Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN ALUMINIUM CABLES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/05/1985
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1201 1985 SCR Supl. (1) 731
1985 SCC (3) 284 1985 SCALE (1)976
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1730 (8)
R 1990 SC 616 (5)
RF 1991 SC 999 (14)
RF 1991 SC1028 (13)
ACT:
Central Excise and Salt Act. 1944:
First Schedule Entry 27 (a) (ii) and Entry No.
68.‘Properzi Rods’-Classification of-Explained.
Interpretation of Statutes:
Central Excise Tariff-Fiscal Schedule-Classification of
product-Process of manufacture and use of product-Not
necessarily determinative of classification.
Words & Phrases:
Properzi Road’-Meaning of-Central Excise & Salt Act
1944, First Schedule Entry 27 (a) (ii).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-Company carries on the business of
manufacture and sale of aluminium conductors used for the
purpose of transmission of high voltage electric current.
There were three different manufacturing techniques by which
rods were obtained: by extrusion, by conventional rolling
and by the Properzi method. The rods prepared by the last
method was known as Properzi Rod.
The Superintendent of Central Excise called upon the
appellant-Company to clear the Properzi Rods manufactured by
it after payment of duty under Entry No. 27 (a) (ii) of the
Central Excise Tariff on the basis that Properzi Rods were
aluminium wire rods. Aggrieved by that order, the appellant
filed an appeal under s. 35 of the Central Excise and Salt
Act, 1944 which was dismissed by the Deputy Collector. The
appellant thereafter filed a revision against that order
under s. 36 to the Central Government, and the order of the
Deputy Collector was set aside, and the matter was remanded
to the Appellate Authority for deciding the appeal afresh.
In view of the order of remand the
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appellant withdrew the writ petition which it had
simultaneously filed, challenging the order of the Deputy
Collector. After the remand the appeal was heard by the
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appellate Collector, and the appellant relied on the
affidavits and opinions of experts in support of its case
that Properzi Rods fall under the residuary entry and not
under Entry No. 27 (a) (ii). The Appellate Collector however
dismissed the appeal. The revision application and the writ
petition to the High Court against the aforesaid order were
also dismissed.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf
of the appellant, that Properzi Rods are not wire within the
meaning of Entry No 27 (a) (ii) of the First Schedule to the
Act for the following reasons: (1) Commercially, Properzi
Rods are not known as wire rods in the trade person wanting
to purchase Properzi Rods asks specifically for Properzi
Rods and not for wire rods. (2) Properzi Rods are mainly
used for the manufacture of aluminium conductors and cables,
while wire rods are used mainly for making nuts, bolts and
rivettes (3) A wire rod is limited by its length, while
Properzi Rods are only available in coils. (4) Aluminium
wire rods are available not in continuous length but only in
short length. (5) Aluminium wire rods are neither accepted
nor commercially required for the purpose of manufacturing
aluminium conductors and cables. (6) The manufacturers of
aluminium wire rods do not have the capacity to manufacture
Properzi Rods. (7) The Indian Standards Institution which
prescribes specifications for various commercial commodities
has prescribed separate specifications for Properzi Rods and
aluminium wire rods (8) In the Cost Accounting Record
(Aluminium) Rules 1972, Properzi Rods are shown separately
from aluminium wire rods the latter being shown under the
description ‘other rolled products’. (9) The Properzi
process is a specialised process evolved only in the field
of aluminium for the manufacture of aluminium rods which are
suitable for being used as aluminium cables and conductors.
The Properzi process is wholly unknown in the field of
manufacture of iron and steel rods.
Dismissing the Appeal,
^
HELD: 1. From the description of ‘Properzi Rod’ as
contained in the various affidavits filed on behalf of the
appellant itself, it is clear that Properzi Rod is a wire
rod. Entry No 27 (a) (ii) comprehends "wire bars, wire rods
and castings, not otherwise specified". The last clause of
this entry, "not otherwise specified" must govern not only
the expression ‘castings’ but the expressions ‘wire bars’
and ‘wire rods’ also. Since Properzi Rods, which are a
species of wire rods, are not otherwise specified, they
would fall under Entry No. 27(a) (ii). [738F-G]
2. In determining the meaning or connotation of words
and expressions describing an article in a tariff schedule,
one principle which is fairly well settled is that those
words and expressions should be construed in the sense in
which they are understood in the trade, by the dealer and
the consumer. The reason is that it is that who are
concerned with it and, it is the sense in which they
understood it which constitutes the definitive index of the
legislative intention. [739 A-B]
733
Commissioner of Salt Tax, Madhya Pradesh v. Jaswant
Singh Charan Singh [1967 2 SCR 720. 723 Minerals & Metals
Trading Corporation of India Ltd. v. Union of India; [1973]1
SCR 997, 1002, Dunlop India Ltd. v. Union of India; [1976] 2
SCR 98, 113., State of U.P. v. M/s. Kores (India) Ltd.;
[1977]1 SCR 837, 839., Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co.
Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan [1980] 3 SCR 1119, 1115, referred
to.
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In the instant case, however the contention of the
appellant itself in the earlier revision application which
was filed by it before the Government of India, was that
Properzi Rods had no commercial market as such. That is
clear from the Remand Order. After the remand, the appellant
contended once again before the Appellate Collector of
Central Excise and Customs, New Delhi, that Properzi Rods
are not "goods" within the meaning of the Central Excise Act
since they are neither marketed as such nor are marketable.
Commercial parlance assumes importance when goods are
marketable. It is therefore not possible to hold that the
goods in question are not wire rods. There is preponderating
evidence on record to show that they are nothing but a
species of wire rods despite the special method of their
manufacture and the use to which they are put. [739 C-F]
3. The genus is ‘aluminium wire rods’ while the
Properzi Rod is a species belonging to that genus. Though
the Central Excise Tariff does not give the definition of
wire rods, the expression ‘wire rod’ has been defined n the
Indian Customs Tariff Guide, Wire Rods are synonymous with
wire bars.[737 E; 738 E]
4. The process of manufacture of a product and the end
use to which it is put, cannot necessarily be determinative
of the classification of that product under a fiscal
schedule like the Central Excise Tariff. What is more
important is whether the broad description of the article
fits in with the expression used in the tariff. The
aluminium wire rods, whether obtained by the extrusion
process, the conventional process or by Properzi process,
are still aluminium wire rods. The process of manufacture is
bound to undergo transformation with the advancement in
science and technology. The name of 17 the end-product may,
by reason of new technological processes, change but, the
basic nature and quality of the article may still answer the
same description.[740 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION; Civil Appeal Nos. 2729
and 2730 of 1982.
From the Judgment and order dated 7.5.1982 of the Delhi
High Court in Civil Writ No. 934 of 1972 & Order No. 162/82
passed by Sh. D.N. Mehta, Addl. Secretary to the Govt. of
India.
KK. Venugopal, Krishna Kumar, Ms. Bina Gupta, and Ms.
Laxmi Venugopal for the Appellant.
734
M.M. Abdual Khader, N.C. Talukdar, Girish Chandra, C.V.
Subba Rao and Ms. A. Subhashini for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, CJ: These two appeals involve the question
as to whether ‘Properzi Rods’ manufactured and cleared by
the appellant, the Indian Aluminium Cables Ltd., fall within
Entry No. 27 (a) (ii) of the First Schedule to the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1 of 1944 and, if so, under which
category of the articles mentioned therein. The Government
of India contends for the application of that Entry while,
according to the appellant, ‘Properzi Rods’ fall under the
residuary Entry 68. Civil Appeal No. 2729 of 1982 arises out
of a judgment dated May 7, 1982 of the High Court of Delhi
in Civil Writ Petition No. 934 of 1972. Civil Appeal No.
2730 of 1982 is directed against Order No. 162 of 1982
passed by the Government of India in a revision application
against the order dated September 7, 1982 passed by the
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Appellate Collector of Central Excise, New Delhi. Order No.
162 of 1982 of the Government of India was passed by the
Additional Secretary and the Joint Secretary, Government of
India, in its Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue.
The appellant Company carries on the business of
manufacture and sale of aluminium conductors used for the
purpose of transmission of high voltage electric current.
One of its factories is situated at Faridabad, in the State
of Haryana. The affidavits filed by the appellant show that
there are three different manufacturing techniques by which
rods are obtained: by extrusion, by conventional rolling and
by the Properzi method. In the extrusion process, rods are
manufactured by forcing the metal through a sized die. In
the conventional rolling process, billets of definite weight
are first cast. Thereafter, they are pre-heated well above
the recrystallization temperature in a loop mill, where the
rods are coiled in between two passes to compensate
exothermic heat produced by rolling. In the Properzi method,
aluminium ingots are charged in melting furnace, each charge
consisting of 2500 pounds which takes about 30 minutes for
melting. After the ingots are subjected to the melting
process, the aluminium is transferred to the holding
furnaces, from where it is taken to the holding pot. The
metal which it poured is cooled by water sprays, as a result
of which it is solidified and emerges in the form of a
continuous bar. The bar is rolled and comes out in the form
of a hot rolled rod of 9.5 mm. diameter in continuous
length. This rod is known as Properzi Rod.
735
The First Schedule to the Act of 1944 contains 68
entries, the last of which, Entry No. 68 is, broadly, in the
nature of a residuary entry. It will be necessary to go to
that entry only if the Properzi Rods with which we are
concerned in these appeals, do not fall under Enter No. 27
(a) (ii), as is contended on behalf of the Government. That
entry reads as follows:
"Aluminium-
(a) (ii) wire bars, wire rods and castings, not
otherwise specified."
By an order dated September 1, 1970, the Superintendent
of Central Excise, Faridabad, called upon the appellant to
clear the Properzi Rods manufactured by it, after payment of
duty under Entry No. 27 (a) (ii) of the Central Excise
Tariff on the basis that Properzi Rods are aluminium wire
rods. Aggrieved by that order, the appellant filed an appeal
under section 35 of the Act which was dismissed by the
Deputy Collector of Central Excise. Chandigarh, on February
7, 1972. The appellant filed a revision against that order
under section 36 of the Act to the Central Government.
Simultaneously, the appellant also filed Civil Writ No. 310
of 1972 in the High Court of Delhi, challenging the order of
the Deputy Collector. The High Court directed the Government
to dispose of the revision application within one month and
kept the writ petition pending for admission. The order of
the Deputy Collector was set aside by the Government in
revision and the matter was remanded to the Appellate
Authority for deciding the appeal afresh. In view of the
order of remand, the appellant withdrew the writ petition on
May 18, 1972. After the remand, the appeal was heard by the
Appellate Collector on July 22, 1972. The appellant relied
on the affidavits and opinions of experts in support of its
case that Properzi Rods fall under the residuary entry and
not under Entry No. 27(a) (ii). However, the Appellate
Collector dismissed the appeal on September 7, 1972. The
appellant filed a revision application against the appellate
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order and it also filed a writ petition in the High Court of
Delhi, being Civil Writ Petition No. 934 of 1972. Having
failed in the revision application as also in the writ
petition, the appellant has filed these two appeals.
Shri Venugopal, who appears on behalf of the appellant,
contends that Properzi Rods are not wire rods within the
meaning of
736
Entry No. 27 (a) (ii) of the First Schedule to the Act, for
the following reasons: (1) Commercially, Properzi Rods are
not known as wire rods in the trade. A person wanting to
purchase Properzi Rods asks specifically for Properzi Rods
and not for wire rods. (2) Properzi Rods are mainly used for
the manufacture of aluminium conductors and cables, while
wire rods are used mainly for making nuts, bolts and
rivettes. (3) A wire rod is limited by its length, while
Properzi Rods are only available in coils weighing 500 to
2000 kg. of continuous length ranging from 2625 meters to
10500 meters, with a uniform standard thickness of 9.50 mm.
diameter. (4) Aluminium wire rods are available not in
continuous length but only in short length ranging from 150
meters to 400 meters. (5) Aluminium wire rods are neither
accepted nor commercially required for the purpose of
manufacturing aluminium conductors and cables. (6) The
manufacturers of aluminium wire rods do not have the
capacity to manufacture Properzi Rods. (7) The Indian
Standards Institution which prescribes specifications for
various commercial commodities, has prescribed separate
specifications for Properzi Rods and aluminium wire rods.
(8) In the Cost Accounting Record (Aluminium) Rules, 1972
prescribed by the Government of India, Department of Company
Affairs, Properzi Rods are shown separately from aluminium
wire rods, the latter being shown under the description
‘other rolled products’. (9) The Properzi process is a
specialised process evolved only in the field of aluminium
for the manufacture of aluminium rods which are suitable for
being used as aluminium cables and conductors. The Properzi
process is wholly unknown in the field of manufacture of
iron and steel rods.
In support of these points, reliance is placed by the
appellant upon the expert opinions of Shri V.A. Gadgil,
Associate Professor of Metallurgy, College of Engineering,
Poona, Dr. K.R. Satyanarayan, Professor and Head of the
Department of Metallurgy, College of Engineering, Poona, Dr.
R.D. Chaudhari, Professor of Metallurgy, College of
Engineering, Poona and Dr P.R. Khangaonkar, Senior Professor
and Head of the Department of Metallurgy, Regional College
of Engineering, Nagpur. Reliance is also placed by the
appellant on the separate specifications made by the Indian
Standards Institution for Aluminium Properzi Rods on the one
hand and wire rods on the other. Finally, the appellant
draws sustenance to its case from the affidavits filed by
Jashwantrai Gangadas Mehta and Shamseer Singh Parmar, the
former being a partner in a concern dealing with the sale
and distribution of nonferrous metals and
737
aluminium products and the latter being a managing partner
of a concern which deals with the sale and manufacture of
aluminium products. In their affidavits, they have described
the qualitative difference between Properzi Rods and wire
rods and have stated that, in commercial parlance, the two
are considered as distinct items.
Turning first to the affidavits of the academics, they
lay accent on the basic difference between the process of
manufacturing Properzi Rods and the wire rods. That is
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demonstrated in the affidavits of Shri V.A. Gadgil, Dr. K.R.
Satyanarayan and Dr. R.D. Chaudhari. Dr. P.R. Khangaonkar
has described with particularity the Properzi process which
is adopted by the appellant’s plant at Faridabad for
manufacturing Properzi Rods. Contrasting the Properzi
Process with the extrusion process, Dr. Khangaonkar states
in his affidavit that the raw material used in the Properzi
process is aluminium ingots whereas it is aluminium billets
in the other processes. He concludes that, from an expert’s
point of view, the Properzi Rods cannot be put in the same
category as conventionally rolled aluminium rods. Though we
have no doubt that the data contained in these affidavits is
based on true facts, we find it difficult to accept that
Properzi Rods cannot be described as wire rods merely
because the process of manufacturing the two articles is
different. It is significant that the appellant itself
obtained a licence in L-4 form to manufacture "aluminium
wire rods". It is only because of the particular process to
which the wire rods are subjected, namely, the process, that
the end product is called Properzi Rods. In other words, the
genus is ‘aluminium wire rods’ while the Properzi Rod is a
species belonging to that genus. Not only did the appellant
obtain a licence to manufacture ‘aluminium wire rods’ on the
strength of which it manufactures Properzi Rods, but the
classification list in From No. 1 submitted by it on October
10, 1969 also declared that the goods manufactured by it
were to be warehoused as "aluminium wire rods 3/8". It is
somewhat interesting that though the contention of the
appellant was that Properzi Rods fall under residuary Item
No. 68, the appellant expressed its willingness before us to
accept the view of the Additional Secretary in revision that
Properzi Rods can fall under the description "castings not
otherwise specified" in Entry No. 27(a) (ii) of the First
Schedule to the Act. The reason why the appellant has come
to the Court appears to be that previously, it was enjoying
an exemption from payment of excise duty by virtue of
Notification No. 46/70 dated March 1, 1970, which was
rescinded by Notification No. 74/70 dated March 26, 1970
738
It may be mentioned that in the Aluminium Control Order
issued by Government of India, Ministry of Steel and Mines,
Properzi Rods are mentioned as "Wire Rods". In the Circulars
issued by Cable and Conductors Manufacturers Association of
India also, such rods are described as "Wire Rods".
Undoubtedly, these considerations are not conclusive but, it
cannot be denied that they are relevant. They show that
Properzi Rods are but a species of wire rods.
The specifications issued by the Indian Standards
Institution are for ensuring quality control and have
nothing to do with the class to which the goods belong in a
tariff schedule. Considering the use to which the Properzi
Rods are put, they may have to meet a different and higher
quality control than the ordinary wire rods. But, that does
not mean that Proparzi Rods are not comprehended within the
expression ‘wire rods’.
The very affidavits on which the appellant relies show
that Properzi Rods are obtained, in the first place, by a
process of casting as cast bars, which ultimately come out
in the form of rods having a 9.5 mm diameter. Though the
Central Excise Tariff does not give the definition of wire
bars or wire rods, the expression ‘wire rod’ has been
defined in the Indian Customs Tariff Guide thus: "Wire rod
is of any shape generally round and between 5 mm and 14 mm
diameter and is intended for conversion into wire". Wire
rods are synonymous with wire bars.
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From the description of ‘Properzi Rod’ as contained in
the various affidavits filed on behalf of the appellant
itself, it is clear that Properzi Rod is wire rod. Entry No.
27 (a) (ii) comprehends "wire bars, wire rods and castings,
not otherwise specified". The last clause of this entry,
"not otherwise specified" must govern not only the
expression ‘castings’ but the expressions ‘wire bars’ and
‘wire rods’ also. Since Properzi Rods, which are a species
of rods, are not otherwise specified, they would fall under
Entry No. 27 (a) (ii).
The affidavits to which we have referred assert,
particularly those of the two dealers, that in commercial
parlance Properzi Rods are not called wire rods and the two
are treated as distinct species of goods. Shri Venugopal
places strong reliance upon these affi-
739
davits and argues that whether a particular item falls under
a particular entry must be determined with reference to its
description in commercial parlance. This Court has
consistently taken the view that, in determining the meaning
or connotation of words and expressions describing an
article in a tariff schedule, one principle which is fairly
well-settled is that those words and expressions should be
construed in the sense in which they are understood in the
trade, by the dealer and the consumer. The reason is that it
is they who are concerned with it and, it is the sense in
which they understand it which constitutes the definitive
index of the legislative intention. (See Commissioner of
Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh v. Jaswant Singh Charan Singh;
Minerals & Metals Trading Corporation of India Ltd v. Union
of India; Dunlop India Ltd. v. Union of India; State of U.P.
v. M/s. Kores (India) Ltd.; and, Delhi Cloth and General
Mills Co. Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan. The difficulty in
applying the principle of these decisions to the instant
case is that the contention of the appellant itself in the
earlier revision application which was filed by it before
the Government of India, was that Properzi Rods had no
commercial market as such. That is clear from the Remand
Order No. 764 of 1972 dated May 16, 1972 passed by the Joint
Secretary to the Government of India. After the remand, the
appellant contended once again before the Appellate
Collector of Central Excise and Customs, New Delhi, that
Properzi Rods are not "goods" within the meaning of the
Central Excise Act since they are neither marketed as such
nor marketable. Commercial parlance assumes importance when
goods are marketable. It is therefore not possible to hold
that the goods in question are not wire rods. There is
preponderating evidence on records to show that they are
nothing but a species of wire rods despite the special
method of their manufacture and the use to which they are
put. We may also add that the statements contained in the
affidavits of Jashwantrao Gangadas Mehta and Shamseer Singh
Parmar cannot be accepted at their face value. Both of them
appear to be dealers in sales and distribution of wire rods.
Their affidavits do not show any familiarity with dealings
in Properzi Rods. The knowledge claimed by them does not
stem from their personal experience but is in the nature of
hearsay.
740
To sum up the true position, the process of manufacture
of a product and the use to which it is put, cannot
necessarily be determinative of the classification of that
product under a fiscal schedule like the Central Excise
Tariff. What is more important is whether the broad
description of the article fits in with the expression used
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in the Tariff. The aluminium wire rods. whether obtained by
the extrusion process, the conventional process or by
Properzi process, are still aluminium wire rods. The process
of manufacture is bound to undergo transformation with the
advancement in science and technology. The name of the end-
product may, by reason of new technological processes,
change but, the basic nature and quality of the article may
still answer the same description. On the basis of the
material before us, it is not possible to record a positive
finding that Properzi rods are treated as distinct items in
commercial parlance. Properzi Rod is a wire rod subject to
the properzy process and is used for transmission of high
voltage electric current.
For these reasons, we confirm the judgment of the High
Court and the order passed by the Government of India in its
Finance Department dated March 15, 1982 and dismiss these
appeals with costs.
N.V.K. Appeals dismissed.
741