Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE, KHURARI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DHANNALAL SETHI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/04/1968
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1458 1969 SCR (1) 166
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC 645 (26)
ACT:
Central Provinces and Berar Municipalities Act, 1922-Rules
made providing for refund of octroi duty on export of goods
on which duty paid at the time of import-R. 27, if gives a
right of refund-Procedure prescribed in rr. 27 to 43 for
obtaining refund not followed-Effect of.
HEADNOTE:
The first and the second respondents purchased a quantity of
foodgrains from certain cultivators who had imported them
into the municipal area of the appellant Committee and, at
the time of importation, had paid octroi duty on those
foodgrains. The first and the second respondents exported
the identical goods out of the- municipal areas and there-
upon applied for refund of octroi duty paid on the
foodgrains. The appellant Committee refused to pay the
refund mainly on the ground that the respondents had failed
to produce the: receipts of duty paid on the importation of
the foodgrains. An appeal to the Additional Deputy
Commissioner as well as the revision application to the
Board of Revenue were both dismissed, but a writ petition
against these orders was allowed by the High Court which
held that an, exporter was entitled under r. 27 to the
refund of 7/8th of the, duty paid on the goods exported.
Subsequently a Division Bench, in appeal, remanded’ the case
to the Board for dealing with certain other contentions
raised by the appellant -and after considering these, the
Board get aside, the orders of the Committee and the Deputy
Commissioner and directed payment of the refund.
The appellant Committee then filed a writ petition
challenging the ,order of the Board but this was dismissed,
the High Court holding, inter alia, that the Rules did not
require a claimant who had exported dutiable goods to
produce receipts of payment of duty and that the amount of
refund is to be determined from the quantity of foodgrains
exported or from their value. The Committee appealed by
special leave to this Court. It was urged on its behalf
that a person claiming refund would not be entitled to it
unless he had followed the procedure prescribed by rr. 27 to
43, and that this had not been done in the present case.
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HELD : Dismissing the appeal
Though the rules lay down a procedure which an appellant
seeking refund has to follow, they do not provide at the
game time that an applicant for refund who has failed do
follow the procedure laid down in rr. 35 to 39 would be
disentitled to claim the refund. In the absence of such a
provision, coupled with the categorical language of r. 27
giving a right to an exporter of dutiable goods to claim
7/8th of the duty paid on such goods on their import, it
becomes difficult to uphold the denial by the appellant
Committee of the right of the first’ and the second
respondents to such a refund. [171 E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 545 of 1965.
167
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated,
December 18, 1961 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc.
Petition No. 247 of 1961.
M. S. Gupta and Yashpal Singh, for the appellant.
S. K. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. The appellant Municipal Committee is for the vil-
lage Khurari, a notified area under the Central Provinces
and Berar Municipalities Act, 1922. The Committee is
entitled to levy and collect under the said Act and under
the Rules made thereunder octroi duty inter alia on
foodgrains brought into the municipal limits for sale. On
March 8, 1954, respondents 1 and 2 applied for refund of
octroi duty on the ground that they had exported from the
municipal area foodgrains of which particulars were given in
the schedule attached thereto. The appellant Committee
replied that they would not be entitled to the refund unless
they filed with their application the receipts of duty is-
sued by the Committee at the time when it was paid on the
importation of the said foodgrains. It may be mentioned
that it was not the case of the Committee in the said reply
that the said goods were not exported by respondents 1 and 2
by rail or that they were not the same goods which were
imported into the area and which were purchased by
respondents 1 and 2 and on which duty would be payable by
the cultivators from whom respondents 1 and 2 had purchased
the said foodgrains. The Committee simply refused to pay
the refund as the respondents failed to produce the said
receipts. In the appeal filed by respondents 1 and 2 before
the Additional Deputy Commissioner, that officer held, on a
construction of rr. 27 and 34, that it would be the. person
who had paid the duty when the goods were brought into the
municipal area who alone could claim the refund if the goods
exported by him were the same on which the duty was paid.
The Board of Revenue before whom respondents 1 and 2 filed a
revision application against the Deputy Commissioner’s said
order held that the word ’refund’ in r. 27 meant that the
person who had paid the duty could alone be entitled to
claim the refund and that respondents 1 and 2 not being such
persons could not apply for it. On that ground alone the
Board rejected the revision application. Respondents 1 and
2 thereupon filed a writ petition in the High Court of
Madhya Pradesh for quashing the said orders of the Deputy
Commissioner and the Board of Revenue.
The admitted facts before the High Court were, (1) that res-
pondents 1 and 2 had purchased the said foodgrains from
certain cultivators; and (2) that those cultivators had in
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fact paid octroi
168
duty when they brought the said foodgrains for sale within
the municipal area. The contention of respondents 1 and 2
before the High Court was that as persons who had exported
the said goods they were entitled to the refund of the duty
paid by their vendors, the said cultivators,’ and that the
Board misconstrued the rules and was in error in refusing
the refund to them. A learned Single Judge of the High
Court held that under r. 9(c) a declaration had to be made
if the goods were intended for consumption or use within the
municipal area or if they were intended for immediate
export. He observed that r. 9, however, did not ’provide
for any such declaration if the goods brought into the
municipal area were intended for sale. He then observed
that s. 27 dealt with refund of octroi on the exportation of
dutiable goods outside the municipal limits and the exporter
thereunder was entitled to a refund of 7/8th of the duty
paid on such goods. He held that the duty having admittedly
been paid on such goods by the said cultivators and
respondents 1 and 2 having purchased and exported those very
goods, they were entitled to the refund. On this basis he
quashed the orders of the Deputy Commissioner and the Board
and allowed the writ petition. In the Letters Patent appeal
filed by the appellant Committee, a division bench of that
High Court agreed with the Single Judge on his construction
of r. 27 but as the Board had considered only one question,
namely, whether respondents 1 and 2 not having themselves
paid the duty were not entitled to claim the refund,
remanded the case for dealing with the rest of the
questions. On remand to the Board, the Committee contended,
(1) that respondents 1 and 2 had to establish that duty was
paid on the said goods when they, were imported into the
municipal area; and (2) that they ’had also to produce the
receipts of payment of such duty and that without doing so
they were not entitled to the refund. The Board rejected
the contention and held on the strength of rr. 42 and 43 of
the said Rules that except in the case of cloth or goods
produced or manufactured within the municipal area, no proof
by the person claiming refund of duty paid on importation
was required and that such payment would be presumed in the
case of goods other than the two aforesaid kinds of goods.
The Board further held that r. 27 also did not lay down that
the person who has exported the goods had to prove payment
of octroi on those goods when they entered the area. The
Board on this interpretation allowed the revision
application of respondents 1 and 2 and set aside the orders
of the Committee and the Deputy Commissioner and directed
payment of the refund. The Municipal Committee thereupon
filed a writ petition in the High Court for quashing the
Board’s order contending once again that no octroi duty had
been paid on the said foodgrains. The High Court rejected
this contention in view of the admission made by
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the Committee before the Deputy Commissioner, the Board and
the High Court in earlier proceedings that the goods
exported by respondents 1 and 2 were duty paid. The High
Court held that in view of those admissions the Committee
could not require respondents 1 and 2 to produce the
receipts to prove payment of the duty, apart from the fact
that the rules did not require a claimant who had exported
dutiable goods to produce receipts of payment of duty. The
High Court further held that it was clear from rr. 28 and 29
that the amount of refund is to be determined from the
quantity of foodgrains exported or from their value and,
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therefore, even for determining the amount of refund
production of receipts by such a claimant was not necessary
nor was such production required by rr. 42 and 43 except, as
aforesaid, in the case of two categories of goods, viz.,
cloth and articles produced or manufactured within the
municipal area. The High Court held that that being the
position and there being no dispute as to the fact that the
goods in question were duty paid and those very goods had
been exported,, there was nothing in the rules which barred
respondents 1 and 2 from recovering 7/8th of the duty paid
on those goods. The High Court dismissed the writ petition.
The Committee then filed a review petition before the High
Court on the ground that it had not considered in its
judgment its contention based on rr. 35 to 38 urged before
it, The contention was that compliance of those rules by
respondents 1 and 2 was a condition precedent to their being
entitled to the refund. The High Court conceded in its
judgment on the review petition that the said point was
urged before it but observed that it did not deal with it as
during the hearing of the writ petition it was pointed out
to the counsel for the Committee that there was no substance
in it. According to the High Court, rr. 35 to 37 did not
require any compliance by respondents 1 and 2 as they dealt
with matters to be done by the Octroi Superintendent and the
Muharrir at the exit post when an application for refund is
made by a person exporting the goods out of municipal limits
and that the fact that respondents 1 and 2 did not present
the challan at such exit post, did not debar them under the
’rules from claiming the refund. The review petition on
this ground was, therefore, rejected. Aggrieved by the
dismissal of its writ petition, the appellant Committee
obtained special leave from this Court and filed this
appeal.
In view of the aforesaid decision of the Board and the High
Court in the earlier stages of this litigation, most of the
contentions raised by the Committee justifying its refusal
to refund have by now been concluded. It cannot now be
disputed (1) that respondents 1 and 2 had purchased
foodgrains from the cultivators who had imported them into
the municipal area for sale; (2) that those cultivators had
at that time paid the duty on those food;up.
Sup. C. I./68-12
170
gains; and (3) that respondents 1 and 2 had exported the
identical goods by rail.
Counsel for the Committee, however, urged that the view
taken by the High Court was erroneous and that if the rules
regarding refund were read together, it would be clear that
a person claiming refund would not be entitled to it unless
he has followed the procedure thereunder prescribed. To
appreciate this contention it would be necessary to turn to
those rules. The rules dealing with refund of octroi are
rr. 27 to 43. Rule 27 provides that on exportation of
dutiable goods outside the municipal limits an exporter
shall be entitled to a refund equal to 7/8th of the duty
paid on them at the time of their import. We do not detain
ourselves on the proviso to this rule as it is not relevant
for the purposes of this appeal. The object of r. 27 is
clear, viz., that in case of dutiable goods, the Committee
has to refund to the person who has exported them 7/8th of
the duty paid thereon at the time when they were brought
into the municipal limits. The rule does not require such
an exporter to produce receipts of payment of duty levied at
the time of their entry. Obviously, the Committee was wrong
in insisting upon respondents 1 and 2 to produce receipts
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before they could be granted the refund, nor could it
justify its demand that respondents 1 and 2 should prove
that duty had been paid on the said goods at the time of
their entry as the rule does not lay down any such
obligation on the exporter. Rules 28 to 33 are not relevant
and need not, therefore, be set out. Rule 34 provides that
an application for refund is to be made in the prescribed
form and that.the exporter after filling in the particulars
has to present his application at the office appointed for
that purpose. Rules 35 to 39 provide an elaborate procedure
to be followed at the time of exportation. Rule 35 provides
that on receipt of an application for refund, the Octroi
Officer must, satisfy himself that the goods brought for
export agree with those mentioned in the application and if
satisfied, he must prepare a challan showing the amount of
refund and hand it over to the exporter who then shall take
the goods beyond the municipal limits. Under r. 36, the
exporter has to present the challan in which the refund
amount is calculated at the exit post within the time
prescribed which shall not exceed twelve hours from the
examination of the goods under r. 35 to their exportation.
Under r. 37, the Muharrir has to check the goods at the exit
post and ascertain that the goods agreed with those
mentioned in the chalIan and then issue a certificate to the
exporter on which the refund would be paid to him. Rule 38
provides that where the goods are not presented at the out-
post as provided by r. 35, the exporter may get them
verified by the officer who would then make an endorsement
on the application and on such endorsement made the exporter
would get the refund’. Under r. 39 when goods are
171
exported by rail, the exporter has to produce the railway
receipt as well as the refund challan bearing the
certificate of the Muharrir at the exit post.
It is clear from rr. 35 to 39 that they lay down the
procedure for claiming refund. Counsel for the Committee,
therefore, appears to be right in his contention that an
exporter desiring to claim refund has to make his
application at the time of exportation of the goods and in
the manner prescribed in these rules. It appears also that
there is considerable force in his contention ,that rr. 42
and 43 deal with only two categories of goods, viz., cloth
and articles locally produced or manufactured and that r. 43
is confined to those two kinds of goods only and, therefore,
when it provides that no further proof of duty having been
paid on them is required, it means that no proof of such
payment other than the one mentioned in r. 42 would be
needed in respect of the said two categories of goods. In
our view, r. 43 has to be read in the context of r. 42 and
must, therefore, be read to mean that no further proof of
payment other than the one mentioned in r. 42 would be
required to respect of those two classes of goods and,
therefore, r. 43 does not apply to other kinds of goods.
The reason is that if r. 43 is read in the manner in which
the High Court has read it, it would render rr. 35 to 39
totally nugatory, a construction which a court having to
construe these rules, would be loath to adopt.
It would seem, therefore, that these rules do provide a
procedure which an exporter wishing to claim refund has to
follow. But the question is whether in a case where an-
exporter has not done so, is he disentitled from claiming
the refund ? The real difficulty in the way of the appellant
Committee is that though the rules lay down a procedure
which such an applicant has to follow, they do not provide
at the same time that an applicant for refund who has failed
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to follow the procedure laid down in rr. 35 to 39 would be
disentitled to claim the refund. In the. absence of such a
provision coupled with the categorical language of r. 27
giving a right to an exporter of dutiable goods to claim
7/8th of the duty paid on such goods on their import, it
becomes difficult to uphold the denial by the appellant
Committee of the right of respondents 1 and 2 to such a
refund. We are, therefore, of the opinion that in the
present state of the rules, the appeal must fail though for
reasons different from those given by the Board of Revenue
and the High Court.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed,
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