid
is done in the same factory for, to such a case,
846
the notification will clearly apply. If it had been the
intention to pin down the concession to cases where the
pre-treatment or processing is part of the manufacturing
process within the same factory, the last sentence would not
have stated the obvious but would have read something like
this:
"In this connection it is emphasised that the
exemption notification precludes any process-
ing or pre-treatment, including hydrogenation
in the manufacture of soap, except where such
processes are incidental and ancilliary to the
manufacturing operations."
The Tribunal has pointed out that the notification
refers to the percentage of rice bran oil consumption and
that, unless such oil is directly used in the factory, it
will not be possible to work back, from the weight of fatty
acid used by the assessee, the weight of rice bran’ oil out
of which such acid had been obtained. There are two answers
to this objection. One is that, if what we have stated is
the correct interpretation of the notification, the mere
fact that there may be some difficulty in ascertaining the
weight of oil, cannot be a justification to refuse to give
effect to that interpretation. The second is that a practi-
cal solution to this difficulty has in fact been evolved and
that, too, in the case of the same assessee. Our attention
has been invited to a circular issued by the Assistant
Collector, Ernakulam II dated 23.6.77. This circular states
that the matter had been considered pursuant to an appellate
order passed in one of the cases relating to the same asses-
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see and it had been decided to fix the formula for arriving
at the correlation between rice bran oil on the one hand and
hydrogenated rice bran oil or rice bran fatty acid on the
other as below:
(a) 100 M.T. of hydrogenated = 100 MT of rice bran oil
rice bran oil
(b) 100 M.T. of Fatty acid = 115 MT of raw rice bran oil
The circular refers to the fact that the present assessee
(in relation to its Cochin factory) had accepted the above-
said formula and that the formula as given above was, there-
fore, "finally fixed in arriving at the rice bran oil con-
tents of hydrogenated rice bran oil and of rice bran fatty
paid for ascertaining the amount of exemption as per notifi-
cation nos. 45 and 46 of 1972". It is true that this is only
a local instruction issued by certain assessing authorities
in Cochin. It is being referred to only show that there is
no insuperable difficulty in ascertaining the weight of rice
bran oil that that has been converted into fatty acid and
thus
847
entered the process of manufacture in the assessee’s factory
particularly in view of the fact that even the process of
conversion of rice bran oil into fatty acid or hydrogenated
oil is carried but in a factory subject to excise jurisdic-
tion.
The appellant has drawn our attention to certain ex-
tracts from a letter of the Ministry of Finance dated
6.4.76. It poses the problem thus:
"A doubt has been raised whether rebate of
Central Excise duty would be admissible under
Notification No. 24 and 25/75 CE, dated 1-3-75
(predecessor Notification Nos. 45 and 46 of
1972) where rice bran oil and other minor oils
are hydrogenated in one factory and sent to
another factory for manufacture of soap."
The answer furnished is this:
"The matter has been considered in the Minis-
try and it is felt that the purpose of rebate
scheme of rice bran oil as well as other minor
oils envisaged in the Notifications Nos. 24/75
and 25/75 (including their predecessor notifi-
cations) is to encourage the use of inedible
oils in the manufacture of soap so as to
relieve the pressure on edible oils. In
Board’s letter F. No. 92/2/72-CX. 3 dated
18-7-74 and F. No. 92/6/74-CX. 3, dated
27-12-74, it was clarified that in respect of
rice bran oil as well as other minor oils
where such oils are subjected to various
treatments, including hydrogenation, such
treatment would not debar them from the rebate
scheme in as much as such processing is essen-
tial in the process of manufacture of soap.
As the notifications in question permit the
rebate subject to identification of the oil as
such, had the manufacturer placed the matter
before the concerned Collector pointing out
his practical difficulties, the Collector
would have advised for suitable documentation
(if the existing documentations are not
enough) for the receipt, processing, movement
and accounting of the oils for the concession
in question. In the circumstances, it is felt
that the benefit of rebate cannot be denied to
the manufacturers for want of prescribing a
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satisfactory procedure, especially, when it is
contended by the manufacturers that they have
opted for
848
the rebate scheme, their factories are under
excise control, they have sufficient documen-
tary evidence about the receipt, processing,
movement, incorporation/use in the manufacture
of soap. If, as contended by the manufactur-
ers, there is sufficient record maintained by
them for excise purposes and the reasonable
correlation is possible about the identity and
use of such oils it would not be correct to
deny the concession. In this connection, it is
of relevance to mention that a problem of
similar nature had arisen with reference to
some other excisable product and the Law
Ministry was also consulted. An extract of
their opinion is appended. It is, therefore,
requested that taking into account the local
practical situations existing in his jurisdic-
tion, the Collector may prescribe suitable
procedures for identification of such oils for
a meaningful implementation of the Rebate
Scheme. A copy of the Trade Notice issued in
this regard by the Collector may be sent to
DICCE under intimation to this Ministry."
Following this, trade notices were issued on
25.8.76 and 8.2.77 in certain central excise
jurisdiction, the relevant portion of which
reads thus:
"A doubt has been raised whether the rebate on
Central Excise Duty would be admissible under
Notification No. 40/72-CE & 46/72-CE both
dated 17.3.72 as amended, where the Rice Bran
Oil and other Minor Oils are hydrogenated in
one factory and sent to another factory for
use in the manufacture of soap.
It has been clarified that in respect of Rice
bran oil and other Minor oils where such oils
are subject to various treatment, including
hydrogenation, such treatment would not debar
them from the rebate scheme as envisaged in
the above said Notifications."
The trade notice proceeds to set out the procedural safe-
guards to be followed in granting this relief which are
unnecessary for our purpose. We endorse this as embodying
the correct approach to the issue in this case.
"This related to a claim of exemption in respect of ferti-
lisers (super-phosphates) manufactured from sulphuric acid
in a case where sulphuric acid was converted elsewhere into
phosphoric acid and then used for the manufacture of the
chemicals.
849
We are, therefore, of the view that the terms of the
notification do not have the effect of excluding cases where
the manufacture of soap is done out of rice bran oil but the
entire process is not carried out by the assessee itself.
The question which one has to ask is: does the assessee
manufacture soap partly or wholly out of indigenous rice
bran oil? and the answer, we think, can only be in the
affirmative. We therefore hold that that the assessee is
entitled to the exemption under the notifications referred
to above and that the departmental authorities and the
Tribunal erred in not granting the said exemption to the
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assessee. The appeals are, therefore, allowed. However, in
the circumstances of the case, we make no order as to costs.
R.N.J. Appeals allowed.
850