Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S HYDERABAD ASBESTOS CEMENT PRODUCTS & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/12/1999
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, R.C.Lahoti, N.S Hegde
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
C.A. No........../99 (Arising out of S.L.P.(C)
No.12722/87) --------------------------------------
Leave granted.
The appellants manufacture and sell asbestos cement
products such as sheets (corrugated or plain), pressure
pipes, couplings etc. These products require cement and
asbestos fibre as raw materials. Both the items consumed as
raw materials as also the finished products manufactured by
the appellants are all excisable commodities under different
tariff items. Asbestos fibre is covered by Tariff item 22-
F. Cement is covered by Tariff item 23. The finished
products manufactured by the appellants are excisable under
Tariff item 23-C. In respect of cement and asbestos fibre
obtained from outside excise duties were duly paid under the
relevant tariff items 23 and 22F. In respect of imported
asbestos additional duty, i.e., countervailing duty
equivalent to excise duty was paid. The finished products
of the appellants were not exempt from payment of excise
duty leviable thereon nor were they chargeable to nil rate
of duty. The appellants claimed the benefit of proforma
credit procedure by seeking credit for the payment of duty
paid on the inputs as against the duty payable on the
finished products and sought for permission of the Assistant
Collector of Central Excise, Hyderabad under Rule 56A of the
Central Excise Rules, 1944 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Rules’) framed under the provisions of the Central Excise
and Salt Act, 1944. The Assistant Collector refused to
grant such permission. An appeal preferred before the
Collector of Central Excise, Hyderabad failed. The
appellants challenged both the orders before the High Court
of Andhra Pradesh by filing writ petition under Article 226
of the Constitution which also has been dismissed. The
decision of the High Court under appeal is reported as 1987
(32) ELT 28 A.P. The High Court has for itself analysed and
examined the provisions of Rule 56A. The High Court has
also cited in its support a division bench decision of the
High Court of Gujarat in Digvijay Cement Company Limited Vs.
Union of India - 1986 (25) E.L.T. 879. The aggrieved
appellants have filed this special leave petition.
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The sole question arising for decision is whether the
benefit of proforma credit procedure specified in Rule 56A
(1) is available to the appellants though the raw materials
consumed by the appellants in their manufacture of the final
products are excisable under tariff items different from the
one under which their final products are excisable.
Rule 56A was introduced on 8.12.1962. It has
undergone several changes from time to time which have been
extensively noticed by the High Court of Gujarat in the case
of Digvijay Cement Company Ltd. (supra). The rule as it
stood at the relevant time reads as under:-
"56.A. Special procedure for movement of duty-paid
materials or component parts for use in the manufacture of
finished excisable goods---
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in these rules
the Central Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, specify the excisable goods in respect of which the
procedure laid down in sub-rule (2) shall apply.
(2) The Collector may, on application made in this
behalf and subject to the conditions mentioned in sub-rule
(3) and such other conditions as may from time to time be
prescribed by the Central Government, permit a manufacturer
of any excisable goods specified under sub-rule (1) to
receive, material or component parts or finished product
(like asbestos cement), on which the duty of excise or the
additional duty under Section 2A of the Indian Tariff Act,
1934 (32 of 1934), (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
countervailing duty), has been paid, in his factory for the
manufacture of these goods or for the more convenient
distribution of finished product and allow a credit of the
duty already paid on such material or component parts or
finished product, as the case may be;
Provided that no credit of duty shall be allowed in
respect of any material or component parts used in the
manufacture of finished excisable goods-
(i) if such finished excisable goods produced by the
manufacturer are exempted from the whole of the duty of
excise leviable thereon or are chargeable to nil rate of
duty, and
(ii) unless---
(a) duty has been paid for such material or component
parts under the same item or sub-item as the finished
excisable goods; or
(b) remission or adjustment of duty paid for such
material or component parts has been specifically sanctioned
by the Central Government;
Provided further that if the duty paid on such
material or component parts (of which credit has been
allowed under this sub-rule) be varied subsequently due to
any reason, resulting in payment of refund to, or recovery
of more duty from, the manufacturer or importer, as the case
may be, of such material or component parts, the credit
allowed shall be varied accordingly by adjustment in the
credit account maintained under sub-rule (3) or in the
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account-current maintained under sub-rule (3) or Rule 9 or
Rule 178(1) or, if such adjustment be not possible for any
reason, by cash recovery from or, as the case may be, refund
to the manufacturer availing of the procedure contained in
this rule."
Subsequently with effect from 1.8.1983 the rule has
undergone further changes which are not relevant for our
purpose.
A bare reading of the rule shows that the Central
Government has been empowered by sub-rule (1) to specify by
notification in the official gazette such excisable goods in
respect of which the benefit of proforma credit as provided
by sub-rule (2) can be taken. The excisable goods referred
to in sub-rule (1) are finished products. In order to claim
the benefit of the rule the conditions to be satisfied are:
(i) the finished product should be specified by the Central
Government by notification in the official gazette as the
excisable goods in respect of which the procedure laid down
in sub-rule (2) shall apply; (ii) an application must be
made by the assessee to the Collector in this behalf; (iii)
the material, component parts or finished products, the duty
or additional duty paid whereon may be availed for the
purpose of taking proforma credit, must not be used in the
manufacture of such finished excisable goods as are exempt
from the whole of the duty of excise leviable thereon or are
chargeable to nil rate of duty; and (iv) (a) the duty as
has been paid for such material or component parts must have
been so paid under the same item or sub item as the finished
excisable goods, or (b) if the raw material or component
parts are not excisable under the same item or sub-item as
the finished excisable goods, or in other words if such
material or component parts are excisable under an item or
sub-item other than the one under which the finished goods
are excisable then the Central Government should have
specifically sanctioned remission or adjustment of duty paid
for such material or component parts.
The controversy centres around the interpretation and
scope of proviso (ii) (b) of Rule 56A. The appellants’ plea
is that once the Central Government has notified the
excisable goods under sub-rule (1) the benefit of proforma
credit shall be available to the appellants without regard
to the fact whether or not the raw material or the component
parts are excisable under the same item or sub-item of
Tariff. The effect of benefit extended by the main part of
the Rule cannot be nullified or taken away by a proviso,
submitted the learned counsel for the appellants. The plea
so raised has not appealed to the High Court. We also find
no merit in the plea though it has been forcefully
reiterated before us.
The language of the rule is plain and simple. It does
not admit of any doubt in interpretation. Proviso (i) and
(ii) are separated by the use of conjunction ‘and’. They
have to be read conjointly. The requirement of both the
provisos has to be satisfied to avail the benefit. Clauses
(a) and (b) of proviso (ii) are separated by the use of an
‘or’and there the availability of one of the two
alternatives would suffice. Inasmuch as cement and asbestos
fibre used by the appellants in the manufacture of their
finished excisable goods are liable to duty under different
tariff items, the benefit of proforma credit extended by
Rule 56A cannot be availed of by the appellants and has been
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rightly denied by the authorities of the Department.
We are in no doubt that to avail the benefit of
proforma credit under Rule 56A the inputs which go to
manufacture the specified finished excisable goods must be
exigible to payment of duty under the same tariff item or
sub item; or else, if such inputs are exigible to tax under
different tariff items or sub-items then they must be
covered by the specific sanction of the Central Government
granting remission or adjustment of duty on those inputs as
provided by proviso (ii) (b). Admittedly there is no such
specific sanction. The raw materials consumed being
excisable under Tariff items different from the one under
which the finished products are excisable the appellants
have been rightly denied benefit of proforma credit.
We find ourselves in agreement with the view taken by
the High Court. The appeal is devoid of any merit. It is
dismissed though without any order as to the costs. C.A.
No.9159/96, C.A. Nos.2779-80/97 and SLP(C) No.13520/87.
For the same reasons these appeals and special leave
petition are also dismissed though without any order as to
the costs.