Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, JAIPURC
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S RAGHUVAR (INDIA) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/05/2000
BENCH:
G.B.Pattanaik, Doraiswamy, S.N.Variam
JUDGMENT:
Raju, J.
This Reference under Section 35H of the Central
Excises and Salt Act 1944, (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Act) came to be directly made at the instance of the
Revenue to this Court by the Customs, Excise and Gold
(Control) Appellate Tribunal, North Regional Bench, on
account of conflict of views expressed in the decisions of
the High Court of Gujarat reported in Torrent Laboratories
Pvt. Ltd. vs Union of India [1991 (55) ELT 25], and that
of the Karnataka High Court reported in Thungabhadra Steel
Products Ltd. vs Supdt. of Central Excise [1991(56) ELT
340].
The factual details necessary to understand and
appreciate the disputes between parties may be noticed,
before adverting to the area and nature of dispute. The
respondent is a holder of licence in Form L-4 and a
manufacturer of vegetable products falling under Chapter
15-04 of the Central Excise Tariff, at the relevant point of
time. The respondent, admittedly, filed a declaration under
Rule 57G of the Central Excises Rules, 1944, (hereinafter
referred to as the Rules), on 10.3.1987 for adoption of
MODVAT Credit in respect of certain inputs used by them in
the manufacture of vegetable products and consequently
became entitled to avail of the duty credit only on and
after 10.3.87. But the fact is that the respondent availed
of the credit facilities in question even from 1.3.87 and,
therefore, the authorities were of the view that wrong
credit had been availed of to the tune of Rs.62,710.61 on
the inputs received and utilised from 1.3.87 to 10.3.87. On
being pointed out though they debited a credit of
Rs.20,828.93 relating to furnace oil and filter cloth, not
covered under the MODVAT Scheme, the balance of
Rs.41,872.68, in respect of other outputs was not debited,
in spite of the communication dated 10.8.87 and reminders
dated 29.12.87 and 1.2.88 for the reversal of the credit,
issued by the Range Officer.
As against the communication dated 1.2.88, the
respondent filed an appeal before the Collector (appeals)
who by his order dated 21.12.89 set aside the same and
remitted the matter to the Assistant Collector, the
competent Authority, for the purposes of Rule 57G. In the
meantime, the Assistant Collector, Central Excise, Jaipur,
issued a show cause notice as to why the sum of Rs.41,872.68
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should not be recovered from the respondent under Section
11A of the Act read with Rule 57-I of the Rules. After
considering the submissions of the respondent, the Assistant
Collector by his order dated 3.8.90 directed the reversal of
the credit of Rs.41,872.68 wrongly taken, in their RG-23A.
The said Authority held that filing of a declaration being a
statutory necessity and condition precedent to avail of
credit under the scheme, the respondent was not eligible to
take credit for the period prior to the filing of the
declaration. As a matter of fact, the respondent did not
appear to have contested the case on merit but only raised a
plea of limitation that notice has not been issued within a
period of six months, as envisaged under Section 11A. The
plea based on limitation came to be also rejected on the
ground that the Range Officer issued a letter dated 10.8.87
calling upon the respondent to debit the credit wrongly
taken and this was well within the six months period. This
was challenged on appeal and the Collector (appeals) by his
order dated 12.12.91 rejected the appeal repelling the plea
of limitation. The matter was further pursued before the
Tribunal by way of an appeal, and by an order dated 3.2.94,
it was held that the show cause notice issued by the
Assistant Collector on 5.8.88 was beyond a period of six
months and that even for demanding reversal of credit
already taken, in exercise of Rule 57-I, the provisions of
Section 11A would get attracted necessitating the raising of
the demand within six months. Thereupon, the Revenue moved
the application for Reference and that is how the reference
came to be made to this Court.
Mr. T.L.V. Iyer, learned senior counsel for the
Revenue, while placing strong reliance upon the decision
reported in 1991 (55) ELT 25 (supra) and the relevant
provisions of the MODVAT Scheme, contended that the
provisions of Section 11A of the Act had no application
whatsoever to the case on hand and that being a special
provision with self contained machinery to enforce them,
reference to a general provision like Section 11A of the Act
is unwarranted and consequently, the orders of the Assistant
Collector and the Collector (appeals) are quite in
accordance with law and did not call for any interference in
the hands of the Tribunal.
Per contra, Mr. C. Harishankar, learned counsel for
the respondent, placed reliance upon a catena of decisions
reported in 1991 (56) ELT 340 (supra); Advani Oerlikon Ltd.
vs Assistant Collector of Central Excise [1993 (63) ELT 427
(Mad. High Court)]; Fabril Gasosa vs Union of India [1997
(96) ELT 241 (Bom. High Court)]; Collr. of C. Ex., Patna
vs Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co. Ltd. [1999 (111) ELT
9 (Pat. High Court)]; J.K. Spinning & Weaving Mills Ltd.
& Another vs Union of India & Others [1987 (32) ELT 234
(SC)] and Govt. of India vs Citedal Fine Pharmaceuticals
Madras & Others Etc. Etc. [1989 (3) SCR 465]; and
vehemently contended that the impugned proceedings involve
recovery and consequently a demand of an amount not paid,
Section 11A of the Act would necessarily get attracted and,
therefore, the view taken by the other High Courts,
different from the one taken by the Gujarat High Court,
would more accord with law and, therefore, the Reference may
be answered against the Revenue. It was also submitted,
once the credit taken has also been utilised by adjustment
against payment of excise duty on articles manufactured, the
question would always be one of recovery of duty or a demand
for payment. In substance the plea of the learned counsel
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is that the stage for reversal of the credit was over with
actual adjustment of the credit taken.
In the decision reported in Torrent Laboratories Pvt.
Ltd. case (supra), a Division Bench of the Gujarat High
Court while repelling a plea that Rule 57-I as it stood
prior to amendment should be read in conjunction with
Section 11A of the Act by reading the period of limitation
in Section 11A into Rule 57-I by necessary implication,
observed as that the provisions of the above Rule has to be
in conformity with the provisions of Section 37 and not
Section 11A since Section 11A was already in existence from
17.11.80 and Rule 57-I brought into force on 1.3.86 had its
own special scheme and purpose underlying the same (b) it
would be over simplification to say that Rule 57-I, as it
stood prior to amendment is nothing but a provision with
regard to recovery of duty as it is in the case of short
payment, short levy of duty or under assessment, (c) that
the Modvat Scheme has its own special and distinguishing
features and Rule 57- I which is part of such special scheme
stands on its own unlike even provisions of proforma credit
contained in Rule 56A and (d) whenever a general provision
is operation and knowing well its existence, a special
provision is made, it has to be presumed that the law makers
did not intend the general provision to apply to the special
cases culled out.
In Thungabhadra Steel Products Ltd. case (supra), a
learned Single Judge of the Karnataka High Court opined that
the restriction of time limit for exercise of powers under
Section 11A should govern the cases envisaged under Rule
57-I and, therefore, Rule 57-I, as it stood prior to its
amendment, should receive the same interpretation as it
should receive after its amendment with effect from 6.10.88,
by assuming that the amendment introduced to the Rule
indicated the intention of the legislature to amend the Rule
to bring it in conformity with the spirit and scope of
Section 11A. There is no rhyme or reasonable basis for such
an assumption. The Division Bench of the Madras High Court,
which decided the case in Advani Oerlikon Ltd. (supra),
expressed the view that not withstanding the omission in
Rule 57-I prior to its amendment, to provide for the issue
of a notice, the obligation to issue such notice followed
from the principles of natural justice as well as Section
11A of the Act and, therefore, the period of limitation in
Section 11A will be attracted to exercise the power of
demand for reversing the credit wrongly availed of or
utilised under Modvat Scheme. There is no justification in
law to equate the notice expected to be issued to satisfy
the principles of natural justice with the one ordained by
the statutory provision to be issued within a stipulated
time for one or the other of the purposes specified in such
a provision, and that in order to suffer a limitation on the
very exercise of the power. A Division Bench of the Bombay
High Court also held in the decision reported in Fabril
Gasosas case (supra) that the power to frame rules since
was derived from the Act itself and the rules owe their
existence to the Act, as long as there is any provision in
the Act, even if the rules are silent on that aspect of the
matter, it will have to be presumed that the provisions in
the Act will govern the interpretation of the rules and,
therefore, the limitation in the Act will apply to cases of
demand/recovery under Rule 57-J, as it stood prior to
amendment, particularly when there is nothing in Section 11A
which renders it inapplicable to cases provided under the
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Modvat Scheme. This reasoning overlooks the position that
the rule in question was not enacted either under Section
11A or to carry out the purposes of Section 11A but actually
in exercise of the rule-making power under Section 37,
particularly sub-section (2) (xvia). A Division Bench of
the Patna High Court, in the decision reported in 1999 (111)
ELT 9 (supra), while following the view expressed by the
Madras, Karnataka and Bombay High Courts disagreed with the
view of the Gujarat High Court and held that when the
limitation is provided for in the parent Act, it need not be
provided for in the subordinate legislation, viz., the
rules, and therefore the limitation prescribed in Section
11A has to be read into Rule 57-I, unamended also. It was
also observed therein that the maxim ‘Generalia specialibus
non derogant applies only to same legislative instruments
and not when one instrument is an Act of Parliament and the
other Rule framed by the Central Government. This
differentiation has no relevance for the application of the
maxim noticed above and what is relevant would be the scope,
extent and area of the operation of the relevant provisions,
only.
The decision of this Court in J.K. Spinning & Weaving
Mills Ltd case (supra) is not directly on point to the issue
raised before us though may provide a clue to resolve the
issue. That was a case wherein this Court was concerned
with the question as to whether in case of a retrospective
amendment creating liability to duty, the levy and
collection could be made dehors the period of limitation
stipulated in Section 11A, particularly in the absence of
any non obstante clause to override Section 11A of the Act.
This case really dealt with the question of limitation
relating to the levy, demand and recovery of duty in respect
of deemed removal of certain goods the moment they come into
existence on production/manufacture introduced with
retrospective effect and, therefore, really and in substance
concerned the imposition and payment of excise duty. Since
the Rules considered in that was only made by virtue of the
rule-making power on 20.2.82 and the same was also, by a
statutory provision brought into force with retrospective
effect from 28.2.1944, the demand and recovery for the
retrospective period would actually partake the character of
an exercise for collecting duty not levied or not paid
envisaged under Section 11A of the Act. The decision in
1989 (3) SCR 465 (supra) dealt with a question as to whether
the mere absence of any period of limitation enables the
authority concerned to exercise its powers at any
point/length of time without any time limit whatsoever and
it was held that even in the absence of any specific period
of limitation, powers conferred have to be exercised and
action thereof taken within a reasonable period. This
decision cannot be of any help to the respondent in this
case because, neither is there any challenge to Rule 57-I on
such ground of absence of limitation nor the period involved
could be held to be so unreasonable on the facts and
circumstances of the case where factually an earlier notice
has been issued within even by that time by the Department
though not by the proper officer and this only necessitated
a fresh action, the validity of which is sought to be
challenged and despite all these, no unreasonable delay
could at all be said to have resulted.
Section 11A (1) of the Act reads as follows:
Section 11A. Recovery of duties not levied or not
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paid or short-levied or short-paid or erroneously refunded.
- (1) When any duty of excise has not been levied or paid or
has been short-levied or short-paid or erroneously refunded,
a Central Excise Officer may, within six months from the
relevant date, serve notice on the person chargeable with
the duty which has not been levied or paid or which has been
short-levied or short-paid or to whom the refund has
erroneously been made, requiring him to show cause why he
should not pay the amount specified in the notice:
Provided that where any duty of excise has not been
levied or paid or has been short-levied or short paid or
erroneously refunded by reason of fraud, collusion or any
wilful mis-statement or suppression of facts, or
contravention of any of the provisions of this Act or of the
rules made thereunder with intent to evade payment of duty,
by such person or his agent, the provisions of this
sub-section shall have effect, as if, for the words six
months, the words five years were substituted.
Explanation.- Where the service of the notice is
stayed by an order of a court, the period of such stay shall
be excluded in computing the aforesaid period of six months
or five years, as the case may be.
Rule 57-I, as it stood prior to amendment on 6.10.88,
is as follows: Rule 57-I - Recovery of credit wrongly
availed of or utilised in an irregular manner.
(1) If the credit of duty paid on inputs has been
taken wrongly, the credit so taken may be disallowed by the
proper officer and the amount so disallowed shall be
adjusted in the credit account or the amount-current
maintained by the manufacturer or if such adjustments are
not possible for any reason, by cash recovery from the
manufacturer of the said goods:
Provided that such manufacturer may make such
adjustments on his own in the credit account or the
account-current maintained by him under intimation to the
proper officer.
(2) If any inputs in respect of which credit has been
taken are not fully accounted for as having been disposed of
in the manner specified in this section the manufacturer
shall upon a written demand being made by the Assistant
Collector of Central excise pay the duty leviable on such
inputs within 10 days of the notice of demand.
After amendments effected on 6.10.88, the relevant
portion of the Rule stands as follows:
Rule 57-I - Recovery of credit wrongly availed of or
utilised in an irregular manner:
(1) (i) Where credit of duty paid on inputs has been
taken on account of an error, omission or misconstruction,
on the part of an officer or a manufacturer, or an assessee,
the proper officer may, within six months from the date of
such credit, serve notice on the manufacturer or the
assessee who has taken such credit requiring him to show
cause why he should not be disallowed to such credit and
where the credit has already been utilised, why the amount
equivalent to such credit should not be recovered from him.
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Provided that where such credit has been taken on
account of wilful mis-statement, collusion or suppression of
facts on the part of a manufacturer or an assessee, the
provisions of this clause shall have effect as if for the
words six months, the words five years were substituted.
(ii) The proper officer, after considering the
representation, if any, made by the manufacturer or the
assessee on whom notice is served under clause (I), shall
determine the amount of such credit to be disallowed (not
being in excess of the amount specified in the show cause
notice) and thereupon such manufacturer or assessee shall
pay the amount equivalent to the credit disallowed, if the
credit has been utilised, or shall not utilise the credit
thus disallowed.
(2) If any inputs in respect of which credit has been
taken are not fully accounted for as having been disposed of
in the manner specified in this section the manufacturer
shall upon a written demand being made by the Assistant
Collector of Central Excise pay the duty leviable on such
inputs within 10 days of the notice of demand.
The fact that the respondent-manufacturer did file the
mandatorily required declaration under Rule 57G of the Rules
only on 10.3.87 and not before and that, therefore, the
respondent was not entitled to avail of the benefits under
Modvat Scheme for the period between 1.3.87 and 10.3.87 is
not at all in dispute before us. The only question is as to
how to set right the wrong availment of duty made by the
respondent and whether prior to 6.10.88 as Rule 57-I existed
then, it has to be set right only by having recourse to
Section 11A and by issue of any notice within a period of
six months as envisaged under Section 11A of the Act.
Similarly, there is no challenge before us that in the
absence of any specific period of limitation provided for in
Rule 57-I, the Rule is arbitrary or unconstitutional, on
that account.
Any law or stipulation prescribing a period of
limitation to do or not to do a thing after the expiry of
period so stipulated has the consequence of creation and
destruction of rights and, therefore, must be specifically
enacted and prescribed therefor. It is not for the Courts
to import any specific period of limitation by implication,
where there is really none, though Courts may always hold
when any such exercise of power had the effect of disturbing
rights of a citizen that it should be exercised within a
reasonable period. Section 11A is not an omnibus provision
which provides any period of limitation for all or any and
every kind of action to be taken under the Act or the Rules
but will be attracted only to cases where any duty of excise
has not been levied or paid or has been short-levied or
short-paid or erroneously refunded. The section also
provides for an extended period on certain contingencies and
situations. The situation on hand and the one which has to
be dealt with under Rule 57-I, as it stood unamended, does
not fall under any one of those contingencies provided for
in Section 11A of the Act. Part AA of the Rules in which
Rule 57-I is found included provides a special scheme for
earning credit and adjustment of duty paid on excisable
goods used as inputs in the manufacture of what is referred
to as ‘final product, and thereby enable the manufacturer
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to utilise the credit so allowed towards payment of duty of
excise leviable on the final products, in the manner and
subject to the terms and conditions stipulated therein. The
manufacturer, in this case while removing the final product
manufactured has adjusted against payment of excise duty on
such final product a part or portion of the credit earned by
him under the special scheme and what is sought to be really
and in substance done is to inform the manufacturer that the
adjustment he purported to have made was with an amount not
legitimately or factually earned by or due to him. For this
purpose, the irregularity and impropriety committed by the
manufacturer in maintaining the accounts and the error in
the calculation of the credit said to have been earned by
him is pointed out, and the manufacturer is only directed to
reverse the credit so wrongly and undeservedly made by
readjustment and if need be, to recover the amount
equivalent to such credit wrongly availed of and disallowed
by the proper officer. The recovery of credit availed of
and utilised in utter breach of the faith and mutual trust
and confidence which is the raison detre for the proper and
successful working of the Modvat scheme and that too in
gross violation of the mandatory requirements necessarily to
be fulfilled before ever claiming or availing of such
benefits cannot be said to be the same as the demand for
payment to be made under Section 11A of the Act of any
excise duty not levied or paid or has been short-levied or
short-paid. They fall into two distinct and different
categories altogether with basic as well as substantial
differences to distinguish them from each other. As a
matter of fact, Rule 57-I envisages disallowance of the
credit and consequential adjustment in the credit account or
the amount-current maintained by the manufacturer and if
only any such adjustments are not possible proceed to
recover the amount equivalent to the credit illegally
availed of. Consequently, the situation postulated to be
dealt with under Rule 57-I cannot be said to involve a case
of manufacture and removal of excisable goods without
subjecting such goods to levy or payment of the various
nature and category enumerated in Section 11A. Hence,
Section 11A of the Act on its own terms will have no
application or operation to cases covered under Rule 57-I of
the Rules.
The above conclusion of ours is itself sufficient to
answer the question in favour of the Revenue and against the
manufacturer, even dehors the applicability or otherwise of
the principle of construction - Generalia specialibus non
derogant, since they do not operate on the same field or
cover the same area, to be reconciled in order to avert any
clash or inconsistency. That apart, even if it is to be
assumed that they relate to one and the same nature of
demand from the manufacturer of any amount due from him to
the State, the provisions contained in Section 11A are
general in nature and application and the Modvat scheme
being a specific and special beneficial scheme, with
self-contained procedure, manner and method for its
implementation, providing for its own remedies to undo any
mischief committed by the manufacturer in abuse thereof, the
provisions of the said special scheme alone will govern such
a situation and there is no scope for reading the
stipulations contained in a general provision like Section
11A into the provision of the rules in question which alone
will govern in its entirety the enforcement of the Modvat
Scheme. The question as to the relative nature of the
provisions general or special has to be determined, as
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observed earlier, with reference to the area and extent of
their application either generally in all circumstances or
specially in particular situations and not on the ground
that one is a mere provision in the Act and the other is a
provision in the Rule. We are not also concerned in this
case with any challenge to the inconsistency of a rule with
any statutory provision in the Act.
On going through very carefully the decisions of the
Gujarat High Court on the one hand and those of the other
High Courts noticed above, we are of the view that the
Gujarat view is more reasonable and quite accord with the
purpose, object, aim and successful implementation of the
Modvat Scheme and the fallacy in the line of reasoning
adopted by the other decisions lie in their assumption that
the period of limitation prescribed in Section 11A of the
Act has universal application to govern every act or course
of action envisaged under the Act and the Rules, wherever
there is no limitation stipulated to the contra. The
restricted operation of the provisions contained in Section
11A is found inherently in-built due to the specification of
the various categories of cases enumerated in the provision
itself to be dealt with. The Scheme of Modvat, introduced
for the first rime in 1986, did not consider it necessary
either to have its own period of limitation in-built in the
Rules nor has the enforcement of the scheme been made
subject to Section 11A of the Act. The fact that even when
an amendment was made on 6.10.88, it was prospective in
nature and the amendment was not given any retrospective
effect indicates the intention unmistakably that the
subsequent amendment should have no impact on the
construction to be placed on the provisions as it existed
before such amendment. The further fact that the amendments
to Rule 57-I had its own pattern of limitation and method of
computation of such limitation also would militate against
the manner of construction adopted by the decisions of the
High Courts other than that of the Gujarat High Court.
The further submission of the learned counsel for the
respondent that whatever may be right or otherwise of the
proper officer to order for reversal of the credit earned
before it was actually utilised or adjusted, on and after
actual utilisation by adjustment, at any rate no question of
the reversal of the credit would arise, proceeds upon a
misconception of the fundamentals underlying the working of
the Modvat Scheme and the powers of the Proper Officer to
set right irregularities, if any, committed by the
Manufacturer in availing of the same. The utilisation and
adjustment depends upon proper and valid earning of the
credit strictly in accordance with the terms and conditions
of the Scheme and while making unilateral credit in the
course of maintenance of the accounts in the prescribed form
and manner, a gross illegality has been committed in
crediting something to which a manufacturer was not
legitimately entitled to, not only the Proper Officer has
the right, power and authority to direct reversal of credit
but on such direction, the extent and quantum of credit and
consequent adjustment also would get necessarily and
automatically readjusted making it obligatory under the
Scheme for the manufacturer, as long as the credit account
or the amount-current is maintained by the manufacturer
under the Scheme, to reverse the credit and set right the
accounts. Lawful earning of a credit is a sine qua non for
proper and valid utilisation of the same and once the credit
side gets diminished the very basis of adjustment disappears
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ipso facto. By adopting a defiant attitude in the matter,
the manufacturer cannot take advantage of his misdeed to
gain an advantage by contending that the action to be taken
involve only a recovery of duty and, therefore, should be
within the period of limitation provided under Section 11A
of the Act. Even when the recovery is ordered, as a last
resort, as envisaged under Rule 57-I, as observed earlier,
it is only recovery of the money value equivalent to the
unlawful credit availed of and adjusted under the Scheme and
not the demand or recovery of any duty as such.
For all the reasons stated above, we are of the view
that the provisions of Section 11A of the Central Excises
and Salt Act, 1944, would have no application to any action
taken under Rule 57-I of the Central Excises and Salt Rules,
1944, prior to its amendment on 6.10.88, and Rule 57-I of
the Rules are not in any manner subject to Section 11A of
the Act. Hence, we approve of the view taken by the Gujarat
High Court in the decision reported in 1991 (55) ELT 25
(supra) and further hold that the contra view expressed by
the Madras, Karnataka, Bombay and Patna High Courts in the
decisions noticed supra, does not lay down the correct
position of law. The Reference is answered accordingly. No
costs.