Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5830 of 1999
PETITIONER:
Comm.of Central Excise, Allahabad
RESPONDENT:
M/s Ginni Filaments Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/02/2005
BENCH:
S.N. VARIAVA,Dr. AR. LAKSHMANAN & S.H. KAPADIA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
KAPADIA, J.
The issue in this civil appeal filed by the department
under section 35L(b) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 relates to
the eligibility to the benefit of exemption under Notification
No.123/81-CE dated 2nd June, 1981, as amended.
M/s Ginni Filaments Ltd. (hereinafter referred to for the
sake of brevity as "the assessee") is 100% Export Oriented Unit
manufacturing filament yarn. The assessee was licensed under
section 58 of the Customs Act, 1962 bearing Licence No.
1-Customs/90 dated 13.3.1990. The assessee was also granted
L-4 licence for the manufacture of cotton yarn falling under
Chapter 53.
The assessee made an application under notification
no.123/81 to the Competent Authority for removal of certain
goods, under form CT-3, from 100% Export Oriented Unit to
its factory, namely, A.C. Sheets, air-Conditioners, flush doors,
typewriters, storewells, tables, chairs, which was granted.
On 2.1.1991, the department issued a show-cause notice
calling upon the assessee as to why duty of Rs.4,55,872.72
should not be recovered from the assessee for not using the
goods, cleared under form CT-3 in the manufacture of
cotton/filament yarn in their Undertaking.
By reply dated 31.1.1991, the assessee submitted that
since the competent authority had allowed the above goods to
be brought into their Undertaking from 100% export oriented
unit under form CT-3 and since the said goods were brought
into their undertaking in connection with the manufacture of
combed cotton yarn, the requisite conditions mentioned in the
notification no.123/81 stood satisfied and the department was
not entitled to demand duty from the assessee. The assessee
further submitted that direct utilization of the said goods in the
manufacture of combed cotton yarn (which was an export
product) was not necessary in view of the words "in connection
with the manufacture" in the said notification.
The Adjudicating Authority confirmed the show-
cause notice holding that the assessee had failed to prove
that the said goods were used in the manufacture of combed
cotton yarn. Being aggrieved, the assessee herein went in
appeal to the Customs, Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate
Tribunal (hereinafter referred to for the sake of brevity as
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"the tribunal") which following its earlier judgments held
that notification no.123/81 should be given widest possible
interpretation as its object was to increase the revenue and
balance of payment position. In this connection, the
Tribunal also placed reliance on the words "in connection
with the manufacture" in the recital to the said notification.
In this appeal, we are required to decide the scope, ambit
and effect of notification no.123/81, as amended.
To decide the above question, we quote herein below
notification no.123/81-CE dated 2.6.1981, as amended:-
"EXEMPTION TO GOODS FOR HUNDRED PER
CENT EXPORT ORIENTED UNDERTAKINGS
The Central Government, being satisfied that it is
necessary in public interest so to do, hereby exempts excisable
capital goods, components and raw materials, consumables,
spares and packaging materials (hereinafter referred to as the
goods) when brought in connection with the manufacture and
packaging of articles into an undertaking approved by the
Board of Approval for hundred per cent Export Oriented
Undertakings appointed by the notification of Government of
India in the former Ministry of Industry and Civil Supplies
(Department of Industrial Development) No. S.O.
163(E)/RLIU/10(2)/76 dated the 3rd March, 1976 from the
whole of\027
(i) the duty of excise leviable thereon under section 3
of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of
1944); and
(ii) the additional duty of excise leviable thereon under
sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Additional
Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance)
Act, 1957 (58 of 1957), subject to the following
conditions namely:-
(a) the hundred per cent export-oriented
undertaking is approved by the said Board;
(b) the goods required by such undertaking for
manufacture and packaging of articles are
brought directly to the factory of
manufacture and are used in the
manufacture and packaging of such
articles meant solely for export or for supply
to a unit situated in another Free Trade
Zone, Export Processing Zone or hundred
per cent export oriented undertaking for the
manufacture of goods solely meant for
export;
(c) such undertaking exports out of India
hundred per cent or such other percentage as
may be fixed by the said Board of articles
manufactured wholly or partly from the
goods for the period stipulated by the said
Board or such extended period as may be
specified by the said Board;
(d) on clearances up to twenty-five per cent, of
articles so produced or manufactured and
allowed to be sold in India, such undertaking
shall pay duty of excise leviable on such
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articles under section 3 of the said Central
Excises and Salt Act;
(dd) on clearances of five per cent of articles so
produced or manufactured or such other
percentage, as may be fixed by the said
Board and allowed to be sold in India, such
undertaking shall pay duty of excise leviable
under section 3 of the said Central Excises
and Salt Act, provided such articles are in
the nature of rejects;
(e) the procedure set out in Appendix to this
notification is followed by such undertaking;
(f) on the expiry of the period referred to in
condition (c), such undertaking shall pay
excise duty on the goods unused and the
articles manufactured from the goods
without depreciation and at the rates in
force at the time of clearance.
2. Notwithstanding anything contained in the
conditions in the preceding paragraph, samples of articles
manufactured from the goods for the purpose of display and
canvassing may be cleared in such quantities and subject to
such limitations as may be specified by the said Board if the
duty of excise at the appropriate rate has been paid on the goods
contained in such samples.
3. Notwithstanding anything contained in the
conditions (b) and (c) of the first paragraph, clearances of the
articles manufactured wholly or partly from the goods brought
into a hundred per cent export oriented undertaking for supply
to the Oil and Natural Gas Commission or the Oil India Limited
or as the case may be the Gas Authority of India Ltd. for their
project in India against global tender shall be exempt from the
so much of the duty of excise leviable thereon under section 3
of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) as is in
excess of the amount calculated at the rate of 15% ad valorem
and from the whole of the additional duty of excise leviable
thereon under sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the
Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance) Act,
1957 (58 of 1957), subject to the following further conditions,
namely:-
(i) the said undertaking produces a certificate to the
Assistant Collector of Central Excise, prior to the
clearance of such articles from the General
Manager or the Project Manager of the Oil and
Natural Gas Commission or the Oil India Limited
or as the case may be the Gas Authority of India
Limited to the effect that such articles are required
to be supplied against global tender to the Oil and
Natural Gas Commission or the Oil India Limited
or as the case may be the Gas Authority of India
Limited for their project in India specified in the
Certificate; and
(ii) the said undertaking produces to the Assistant
Collector of Central Excise within three months
from the date of the said clearance of such articles
or such extended period as may be allowed by the
Assistant Collector of Central Excise, a certificate
from the General Manager or the Project Manager
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of the Oil and Natural Gas Commission or the Oil
India Limited or as the case may be the Gas
Authority of India Ltd., to the effect that such
articles have actually been received by the Oil and
Natural Gas Commission or the Oil India Limited
or as the case may be the Gas Authority of India
Ltd., at the specified project and are intended for
use in the specified project.
APPENDIX
Procedure to regulate the movement of the goods for
Manufacture and packaging of articles for export.
(a) Application for obtaining the goods free of duty.\027
Any person intending to obtain the goods free of duty for use
by him in his 100 per cent export oriented undertaking shall
make an application in writing to the Assistant Collector of
Central Excise in proper form to be prescribed by the Assistant
Collector of Central Excise stating therein the annual quantity
of the goods required and the purpose for and the manner in
which such goods are intended to be used and declaring that the
goods shall be used for such purpose and in such manner only.
The Assistant Collector may grant the application after causing
such enquiries to be made as he may deem fit and the applicant
shall then enter into a bond in the form given at Annexure A
below with such surety or sufficient security, in such amount
and under such conditions as the Assistant Collector of Central
Excise approves. The Assistant Collector of Central Excise
may, however, allow the annual quantity of the goods to be
brought as furnished by the manufacturer to be extended when a
request to that effect is made. The concession shall expire on
the 31st December every year, but may be renewed if the
Assistant Collector of Central excise sees no reason to the
contrary:
Provided that, in the event of death, insolvency or
insufficiency of the surety, or where the amount of the bond is
inadequate, the Assistant Collector of Central Excise, in his
discretion, demand a fresh bond, and may, if the security
furnished for a bond is not adequate, demand additional
security.
After the grant of the application and execution of bond
by the applicant, the Central Excise officer-in-charge of the 100
per cent Export oriented undertaking shall issue a certificate, in
the form given in Annexure B below certifying that\027
(i) the said undertaking has executed a bond in the
form given in Annexure A below with the
Assistant Collector of Central Excise showing the
number and particulars of the bond; and
(ii) the specimen signature of the agent of the said
undertaking furnished on the body of the
certificate is genuine and he would attest it. The
certificate shall be sent by the said officer-in-
charge under registered post (acknowledgement
due) to the factory from which the goods are to be
obtained. A copy of the certificate shall also be
sent by the said undertaking to the Superintendent
in-charge of the range of the factory from where
the goods are to be received.
(b) Removal of goods to 100% Export oriented
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undertaking.\027On receipt of the aforesaid certificate the
factory (consignor) from where the goods have to be removed
shall prepare an application in the form given in Annexure C
below in quadruplicate for removal of non-duty paid goods
from one warehouse to another mentioning clearly the number
and date of the bond in Annexure A below as per the certificate
issued by the Central Excise officer-in-charge of the 100 per
cent Export Oriented Undertaking. Removal application in
Annexure C below must be serially numbered. The serial No.
should be according to the financial year. The serial No. must
be noted on all the copies. Whenever any removal application
has to be cited in the course of correspondence; the name of the
factory, the Serial No. and date of Annexure C below should
always be quoted as reference. The consignor shall however,
intimate to the Central Excise officer-in-charge of the 100 per
cent Export oriented undertaking about the removal of goods at
least 12 hours before such removal is expected to take place.
(c) Marking of the packages.\027Packages to be marked and
address to be noted in the application:
The factory of removal (consignors) must\027
(i) ensure that packages bear proper marking
and number;
(ii) ensure that all copies of Annexure ’C’ below
are prominently marked "Intended for use in
the undertaking approved for manufacturing
100 per cent Export oriented goods";
(iii) give the full address of the factory of
removal as well as of the Superintendent-in-
charge of the range under which the factory
falls and the Collectorate to which it is
attached.
Whenever any of these addresses is used for dispatching
purposes, care must be taken by the dispatching factory to see
that the full address of the Superintendent in-charge of the
range including the names of the district is properly reproduced.
(d) Preparation of Gate Pass.\027The consignor shall also
prepare a gate pass in Form G.P.2 in Appendix I (Central
Excise Series No.65AA) to the Central Excise Rules, 1944, in
respect of the goods proposed to be removed from his factory
and will thereafter clear the goods on his own without any
verification by any Central Excise Officer.
(e) Disposal of documents in Annexure C and Gate
Pass.\027The Consignor shall send the original and triplicate
copy of the Annexure C below and original copy of the gate
pass along with the consignment to the consignee. The
duplicate copy of Annexure C below will be sent by the
consignor to the Assistant Collector of Central Excise in-charge
of the 100 per cent Export oriented undertaking. The duplicate
copy of the gate pass will be sent by the consignor to the
officer-in-charge of his factory within 24 hours of the removal
of the consignment in question. The said officer-in-charge shall
maintain an account of all such removals in Annexure D below.
(f) Action at destination.\027On receipt of the duplicate copy
by the Assistant Collector of Central Excise, it must
immediately be entered in the ’Record of Receipts in bond"
given in Annexure E below and forwarded the same day to the
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Central Excise officer-in-charge of the 100 per cent Export
oriented undertaking. The entries in this record should be
verified against relative entries of the Record of Raw Materials
prescribed by the Collector.
(g) Responsibility for further accounting.\027After delivery
of the goods from a manufacturer, proper accounting of these
goods shall be the responsibility of the Central Excise officer-
in-charge of the 100 per cent Export oriented undertaking.
(h) Examination of the consignment on receipt.\027(1) The
consignee must give intimation of the arrival of the
consignment at his premises to the Central Excise officer-in-
charge of the 100 per cent Export oriented undertaking without
any delay and should store the same separately and intact,
pending examination and check by the said officer and the said
officer, after taking account of the goods, will identify them
with the marks and numbers, and weigh the consignment in
full. Thereafter, he shall complete the re-warehousing
certificate on the duplicate copy received from the Central
Excise Superintendent-in-charge of the factory at destination
and original and triplicate copy of the applications presented by
the consignee, return duplicate to the Central Excise officer-in-
charge of the factory of removal direct and triplicate to the
consignee for dispatch to the consigner after noting thereon the
deficiency or excess, if any.
(2) Duty on shortages or losses in transit.\027Since
the bond in Annexure A below would have been executed by
the consignee, duty on shortages will be demanded from him
after condoning the permissible losses in transit. For such
commodity a separate schedule of losses will be formulated and
issued by the Collector of Central Excise.
(i) Re-entry.\027If the duplicate application is received by the
Central Excise Officer-in-charge of the 100 per cent Export
oriented undertaking, before arrival of the goods is reported to
him by the consignee, he must keep it pending, securely and
systematically filed in a file marked "pending duplicate in
Annexure B application" and record the particulars of the
consignment in his "record of receipts in bond" prescribed as in
Annexure E below and no sooner the consignment is received,
he will follow the procedure prescribed in paragraph (h) above.
(j) Duty leviable on excisable goods not duly accounted
for as having been utilized in the manufacture of goods for
export, etc.\027If any excisable goods obtained under this
procedure are not duly accounted for as having been utilized in
connection with the manufacture and packaging of articles
for export or clearances up to twenty five percent of the articles
produced or manufactured and allowed to be sold in India on
payment of duty of excise leviable under section 3 of the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) or for clearances
for supply to the Oil and Natural Gas commission for their
projects in India against global tender or are not shown to the
satisfaction of the Central Excise officer-in-charge of 100 per
cent Export oriented undertaking to have been lost or destroyed
by natural causes or by unavoidable accidents during storage or
handling in the approved premises, or, have been permitted to
be disposed of as refuse or waste within the permissible limits
prescribed by the Collector of Central Excise, the applicant
shall, on demand by the said Central Excise officer,
immediately pay the duty leviable on such goods. The
concession may at any time be withdrawn by the Collector of
Central Excise if a breach of the procedure is committed by the
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applicant, his agent or any person employed by him. In the
event of such a breach, the Collector of Central Excise may also
order the forfeiture of the security deposited under paragraph
(a) above and may also confiscate the goods and all articles
manufactured from such goods in store in the premises of the
100 per cent Export oriented undertaking.
(k) Despatch of duplicates by registered post
acknowledgement due.\027Despatch of duplicate application in
Annexure B referred to in paragraph (a) above must always be
made by registered post acknowledgement due, and the postal
receipt acknowledgement must be systematically filed by the
consignor and presented for inspection to the Central Excise
officer-in-charge of the factory whenever required.
(l) Demand of duty on goods not reaching destination.\027
Under sub-rule (1) of rule 156B of the Central Excise Rules,
1944, if the certificate of receipt of a consignment of the goods
dispatched to the consignee [as per paragraph (1)] is not
received back by the consignor within 90 days of the removal
of the goods or within such extended period as may be allowed
by the Collector of Central Excise, it is the responsibility of the
consignor to himself pay the duty leviable on the consignment
by a debit entry in his account current. However, a provision
has been made that in such cases where the consignor produces
proof re-warehousing to the satisfaction of the Central Excise
Officer-in-charge of the factory after payment of duty in the
manner indicated above, he will be eligible for grant of refund
on the duty so paid by making an application.
The Central Excise officer-in-charge of the factory may
also demand duty on a consignment the certificate in respect of
which has not been received within the stipulated period. In
such cases, if the consignor has already paid the duty leviable
on the consignment by a debit entry in his account current, he
may intimate the officer-in-charge of the 100 per cent Export
oriented undertaking about the particulars of such deposit in
reply to this notice of demand.
(m) Action by the officer-in-charge of the factory of
removal in case of non-receipt of the warehousing
certificates.\027If the duplicate copy of Annexure B below is not
returned to the officer-in-charge of the factory of removal
within a month of the removal of consignment reminders must
be issued regularly at fortnightly intervals to the Central Excise
officer-in-charge of the 100 per cent Export oriented
undertaking. If, despite such reminders, the duplicate
application is not received within two months of the date of
removal of the consignment, the matter should be reported to
the Assistant Collector of Central Excise in whose charge the
consignor operates, who will either secure a satisfactory proof
of the consignment having been duly received by the consignee
or ensure that the duty properly due on the goods not so
received at destination is recovered as per paragraph (1) above.
(n) Verification of the use of non-duty paid goods.\027On
receipt by the consignee, the goods shall be utilized in the
manufacture and packaging of articles intended (solely) for
export of clearances up to twenty-five percent of the articles
produced or manufactured and allowed to be sold in India on
payment of duty of excise leviable under section 3 of the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) or for clearances
for supply to the Oil and Natural Gas Commission for their
projects in India against global tender. It shall be the
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responsibility of the Central excise officer-in-charge of the 100
per cent Export oriented undertaking to ensure that all the
goods have been fully utilized for manufacture and packaging
of articles intended for export or for clearances up to twenty
five per cent of the articles produced or manufactured and
allowed to be sold in India on payment of duty of excise
leviable under section 3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944 (1 of 1944) or for clearances for supply to the Oil and
Natural Gas Commission for their projects in India against
global tender or are otherwise accounted for to the satisfaction
of the Assistant Collector, Central Excise in-charge of the 100
per cent Export oriented undertaking.
[Emphasis supplied]"
The above notification gave exemption to goods for
"use" in 100% export oriented unit. As can be seen from the
preamble, the notification gave exemption to capital goods, raw
materials, components, consumables etc. compendiously known
as "goods" when brought into the undertaking of a licensed
holder from the 100% export oriented unit approved by the
Board under a certificate in form CT-3 "in connection with the
manufacture of" products to be exported out of India. The said
notification exempted the above goods from payment of basic
excise duty and additional excise duty subject to conditions
which further stipulated that exemption shall be granted only if
the "goods" released from 100% export oriented unit were
brought directly into the factory of the licensee and were "used
in the manufacture of the products" to be exported. [See:
Conditions 1(b)(c)(f), 2, 3 as well as the various Clauses in the
Appendix to the notification, relevant portions of which have
been underlined in bold print]. Therefore, in the preamble,
which deals with removal of goods from 100% export oriented
unit under CT-3 form, we find use of the words "in connection
with the manufacture of" which words are wider when
compared to the words in the conditions for exemption, namely,
"used in the manufacture of". Reading the notification in
entirety, therefore, two stipulations have to be fulfilled, namely,
removal of the "goods" from 100% export oriented unit to the
factory of the licensee under form CT-3 and use or participation
of the said "goods" in the manufacture of products meant for
export.
In the present case, the tribunal following its judgments
in earlier cases has emphasized the words "in connection with
the manufacture" in the preamble while failing to notice the
words "used in the manufacture of" in the conditions which
indicate use or participation of the said "goods" in the
manufacture of products to be exported out of India. This test
of participation has to be applied to the facts of each case. It is
on fulfillment of both the above conditions, that, the assessee
becomes entitled to the benefit of the above notification. In
number of cases, the tribunal has wrongly drawn an analogy
from notification no.272/79 which has no application to the
present case. Each notification has to be read on its own terms
and merely because the object of a notification is to increase
resources of the State, conditions stipulated therein cannot be
ignored. Further, it may be noted, that the word "capital asset"
is very wide. It includes all types of properties including
consumables, raw material, components etc. However, capital
assets become capital goods when used in the manufacture of
products. Every capital asset is not capital goods. Hence, one
has to read the words "capital goods" in the context of the
above notification. For example, a telephone instrument may
constitute "capital goods" where the assessee is in the business
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of telecommunication. However, if the assessee is in the
business of manufacture of hydrogen peroxide, the same
instrument cannot be construed as "capital goods" for the
purposes of the above notification. Hence, the peculiarities of
the business or the undertaking is also required to be kept in
mind while interpreting the said notification.
Applying the above tests to the facts of the case in hand,
we find that the assessee has claimed exemption in respect of
table, chairs, air-conditioners etc. which cannot be said to be
"goods" used in the manufacture of cotton or filament yarn. It
is the case of the assessee that the words "in connection with
the manufacture" are wide enough to cover every item which is
allowed to be removed under CT-3 certificate. This contention
of the assessee is accepted by the tribunal erroneously as it has
failed to look at the words used in the conditions enumerated in
the notification. As stated above, we have to read the
notification in its entirety. Further, we are dealing with
exemption notification which has to be read strictly so far as the
eligibility is concerned. It was for the assessee to prove by
evidence, and not by submitting a chart, the nexus between AC
Sheets and the manufacture of filament/cotton yarn. It was for
the assessee to prove by evidence the participation of AC
Sheets in the manufacture of filament/cotton yarn, which has
not been done and, therefore, the tribunal had erred in admitting
the claim of the assessee for exemption without analyzing the
notification no.123/81 dated 2.6.1981 (as amended).
For the reasons given hereinabove, this civil appeal filed
by the department succeeds; the impugned judgment and order
of the tribunal dated 4.2.1999 passed in Appeal No. E/A
2120/94-D is set aside; and accordingly the civil appeal stands
allowed, with no order as to costs.