Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GARDEN SILK MILLS LTD. & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/09/1999
BENCH:
R.P.Sethi, B.N.Kripal, A.P.Misra
JUDGMENT:
KIRPAL,J.
The main question which arises in all these appeals by
special leave is whether while assessing customs duty
payable in respect of imported goods, the customs
authorities can add/include landing charges in arriving at
the value of those goods. The facts which are relevant for
deciding the issue are similar. For the sake of convenience
we will refer to the facts in the case of Garden Silk Mills
Limited in greater detail.
The appellants in these appeals had imported polyester
yarn from abroad. The transactions for sale and purchase
between the foreign supplier and the appellant company were
in the nature of CIF contracts i.e. price included costs,
insurance and freight charges. These contracts normally
provide CIF price for the port of discharge. It is not in
dispute that under a CIF contract the price which was paid
included not only the cost of the goods but also the
insurance and freight charges.
The customs authorities, in determining the value of
the goods for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of duty
payable, added to the CIF price the landing charges which
were paid to the Port Trust Authorities. On the payment of
the customs duty being made, the goods were cleared and used
by the appellants.
The appellant company then filed writ petitions in the
High Court of Gujarat, inter alia, contending that the
landing charges which were paid at the rate ¾% of the CIF
value of goods had been wrongly added while arriving at the
assessable value of those goods and, therefore, the High
Court should direct a refund of Rs. 69030.60 which was the
amount of duty relatable to the landing charges. The High
Court came to the conclusion that the Customs Authorities
had rightly added the landing charges to the CIF value of
the goods for the purpose of determining the customs duty
and, therefore, no refund was due to the appellants. Hence,
these appeals by special leave.
Section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) provides for the levy of duty of
customs on the goods imported into or exported from India at
such rates as may be specified under the Customs Tariffs
Act, 1975. Prior to its amendment in 1988, Section 14 of
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the Act read as follows:
14. Valuation of goods for purposes of assessment.
(1) For the purposes of Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51
of 1975), or any other law for the time being in force
whereunder a duty of customs is chargeable on any goods by
reference to their value, the value of such goods shall be
deemed to be:
(a) the price at which such or like goods are
ordinarily sold, or offered for sale, for delivery at the
time and place of importation or exportation, as the case
may be, in the course of international trade, where the
seller and the buyer have no interest in the business of
each other and the price is the sole consideration for the
sale or offer for sale.
Provided that such price shall be calculated with
reference to the rate of exchange as in force on the date of
which a bill of entry is presented under Section 46, or a
shipping bill or bill of export, as the case may be, is
presented under Section 50.
(b) Where such price is not ascertainable, the nearest
ascertainable equivalent thereof determined in accordance
with the rules made in this behalf.
By an amendment in 1988, a new provision sub-section
(1A) has been incorporated in Section 14, after deleting
clause (b) of sub-section 1. The new sub-section (1A)
stipulates that subject to the provisions of sub-section 1,
the price referred to in that sub-section in respect of
imported goods shall be determined in accordance with the
rules made in this behalf. Pursuant thereto Customs
Valuation (Determination of Price of Imported Goods) Rules
1988 have been framed. Post 1988, therefore, the value of
the imported goods has to be determined in accordance with
the rules which, according to the respondents, are based on
the GATT Valuation Code (also called Article VII of the
General Agreement on Tariff and Trade) which was adopted in
1979. With these Rules, however, we are not concerned in
the present case because all the goods were imported prior
to the incorporation of sub-section (1A) of Section 14 of
the Act.
On behalf of the appellants it was contended that
under Section 12 of the Act the duty was leviable on goods
imported into India and the value of the goods must be fixed
at the time and place of importation. In the case of C.I.F.
contracts, it was contended that the contracts reflect the
price for sale in the course of international trade and for
delivery at the time and place of importation, which, in the
case of appellants, was Bombay. The expressions time and
the place of importation must be understood in an ordinary
sense. In commercial world and in international trade, time
and place of importation could only mean (a) the date of
import and (b) the place of import i.e. port of import. It
was submitted that place of importation could not mean
wharf, dock, port, quays or the customs barrier. Similarly
the expression delivery, it was contended, had to be
construed in ordinary sense which, in the case of C.I.F.
contracts, would mean the port of discharge i.e. Bombay and
not the wharf at the port of Bombay. According to the
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appellants the words for delivery at the time and place of
importation occurring in Section 14 of the Act could only
mean delivery on the date and the port of discharge and the
price must, therefore, be an ordinarily available price at
about the same time and place of discharge. It could not be
a price anterior or posterior to the point of time when the
goods arrived and, therefore, landing charges which are
levied after the delivery of the goods could not be imposed.
Our attention was also invited to Sections 2(23) and 2(27)
of the Act which read as follows:
2(23) import with its grammatical variations and
cognate expressions, means into India from a place outside
India;
2(27) India includes the territorial waters of
India.
A submission was sought to be raised that reading
Section 12 of the Act with Sections 2(23) and 2(27), the
import of goods into India would be completed when they
enter the territorial waters of India and it is the value at
that point of time which alone can be taken into
consideration for the purposes of assessing the customs
duty. If this be so the question of there being any
addition of landing charges to the C.I.F. value can under
no circumstances arise because landing charges are levied in
relation to goods after they have been off-loaded from the
ship.
On a careful analysis it is evident that the
principles of valuation incorporated in Section 14(1) (a) of
the Act therein show that:
a) the price is a deemed price; b) at which such or
like goods are ordinarily sold or offered for sale; c) for
delivery at the time and the place of importation or
exportation; d) in the course of international trade; e)
where the seller and the buyer have no interest in the
business of each other and f) the price is the sole
consideration for the sale or offer for sale.
This Section clearly indicates that it is not the
price stated in the CIF contract which alone is to be
accepted as being the value of such goods for the purpose of
Section 14 of the Act. The said Section requires
determination of the value of the imported goods. The
appellants are right in contending that this is a deeming
provision. The value of such goods is to be deemed to be
the price at which such goods are ordinarily sold, or
offered for sale, for delivery at the time and place of
importation in the course of international trade, where the
seller and the buyer have no interest in the business of
each other and the price is the sole consideration for the
sale or offer for sale. The price of the imported goods, in
other words, has to be determined in respect of import of
those goods for delivery at the time and place of
importation. It appears to us that the word delivery must
necessarily mean the point of time when the goods can be
physically delivered to the importer. In other words,
delivery and discharge are not synonymous. As we shall
presently see, merely by the shipper discharging the goods
at the port of import does not ipso facto give the importer
a right to take the delivery thereof.
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Chapter VI of the Act contains the provisions relating
to conveyances carrying imported or exported goods. Chapter
VII of the Act contains provisions regarding the clearance
of imported goods and export goods. Reading the provisions
contained in the said chapters, it becomes apparent that all
goods carried by vessel or aircraft entering from any place
outside India has to land the goods at a customs port or
customs airport and that too with the permission of the
Customs Officer (Section 29). The import manifest of the
vessel is required to be delivered to the Customs Officer in
terms of Section 30. Unloading of imported goods can take
place only after the import manifest has been delivered and
an order permitting entry inwards of the vessel has been
given by the Customs Officer in terms of Section 31.
Section 32 provides that un- loading of only those goods is
permitted as are mentioned in import manifest. The goods
are to be un-loaded as per Section 33 only at the place
which is approved for that purpose and the same cannot be
un- loaded except under the supervision of the Customs
Officer (Section 34).
All imported goods unloaded in a customs area are
required to remain under the customs authorities until they
are cleared for home consumption or are warehoused or are
transshipped (Section 45). The goods can be cleared by the
importer only after, as provided by Section 46, the importer
files a bill of entry for home consumption or warehousing
pursuant to which clearance of goods is granted under
Section 47 by the Customs Officer. This clearance is given
after the officer is, inter alia, satisfied that the
importer has paid the import duty assessed on the imported
goods.
The aforesaid provisions of the Act , therefore,
clearly show that after the imported goods are discharged
from the vessel at the wharf the importer cannot immediately
take delivery thereof. The imported goods remain in the
custody of the Port Trust Authorities till they are, inter
alia, cleared for home consumption. This being the position
the goods cannot be cleared and delivery taken without their
being valued and assessed and, thereafter, duty being paid.
Section 14 of the Act provides that the value of the goods
shall be deemed to be the price of the goods for the
delivery at the time and place of importation in the course
of international trade. The value has to be determined with
relation to the time when physical delivery to the importer
can take place. Physical delivery can take place only after
the bill of entry, inter alia, for home consumption is filed
and it is the value at that point of time which would be
relevant. It is evident that there normally will be some
lapse of time between the time when the shipper discharges
the goods and the time when the bill of entry is filed. The
landing charges, which are imposed at or after the time of
the discharge of the goods and prior to the clearance being
granted under Section 47 of the Act, necessarily have to be
an element which have to be taken into account in
determining the value thereof for the purpose of assessing
the customs duty which would be chargeable.
Section 14 is a deeming provision. The legislative
intent is clear that the actual price of the imported goods,
namely the landing cost, cannot alone be regarded as the
value for the purpose of calculating the duty. If the
submission of the learned Counsel for the appellants is
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correct namely that the C.I.F. price represents the value
of the imported goods, then the Section 14 would have been
differently worded. It could, for instance, have easily
been stated that the value of the imported goods would be
the transaction value of the goods. The language of Section
14 clearly indicates that though the transaction value may
be a relevant consideration, the value for the purpose of
Customs duty will have to be determined by the Customs
Authorities which value can be more, and at times even less,
than what is indicated in the documents of purchase or sale.
The question as to whether the import is completed
when the goods entered the territorial waters and it is the
value at that point of time which is to be taken into
consideration is no longer res integra. This contention was
raised in Union of India Vs. Apar Industires Limited, 1999
(5) J.T. 160. In that case the day when the goods entered
the territorial waters, the rate of duty was nil but when
they were removed from the warehouse, the duty had become
leviable. The contention which was sought to be raised was
that what is material is the day when the goods had entered
the territorial waters because by virtue of Section 2(23)
read with Section 2(27) the import into India had taken
place when the goods entered the territorial waters.
Following the decision of this Court in Bharat Surfactants
(M/s) (Private) Ltd. and Another Vs. Union of India and
Another, 1989(4) SCC 21 and Dhiraj Lal H. Vohra and Others
Vs. Union of India and Others, 1993 (Supp. 3) SCC 453,
this Court came to the conclusion in Apars Private Limited
case that the duty has to be paid with reference to the
relevant date as mentioned in Section 15 of the Act.
It was further submitted that in the case of Apars
Private Limited this Court was concerned with Sections 14
and 15 but here we have to construe the word imported
occurring in Section 12 and this can only mean that the
moment goods have entered the territorial waters, the import
is complete. We do not agree with the submission. This
Court in its opinion in Re. The Bill to Amend Section 20 of
the Sea Customs Act, 1878 and Section 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944, 1964 (3) SCR 787 at page 823
observed as follows:
Truly speaking, the imposition of an import duty, by
and large, results in a condition which must be fulfilled
before the goods can be brought inside the customs barriers
i.e. before they form part of the mass of goods within the
country.
It would appear to us that the import of goods into
India would commence when the same cross into the
territorial waters but continues and is completed when the
goods become part of the mass of goods within the country;
the taxable event being reached at the time when the goods
reach the customs barriers and the bill of entry for home
consumption is filed.
It was submitted by the learned counsel for the
appellants that in actual effect in the case of CIF
contracts like the present, it is the shipper who pays the
landing charges and the Indian importer does not incur these
expenses in addition to what he has paid on the basis of the
CIF contract. In other words the submission was that the
landing charges are already included in the CIF value of the
goods as they form part of the freight paid to the steamer
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agent and the said charges are recovered by the Port Trust
authorities directly from the steamer agents and, therefore,
a second inclusion of such landing charges by loading a flat
percentage of the CIF value is uncalled for. In this
connection, reliance was placed on clause 15 of the terms
and conditions of a sample of a Bill of Lading which deals
with loading, discharge and delivery and reads as under:
any expenses, costs, dues and other charges which
incur before loading and after discharge of the goods shall
be borne by the Merchant.
Learned Additional Solicitor General is correct in
submitting that the aforesaid clause 15 does not in any way
indicate that the CIF value includes therein the charges
levied by the Port Trust Authorities after the discharge of
the goods. It is difficult to imagine that at the time when
the contract is entered into, and the CIF price is fixed, as
to how the parties could envisage as to what the port
charges at the destination are likely to be. It does appear
that any expense which is incurred with regard to the
loading or un-loading of the goods to and from the ship
would be included in the CIF price paid by the importer.
But there is nothing on record to show that in actual effect
landing charges were collected by the Port Trust Authorities
from the shipper. No document in this regard showing the
discharge of such a liability by the shipper to the Port
Trust Authorities has been produced. There can be little
doubt that if the importer is able to establish that the
obligation to pay the landing charges was on the seller or
by the shipping agent, and not by the buyer, and the said
charges have infact been paid to the Port Trust Authorities
not by or on behalf of the importer, then the importer can
claim that the landing charges should not once again be
added to the price because in such an event, where payment
is made of landing charges by the seller or the shipper, the
CIF price must be regarded as including the said landing
charges. There is however, in these cases, no factual basis
for contending that the landing charges were included in the
CIF price and, consequently the said obligation was
discharged not by the importer or by its agent but by the
seller or the shipper.
It is also submitted on behalf of the appellants that
onus of proving that the transaction value does not
represent the value for the purposes of Section 14 of the
Act and that it has to be loaded with any other elements
such as landing charges, is on the Department. We are
unable to agree with the submission. The value at which the
goods are to be assessed is indicated by the importer when
he makes a declaration while submitting a bill of entry
under Section 46 of the Act. Once, we come to the
conclusion that the landing charges would be included in the
determining of the value of the goods imported then the onus
has to be on the importer to show that the price indicated
in the CIF contract includes therein this element of landing
charges. If such an element is included in the CIF
contract, that would be within the knowledge of the importer
and the Department cannot be asked to prove the negative,
namely that the CIF contract does not include therein the
element of landing charges.
It was contended that legal fictions are created only
for some definite purposes and here the purpose is to take
the transaction value in international trade as the basis
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for valuation. Therefore, whichever view is taken of
Section 14(1) (a) of the Act, it should be limited to the
purpose the legislation makers had in view when they
incorporated it. It was further submitted that in the
present case the fiction was clearly limited to the
parameters provided in Section 14(1)(a) (ordinary price in
international trade at the time and place of importation)
and cannot be extended further to be settled with elements
like landing charges. Once that is done, the whole purpose
of legal fiction stands defeated and, therefore, landing
charges cannot form part of the value of goods for
assessment.
We do not agree with the aforesaid submission because
what has to be arrived at is a deemed price in the manner
indicated in the said Section. In determining this deemed
price in international trade the element of port charges
which have to be borne by the importer, in addition to the
CIF value, before the goods can be cleared for human
consumption must necessarily form a part or an element of
the value. The said Section does not accept as final the
price fixed by the purchaser and the seller in the course of
international trade as reflected in the CIF contract but it
requires determination of value by the customs authorities
in the manner indicated therein. What has to be seen is the
value or cost of the imported articles at the time of
importation i.e. at the time when they reach the customs
barrier. Landing charges which have to be paid to the Port
Trust must, therefore, be taken into consideration while
determining the value of the imported goods for the purpose
of assessment of duty. It is only if the importer
establishes that the obligation to pay the landing charges
is on the seller and not on the importer and that the seller
or his agent has, in fact, paid the said landing charges to
the Port Trust Authorities, that the importer can claim that
the landing charges should not be again added to the price.
In none of the cases before us has it been found by any fact
finding authority, even in cases of CIF contracts, that the
Port Trust Authorities did receive the landing charges from
the shipper or the foreign seller and that the said charges
were included in the CIF contract.
We notice that various High Courts in India since 1982
have held that for the purpose of arriving at the value at
which goods are delivered to the buyer at the time and place
of importation into India, the concept of value as
understood in Section 14 of the Act necessarily requires the
landing charges to be included in the value. These
decisions are:
a) 1982(10) ELT 203 (Gujarat High Court) Prabhat
Cotton and Silk Mills Vs. Union of India judgment dated
9.3.1982. b) 1983(12) ELT 258 (Delhi High Court) Super
Traders and Anr. Vs. Union of India and Others, judgment
dated 23.9.1982, followed by another judgment in 1983(12)
ELT 661 (Delhi High Court) in Bhartiya Plastic Udyog Vs.
Union of India, judgment dated 7.1.1983. c) 1984(18) ELT
235 (Punjab and Haryana High Court) Oswal Woolen Mills Ltd.
Vs. Union of India, judgment dated 22.2.1983. d) 1985(35)
ELT 280 (Calcutta High Court) Govind Ram Agarwal Vs.
Collector of Customs, Calcutta, judgment dated 21.1.1985.
e) 1986(24) ELT 456 (Karnataka High Court) B.S. Kamath &
Co. Vs. Union of India, judgment dated 12.3.1986. f)
1987(32) ELT 2263 (Bombay High Court) Ashok Traders vs.
Union of India, judgment dated 9.10.1987 followed by another
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judgment in 1992 (57) ELT 221 (Bombay High Court) in Ceat
Tyres Vs. Union of India. g) 1988 (37) ELT 327 (Andhra
Pradesh High Court) Barium Chemicals Ltd. Vs. Union of
India, judgment dated 4.12.1987. h) 1994(69) ELT 4 (Madras
High Court) Shri Ram Fibres Ltd. Vs. Union of India,
judgment dated 5.8.1993.
In our opinion these decisions have correctly
interpreted the relevant provisions of the Customs Act and
the submissions on behalf of appellants cannot be accepted.
For the aforesaid reasons, we do not find any merit in
the contentions of the appellants and, in our opinion,
landing charges were rightly taken into consideration in
determining the assessable value of the imported goods for
the purposes of Section 14(1)(a) of the Act. There being no
other point for consideration, Civil Appeal Nos. 2976 of
1991 and 2674 of 1982 are accordingly dismissed.
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 8459-60, 8864, 8865, 8866, 11897 OF
1983 AND 7675 OF 1996
The only contention raised in these appeals by Mr. J.
Vellapally, Sr. Advocate related to the addition of the
landing charges to the CIF value for the purpose of
determining the assessable value under Section 14(1)(a) of
the Act. The emphasis of the learned counsel was that in
the case of CIF contract the freight which is paid included
the landing cost and, therefore, the same cannot be added
once again to the CIF value.
As we have already indicated earlier, it is a question
of fact whether landing cost was included in the freight
which was paid by the importer in the case of a CIF
contract. There is nothing on record to indicate that in
actual effect the landing cost was paid to the Post Trust
Authorities by the shipper or the seller or their agents out
of the freight which had been paid by the importer as a part
of CIF price. Even if landing and delivery is the
responsibility of shipper, it appears to us that the landing
charges are demanded after the goods have been discharged
from the vessel and it is not correct to state that the
discharge of the goods from the vessel is synonymous with
the landing and delivery of the goods to the buyer. These
appeals are also, accordingly, dismissed.
C.A. NOS. 7352 OF 1983 AND 4216-26 OF 1995
The only question, in these appeals, related to
landing charges. In view of the aforesaid discussion, we do
not find any merit in this contention and the appeals are,
accordingly, dismissed.
C.A. NOS. 3070-75 OF 1989
Addition of landing charges is the only question
raised in these appeals. For the reasons stated
hereinabove, we do not find any merit in this submission
and, therefore, these appeals are dismissed.
WRIT PETITION NOS. 7221-23 AND 7295 OF 1982
The only contention raised in these petitions pertains
to the addition of landing charges. For the reasons stated
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hereinabove, we do not find any merit in this submission
and, therefore, these petitions are dismissed.
WRIT PETITION © NOS. 7224, 7296 OF 1982 AND 40 OF
1983
The only contention raised in these petitions pertains
to the addition of landing charges. For the reasons stated
hereinabove, we do not find any merit in this submission
and, accordingly, these petitions are dismissed.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2902 OF 1991
The only contention raised in this appeal pertains to
the levy and addition of landing charges. For the reasons
stated hereinabove, we do not find any merit in this
submission and, therefore, this appeal is dismissed.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. OF 1999 ARISING OUT OF SPECIAL LEAVE
PETITION © NO. 4120 OF 1989
Special leave granted. Three contentions were urged
in this appeal. The first was whether landing charges can
be included for determining the assessable value of imported
goods under Section 14 of the Act. In view of the foregoing
discussion, it is clear that the charges paid to the Port
Trust Authorities prior to the clearance of goods would be
included in determining the assessable value and, therefore,
this contention is rejected.
The second contention was whether Section 3(a) of the
Customs Tariff Act is ultra virus of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India and/or whether the customs authorities
are correct in charging additional duty on the sum total of
assessable value, basic customs duty and auxiliary duty,
instead of only on additional duty. In the case of Jain
Brothers Vs. Union of India, 1999(112) E.L.T. 5 (S.C.), a
similar contention was not accepted and it was held that the
said provision is valid.
The third contention was that the appellant had
imported consignment of HDPE Blow moulding Grade from M/s.
Inter Trade, Yugoslavia. The total invoice price of the
consignment was US $ 830 per M.T. The said invoice price
also included in it the cost of packing materials. The cost
of packing materials was US $ 40 per M.T. The appellant
claimed benefit of exemption from customs duty on the value
of packages in terms of Notification No. 184/76-Cus; dated
2.8.76.
The High Court dis-allowed the aforesaid benefit on
the ground that the effect of aforesaid notification was not
to exclude the value of packages from the total assessable
value of the imported goods (which includes the value of the
packages as the invoice value includes the value of the
packages) but to exempt the levy of duty on the packages
separately, since in law these are two separate imposts one
on the value of the contents (which is the invoice value and
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which includes the value of packages) at the rate applicable
to the contents and the other on the value of the package
itself. This question now stands concluded with the
judgment of this court in the case of Hind Plastics Vs.
Collector of Customs [1994 (71) ELT 325] wherein this very
notification had been construed and it was held that this
notification as well as Section 14 did not contemplate
deduction of value of packages from the invoice value. This
contention of the appellant cannot, therefore, be accepted.
For the aforesaid reasons this appeal is accordingly
dismissed.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 3381 OF 1991
Three contentions were raised. The first was whether
landing charges could be included for determining the
assessable value of imported goods under Section 14 of the
Act. In view of the foregoing discussion, this contention
of the appellants is rejected.
The second contention related to the validity of
Section 3(a) of the Customs Tariff Act. In view of the
decision of this Court in Jain Brothers case, this issue has
been decided against the appellants.
The third contention related to the claim for
exemption by virtue of Notification No. 184/76-Cus dated
2.8.1976 of customs duty and packing material. In view of
the decision of this Court in Hind Plastics case, this
submission of the appellants can also be not accepted. This
appeal is accordingly dismissed.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5974 OF 1994
In the written submissions filed on behalf of the
appellants it was stated that the appellants had filed a
declaration under the Kar Vivadh Samadhan cheme, 1998. The
Assistant Commissioner, Kar Vivadh Samadhan Scheme, Central
Excise, Mumbai had conveyed to the appellants that the
declaration is not based on the show cause notice or demand
notice prior to 31st March, 1998 and, therefore, the said
declaration was not tenable and was rejected. This letter
of March, 1999 has been challenged in the Writ Petition No.
2528 of 1999 in the Bombay High Court and the same is
pending in the High Court. In the written submissions it
was stated that either this appeal being C.A. No. 5974 of
1994 be kept pending or the same be heard after the disposal
of Writ Petition No. 2528 of 1999 by the Bombay High Court
or in the alternative, this Civil Appeal No. 5974 of 1994
may be allowed to be withdrawn. In our opinion, the latter
course is a preferable one and, therefore, Civil Appeal No.
5974 of 1994 is dismissed as withdrawn in view of the
pendency of the Writ Petition No. 2528 of 1999 before the
Bombay High Court.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5014 OF 1989
Three contentions were raised in this appeal. The
first was whether the countervailing duty at the rate of 42%
could be levied on the goods viz., Polyvinyl Alcohol
imported by the appellant or whether the appellant was
entitled to benefit of the exemption notification imposing a
duty of 10% as the Polyvinyl Alcohol imported is
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manufactured only from Vinyl Acetate Monomer.
This issue has to be decided against the appellant in
view of the decision of this Court in M/s. Motiram Tolaram
and Anr. Etc. etc. Vs. The Union of India and Anr.
[1999(4) Scale 666].
The second contention related to the landing charges
and the said contention cannot be accepted in view of our
discussion hereinabove.
The third contention related to value of packing
charges and the grant of benefit of exemption notification.
The same has to be rejected In view of the decision of this
Court in Hind Plastics case (supra). This appeal is,
accordingly, dismissed.
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 5983/83, 786/89, 788-90 OF 1989
The contentions, which were raised in these appeals
are a) vires of Section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act; (b)
demand of duty by including landing charges, © adding on of
customs duty for the purposes of assessing the
countervailing duty and (d) exemption of duty on the packing
material under Notification No. 184/76-Cus. Dated
2.8.1976.
For the reasons stated hereinabove none of these
contentions can be accepted and the appeals are,
consequently dismissed.
C.A. NOS. 3163/91, 8194/95 AND CIVIL APPEAL NO. /99
ARISING OUT OF S.L.P.© 9814 OF 1990
Leave granted in S.L.P. © No. 9814 of 1990. In view
of the discussion hereinabove, the contentions raised in the
above-said appeals cannot be accepted and the appeals are,
consequently dismissed.
Civil Appeal No.4082 of 1995
The only contention raised by the appellant before the
High Court related to the packing charges. For the reasons
stated hereinabove that contention must fail here also. As
no other ground was urged before the High Court the question
of the appellant being allowed to raise any additional
ground does not arise. The appeal is dismissed.
CONCLUSION
While Civil Appeal No. 5974 of 1994 is dismissed as
withdrawn, the other appeals and petitions are dismissed
with costs.