Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ORIENT PAPER MILLS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/03/1967
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SIKRI, S.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1564 1967 SCR (3) 205
ACT:
Central Excise Act, s. 4 and Central Excise Rules 1944 r. 9
and r. 9A-Goods removed from factory after payment of duty-
Change in rate of duty--crucial time for changed rate to
apply, whether payment of duty or removal of goods.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company carried on in the State of Orissa the
business of manufacturing and selling paper and boards. It
held a licence in Form L.4 under the Central Excise Act is
prescribed by the Central Excise Rules., 1944. The
company’s factory and its premises were demarcated under the
said Rules. The Factory enjoyed the benefit of a private
railway siding in the factory area. In 1960 a new siding
was constructed outside the original factory premises; the
company’s request to the Excise authorities to amend its
licence so as to include the new railway siding in the
factory area was refused. On February 27 and 28, 1961 the
company loaded some wagons of paper after effecting
clearance of these goods by payment of excise duty under r.
52 of the Excise Rules. The wagons then passed into the
hands of railway administration but as a pilot engine was
not available they were shunted into the new siding. On
March 1, 1961 new rates of excise duty came into force and
the Deputy Superintendent of Central Excise demanded extra
duty on the wagons loaded on February 27 and 28, 1961 on the
ground that they we’re found in the factory premises till
9.45 a.m. on March 1, 1961. The company relying on r. 9A of
the Excise Rules submitted that the duty was payable at the
rate in force on the date on which the duty was actually
paid. In the alternative it submitted that the goods having
been cleared and removed from the factory premises before,
the midnight of February 28, 1961, could not be made liable
for the enhanced duty which came. into force. on March 1,
1961. The contentions were not accepted by the Deputy
Superintendent. Higher departmental authorities also
rejected them. The company then filed an application for
revision before the Government of India This also being
rejected the company appealed by special leave to. this
Court.
HELD : (i) In the case of manufactured goods, according to
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the provisos to r. 9, the payment of the duty and the
clearance of goods maybe synchronous or the payment may be
postponed although the goods may be removed. In the latter
case, under the second part of r. 9A the critical time
becomes the removal of the goods from the factory or
warehouse; but if the payment of duty is made before the
removal,, then under the first part of r. 9A the critical
time is the payment of duty. [213 C]
It cannot be said That the first part of r-. 9A relates to
unmanufactured goods and the second part to manufactured
goods. [212 F]
(ii) In the present case the payment of duty was synchronous
with the clearance of the goods because the gate pass under
r. 52 can only be issued when the goods have actually been
cleared for removal. The payment of duty and the removal of
the goods bad both been effected before the change in the
rate of duty. The recovery of enhanced duty from the
appellant company was therefore erroneous. [213 D, G]
206
(iii) The Excise authorities had themselves refused to
recognise the new railway siding as part of the factory and
it could not therefore be said that the wagons being in the
new siding must be treated as still in the factory. [213 F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 30 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the order dated June 7, 8, 1963
of the Government of India, Ministry of Finance (Department
of Revenue) in Central Excise Revision Application No. 463
of 1963.
B. Sen, Bishan Narain and B. P. Maheshwari, for the
appellant.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, S. G. Patwardhan, R. N.
Saththey, and S. P. Nayyar, for ’the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. The appellant is a public limited company
which carries on the business of manufacturing and selling
wholesale, paper and boards at Brajrajnagar in the State of
Orissa. The appellant company holds a licence under the
Central Excise Act in Form L-4 prescribed by the Central
Excise Rules, 1944. The appellant company’s factory and its
premises and precincts have been demarcated under the said
Rules. The Factory is traversed by railway lines, because
the appellant company enjoys the benefit of a private
siding. In 1960, the appellant Company constructed a new
railway siding outside the original factory premises where
bamboos and other raw materials were stored and constructed
a platform for loading and unloading. This extension has
not been included in the factory or its premises or
precincts for purposes of the Excise Rules. It is
presumably so, because to reach the new siding, a public
road has to be traversed which is not enclosed and from
which public cannot be excluded. It is in evidence that
after this new siding was constructed, the appellant company
requested the Excise authorities to amend the licence to
include the new railway siding; but this was refused.
On February 27, 1961, the appellant company loaded 20 wagons
of paper after effecting clearance of these goods by payment
of the excise duty under r. 52 of the Excise Rules. On
February 28, 1961, the appellant company loaded 13 more
wagons and cleared them. These wagons were sealed by the
railway administration and railway receipts were issued to
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the appellant company. The company also obtained gate pass.
The wagons then passed into the control of the railway
administration, but as pilot engine was not available, the
wagons were shunted into the new siding. The exit from the
new siding is only through the factory premises because the
railway track comes to a dead-end on the other side.
207
The Deputy Superintendent of Central Excise wrote to the
appellant company on March 1, 1961 that the wagons loaded on
February 27 and 28, 1961 were found inside the factory pre-
mises till 9-45 A.M. on March 1, 1961 and the goods were
therefore liable to be assessed at the higher rates of
excise duty current from March 1, 1961. The appellant
company contended before the Deputy Superintendent that the,
wagons were duly sealed after the completion of loading in
his presence, were taken out of the factory premises and
were not in the factory when the new rates came into force.
The appellant company relying upon r. 9A of the Central
Excise Rules, 1944 submitted that duty was payable at the
rate in force on the date on which the duty was actually 1-
,.)aid. In the alternative, the appellant company submitted
that the goods having been cleared or removed from the
factory premises before the midnight of February 28, 1961,
could not be made liable for the enhanced duty which came
into force from March 1, 1961, These contentions were not
accepted by the Deputy Superintendent who demanded payment
of Rs. 45,475.83, from the appellant company as differential
excise duty. The amount was paid under protest and without
prejudice to the rights of appeal and representation to the
proper authorities under the Excise Act.
The matter was then placed by the appellant company before
the Assistant Collector, Central Excise, Cuttack and the
company requested that the differential duty be refunded as
it had been illegally collected. The Assistant Collector
rejected the claim and confirmed the collection of
differential duty. The appellant company appealed the
Collector of Central Excise, Calcutta and Orissa but the
appeal was dismissed on March 12, 1962. ’the appellant
company then filed an application for revision against the
order of the Collector of Central Excise, Calcutta and
Orissa before the Government of India (Central Excise
Revision Application No. 473 of 1963). The application for
revision was rejected by the Government of India on June
7/18, 1963. No reason was given in the order communicated
to the appellant company. The present appeal has been filed
by special leave against the last order.
The first contention in this appeal is that the order of the
Deputy Superintendent confirmed by the Assistant Collector,
the Collector of Excise and the Central Government was
illegal and contrary to the provisions and intendment of the
Central Excise Act and the rules framed thereunder, because
under r. 9A, first part, these goods were cleared by payment
of excise duty ’and could not be reassessed to the enhanced
duty. It is further submitted alternatively that the goods
were removed from the factory proper before the midnight of
February 28, 1961 and therefore could
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not be assessed to the enhanced duty even if the latter part
of rule 9A applied. A third contention that the order of
the Central Government was bad because it gave no reason for
the rejection of the application for revision was not
pressed seriously.. We shall examine the first two arguments
only.
’The duty of excise on paper and boards was increased by s..
13 of the Finance Act, 1961 (Act XIV of 1961) read with item
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17 of the Schedule. Under the Provisional Collection of
Central Taxes Act (XVI of 1931) this duty became payable
from the 1st day of March, 1961. The question, therefore,
arises whether the goods are to bear the old duty or the
new. This question depends upon the time at which the duty
was payable on the goods in this case. That in its turn
depends upon the true construction of r. 9A of the Central
Excise Rules, 1944. The rule consists of two sub-rules, but
we are concerned with the first sub-rule and first proviso
to that sub-rule. The relevant portion of the rule may be
read even at this stage:
"9A. (1) Alteration of duty or tariff
valuation.-
The rate of duty and the tariff valuation (if
any) applicable to goods cleared on payment of
duty shall be the rate and valuation (if any)
in force on the date on which duty is paid, or
if the goods are cleared from a factory or a
warehouse, on the date of the actual removal
of such goods from such factory or warehouse:
Provided that if the goods have previously
been removed from warehouse under bond to be
rewarehoused, and the duty is paid on such
goods without their being rewarehoused, the
rate and valuation (if any) applicable thereto
shall be the rate and valuation (if any) in
force on the date on which duty is paid or, if
duty is paid through an account-current
maintained with the Collector under Rule 9, on
the date on which an application in the proper
form is delivered to the officer-in-charge of
the warehouse from which the goods were
removed:
To understand this rule and its implications something must
be said first about the scheme of the Central Excise and
Salt Act, 1944 and the Central Excise Rules, 1944. The
Central Excise Act defines ’excisable goods’ to mean goods
specified in its First Schedule and subject to a duty of
excise. The Act further defines ’factory’ to mean any
premises including the precincts wherein excisable goods are
manufactured, or wherein or in any part of which any
manufacturing process connected with the production
209
of these goods is being carried on or is ordinarily carried
on.. ’Manufacture’ is defined to include any process
identical or ancillary to the completion of a manufactured
product, and certain processes in relation to tobacco and
salt are included in manufacture, but with these we are not
concerned. It also defines ,curing’ as including any
process for rendering an unmanufactured product fit for
marketing or manufacture. Section 3 of the Act lays down
inter alia that there shall be levied and collected in such
a manner as may be prescribed duties of excise on all
excisable goods which are produced or manufactured in India
at the rates setforth in the First Schedule. Section 4,
which is headed "Determination of value for the purposes of
duty, provides that where any article is chargeable with
duty at rates dependent on the value of such article such
value shall be deemed to be the whole sale cash price for
which an article of like kind and quality is sold or is
capable of being sold at the time of the removal of the
article chargeable with duty from the factory or any other
premises of manufacture or production for delivery, etc.
The emphasis in s. 4 is on the time of removal of the
article chargeable with duty from the factory. This is the
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only guidance which the Act furnishes. We may now turn to
the Rules.
Under the Rules, duty means duty payable under s. 3 of the
Act above-mentioned. Rule 2(xv) defines ’warehouse’ as any
place or premises appointed or licensed under rule 140. We
now come to Chapter III which deals with levy and refund of
and exception from duty. Rule 7 provides that every person
who produces, cures or manufactures any excisable
goods or who stores such goods in a warehouse shall pay the
duty or duties leviable on such goods at such time and place
and to such person as may be designated in or under the
authority of the Rules, whether the payment of such duty or
duties is secured by bond or otherwise. Rule 9 lays down
the time and manner of payment of duty. The rule may be
read here:
"9. Time and manner of payment of duty.-
( 1) No excisable goods shall be removed from
any place where they are produced, cured or
manufactured or any premises appurtenant
thereto, which may be specified by the
Collector in this behalf, whether for
consumption, export, or manufacture of any
other commodity in or outside such place,
until the excise duty leviable thereon has
been paid at such place and in such manner as
is prescribed in these Rules or as the
Collector may require, and except on
presentation of an application in the proper
form and on obtaining the permission of the
proper officer on the form:
210
Provided that such goods may be deposited
without payment of duty in a store-room or
other place of storage approved by the
Collector under rule 27 or rule 47 or in a
warehouse appointed or licensed under rule 140
or may be exported under bond as provided in
rule 13:
Provided further that such goods may be
removed on part payment of duty leviable
thereon if the Central Government, by
notification in the Official Gazette, allow
the goods to be so removed under rule 49:
Provided also that the Collector may, if he
thinks fit instead of requiring payment of
duty in respect of each separate consignment
of goods removed from place or premises
specified in this behalf, or from storeroom or
warehouse duly approved, appointed or licensed
by him keep with any person dealing in such
goods an account-current of the duties payable
thereon and such account shall be settled at
intervals not exceeding one month, and the
account-holder shall periodically make deposit
therein sufficient in the opinion of the
Collector to cover the duty due on the goods
intended to be removed from the place of
production, During manufacture or storage.
This rule prohibits the removal of goods from the factory or
any premises appurtenant thereto until the excise duty
leviable thereon had been paid. The factory and the
premises appurtenant thereto has to be specified by the
Collector. To this rule there are exceptions. One of them
is that the goods may be deposited without payment of duty
in a store-room or other place of storage approved by the
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Collector under rule 27 or under rule 47 any warehouse
appointed or licensed under rule 140. Another exception is
that the goods may be removed on part payment of duty
reliable if the Government notifies and allows the goods to
be so removed or the Collector if lie thinks fit, approves
the opening of ,in account-current of the duty payable and
the account-holder periodically makes deposits sufficient in
the opinion of the Collector to cover duty due on the goods
intended to be removed from the place of manufacture or
storage. As we are not concerned with export under bond we
may not refer to rule 13 but it is necessary to see rules 47
and 140. Rule 47 is headed "Goods may be stored without
payment of duty". Under this rule a manufacturer has to
provide a storeroom or other place of storage at his
premises for depositing goods made on the same premises
without payment of duty. Duty-paid goods and goods other
than excisable goods made in the factory must not be
211
deposited in such store-rooms or place. The store-room or
place must be declared by the manufacturer and approved by
the Collector. To this rule there is an exception and it is
that if the manufacturer undertakes to pay duty on all the
manufactured goods and clears them immediately on completion
of manufacture the Collector may exempt him from providing a
store-room or other place of storage. Rule 140 deals among
other matters with the appointment and licensing of
warehouse. Under this rule the Collector shall by order in
writing from time to time approve and appoint a public
warehouse and may in like manner license private warehouses
for the storage of excisable goods on which duty has not
been paid.
The Rules make a distinction ’between manufactured and
unmanufactured goods. The relevant rules may also be seen.
Rule 25 provides for unmanufactured goods and rules 52 and
52A for manufactured goods. Rule 25 deals with clearance of
unmanufactured products on payment of duty. This rule
applies to a curer who may apply to an officer to get the
goods weighed and duty assessed. If the duty so assessed is
then paid the curer is granted a transport permit
authorising him to remove the products to any destination
named by him. Rule 52 deals With manufactured goods. It
deals with clearance on payment of duty. The rule reads as
follows :-
"52. Clearance on payment of duty.-
When the manufacturer desires to remove goods
on payment of duty, either from the place or
premises specified under rule 9 or from a
store-room or other place of storage approved
’by the Collector under rule 47, he shall make
application in triplicate (unless otherwise by
rule or order required) to the proper officer
in the proper Form and shall deliver it to the
officer at least twelve hours (or such other
period as may be elsewhere prescribed or as
the Collector may in any particular case
require or allow) before it is intended to
remove the goods. The officer shall, there-
upon, assess the amount of duty due on the
goods and on production of evidence that this
sum has been paid into the Treasury, or paid
to the account of the Collector in the Reserve
Bank of India or the State Bank of India, or
has been despatched to the Treasury by money-
order shall allow the goods to be cleared."
We may also refer to rule 52A which provides for the actual
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removal of the goods from the factory. The rule provides
that no excisable goods shall be delivered from a factory
except under a gate pass signed by the owner of the factory
and counter signed by the proper officer., Such a gate pass
is made out in
212
triplicate and must be presented to the proper officer for
countersignature at least one hour before the actual removal
of the goods from the factory. In the present case a gate
pass had been obtained. Rule 51A then provides that except
as otherwise expressly provided for in the Rules, no duty-
paid goods shall be allowed to re-enter or be retained in,
any part or premises of factory. We may now turn to rule
9A, the interpretation of which has given rise to the
present case.
The dispute, shortly stated, is as to the application of the
two parts of Rule 9A. According to Mr. B. Sen for the
appellant company, the first part applies where duty is paid
and the goods cleared and in such a case the critical point
of time is the payment of duty and the point of time of the
removal from the factory is not relevant. In the second
part, according to him. the critical time is the removal of
the goods from a factory or warehouse without payment of
duty such as happens when they are removed under the
provisos to Rule 9A. In this view of the matter he contends
that this case falls within the first part of Rule 9A. On
the other hand, the learned Solicitor General on behalf of
the Union of India submits that the main rule is in the
first part and the second part of the rule is an exception.
He suggests that one part speaks of payment of duty and the
other of removal and the difference in point of time is
between clearance of duty in the case of unmanufactured
goods and the actual removal of the goods from the factory
or warehouse in the case of manufactured goods. To prove
his point he emphasises the separate provisions regarding
manufactured goods in Chapter V Lind unmanufactured goods in
Chapter IV of the Rules.
In our opinion Rule 9A cannot be read on the basis of the
classification suggested by the Solicitor General. No doubt
rules 9 and 9A apply to manufactured as well as
unmanufactured goods because rule 9 speaks in terms of both
and rule 9A mentions in on place goods without adverting to
the source and in the other the factory or warehouse. But
the distinction in the two parts of rule 9A cannot be
founded on the basis of a difference to be found in Chapters
IV and V of the Rules. Rule 25 allows the clearance of
unmanufactured products on payment of duty but rules 26 and
27 allow such products to be despatched to it bonded
warehouse or to be deposited in a curer’s bonded storeroom.
A special rule applies to the latter goods deposited in the
store-room. They must be cleared on payment of duty
ordinarily before the 30th day of June (extended to 31st
December under certain conditions) of the year following
that in which they are harvested or deposited. On the other
hand, under rule 49 payment of duty is not required in
respect of goods made in a factory until they are about to
be issued out of the place or
213
premises specified under rule 9 or are about to be removed
from a store-room or other place of storage approved by the
Collector.. The only exception to this is their removal to a
licensed warehouse. Rule 52 then says that when the
manufacturer desires to, remove goods on payment of duty
from the factory or storeroom or other place of storage, he
can get the duty assessed, pay it and get a clearance and a
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gate pass. He must then remove the goods and such goods
must not lie in the factory etc. or after removal re-enter
the premises (vide r. 51A).
It will thus be seen that in the case of manufactured goods
the payment of duty and the clearance of goods may be
synchronous or the payment may be postponed although ’the
goods may be removed (provisos to r. 9). This immediately
sets up two kinds of cases in respect of manufactured goods.
The critical time thus ’becomes the removal from the factory
or warehouse but if the payment of duty is made before the
removal then the critical time is the payment of duty. In
the present case the payment of duty was synchronous with
the clearance of the goods because the gate pass can only be
issued when the goods have actually been cleared for
removal. The above construction of the Rules agrees with
the construction placed by the Board of’ Revenue in its
ruling of 1957 when the effect of the sealing of the wagons
by the Railway after loading and the issuance of railway
receipts was considered. The Board ruled that such goods
would not be considered as lying in the stock in the factory
premises. When we add to it the fact in this case that duty
was paid on the goods and gate pass was also issued, there
remains little to argue except to say that the wagons being
in the new siding must be treated as still in the factory.
Here the difficulty in the way of the Union of India is that
the Excise authorities themselves refused to recognise this
portion as part of the factory. if the goods were put in the
wagons after payment of duty, and’ the wagons were sealed
and shunted out of the factory proper on a gate pass, not
only under the ruling of the Board but also on the
application of the Rules as explained here these goods
became free of the enhanced duty. The recovery was
accordingly erroneous. The duty collected must, therefore,
be refunded and we order accordingly. The appellant’s costs
must be paid by the respondent.
G. C. Appeal allowed.
214