Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE BRITISH MACHINARY SUPPLIES CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/08/1996
BENCH:
THOMAS K.T. (J)
BENCH:
THOMAS K.T. (J)
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (7) 169 1996 SCALE (5)645
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
THOMAS, J.
This appeal by special leave is in challenge of and
order passed by the Government of India, In exercise of
their revisional power under the Customs Act, 1962 (for
short ’the Act’). As per the impugned order Government
annulled the order passed by the appellate Collector of
Customs in favour of the appellant on 6.12.1978.
Facts are, in brief, these:
Appellant firm ha a factory for manufacturing sewing
machines and accessories at Faridabad, with an approved
capacity for making both domestic as well as industrial
sewing machines Appellant imports components for
manufacturing such sewing machines from foreign suppliers.
In October, 1977, appellant imported components of
industrial sewing machines - "rotating hooks complete with
bobbin case", some of which required 1/3 H.P. and the others
required 1/2 H.P. for their operation. According to
appellant such imported components were dutiable at the rate
of 40 per cent to customs duty as per item 84.41(1) of the
Customs duty in accordance with it. But the Assistant
Collector of Customs (Foreign Post), New Delhi charged
higher duty by treating those goods as components for
domestic sewing machines as prescribed under clause (2) of
heading 84.2 of the Schedule. Appellant paid the higher duty
under protest and goods released and later applied for
refund of the excess amount paid (i.e. Rs.1,78,208/-). The
Assistant Collector rejected the application reiterating
that the goods imported were components for domestic sewing
machines.
Appellant then filed a statutory appeal before the
Appellate Collector of Custom who allowed the appeal holding
that the goods imported were not for domestic sewing
machines and as such they were classifiable under item
84.41(1) of the Schedule. Thus the appellant became entitled
to refund of the amount paid in excess. But appellant failed
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to get the refund applied for, inspite of pursuing the
applications filed for that purpose. So a writ petition was
filed in the High Court of Delhi for appropriate directions.
Notice was served on the Central Government. They proposed
to review the order for which a notice was given to the
appellant to show cause why it should not be reviewed.
Appellant submitted its detailed reply. Central Government
after hearing the appellant passed the impugned order.
Appellate collector concurred with the importer’s stand
that the components were intended for industrial sewing
machines on the strength of a variety of reasons and on its
own satisfaction when the difference was demonstrated before
him, during the time of hearing. He noticed that " the
rotating book in the industrial machine had higher speed
than the domestic sewing machine and if the rotation pin of
the industrial sewing machines were to be attached to the
domestic sewing machines, it would not withstand the speed
and would break." Appellate Collector, therefore. was
convinced that the hooks imported by the appellant were not
for domestic sewing machines and were "solely" and
principally for use in machines operated with more than 1/4
H.P. and as such are classifiable under ICT 84.41(1)".
Government of India differed form the above conclusion,
mainly on the premises that (1) "the rotating hooks complete
with bobbin case" find their use in domestic as well as
other sewing machines, but their principal use lies in
domestic sewing machines, (2) the term sewing machine should
have been understood in the manner it is understood in
international market/trade for purposes of customs
classification. and (3) the corresponding heading in the
Brussels Tariff Nomenclature (BTN) covers tow types of
sewing machines, namely (a) ordinary sewing machines used in
homes or by tailors or dress-makers etc.. (b) special
machines which can be used only for certain other kinds of
sewing (as enumerated therein).
Learned counsel for the appellant contended that the
Government of India have gone far beyond its powers in
interfering with a fact finding arrived at by the Appellate
Collector for which many extraneous materials were
improperly used, At any rate the view adopted by the
Appellate Collector should have been accepted as a
reasonable conclusion on the facts. According to the
counsel.
Item 84.41 of the Customs Tariff Schedule, which was
brought into force on 1.1.1977, read thus;
"84.41 Sewing machines; furniture
specially designed for sewing
machines; sewing machines needles;
(1) Not elsewhere specified - 40%
(2) Domestic sewing machines -
100%"
If the imported components were for domestic sewing
machines then the Central Government is right in insisting
on the customs duty realised form the appellant. The
language in which the item in the schedule is couched
indicates that one category relates to a specific specie
i.e. "domestic sewing machines", and the other is a general
category i.e. "not elsewhere specified". Apparently the
burden is on the revenue if they want to include the
imported materials within the specific category to
substantiate that those materials are such.
The very licence granted to the appellant contains a
description which cannot normally be marginalised in
reaching a conclusion on this disputed aspect. A list of
components to be imported during the licensing period is
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appended with the licence. It starts with the description
that the components are for industrial sewing machines. The
first item in that list is "rotating hooks complete with
bobbin case", which is the component involved in this case.
In the letter of Credit, granted by the Foreign
Exchange Branch of Syndicate Bank under which the components
were imported, the commodities are described as components
of industrial sewing machines. Learned counsel for the
appellant produced a letter dated 832.1977, which was
addressed to the Collector of Customs and Central Excise,
New Delhi, by the Central Board of Excise and Customs, copy
of which had been forwarded to the subordinate officers. the
letter contains a reference to the minutes of the conference
of Collectors of Customs on tariff classification matters,
held in November, 1976. in which the Board of Central Excise
and Customs agreed that "the ordinary sewing machines used
in the home or by tailors, dress-markers etc. to be worked
by manual labour or which require for their operation less
than 1/4 H.P. may continue to be considered as domestic
sewing machines whereas industrial sewing machines
essentially designed for operation powered by motors of 1/4
H.P. or more would fall outside the scope of term domestic
sewing machines." Much reliance is sought to be made on this
circular. The only conclusion that can be arrived at, if the
said circular has any use, is that the imported materials in
this case are usable for industrial sewing machines.
Shri Joseph Vellapally, learned senor counsel who
argued for the respondents, contended that classification as
for tariff cannot be determined on the basis of what the
Collectors of Central Exercise & customs or even what the
Board of Central Excise and Customs would have thought about
it because it is legislative process and its interpretation
should be in accordance with law, we cannot overlook the
said circular which is, at least, binding on the department
as they have made it known binding on the department as they
have made it known to all concerned that sewing machines
covered by motors of 1/4 H.P. or more would fall outside the
scope of the terms "domestic sewing machines" . It must be
borne in mind that the heading concerned in the tariff i.e.
84.41 uses the expression "domestic sewing machines" and but
all the other sewing machines in the residuary category "not
elsewhere specified". When customs officials themselves have
understood that sewing machines designed for operation
powered by motor of 1/4 H.P. or more would fall outside the
scope of domestic sewing machines, it would be inept to
suggest that they should adopt a different stand when
mulcting the importer with duty unless there is a judicial
pronouncement on the matter.
Learned counsel for the respondent invited our
attention to a reference made in the universal Encyclopedia
of Machines to a (Vol.I) to the effect that the present day
domestic sewing machines is usually driven by an electric
motor. Hence it was contended that a particular horse power
for the motor attached to the machines may or may not be
decisive of the question whether a component is principally
used for domestic sewing machines. True the horse power is
not the only factor to determine it.
Learned counsel for the respondent invited out
attention to a decision of this Court in Nat Steel Equipment
Private Ltd. vs. Collector of Central Excise, 1988 (34) ELT
8, where this Court was concerned with "domestic electrical
appliances" mentioned in explanation of tariff Item 33(c)
which was in force at the relevant time. Their Lordships
referred to an earlier decision of the Gujarat High Court in
Viswa & Co, vs. State of Gujarat (17 STC 581) in which
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Bhagwati, J. (as the learned Chief Justice then was) has
observed that to make an electrical appliance a domestic
electric appliance "what is necessary is that it must be of
a kind which is generally used for household word". But in
this case there is no material to show that a sewing machine
fitted with the type of components imported by the appellant
is generally used in household work.
We find that the observations made by the Special Bench
of CEGAT in Para Engineering Works, New Delhi vs. Collector
of Customs, New Delhi, 1987 (27) ELT 668, as more
appropriate to the facts of this case. A manufacturer,
importing some components of industrial sewing machines with
a motor of 1/4 H.P. had to approach the Special Bench as
similar question was raised by the custom officials. The
Tribunal noted that each Bill of Entry pertaining to the
import in that case contained reference to the invoices
which were properly co-related with the bills. Those
documents contain the description that the components were
for industrial sewing machines. Assessment made under a
different item inspite of such invoices was held to be
unsustainable. The position in this case is almost similar.
From the above discussion we come to the conclusion
that Government of India have wrongly exercised revisional
powers by interfering with the decision of the appellate
Collector. we, therefore, allow the appeal and set aside the
impugned order. There shall be no order as costs.