Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2762 of 2000
PETITIONER:
M/S.BRITISH AIRWAYS PLC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/11/2001
BENCH:
R.P. Sethi & Y.K. Sabharwal
JUDGMENT:
(With CA 2763, 3756/2000)
J U D G M E N T
SETHI,J.
The appellants are the aircraft carrier engaged in the business
of international air transport of passengers and cargo across various
countries. They are also operating in India under bilateral agreements
executed between the countries of their origin and India. Claiming
that as they are not the ’persons incharge’ of the aircraft, no
liability of shortages of off-loading the complete quantity of goods
can be imposed upon them in terms of Section 116 of the Customs Act,
1962 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act"). It is contended that once
the officer incharge of the aircraft is given a certificate under
Clause (e) of Sub-section (2) of Section 42 of the Act, the authorities
cannot re-open the issue. According to the appellants no penalty could
be imposed upon either the owner of the aircraft or the carrier as the
owner and the carrier cannot be deemed to be an agent of the person
incharge of the conveyance under Section 148 of the Act.
It appears that the aircrafts of the appellants unloaded their
cargo at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, Delhi. They were
issued show cause notices alleging that some of the packages airlifted
for India were found short and required from them as to why penalty as
detailed in the show cause notices be not imposed upon them. The
notices were appropriately replied disputing the facts stated therein
and pleading that show cause notices had been issued to wrong persons
because the appellants were not the ’person incharge’ of the
conveyance, liable to be dealt under Section 116 of the Act. It was
further contended that the deficient quantities noticed in the cargo at
the time of preparation of the segregation report were infact either
pilferaged at Delhi Aiport after the cargo had been unloaded from the
conveyance and before the preparation of the segregation report under
Section 45 of the Act or were not loaded on the conveyance at all. The
Assistant Commissioner of Customs was not satisfied with the reply
submitted to the show cause notice. The said appropriate authority
imposed the penalty on the appellant against which they filed appeals
before the Commissioner of Customs. On dismissal of their appeals by
the Commissioner of Customs (Appeals), they preferred further statutory
appeals before the Joint Secretary (Revenue) which were also dismissed.
Dissatisfied by the orders passed by the authorities under the Act, the
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appellants filed writ petitions in the High Court of Delhi which were
also dismissed vide the order impugned in these appeals.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellants has vehemently
argued that as his clients were not the "person incharge" within the
meaning of Section 2(31) of the Act and the person incharge had
obtained an order from the officer incharge in terms of Clause (e) of
sub-section (2) of Section 42 of the Act, no liability could be
fastened upon the appellants. Learned Attorney General for India who
appeared for the respondents drew our attention to Section 148 of the
Act and submitted that though strictly and technically speaking the
appellants were not the persons incharge, yet they were ’such persons’
as contemplated under sub-section (2) of Section 148 of the Act, liable
to penalty and pay for the price for the shortages in unloading of the
cargo.
In order to appreciate the rival contentions of the parties, a
reference may be made to various Sections of the Act which are relevant
for the purpose of determining the controversy in these appeals.
Section 2(31) of the Act defines "person incharge" to mean:
"(a) in relation to a vessel, the master of the vessel;
(b) in relation to an aircraft, the commander or pilot-
in-charge of the aircraft;
(c) in relation to a railway train, the conductor, guard
or other person having the chief direction of the
train;
(d) in relation to any other conveyance, the driver or
other person-in-charge of the conveyance."
Section 42 of the Act provides that the person incharge of a
conveyance, which has brought any imported goods or off-loaded at a
customs station shall not cause or permit the conveyance to depart from
that customs station until a written order to that effect has been
given by the proper officer. Clause (e) of sub-section(2) of Section
42 prescribes that no such order shall be given until the person in
charge of the conveyance has satisfied the proper officer that no
penalty is leviable on him under section 116 or the payment of any
penalty that may be levied upon him under that section has been secured
by such guarantee or deposit of such amount as the proper officer may
direct. Section 45 puts restrictions on custody and removal of the
imported goods. Section 116 of the Act provides:
"116. Penalty for not account for goods-- If any goods
loaded in a conveyance for importation into India, or any
goods transhipped under the provisions of this Act or
coastal goods carried in a conveyance, are not unloaded at
their place of destination in India, or if the quantity
unloaded is short of the quantity to be unloaded at that
destination, and if the failure to unload or the deficiency
is not accounted for to the satisfaction of the Deputy
Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of
Customs, the person-in-charge of the conveyance shall be
liable,--
(a) in the case of goods loaded in a conveyance for
importation into India or goods transhipped under the
provisions of this Act, to a penalty not exceeding
twice the amount of duty that would have been
chargeable on the goods not unloaded or the deficient
goods, as the case may be, had such goods been
imported;
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(b) in the case of coastal goods, to a penalty not
exceeding twice the amount of export duty that would
have been chargeable on the goods not unloaded or the
deficient goods, as the case may be, had such goods
been exported."
Section 148 of the Act, reads:
"148. Liability of agent provided by the person in charge
of a conveyance-- (1) Where this Act requires anything to
be done by the person in charge of a conveyance, it may be
done on his behalf by his agent.
(2) An agent appointed by the person in charge of a
conveyance and any person who represents himself to any
officer of customs as an agent of any such person in
charge, and is accepted as such by that officer, shall be
liable for the fulfilment in respect of the matter in
question of all obligations imposed on such person in
charge by or under this Act or any law for the time being
in force, and to penalties and confiscations which may be
incurred in respect of that matter."
It may be noticed that Sub-section (2) of Section 148 was
incorporated by way of an amendment. The Objects and Reasons for its
incorporation were notified in Gazette of India on 14.12.1962, Part-II,
S.2, Ext., P.368 as under:
"Clause 148. - Sub-clause (1) corresponds to the existing
Section 5.
Sub-clause (2) is a new provision which makes the agent
responsible for all the penalties and confiscations to
which the person-in-charge of a conveyance may be liable.
Since the person-in-charge of a conveyance has to leave
with the conveyance, it is necessary that his agent in
India should be made responsible for all the penalties and
confiscations."
While interpreting a statute the court should try to sustain its
validity and give such meaning to the provisions which advance the
object sought to be achieved by the enactment. The court cannot
approach the enactment with a view to pick holes or to search for
defects of drafting which make its working impossible. It is a
cardinal principle of construction of a statute that effort should be
made in construing the different provisions so that each provision will
have its play and in the event of any conflict a harmonious
construction should be given. The well-known principle of harmonious
construction is that effect shall be given to all the provisions and
for that any provision of the statute should be construed with
reference to the other provisions so as to make it workable. A
particular provision cannot be picked up and interpreted to defeat
another provision made in that behalf under the statute. It is the
duty of the court to make such construction of a statute which shall
suppress the mischief and advance the remedy. While interpreting a
statute the courts are required to keep in mind the consequences which
are likely to flow upon the intended interpretation.
The scheme of the Act provides that the cargo must be unloaded at
the place of intended destination and it should not be short of the
quantity. Where it is found that the cargo has not been unloaded at
the requisite destination or the deficiencies are not accounted for to
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the satisfaction of the authorities under the Act, the person incharge
of the conveyance shall be liable in terms of Section 116 of the Act.
Besides the person incharge of the conveyance, the liability could be
fastened upon his agent appointed under the Act or a person
representing the officer incharge who has accepted as such by the
officer concerned for the purposes of dealing with the cargo on his
(officer-in-charge) behalf. Assuming that the appellants are neither
the officer incharge within the meaning of Section 2(31) of the Act nor
his agent, it cannot be denied that they shall be deemed to be a person
representing the officer incharge to the officers of the customs as his
agent for the purposes of dealing with the cargo off-loaded from the
aircraft of the appellants carrier.
It is found from the record that the mechanism of unloading and
accounting of the cargo prevalent at the airport is that on arrival of
the aircraft the carrier Airlines are not unloading the package and
accounting the same airway bill wise as manifested in the cargo
manifest. They bring out cargo in pallets and ULDs which contains many
number of packages relating to number of Master Airways Bill and House
Airways Bills. Thereafter they carry the pallets and the ULDs by their
transport to the cargo terminal for handing over to the Airport
Authority of India (the custodian). At this stage pallets and ULDs are
opened and packages relating to each Master Airway Bill & House Airway
Bill are unloaded to the ground and handed over to the custodian by the
representatives of the airlines. At this stage the airlines tally the
goods with the cargo manifest and a segregation report is prepared
indicating the account of cargo handed over by the airlines. Any
discrepancy in number of packages not handed over as found short
against a particular airway bill or the package if found in damaged
condition is recorded. The segregation report is jointly signed by the
airlines, AAI and the customs. Before this stage the custodian have no
mechanism to know as to how many packages are contained in the pallets
and ULDs and as to whether they relate to cargo manifest or not. In
such circumstance custody cannot be passed on to a custodian unless a
person carrying the goods hands over by identifying to a document of
account. The segregation report prepared by the airlines and the
custodian is the document of accounting for the goods carried by the
carrier and passing on the custody by the carrier to the custodian.
The process of unloading is completed only when the cargo carried by
the carrier airlines are put on the ground and handed over to the
custodian accounting each package to an airway bill in conformity with
the cargo manifest. Till then the cargo remains in possession and
control of the carrier airlines and they all along have to keep the
safety of the goods. If any loss or pilferage takes place prior to the
handing over of the cargo to the custodian the goods cannot be taken as
accounted for by the carrier. The process of unloading and accounting
of the cargo clearly and unambiguously shows that the goods are handed
over by such persons who are the representatives of the carrier and
represent themselves as an agent of the "person incharge" of the
conveyance. It is undisputed that such person who represent themselves
as agent of the officer incharge of the conveyance are accepted as such
by the officers of the respondents dealing with the carrier.
All the authorities under the Act have found on facts that the
cargo was being dealt with by the representatives of the officer
incharge of the conveyance which was owned and are possessed by the
appellants. The appellants have tried to take shelter under the
technicalities of law to avoid their liability without disputing the
fact that packages or quantities in the packages were found short.
Accepting the submission of the appellants that after the
issuance of an order under Section 42 of the Act no proceedings could
be initiated against the officer incharge of the carrier would amount
to negating the working of the Act and defeating the object sought to
be achieved by it. Sections 42 and 116 of the Act are distinct as they
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deal with different contingencies. Whereas Section 42 puts the
restriction that no conveyance shall be permitted to depart from the
customs station until a written order to that effect is given by the
proper officer under sub-section (2) of it, Section 116 deals with the
penalty for not accounting for goods unloaded at the intended
destination. The purpose of Section 42 is to not detain the conveyance
unnecessarily and pass an order for its departure on prima facie
satisfaction that the person incharge of the conveyance has unloaded
the goods which apparently do not show the levy of a penalty under
Section 116 of the Act. Even after compliance of the provisions of
Section 42 if it is found that the goods unloaded are short of
quantity, the Designated Officer under Section 116 of the Act can
proceed with the matter and impose penalty after following the
procedure prescribed under the Act. The officers contemplated under
Sections 42 and 116 are different authorities, obviously for dealing
with different situations.
It may be noticed that sub-section (2) of Section 148 was enacted
to give relief to the aircraft carrier and the officer incharge of a
conveyance and permit him to leave with the conveyance by making his
agent and person representing him responsible for all the penalties and
confiscations. Accepting the submissions of the appellants in this
context would defeat the purpose of incorporation of sub-section (2) of
Section 148 of the Act and make the working of the Act impractical.
Such an interpretation would be detrimental both to the carrier, the
officer incharge on the one hand and the revenue and customs
authorities under the Act, on the other. Insistence of ascertaining
the liability under Section 116 of the Act before passing an order in
terms of Section 42 would mean not permitting the conveyance to depart
from the customs station unless its officers have minutely examined the
whole case and determined the consequences for not accounting of goods.
Such could not be the intention of the Legislature.
Alternatively the learned counsel for the appellants referred to
the facts of the case to canvass that even if the appellants are liable
under the law to be served with the show cause notice, the respondents
authorities have on facts not proved the averments made in the show
cause notice. Such a submission is factually incorrect and legally
impermissible. All the authorities on facts have found that the
shortages had not been accounted for and actually not denied by the
appellants. The findings of fact arrived at by all the authorities
under the Act could not be disturbed by the High Court in exercise of
the writ jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution of India.
There is no merit in these appeals which are accordingly
dismissed with costs quantified at Rs.5,000/- in each appeal.
.......................J.
(R.P. SETHI)
.......................J.
(Y.K. SABHARWAL)
NOVEMBER 6, 2001