Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S HARDIK INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/12/1997
BENCH:
S.P. BHARUCHA, A.P. MISRA
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Bharucha, J.
The Revenue is in appeal from an order passed by the
Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal.
The respondent filed, for clearance for home
consumption, seven bills of entry purporting to relate to
polyethylene scrap. By reason of intelligence received that
serviceable material was likely to be cleared by the
respondent as scrap, the goods covered by the seventh bill
of entry were examined by the Customs authorities. It was
found that what had been imported were plastic rolls of LDPE
films of continuous printed jumbo size bags, plain carry
bags and printed carry bags, all ready for use. The gods
were seized. Statements were recorded under the provisions
of Section 108 of the Customs Act, 1962, and an order was
made on 8th March, 1994 by the Collector of Customs. Bombay.
The order noted the correspondence between the respondent
and its foreign suppliers, the statements that had been made
and other material on record. It found that the respondent
had sought to clear serviceable material as scrap. it
required that the goods be assessed as serviceable material;
that the value thereof be enhanced; that they be confiscated
with option to the respondent to redeem them on payment of a
fine; and that the respondent pay a personal penalty.
Against the Collector’s order the respondent preferred
an appeal to the Tribunal The judgment and order thereon is
the subject matter of this appeal. In its judgment the
Tribunal referred t the submission made on behalf of the
respondent that the goods had been imported for the purpose
of recycling in the manufacture of mono filament yarn and
the respondent was not interested in using the goods for any
purpose other than as scrap. In order to establish the
respondent’s bonafide, its counsel submitted that the
respondent was willing to have the goods mutilated at its
own expense, and, in that context, referred to Section 24 of
the Customs Act. The Tribunal observed that the purpose of
the said provision was to ensure that where imported goods
had more than one purpose, they were rendered unfit for use
except for one purpose. In other words, the Tribunal said,
where imported goods could be used as scrap or as
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serviceable material, it should be open to an importer who
contended that the import was only for use as scrap to seek
mutilation so that the goods could be used only as scrap and
not as serviceable material. The Tribunal referred to the
practice of permitting mutilation of serviceable garments
which were claimed to have been imported as rags. The
Tribunal was satisfied that the same procedure could be
followed in the instant case, notwithstanding that rules had
not been made under Section 24. Setting aside the order of
the Collector, the Tribunal directed that the goods should
be mutilated in such a manner that they could be used only
for recycling and not for any other purpose.
Section 24 of the Customs Act reads thus:
"Power to make rules for denaturing
or mutilation of goods.- The
Central Government may make rules
for permitting at the request of
the owner the denaturing or
mutilation of imported goods which
are ordinarily used for more than
one purpose so as to render them
unfit for one or more of such
purposes; and where any goods are
so denatured or mutilated they
shall be chargeable to duty at such
rate as would be applicable if the
goods had been imported in the
denatured or mutilated form"
Mr. Usgaocar, learned Additional Solicitor General,
submitted that the respondent had attempted to clear
serviceable material as scrap. the goods had been, inter
alia, confiscated and a redemption fine and penalty had been
imposed. The order under appeal had wiped out all this,
without going into the merits, only by relying upon Section
24. The purpose of Section 24 was not to condone or erase
the consequences of an offence that had been committed .
Learned counsel for the respondent pointed out that the
order of the Collector had noted that it had been argued
before him on behalf of the respondent that the goods had
been offered for mutilation, and submitted that this offer
should have been accepted because it proved the bona fides
of the import. Learned counsel submitted that the Tribunal
was, therefore, justified in invoking Section 24 and basing
its judgment upon it.
The point of time at which the respondent made the
offer of mutilation is relevant. If, at the very outset, the
respondent had asked for mutilation of the goods, that might
have been a different matter. The Collector’s order suggests
that it did not. It sought to clear the goods. It was only
upon the examination of the seventh container that it was
noticed that a part of what it contained was serviceable
material. If that be so, the respondents offer of mutilation
was made only after the offence had been discovered.
The order of the Tribunal does not discuss the merits
of the case. It does not hold as a fact that the goods were
scrap or that the respondent had not sought to clear as
scrap what was really serviceable material or that the
confiscation, redemption fine and penalty were uncalled for.
Without so finding, the Tribunal could not have set aside
the Collector’s order and directed merely the mutilation of
the goods.
We are, thus, unable to uphold the order of the
Tribunal and must set it aside. At the same time, the
respondent should not be deprived of the opportunity of
satisfying the Tribunal upon the merits of its appeal; the
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appeal must, therefore, be remanded to the Tribunal for
being heard and disposed of on merits, uninfluenced by the
judgement and order that we have set aside.
The appeals are allowed. The judgment and order under
appeal is set aside. The appeal (No. C. 481/91-A, 327-
328/95-A) is restored to the file of the Tribunal (New
Delhi) to be heard and disposed of on merits.
The respondent shall pay to the appellant the costs of
the appeal.