Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 39
PETITIONER:
UJAGAR PRINTS ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/11/1988
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 516 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 770
1989 SCC (3) 488 JT 1988 (4) 330
1988 SCALE (2)1115
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC 999 (8)
F 1991 SC1784 (7,9)
ACT:
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944-Sections 2(f), 4 and
Schedule Items 19 and 22--‘Manufacture’ meaning of--
Processors carry out operations on ‘grey fabrics’ on job
work basis--Whether ‘manufacture’--Central Excise and Salt
Additional Duties Excise (Amendment) Act, 1980-Effect of.
%
Taxation--Under the Act is the rule--Benefit and
exemption--The exception--Excise duty of goods--Levied upon
manufacturer--lmposed on production/manufacture/producer in
accordance with the relevant rules.
Constitution of India, 1950, Article 245, 246 and
Schedule VII Lists I Entries 84, 97, Lists 11 and 111--"With
respect to"--Inter-pretation of--‘ManuJacture’--Concept of
Entries in legislative lists--Not sources of legislative
power--Merely topics or fields of legislation--Legislation
could be ‘composite legislation’--‘Rag-bag’ legislation--
Familiar in taxation--Competent legislature can always
validate law---Retroactivity of legislation---Test of
validity how applied.
Statutory Interpretation--Referential legislation---
Types of--Effect of--Legislation could be composite
legislation--‘Rag-hag’ legislation--What is--Competent
legislature can always validate a law.
Words and phrases---‘Manufacture’--’In respect of--
Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
Section 2(f) of the Central Excise Act defines
‘manufacture’, to include any process incidental or
ancillary to the completion of a manufactured product.
The President of India promulgated an Ordinance called
the Central Excises and Salt and Additional Duties of Excise
(Amendment) Ordinance 1979, which was later replaced by
Central Act VI of 1980, called the Central Excises and Salt
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 39
and Additional Duties of Excise (Amendment) Act, 1980. The
PG NO 770
PG NO 771
Amending Act became effective from 24th February, 1979. By
section 2 of the Amending Act, Section 2 (f) of the Excise
Act was amended by adding three sub-items in the definition
of ‘manufacture’ so as to include activities like bleaching,
dyeing, printing etc. which were held not covered by two
decisions of the Gujarat High Court. Similar amendments were
made in items 19 and 22 of the First Schedule with
retrospective effect. Section 5(2)(b) of the Amending Act
provided that no suit or other proceedings shall be
maintained or continued in any other Court for the refund of
the duty collected and no enforcement shall be made by any
Court of any decree or order directing the refund of such
duties of excise which have been collected and which may
have been collected, as if the provisions of Section 5 of
the Act had been in force on and from the appointed day as
defined in the Act.
Prior to the Amending Act, 1980, the levy an the
processors, was challenged before the Gujarat High Court in
the case of vijay Textiles Mills v. Union of India nd Real
Honest Textile v. Union of India, [1979] 4 E.L.E.J. 181. The
Gujarat High Court held that cotton fabric subjected to
bleaching, dyeing and printing could not be subjected to
excise duty under items 19 and 22 of the First Schedule to
the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944, and that processors
were liable to pay duties under tariff-entry 68 only on the
value added by that processor. Following this judgment a
large number of similar claims of ,processing-houses were
allowed by the High Court by its judgment dated 13.3 1979.
However, the Bombay High Court, took a different view and
held that even under the concept of manufacture’ envisaged
in section 2(f) even prior to its amendment, the operations
carried on by the professors amounted to ‘manufacture’ and
that, at all events, the matter was placed beyond any
controversy by the Amendment Act of 1980.
The judgment of the Gujarat High Court in the case of
Vijay Textiles and Real Honest Textiles was considered by a
Bench consisting of three judges of this Court in Empire
Industries v. Union of India [1985] Supp. 1 SCR 292 and it
was held not to have been decided correctly. The view taken
by the Bombay High Court in New Shakti Dye Works Pvt. Ltd.
v. Union of India & Anr. [1983] ELT 1736. was approved.
The present appeals, by special leave, preferred against
the judgments of the High Court of Gujarat and the High
Court of Bombay, and the batch of writ petitions under
Article 32 of the Constitution of India, involve common
PG NO 772
questions of law concerning the validity of the levy of
duties of excise under tariff-items 19 and 22 of the
Schedule to the Central Excises and Salt Act 1944 ("Central
Excise-Act") as amended by the Central Excises and Salt
Additional Duties Excise (Amendment) 1980 Act ("Amending
Act") treating as ‘manufacture’ the process of bleaching,
dyeing, printing, sizing, mercerising, water-proofing,
rubberising, shrink-proofing, organdie processing etc. done
by the processors who carry out these operations in their
factories on job-work basis in respect of ‘cotton-fabric’
and ‘Man-made fabric’ belonging to their customers. The
facts in all the cases are indenticl.
The petitioners/appellants carry out the operations of
bleaching dyeing, printing sizing, finishing etc. of grey
fabric on job-work against payment of processing charges to
it by the customers who are the owners of the grey-fabric.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 39
The machinery and equipment installed in the petitioners’
factories are suited for and appropriate to the processing
of grey-fabric and are not capable to manufacturing grey-
fabric. The man-made grey-fabric, such as, Art Silk Grey-
fabric is manufactured in mills and on power looms and that
latter is exempt from excise duty on its manufacture. The
Art Silk Grey-fabrics which are processed in the
petitioners/appellants factories are those manufactured on
power looms and not by the mills and that the Art Silk Grey-
fabric received do not come from the manufacturers of the
grey-fabric through the manufacturing-stream but from the
various trader through the sales-stream.
The present writ petitions/appeals also include cases
where the grey-fabric is also purchased by some of the
processing houses and are sold by them, after processing. In
some cases, the manufacturers of the grey-fabric subject it
to captive consumption and process them in their own
composite establishments.
At the time of hearing, the correctness of the view
taken in the Empire Industries case on certain aspects
having been doubted by another Bench of this Court, these
appeals/writ petitions were referred to a Bench of five
judges on two questions namely (1) whether the processing
of grey-fabric amounted to ‘manufacture’ within the meaning
of Section 2(f) as it stood prior to its amendment, and (2)
whether, even if such processing did amount to ‘manufacture’
what should be the proper basis for determining the
assessable value of the processed fabrics.
In the petitions and appeals, the following points arise
for determination.
PG NO 773
A(i) Whether the process of bleaching, dyeing, printing,
sizing, shrink-proofing etc. carried on in respect of cotton
or man-made ‘grey-fabric’ amount to ‘manufacture’ for
purposes, and within the meaning of Sect;on 2(f) of the
Central Excises and Salt Act 1944 prior to the amendment of
the said Section 2(f) by section 2 of the Amending Act VI of
1980.
A(ii) Whether the decision in Empire Industries Limited
JUDGMENT:
that these operations amount to ‘manufacture’ is wrongly
decided and requires reconsideration.
(B) Whether the amendment brought about by the Act of
1980 of Section 2(f) and to tariff-items 19 and 22 of the
Central Excise Act is ultra-vires Entry 84 List 1 and,
therefore, beyond the competence of the Union Parliament.
Whether, at all events, even if the expended concept of
manufacture introduced by the Amendment is beyond the scope
of Entry 84 List 1, whether the impost is, at all events,
referable to and supportable by the residual Entry 97 of
List 1.
(C) Whether, at all events even if the amendments to
Central Excise Act are valid, the levy under the Additional
Duties Act is unsupportable and without the authority of law
as there is no corresponding enlargement of the definition
of ‘manufacture’ under the Additional Duties Act.
(D) Whether the retrospective operation of the Amending
Act is an unreasonable restriction on the fundamental right
of the ‘processors’ under Article 19(1)(g) of the
Constitution.
(E) Whether, even if the levy is justified, at all
events, the computation of the assessable-value of the
processed grey-fabric on the basis of the whole-sale cash
selling-price declared under classification list under Rule
173(b) is unjustified and illegal in respect of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 39
assessable value of the processed grey-fabric done on job-
work-basis.
Allowing the appeals preferred by the Union of India,
HELD: (Per Majority)
The appeals preferred by the Union of India are allowed
and the Judgment of the Gujarat High Court under appeal is
PG NO 774
set-aside. The appeals preferred by the processors against
the judgment of the Bombay High Court and the Writ Petition
filed by the processors directly in this Court are
dismissed. The Union of India and its authorities shall be
entitled to take necessary steps to seek the enforcement of
the bank guarantees, if any for the recovery of the arrears.
[810C-D]
Per Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. (Concurring with
Venkatachaliah. J.)
(1) A statutory charge should be measured by the method
of its computation as laid down in the statute and not by
any other method of computation. The circumstances that
thereby the benefit of any computation granted by the
legislation may be lost and that in some cases hardship
might result are not matters which would influence courts on
the Instruction of the statute. A tax payer is entitled only
to such benefit as is granted by the legislature [811C-D]
(2) (i) Where a manufacturer sells the goods
manufactured by him in wholesale to a wholesale dealer at
the arms length and in the usual course of business, the
wholesale cash price charged by him to the wholesale dealer
less trade discount would represent the value of the goods
for the purpose of assessment of excise. But the price
received by he wholesale dealer who purchases the goods from
the manufacturer and in his turn sells the same in wholesale
to other dealers would be irrelevant for determination of
the value of the goods and the goods would be charged on
that basis. [812E-F]
(2) (ii) The valuation must be on the basis of wholesale
cash price at the time when the manufactured goods enter
into the open market. The value of the trade-marks is not to
be taken into account in computing the assessable value as
the affixation of the trade-marks of a particular brand was
extraneous to manufacture. The values of such extraneous on
additional factors do not enter into the computation of
assessable value and as such the wholesale cash price at
which the goods enter into the wholesale market would be
independent of the value of the trade-marks. [812G-H:8134A-
B]
(2)(iii) The assessable value would, therefore, include
the value of the grey cloth in the hands of the processors
plus the value of the job-work done plus manufacturing
profits and manufacturing expenses whatever would be
included in the price at the factory gate. The correct
assessable value must be the value of the fabric at the
factory gate, that is to say, the value at which the
manufactured goods leave the factory and enter the main
stream. [813E]
PG NO 775
3. Computation of the assessable-value is one question
and as to who should be liable for the same is another.
Duties of excise are imposed on production or on manufacture
of goods and are levied upon the manufacturer or the
producer in accordance with the relevant rules. This is
quite independent of the ownership of goods. It is, there-
fore, necessary to reiterate that the value for, the
assessment under Section 4 of the Act will not be the
processing charge along but the intrinsic value of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 39
processed fabric which is the price at which the fabrics are
sold for the first time in the wholesale market. The rules
are clear on the computation of that value.[813F-H]
Atic Industries Ltd. v. H.H. Dave, Asstt. Collector of
Central Excise and Ors., [1975] 3 S.C.R. 563; Union of India
& Ors. etc. etc. v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd. etc.
etc., [1984] 1 S.C.R. 347 at 375; Union of India & Ors. v.
Cibatul Ltd., [1985] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 95 and Joint Secy. to
the Govt. of India & Ors. v. Food Specialities Ltd., 11985]
Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 165, followed.
Per Venkatachaliah, J. (for himself and on behalf of R.
S. Pathak, and S. Natarajan, J.)
1(i) The prevalent and generally accepted test to
ascertain that there is ‘manufacture’ is whether the change
or the series of changes brought about by the application of
processes take the commodity to the point where,
commercially, it can no longer be regarded as the original
commodity but is, instead, recognised as a distinct and new
article that has emerged as a result of the processes.
[797E-F]
1(ii) The view taken in the Empire Industries case that
‘grey-fabrics’ after they undergo the various processes of
bleaching, dyeing sizing, printing, finishing etc. emerges
as a commercially different commodity with its own price-
structure, custom and other commercial incidents and that
there was in that sense a ‘manufacture’ within the meaning
of Section 2(f), even as unamended, is an eminently
plausible view and is not shown to suffer from any fallacy.
[798A-B]
Union of India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills, [1963]
Supp. 1 S.C.R. 536 at 597; Tungabhadra Industries Ltd. v.
Commercial Officer Kurnool, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 14; Deputy
Commissioner of Sales Tax v. Pio Food Packers, [1980] 3
S.C.R. 1271 at 1275; Sterling Foods v. State of Karnataka,
PG NO 776
[1986] 3 S.C.C 469 at 475 & 476; Kailash Nath v. State of
U.P., 8 S.T.C. 358; Deputy Commissioner sales Tax v.
Sadasivan, 42 S.T.C. 2 (Kerala); Swastic Products Baroda v.
Superintendent of Central Excise, [1980] E.L.T. 164
(Gujarat); Swan Bangle Stores v. Assistant Sales Tax
Officer, 25 S.T.C. 122 (Allahabad); State of Andhra Pradesh
v. Sri Durga Hardware Stores, 32 S.T.C. 322 (Andhra
Pradesh); Extrusion Process Pvt. Ltd. v. N.R. Jadnav,
Superintendent of Central Excise, [1979] E.L.T. 380
(Gujarat); In Health & Milligan Manufacturing Company, The
Sherwin-Williams Company, etc. v. J.H. Worst Director of the
North Dakota Government Agricultural Experiment Station;
Kailash Nath v. State of U.P., 8 S.T.C. 358; Commissioner of
Sales Tax, U.P. (Lucknow) v. Harbilas Rai, 21 S.T.C. 17;
Hiralal Jitmal v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, 8 S.T.C. 325
at 326 and Kores (India) Ltd. v. Union of India and Ors.,
[1982] 10 E.L.T. 253, referred to.
2(i) Entries in the legislative lists. are not sources
of the legislative power but are merely topics or fields of
legislation and must receive a liberal construction inspired
by a broad and generous spirit and not in a narrow
pedantic sense. The expression "with respect to" in Article
246 brings in the doctrine of "Pith and Substance" in
the understanding of the exertion of the legislative
power and wherever the question of legislative-competence is
raised, the test is whether the legislation, looked at as a
whole, is substantially ‘with respect to’ the particular
topic of legislation. If the legislation has a substantial
and not merely a remote connection with the entry, the
matter may well be taken to be legislation on the topic.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 39
[799B-D]
2(ii) Competence to legislate flows from Articles 245.
246 and the other Articles following in Part XI of the
Constitution. In defending the validity of a law questioned
on ground of legislative-incompetence, the State can always
show that the law was supportable under any other entry
within the competence of the legislature. Indeed in
supporting a legislation sustenance could be drawn and had
from a number of entries. The legislation could be a
composite legislation drawing upon several entries. Such a
"rag-bag" legislation is particularly familiar in taxation.
[800F-G]
Diamond Sugar Mills v. State of IJ.P., [1961] 3 S.C.R.
242 at 248; Statutory Interpretation, at page 644 and Hari
Krishna Bhargav v. Union of India & Anr., [1966] 2 S.C.R.
22, referred to.
PG NO 777
2(iii) So far as, the exclusive competence of the Union
Parliament to legislate is concerned, all that is necessary
is to find out whether the particular topic of legislation
is in List 11 or List 111. If it is not, it is not necessary
to go any further or search for the field in List 1. Union
Parliament has exclusive power to legislate upon that topic
or field. Of course, it has concurrent power also in respect
of the subjects in List 111. [801E-F]
2(iv) Even if the impost on process is not one under
Entry 84, List 1, but Is an impost of ‘processing’ distinct
from ‘manufacture’ the levy could yet be supported by Entry
97, List 1, even without the aid of the wider principle
recognised and adopted in Dhillon’s case AIR 1972 SC 1061.
[799F]
3. Section 4 of the Amending Act VI of 1980 has amended
the relevant items in the schedule to the Additional Duties
Act, the expressions’ ‘produce’ or ‘manufacture’ in Section
3(1) of the Additional Duties Act must be read along with
the entries in the Schedules. What appears, therefore, clear
is that what applies to the main levy, applies to the
additional duties as well. [803F]
Pandit Ram Narain v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and
Ors.,[1956] S.C.R. 664 at 673; Macbath & Com. v. Chisletr,
[1910] AC 220 at 224; Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya
Pradesh v. Jaswant Singh Charan Singh, [19671 2 S.C.R. 720
at 725-26; Assistant Collector of Central Excise, Calcutta
Division v. National Tobacco Co. of India Ltd., [1973] 1
S.C.R. 822 at 835; Att.-Gen. v. Lamplough [1878] 3 Ex. D.
214, 299; Interpretation of States, 11th ed. p. 156 and
Bennion’s Statutory Interpreation, p. 568-569, referred to.
4(i) A Competent legislature can always validate a law
which has been declared by court to be invalid provided the
infirmities and vitiating factors noticed in the
declaratory-judgment are removed for cured. Such a
validating law can also be made retrospective. If in the
light of such validating and curative exercise made by the
legislature---granting legislative--competence--the earlier
judgment becomes irrelevant and unenforceable, that cannot
be called an impermissible legislative overruling of the
judicial decision. All that the legislature does is to usher
in a valid law with retrospective effect in the light of
which earlier judgment becomes irrelevant. Such legislative
expedience of validation of laws is of particular
significance and utility and is quit often applied, in
taxing statutes. It is necessary that the legislature should
be able to cure defects in statutes. No individual can
PG NO 778
acquire a vested right from a defect in a statute and seek a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 39
wind-fall from the legislature’s mistakes. [804G-H; 805A-C]
Sri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. Broach Borough
Municipality & Ors., [1970] 1 S.C.R. 388, referred to.
4(ii) Validity of legislations retroactively curing
defects in taxing statutes is well recognised and courts,
except under extraordinary circumstances, would be reluctant
to override the legislative judgment as to the need for and
wisdom of the retrospective legislation. [805C]
4(iii) In testing whether a retrospective imposition of
a tax operates so harshly as to violate fundamental rights
under article 19(1)(g), the factors considered relevant
include the context in which retroactivity was contemplated
such as whether the law is one of validation of taxing
statute struck-down by courts for certain defects; the
period of such retroactivity, and the decree and extent of
any unforeseen or unforeseenable financial burden imposed
for the past period etc. Having regard to all the
circumstances of the present case, this court in Empire
Industries’ case rightly held that the retroactivity of the
Amending provisions was not such as to incure any infirmity
under Article 9(1)(g). [805E-G]
5(i) Section 4 of the ‘Central Excise Act’ envisages
that the value of an article for the purposes of duty shall
be deemed to be; (a) the wholesale cash price for which an
article of the like kind and quality was sold or was capable
of being sold at the time of removal of the article from the
factory or premises of manufacture for delivery at the
place of manufactures or (b) where such price was not
,ascertainable the price at which an article of the like
kind and quality as sold or capable of being sold al the
time of removal of the article chargeable with duty [808F-G]
5(ii) Consistent with the provisions of Section 4 and
the Central Excise (Valuation) Rules, 1975, framed under
sec. 37 of the Act, it cannot be said that the assessable-
value of the processed fabric should comprise only of the
processing-charges. this extreme contention, if accepted,
would lead to and create more problems than it is supposed
to solve, and produce situations which could only be
characterised as anomalous. The incidence of the levy should
be uniform, uninfluenced by fortuitous considerations. The
view taken in the matter in Empire Industries case does not
call for reconsideration. [809C-D]
PG NO 779
5(iii) The question whether the producer or the
manufacturer is or is not the owner of the goods is not
determinative of the liability. The essential and
conceptional nature of the tax is to be kept clearly
distinguished from both the extent of the power to impose
and the stage at which the tax is imposed. Though the levy
is on the production or manufacture of the goods, the
imposition of the duty could be at the stage which the law
considers most convenient to impose as long as a rational
relationship with the nature of the tax is maintained.
[806B-D]
5(iv) The nature of the excise duty is not to be
confused with, or tested with reference to, the measure by
which the tax is assessed. The standard adopted as the
measure of assessment may throw light on the nature of the
levy but is not determinative of it. When a statutory
measure for assessment of the tax is contemplated, it "need
not contour along the lines which spell out the levy
itself’, and "a broader based standard of reference may be
adopted for the purposes of determining the measure of the
levy". Any statutory standard which maintains a nexus with
the essential character of the levy can be regarded as a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 39
valid basis for assessing the measure of the tax. [808G-H;
809A-B]
Atic Industries Ltd. v. H.H. Dave, Assn. Collector of
Central Excise and Ors., [1975] 3 S.C.R. p. 563 and Union of
India Ors. etc. etc. v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd. etc..
[1984] 1 S.C.R. p. 347 at 375, referred to.
Per Ranganathan, J. (Concurring with Venkatatchlliah, J.
1(i) Hindustan Milkfood Manufacturers Ltd. v. Union, The
HMM case) [1980] ELT 480, was based not on the scope of
legislative entry 97 in List I but on the language and scope
ot the amendment actually effected. It was considered not
necessary or possible to stretch the language of the
definition in S. 4 beyond the ambit of the provision as
delineated in the earlier decisions. The question decided
was not that the legislature could not, but that it did not
make any redical change in the nature of the levy. [815F-G]
1(ii) There is nothing in the decision HMM case that
supports the contention of the petitioners here that the
amendment of the definition of ‘manufacture’ cannot be
sustained by reference to entry 97 of List 1 in the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution of India, if it cannot be
upheld as falling under the purview of Entry 84. [816H;
817A]
PG NO 780
2(i) The words ‘levied’ is a wide and generic
expression. One can say with as much appropriateness that
the Income Tax Act levies a tax on income as that the Income
Tax Officer levies the tax in accordance with the provisions
of the Act. It is an expression of wide import and takes in
all the stages of charge, quantification and recovery of
duty, though in certain contexts it may have a restricted
meaning. In the context of sub-section (I) the word ’levied’
admittedly means ‘charged as well as assessed’. The words
‘levy and collection’ in sub-section (3) cannot be construed
differently from the words ‘levied and collected’ used in
sub-section (1). Section 3(3), therefore. also covers the
entire gomut of s. 3(1) and cannot be construed as becoming
operative at some what later stage. Its operation cannot be
excluded in determining the scope of the charge. [818F-H]
2 (ii) Having regard to the nature and content of the
levy indicated in s. 3(1), it is obvious that s. 3(3) has
to have the effect of attracting not only the purely
procedural and machinery provisions of the 1944 Act but also
some of its charging provisions. It is, therefore, difficult
to consider section 3(1) of the 1957 Act--in contrast to the
Finance Act of 1965--as covering the entire ambit of the
charge imposed. In short, the language of s. 3(3) has to be
given a wider meaning than under the Finance Act, 1965. A
provision similar to that in s. 80 of the Finance Act, 1965
is also found in other Finance Acts. On perusal of these
provisions, it will be found that a like position exists
there also. These provisions are all self-contained and
completely specify the scope of the charge either as a
percentage of the excise duty normally chargeable under the
Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944 or as a percentage of the
‘assessable value determined under s. 4 of the 1944 Act.
This is very important reason why the observations in the
Associated Cement Co. s, case [1985]2 S.C.C. 719 cannot be
of application in the context of the 1957 Act. [821E-H]
M/s Mahendra Pratap Rama Chandra v. Commercial Tax
officer & Others. A.I.R. 1965 Cal. 203, referred to.
3(i) Legislatures sometimes take a short cut and try to
reduce the length of statutes by omitting elaborate
provisions where such provisions have already been enacted
earlier and can be adopted for the purpose on hand. While,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 39
on the one hand, the prolixity of modern statutes and the
necessity to have more legislations than one on the same or
allied topics render such a course useful and desirable, the
attempt to legislate by reference is sometimes overdone and
brevity is achieved at the expense of lucidity. However this
legislative device is quite well known and the principles
applicable to it fairly well settled. [823C-D]
PG NO 781
3(ii) Referential legislation is of two types. One is
where an earlier Act or some of its provisions are
incorporated by reference into a later Act. In this event,
the provisions of the earlier Act or those so incorporated,
as they stand in the earlier Act at the time of
incorporation, will be read into the later Act. Subsequent
changes in the earlier Act or the incorporated provisions
will have to be ignored because, for all practical purposes
the existing provisions of the earlier Act have been re-
enacted by such reference into the later one, rendering
irrelevant what happens to the earlier statute thereafter.
On the other hand, the later statute may not incorporate the
earlier provisions. It may only make a reference of a broad
nature as to the law on the subject generally or contain a
general reference to the terms of an earlier statute which
are to be made applicable. In this case any modification,
repeal or re-enactment of the earlier statute will also be
carried into in the later, for here, the idea is that
certain provisions of an earlier statute which become
applicable in certain circumstances are to be made use of
for the purpose of the later Act also. [823E-H]
3(iii) Whether a particular statute falls into the first
or second category is always a question of construction.
[824B]
In the present case, the legislation falls into the
second category. S. 3(3) of the 1957 Act does not
incorporate into the 1957 Act any specific provisions of the
1944 Act. It only declares generally that the provisions of
the 1944 Act shall apply ’so far as may be"’. that is, to
the extent necessary and practical, for the purposes of the
1957 Act as well. [824B-C]
Secretary of State v. Hindustan Cooperative Insurance
Society A.I.R. 1941 P.C. 149; Solani Ores Ltd. v. State,
A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 17; Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd. v. Union,
A.I.R. 1979 S.C. 798; Bhajiva v. Gopikabai, [1978] 3 S.C.R.
561; Collector of Customs v. Nathella Sampathu Chetty,
[1962] 3 S.C.R. 786; New Central Jute Mills Ltd. v.
Assistant Collector, [1971] 2 S.C.R. 92; Special Land
Acquisition Officer v. City Improvement Trust, [1977] 1 S.(
referred to.
3(iv) The legislation presently in question is clearly
in pari materia with the 1944 Act. It is also merely
supplemental. While the 1944 Act imposes a general levy of
excise duty on all goods manufactured and produced, and aim
of the present Act is to supplement the levy by an
additional duty of the same nature on certain goods.
PG NO 782
The duration of the applicability is underfined but the
statute is clearly enforceable as long as it is in the
statute book side by side with the normal excise duties. The
clear intention is that the same provisions shall govern
both the levies except that the duty under the later Act is
confined to certain goods only und its distributability
among the States may perhaps follow a different pattern from
the principal duty. [825B-C]
3(v) The Finance Acts which levied special or regular or
additional excise duties contained in themselves all the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 39
elements of charge or duty. T he goods were mentioned and
the duty has to be levied either at a percentage of the
normal excise duty payable under the 1944 Act or at a
percentage of the value of the assessable goods as
determined under the 1944 Act. All that was further needed
was the applicability of the procedural provisions of the
1944 Act. However, the 1957 Act is incomplete as to the
basis of the charge and its provisions would become totally
unworkable unless the concepts of ’manufacture’ and
’assessable value’ as determined under the 1944 Act are
carried into it. [825D-F]
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 12183 of 1985
etc. etc
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
K. Parasaran. Attorney General, Soli i Sorabjee A.J.
Rana A.K Sen, S.K. Dholakia, Hari Swarup V.C.Mahajan, A. K.
Ganguli, Mrs. Shashi Rana, Mrs. J Wad, Ms. Aruna Mathur,
Subhash Parekh, Dushyant Dave, P.H Parekh E. K. Jose Ms.
Rashmi Chandrachud, Sanjay Bharthri, Sarve Mitter, C.L.
Beri, S.K. Beri R.C. Bhatia. Ravi P. Wadhwani. P C Kapur
Sukumaran, D.N. Mishra, B.V. Desai, M.B Lal. Mukul Mudgal, B
Kanta Rao, Mrs. H Wahi, Mrs. V D Khanna, Aruneshwar Gupta,
Mrs. Anil Katiyar R.K.Kapur, B.R. Kapur. Anis Ahmed Khan.
Ms. Abha Jain, R. Karanjawala, Mrs. Karanjawala, Ms.
Meenakshi. Vishnu Mathur, Kailash Vasudev P.D.Shah,
Shri Narain, Sandeep Narain, M.N. Shroff. Mrs P S. Shroff,
R. Sasprahbu, S.A.Shroff, S.S Shroff, Praveen Kumar, M.N
Chowdhary M.D. Chowdhary, N. Das Gupta, Rajesh Chibber, K.K
Bhaduri, Rajiv Dutta. E.C. Agarwala, Harjinder Singh, R.K.
Nambiar P Paremeswaran, Ms. Bina Gupta, K.Swami and V.N.
Ganpule for the appearing parties.
The following Judgments of the Court were delivered
PG NO. 783
VENKATACHALIAH J. These appeals, by Special Leave,
preferred against the Judgments of the High Court of Gujarat
and the High Court of Bombay and the batch of writ-petitions
under Article 32 of the Constitution of India are heard
together and disposed of by this common judgment as they all
involve questions--common to them--concerning the validity
of the levy of duties of excise under tariff-items 19 and 22
of the Schedule to the Central Excises and Salt Act 1944
("Central-Excise-Act") as amended by the Central Excise and
Salt Additional Duties Excise (Amendment) 1980 Act (
’"Amending Act") treating as "Manufacture" the process of
Bleaching. Dyeing, Printing, Sizing, Mercerising, water-
proofing, rubberising, Shrink-Proofing Organdie, Processing,
etc done by the processor who carry out these operations in
their factories on Job-work basis in respect of Cotton-
fabric’ and ’Man-made fabric belonging to their customers
The Amending Act which became effective from 24.12.1979
sought to render the processes of Bleaching, Dyeing,
Printing Sizing, Mercerising etc "Manufacture within the
meaning of the Section 2(f) of the Central Excise Act The
amendment was necessitated by the Judgment of the High Court
of Gujarat which has declared the levy on such ’processing
as illegal as, according to the High Court the processing
did not bring into being a new and commercially different
article with a distinctive character and use and did not
therefore constitute ’manufacture’ for purposes, and within
the meaning, of the charging section.
The processors who carry-out these operations on cotton
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 39
fabrics or "man-made fabrics which are popularly go by the
name ’Grey-fabric in the particular trade also challenged
the levy of the additional duties of excise under the
provisions of the additional Duties of Excise goods (of
special importance) Act 1957 (Additional Duties Act) on the
ground, first. that if the processes carried on by them do
not amount to "manufacture" under Section 2(f) as it
originally stood, then, consistent with the impermissibility
of main impost. the levy of additional duties also fails
and, that at all cvents, even after the amendment the
concept of manufacture under the said Additionl Duties Act
had not been correspondingly widened by an appropriate
amendment.
2. The present hatch of appeals and writ-petitions
comprise of a large number of cases It is not, having regard
to the questions requiring to be decided in these matters,
necessary to go into, in any particular detail, the fact-
situation of each individual case. The processors in these
PG NO 784
cases, who may conveniently be referred to as the
processors" or "jobbers ’, mainly carry out these operations
of Bleaching, Dyeing, Printing, Sizing, Finishing etc. of
’Grey-fabric’ on ’job-work’ against payment of processing
charges to them by the customers who are the owners of the
Grey-fabric. The ownership of the cloth rests with the
customers who get these processes done to their
specifications from these processing-houses on payment of
processing charges. The Grey-fabric, after processing, is
returned by the processing-house to the customers.
The facts of W P. No. 12 183 of 1985 ’M/s. Ujagar Prints
v. Union of India and Ors.), in which the petitioner has
challenged the levy by a petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution are typical and representative of all other
similar cases The petitioner is a firm of partners with its
Head Office at 51, Sheikh Memon Street, Bombay. It has a
factory at Sunder Baug, Deonar, Bombay, which is equipped
with machinery and plants for processing of man-made grey-
fabric The machinery and equipment installed in the
petitioners factory? it is averred---and that is not
disputed either--are suited for and appropriate to the
processing of Grey-fabric and are not capable of
manufacturing Grey-fabric The man-made grey-fabric such as
Art Silk Grey--fabric, it is stated, is manufactured in
mills and on power looms and that letter- is exempt from
excise duty on its manufacture Petitioners further over that
the Art Silk (Grey-fabrics which are processed in the
petitioner’ factory are those manufactured on power looms
and not by the mills and that the Art Silk (Grey-fabric
received do not come from the manufacturers of the grey-
fabric through the manufacturing-stream but from the
various traders through the sales stream. The point that
the petitioners seek to made is that the processing of the
grey-fabric is not a part, a continuation, of the process of
manufacture in the manufacturing-stream, but is an
independent and distinct operation carried out in respect of
the Grey-fabric, after it has left manufacturing-stage and
has become part of the common-stock of goods in the market.
It is also averred that the firm M/s. Ujagar Prints does not
purchase the Grey-fabric but is only engaged in processing
it for charges and that in many cases the Grey-fabric would
have passed on from trader to trader with the attendant
increase in the prices with each successive change of hands
and is entrusted to the petitioner by the last purchaser for
processing against stipulated processing-charges on job work
basis.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 39
It is contended that these job work processing
operations do not amount to "manufacture" as the petitioners
do not carry out any spinning or weaving operations; that
what they receive from their customers for processing is
PG NO 785
therwise fully manufactured man-made fabric and that what is
returned to the customers after processing continues to
remain man-made fabric. The imposition of excise duty on the
processor on the basis of the full-value of the processed
material, which reflects the value of grey-fabrics, the
processing-charges, as well as the selling profits of the
customers is, at once unfair and anamolous, for, in
conceivable cases the duty itself might far exceed the
processing-charges that the processors stipulate and get.
3. The batch of cases also includes cases where the
grey-fabric is also purchased by these processing-houses and
are sold by them, after processing In some cases the
manufacturers of the grey-fabric subject it to captive
consumption and process them in their own
compositeestablishments .
The essential question is whether these situational-
differences have a bearing on the principles of
determination of the assessable-value of processed grey-
fabric and whether the assessable value could be different
in the different fact-situations which would be the logical
corollary if the contention of the processing-houses which
do not processing work for charges on the goods not their
own, is accepted and the assessable value determined on the
basis of mere processing-charges.
But the main questions that arise are whether
"processing" of the kind concerned in these cases amounts to
manufacture", whether the provisions of section 2 of the
Amending Act which impart an artificial-dimension to the
concept of "manufacture" is ultra-vires Entry 84 List l;
whether at all events, the imposition of a tax on such
1processing is referable to Entry 97 List l; and if the
import on the processors is justified under tariff-items 19
and 22, according as whether the Grey-fabric is cotton or
’man-made, what should be the assessable-value for purposes
of levy of duty so far as processors are concerned.
4. Prior to the Amending Act of 1980, the levy on the
processors was challenged before the Gujarat High Court The
Gujarat High Court by its judgment dated 24.1.1979 in the
cases of Vijaya Textiles Mills v. Union of India and Real
Honest Textiles v. Union of India held that the processes
that the processing-houses imparted to the Grey-fabric did
not amount to ’manufacture’ and did not attract ad-valorem
duty under tariff-items 19 and 22, and that processors were
liable to pay duty under tariff-entry 68 only on the value
added by the processing.
PG NO. 786
Following this judgment a large number of similar claims
of processing-houses were allowed by the High Court by its
judgment dated 13.3.1979. Civil Appeals 1685 to 1766 of 1979
are preferred by the Union of India challenging this view of
the High Court.
5. The Bombay High Court on the contrary by its
judgment,dated 16th June, 1983 in writ petition 1623 of 1979
New Shakti Dye Works Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India and Anr.
took a view different from the one that commended itself to
the Gujarat High Court. Bombay High Court held that even
under the concept of "manufacture’ envisaged in Section 2(f)
even prior to its amendment, the operations carried on by
the processors amounted to "manufacture" and that, at all
events, the matter was placed beyond any controversy by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 39
mending Act i.e. Act of 1980. The aggrieved processors have
come up in appeal by Special Leave in Civil Appeal No 6396
of 1983.
6. Some of the processors have, as stated earlier, filed
writ-petitions under Article 32 directly in this court
challenging the impost on grounds that commended themselves
for acceptance to the Gujarat High Court.
7. Before its amendment by the Amending Act Central Act
VI of 1980) Section 2(f) of the Central Excise ACt, defined
’manufacture’ in its well accepted legal-sense--nomen--
juris--and not with reference to an artificial and
statutorily expanded import
"2(f) ’manufacture ’ includes any process, incidental or
ancillary to the completion of a manufactured product; and
(i) ]
(ii) ] Omitted as unnecessary"
The reasoning of the Gujarat High Court was on these
lines
"In the instant case, the excise duty claimed on the
basis of the market value of the processed cotton fabrics or
manmade fabrics cannot be levied because, assuming that
process amounts to manufacture, all that they have done is
to manufacture processed cloth, processed fabric, either
cotton or man-made and that not being a taxable event in the
light of Section 3 read with section 2(d) of the Act and
PG NO 787
Items 19 and 22 levy of excise duty on this basis was ultra
vires and contrary to law .. "
This view, according to the Revenue, was incorrect and
caused serious prejudice to the legitimate financial
interests of the State. Accordingly the President of India
promulgated an Ordinance called the ’Central Excise and Salt
and Additional Duties of Excise (Amendment) Ordinance’, 1979
(Central Ordinance No. 12 of 1979)--sub-sequently replaced
by Central Act VI of 1980 of the same name with
retrospective effect from 24.2.1979--amending Section 2(f)
of the Central Excise Act and tariff-items 19(1) and 22(1).
The relevant entries in the Schedule to the ’Additional
Duties Act’ were also amended. So far as amendment to
Section 2(f) was concerned, Section of the Amending Act
introduced three sub-items in the definition of
’manufacture’. Two of them are material for the present
purpose:
"(v) in relation to goods comprised in Item No. 19(1) of
the First schedule, includes bleaching, mercerising, dyeing,
printing, water-proofing, rubberising. shrink-prcofing,
organdie processing or any other process or any one or more
of these processes. ’
"(vii) in relation to goods comprised in Item No 22(1)
of the First Schedule, includes bleaching. dyeing, printing,
shrink-proofing, tentering, heat-setting, crease resistant
processing or any other process or any one or more of these
processes."
Similarly, amendments were affected by Section 3 of the
Amendment Act which amended the original tariff-items 19 and
22 by sub-stituting the following provisions in their
respective places:
" 1 Cotton fabrics other than (i) embroidery in the
piece. strips or in motifs, and (ii) fabrics impregnated,
coated or laminated with preparations of cellulose
derivatives or of other artificial plastic materials
(a) cotton fabrics. not subjected to any process Twenty
per cent ad-valorem
(b) cotton fabrics, subjected to the process of
bleaching, mercerising, dyeing, printing, water-proofing,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 39
rubberising, shrink-proofing, organdie processing or any
other process or any two or more of these processes. Twenty
per cent ad-valorem
PG NO 788
XXX XXX XXX"
"22(1) Man-made fabrics other than (i) embroidery in the
piece, in strips or in motifs, (ii) fabrics impregnated,
coated or laminated with preparations of cellulose
derivatives or of other artificial plastic materials--
(a) man-made fabrics, not subjected to any process:
Twenty per cent ad-valorem plus rupees five per square
metre.
(b) man-made fabrics, subjected to the process of
bleaching, dyeing, printing, shrink-proofing, tentering,
heat-setting, crease resistant processing or any other
process or any two or more of these processes Twenty per
cent ad-valorem plus rupees five per square metre."
Section 4 of the Amending Act amended the relevant
entries in the Schedule to the Additional Duties Act.
Section-5(2) of the Amending Act provided:
"5 Special provisions as to duties of excise on cotton
fabrics, woollen fabrics, man-made fabrics, etc during a
certain past period and validation:-
(1)....................
(2) Any rule or notification or any action or thing made
issued, taken or done or purporting to have been made.
issued, taken or done under a Central Act referred to in
sub-section (I) before the date of commencement of this Act,
with respect to or in relation to the levy of duties of
excise on--
(a) ’cloth", "cotton cloth" or, as the case may be.
cotton fabrics,"
(b) woollen fabrics",
(c) "rayon or artificial silk fabrics" or, as the case
may be, "man-made fabrics", shall for all purposes be
PG NO 789
deemed to be and to have always been, as validly and
effectively made, issued taken or done as if the provisions
of this section had been in force at all material times and,
accordingly, notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order
of any court, tribunal or other authority--
(a) all duties of excise levied, assessed or collected
or purported to have been levied assessed or collected
before the date of commencement of this Act, on--
(i) "cloth", "cotton cloth" and "cotton fabrics"
subjected to any process,
(ii) "woollen fabrics" subjected to any process,
(iii) "rayon or artificial silk fabrics" and "man-made
fabrics" subjected to any process,
under any such Central Act shall be deemed to be, and
shall be deemed always to have been, as validly levied,
assessed or collected as if the provisions of this section
had been in force on and from the appointed day;
(b) no suit or other proceeding shall be maintained or
continued in any court for the refund of, and no enforcement
shall be made by any court of any decree or order directing
the refund of, any such duties of excise which have been
collected and which would have been validly collected if the
provisions of this section had been in force on and from the
appointed day;
(c) ....................
(d) ...................."
8. Indeed, the correctness of the judgment of the
Gujarat High Court in the cases of Vijaya Textiles and Real
Honest Textiles were considered by a Bench consisting of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 39
three judges of this court in Empire Industries v. Union of
India, [1985]SUPP. I SCR 292 by the judgment dated 6.5.1985,
one of us (Sabyasachi Mukharji J ) speaking for the Court
upheld the validity of the impost Vijaya Textiles Mills v.
Union of India, (1979] 4 ELTJ 181, was held not to have been
PG NO 790
decided correctly. The view taken by the Bombay High Court
in New Shakti Dye Works Pvt. v. Union of India & Anr. was
approved.
The pronouncement of this court in Empire Industries
case otherwise covers, and is a full answer to, the
contentions raised in this batch of cases. However, the
correctness of the view taken in the Empire Industries’ case
on certain aspects was doubted by another Bench of this
court and the matter was, accordingly, referred to a Bench
of five judges.
9. It is, perhaps, necessary to refer to the order dated
9.12.1986 made by the Division Bench referring the cases to
a larger bench. What came before the Division Bench were WP
12183/1985 (M/s. Ujagar Prints v. Union of India & Ors.) and
CA Nos. 1685-1766/1979 (Union of India & Ors. v. Narendra
Processing Industries & Ors.). Two questions arose before
and were examined by the Referring Bench. The first was
whether the processing of Grey-fabric amounted to
’manufacture’ within the meaning of Section 2(f) as it stood
prior to its amendment. The second question was whether,
even if such processing did amount to ’manufacture’ what
should he the proper basis for determining the assessable-
value of the processed fabrics. Both these questions had
earlier been examined and answered in the Empire Industries
case. It is necessary to ascertain as to the precise points
on which the Empire Industries’ decision was required to be
reconsidered. The Referring Bench did not disagree with the
decision in Empire Industries’ case on the question whether
processing’ did amount to ’manufacture’. Indeed, the
Referring Bench appears to have proceeded on the premise
that the view taken in Empire Industries case on the point
was the correct one. Referring Bench said this on the point:
".... So far as the first question is concerned it was
agitated before this Court in Empire Industries Ltd. v
Union of India and this Court held that the processes of
bleaching, mercerising, dyeing, printing. water-proofing.
etc. carried out by the processors on job-work basis amount
to manufacture both under the Act as it stood prior to the
amendment as also under the Act subsequent to the amendment
and the processed fabrics are liable to be assessed to
excise duty in the hands of what may be called jobbers’.
Since this was a decision given by a Bench of three Judges,
the petitioners and appellants who are carrying on business
of processing on job-work basis could not contend that these
PG NO 791
processes do not amount to manufacture and that the
processed fabrics are not liable to be assessed to excise
duty in the hands of the jobbers. But, it was the second
question which provoked serious controversy before us . .
It is only on the second question touching valuation
that it expressed some doubts. Nevertheless, in par. 6 of
the order, the Referring Bench made a further observation to
this effect:
".... Of course, when. ,n se writ petitions and appeals
are referred to the larger Bench it will be open to the
larger Bench to consider not only the question of
determination of the assessable value but also the other
question, namely, whether processing of grey fabric by a
processor on job work basis constitutes manufacture, because
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 39
the judgment in Empire Industries case which has decided
this question in favor of the revenue and against the
processor is a judgment of a Bench of only three Judges and
now the present writ petitions and appeals will be heard by
a Bench of five Judges ."
10. This is how the first question which is, otherwise
concluded by the pronouncement in Empire Industries case is
sought to be reagitated before us Out of deference to the
learned counsel who vigorously argued this aspect at great
length and we though we should examine the submission on
this point also, though, the matter could by no means be
considered to have been referred to a larger bench.
On the second question also the matter is within a short
compass. The Referring Bench clearly excluded any
possibility of the assessable-value being limited to the
mere processing-charges. It contemplated the alternative
possibilities of valuation thus:
"It was common ground between the parties that the
procedure followed by the Excise authorities was that the
trader, who entrusted cotton or man made fabrics to the
processor for processing on job-work basis would give a
declaration to the processor as to what would be the price
at which he would be selling the processed goods in the
market and that would be taken by the Excise authorities as
the assessable value of the processed fabrics and excise
duty would be charged to the processor on that basis. This
may be illustrated by giving the following example:
PG NO 792
(i) Value of grey cloth in the hands of the processor:
Rs. 20.00
(2) Value of job-work done: Rs.5.00 Value of finished
cloth returned to the trader ( 1+2): Rs.25.00
(3) Trader’s selling price inclusive of his selling
profits, etc.: Rs.30.00
The assessable value in the case given in this example
would be taken by the Excise authorities at Rs.30 which was
the sale price of the trader . . .’’
The view of the Referring Bench on the point was this:
"We cannot accept the contention of the learned counsel
on behalf of the petitioners and the appellants that the
value of the grey cloth which is processed by the processor
should not be included in the assessable value of the
processed fabric since the grey cloth is one of the raw
materials which goes into the manufacture of the processed
fabric and the value of the processed fabric cannot be
computed without including the value of the raw material
That goes into its manufacture. The assessable value of the
processes fabric cannot therefore be limited merely to the
value of the job-work done but it must be determined by
reference to the wholesale cash price of the processed
fabric gate of the factory of the processor . . .
The Referring Bench was of the view that the correct
assessable-value should be:
"..... Thus in the example given above the
assessable value of the processed fabric must be taken to be
Rs. 20 + 5 that is Rs. 25 and the profit of Rs.5 which the
trader may make by selling the processed fabric cannot be
included in the assessable value. The element of selling
profit of the trader would be entirely an extraneous element
and it cannot be taken into account for the purpose of
determining the assessable value of the processee fabric
which would comprise the value of the grey cloth and the
PG NO 793
job-work charges but exclude the profit at which the trader
may sub-sequently sell the processed fabric."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 39
11. We have heard Sri A.K Sen, Sri Soli J. Sorabjee, Dr.
Chitale and Sri Dholakia, learned Senior Advocates in the
appeals and writ-petitions preferred by the processors; and
Sri K. Parasaran, learned Attorney-General and Sri A.K.
Ganguli, learned Senior Advocate for the Union of India and
its authorities. On the contentions urged, the points that
fall for determination are:
(a) (i) Whether the processes of Bleaching, Dyeing,
Printing, Sizing, Shrink-proofing etc. carried on in respect
of cotton or man-made ’Grey-fabric’ amount to ’manufacture’
for purposes, and within the meaning of Section 2(f) of the
Central Excises and Salt Act 1944 prior to the amendment of
the said Section 2(f) by Section 2 of the Amending Act VI of
1980.
(a) (ii) Whether the decision in Empire Industries
Limited & Ors. v. Union of India, [1985] Suppl. 1 SCR 282
holding that these operations amount to a manufacture is
wrongly decided and requires reconsideration.
(b) Whether the amendment brought about by the Amending
Act of 1980 of Section 2(f) and to tariff-items 19 and 22 of
the Central Excise Act is ultra-vires Entry 84 List I and,
therefore, beyond the competence of the Union Parliament.
Whether, at all events, even if the expanded concept of
manufacture introduced by the Amendment is beyond the scope
of Entry 84 List l, whether the impost is, at all events,
referable to and supportable by the residual Entry 97 of
List I.
(c) Whether, at all events, even if the amendments to
Central Excise Act are valid, the levy under the Additional
Duties Act is unsupportable and without the authority of law
as there is no corresponding enlargement of the definition
of ’manufacture’ under the Additional Duties Act.
(d) Whether the retrospective operation of the Amending
Act is an unreasonable restriction on the fundamental right
of the ’processors’ under Article 19(1)(g) of the
Constitution.
PG NO 794
(e) Whether, even if the levy is justified, at all
events, the computation of the assessable-value of the
processed Grey-fabric on the basis of the whole-sale cash
selling-price declared under classification list under Rule
173(b) is unjustified and illegal in respect of the
assessable-value of the processed Grey-fabric done on job-
work-basis.
12. Re: Contention (a)
The essential condition to be satisfied to justify the
levies, contend counsel, is that there should be
’manufacture’ of goods and in order that the concept of
’manufacture’ in Entry 84 List I is satisfied there should
come into existence a new article with a distinctive
character and use, as a result of the processing. It is
contended that nothing of the kind happens when ’Grey
fabric’ is processed; it remains ’grey fabric’; no new
article with any distinctive character emerges.
A number of authorities of this Court and of the High
Courts were cited. Particular reference was made to Union of
India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills, [1963] Supp. ( I) SCR
586 at 597; Tungabhadra Industries Ltd. v. Commercial
Officer Kurnool, L 1961] ? SCR 14; Deputy Commissioner of
Sales Tax v. Pio Food Packers, [1980] 3 SCR 1271 at 1275;
Sterling Foods v. State of Karnataka, [1986] 3 SCC 469 at
475 & 476; Kailash Nath v. State of U.P., 8 STC 358; Deputy
Commissioner Sales Tax v. Sadasivan, 42 STC 201 (Kerala);
Swastic Products Baroda v. Superintendent of Central Excise,
[1986] E.L.T 164 (Gujarat). Swan Bangle Stores v Assistant
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 39
Sales Tax Officer, 25 STC 122 ’(Allahabad); Stale of Andhra
Pradesh v. Sri Durga Hardware Stores, 32 STC 322 (Andhra
Pradesh) and Extrusion Process Pvt. Ltd. v. N.R. Jadhav,
Superintendent of Central Excise, [19791 ELT 380 (Gujarat ).
13. The following observations of this Court in Union of
India v. Delhi Cloth and General Mills, AIR 1963 SC p. 791
at 794 were emphasised:
"According to the learned counsel "manufacture is
complete as soon as by the application of one or more
processes. the raw material undergoes some change. To say
this is to equate "processing to manufacture and for this we
can find no warrant in law. The word "manufacture" used as a
verb is generally understood to mean as "bringing into
existence a new substance ’ and does not mean merely to
produce some change in a substance. however minor in
consequence the change may be. ’
PG NO 795
These observations in Health & Milligan Manufacturing
Company, the Sherwin-Williams Company, etc. v. J.H. Worst,
Director of the North Dakofa Government Agricultural
Experiment Station which were referred to with approval by
this Court in the case of Pio Food Packers’ supra, was
relied upon:
"At some point processing and manufacturing will merge.
But where the commodity retains a continuing substantial
identity through the processing stage we cannot say that it
has been "manufactured".
(Emphasis Supplied)
The following observations of Bhagwati J. in Pio Food
Packers case were cited:
" ..... manufacture is the end result of one or more
processes through which the original commodity is made to
pass .... Where there is no essential difference in
identity between the original commodity and the processed
article it is not possible to say that in one commodity has
been consumed in the manufacture of another. Although it has
undergone a degree of processing, it MUSt be regarded as
still retaining its original identity."
(Emphasis Supplied)
The observations of this (’court in Kailash Nath v.
State of U. P., 3 STC 358 made while repelling the
contention of the revenue urged in that case that when cloth
is printed and coloured it gets transformed to sorne other
material and that therefore when such printed and coloured
cloth is exported what was exported was not the same cloth
and that by such printing and dyeing the original cloth got
transformed into different material were relied on:
The cloth exported is the same as the cloth sold with
this variation or difference that the colour has change by
printing and processing. In view which we take the cloth
exported is the same as the cloth sold by the petitioners,
there can be no question above the exemption clause not
applying to it . .
(Emphasis Supplied)
The following passage in the permanent Edition of ’Words
and Phrases’ referred to with approval in Delhi Cloth and
General Mills’ AIR 1963 SCp. 791 at 795 case was referred
to:
PG NO 796
"Manufacture implies a change, but every change is not
manufacture and yet every change of an article is the result
of treatment, labour and manipulation. But something more is
necessary and there must be transformation; a new and
different article must emerge having a distinctive name,
character or use."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 39
Further, learned counsel placed reliance upon
Tungabhadra Industries’ case where it was held that ground-
nut oil after the process of hydrogenation which improved
its keeping-qualities and shelf life yet remained basically
ground-nut oil and that the quality of the oil had been
improved by the processes it was subjected to, did not
detract from its continuing identity as ground-nut oil. The
change brought about in the oil, it was observed by this
Court, rendered it more acceptable to the customers by
improving its quality, but did not render the oil a
commodity other than ground-oil which still continued to be
"groundnut oil" notwithstanding the processing which was
merely for the purpose of rendering the oil more stable thus
improving its keeping qualities for those who desire to
consume ground-nut oil. Likewise the processing such as
bleaching, dyeing. printing, finishing etc., it was urged,
merely improved the quality of Grey-fabric and rendered it
more acceptable to the customers while not shedding its
basic character as ’cotton fabric’ or ’man-made fabric’. It
was also urged that the affidavits filed by person engaged
in and familiar with the textile-trade indicated that the
finished fabric was not a commercially different commodity.
14. We have carefully considered these submissions. In
the Empire Industries case, this court considered similar
submissions in an almost identical context and situation.
Learned judges referred to the observations of this Court
in Commissioner of Sales Tax UP (Lucknow) v. Harbilas Rai,
21 STC 17 in which the view expressed by the Division Bench
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Hiralal Jitmal v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, 8 STC 325 at 326 was held
supportable on the reasoning that:
" . . . The decsion of the Madhya Pradesh High Court
might perhaps be justified on the ground that a printed or
dyed cloth is commercially different article from the cloth
which is purchased and printed or dyed."
PG NO 797
The Division Bench also referred to, with approval, the
decision of the Bombay High Court in Kores (India) Limited
v. Union of India and Ors., [1982] 10 ELT 253. The Division
Bench noticed the question arising for decision:
"Fabric itself means woven materials. It was contended
that processing the manufactured fabric does not bring into
existence any new woven material but the question is: does
new and different goods emerge having distinctive name, use
and character?"
Answering, the Bench said:
"It appears in the light of the several decisions and on
the construction of the expression that the process of
bleaching, dyeing and printing etymologically also means
manufacturing processes .. ’
15. It is strenuously urged for the processors that the
view taken by the Division Bench in the Empire Industries
case suffers from fallacies both of reasoning and conclusion
and requires to be reconsidered.
The prevalent and generally accepted test to ascertain
that there is ’manufacture’ is whether the change or the
series of changes brought about by the application of
processes take the commodity to the point where,
commercially, it can no longer be regarded as the original
commodity but is, instead, recognised as a distinct and new
article that has emerged as a result of the processes. The
principles are clear. But difficulties arise in their
application in individual cases. There might be border-line
case where either conclusion with equal justification be
reached. Insistence on any sharp or intrinsic distinction
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 39
between processing’ and ’manufacture, we are afraid, results
in an over simplification of both and tends to blur their
interdependence in cases such as the present one. The
correctness of the view in the Empire Industries case cannot
be tested in the light of material--in the form of affidavit
expressing the opinion of persons said to be engaged in or
connected with the textile-trade as to the commercial
identity of the commodities before and after the processing-
-placed before the court in a sub-sequent case. These
opinions are, of course, relevant and would be amongst the
various factors to be taken into account in deciding the
question.
PG NO.798
16. On a consideration of the matter, we are persuaded
to think that the view taken in the Empire Industries case
that ’Grey fabric’ after they undergo the various processes
of bleaching, dyeing, sizing printing, finishing etc.
emerges as a commercially different commodity with its own
price-structure, custom and other commercial incidents and
that there was in that sense a ’manufacture’ within the
meaning of Section 2(f), even as unamended, is an eminently
plausible view and is not shown to suffer from any fallacy.
Indeed, on this point the Referring bench did not disagree
or have any reservations either. It is to be noticed that if
the amending law is valid, this aspect becomes academic.
We think, we should reject Contention (a).
17. Re: Contention (b)
The concept of manufacture’ embodied in Entry 84 of List
I, it is urged, should be construed not in an artificial
sense, but in its recognised legal sense and so construed
artificial dimensions sought to be imparted to it by the
amendment would be impermissible. Learned counsel drew
attention to the following observations of this Court in
Diamond Sugar Mills v. State of UP, [1961] 3 SCR 242 at 248.
"..... we have, on the one hand, to bear in mind
the salutary rule that words conferring the right of
legislation should be interpreted liberally and the powers
conferred should be given the widest amplitude; on the other
hand we have to guard ourselves against extending the
meaning of the words beyond their reasonable connotation, in
an anxiety to preserve the power of the legislature.
(Emphasis supplied)
Though entries in the legislative lists are to be
construed liberally and the widest possible amplitude given
to them, however, no artificial or arbitrary extensions of
the meaning of the words in the entry. it is urged, are
permissible. It is submitted the concept manufacture in
Entry 84 List I has a well accepted legal connotation and
in construing the entry the precise connotation which it
possesses and conveys in law must be kept in mind. There is
in law no ’manufacture’ unless as a result of the process a
new and commercially distinct product with distinct use
emerges. The idea of manufacture might imply change, but
every change is not necessarily manufacture. It is.
accordingly, contended that the amendment which seeks to
equate "processing "with "manufacture" is beyond the scope
of Entry 84 List I.
PG NO. 799
18. In the Empire Industries’ case a similar argument
was urged but without success. Learned Judges were persuaded
to the view that such processes which were referred to by
the amendment were not so alien or foreign to the concept of
’manufacture’ that they could not come within that concept.
Entries to the legislative lists, it must be recalled,
are not sources of the legislative power but are merely
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 39
topics or fields of legislation and must receive a liberal
construction inspired by a broad and generous spirit and not
in a narrow pedantic sense. The expression "with respect to"
in Article 246 brings-in the doctrine of "Pith and
Substance" in the understanding of the exertion of the
legislative power and wherever the question of legislative-
competence is raised the test is whether the legislation,
looked at as a whole, is substantially ’with respect to’ the
particular topic of legislation. If the legislation has a
substantial and not merely a remote connection with the
entry, the matter may well be taken to be legislation on the
topic.
In Empire Industries case, it was held:
"As has been noted processes of the type which have been
incorporated by the impugned Act were not so alien or
foreign to the concept of "manufacture ’ that these could
not come within that concept."
19. At all events, even il the impost on process is not
one under Entry 84, list l, but is an impost on ’processing’
distinct from "manufacture" the levy could yet be supported
by Entry ’97. List l, even without the aid of the wider
principle recognised and adopted in Dhillon’s case AIR 1972
SC l061. It was, however, contended that the levy of tax on
an activity which cannot reasonably be regarded as an
activity of ’manufacture’ cannot be described as a levy of
duties of excise under Entry 84, List I. If it is a non-
descript tax under Entry 97, the Parliament, it is urged,
has not chosen1 to enact any such law in this case. The
charging section does not, it is urged. bring such a
taxable-event to charge. This argument was noticed in Empire
Industries case thus:
" .. It was then argued that if the legislation
was sought to be defended on the ground that it is a tax on
activity like processing and would be covered by the powers
enumerated under Entry 97 of List I of the Seventh Schedule
PG NO 800
then it was submitted that there was no charging section for
such an activity and as such the charge must fail, and there
cannot be any levy .. "
The contention was rejected holding:
".... This argument proceeds on an entire
misconception. The charging section is the charging section
3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944. It stipulates
the levy and charge of duty of excise on all excisable goods
produced or manufactured. "Manufactured" under the Act after
the amendment would be the ’manufacture’ as amended in
section 2(f) and Tariff item 19-I and 22 and the charge
would be on that basis. Therefore it is difficult to
appreciate the argument that the levy would fail as there
will be no appropriate charging section or machinery for
effectuating the levy on the activity like the method of
processing even if such an activity can be justified under
Entry 97 of List l of Seventh Schedule. We are, therefore,
of the opinion that there is no substance in this contention
We respectfully agree.
20. If a legislation purporting to be under a particular
legislative entry is assailed for lack of legislative-
competence, the State can seek to support it on the basis of
any other entry within the legislative competence of the
legislature. It is not necessary for the State to show that
the legislature, in enacting the law, consciously applied
its mind to the source of its own competence. Competence to
legislate flows from Article 245, 246, and the other
Articles following, in Part XI of the Constitution. In
defending the validity of a law questioned on ground of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 39
legislative-incompetence, the State can always show that the
law was supportable under any othe entry within the
competence of the legislature. Indeed in supporting a
legislation sustenance could be drawn and had from a number
of entries. The legislation could be a composite legislation
drawing upon several entries. Such a "rag-bag" legislation
is particularly familiar in taxation.
Bennion in his "Statutory Interpretation" (at page 644)
refers such a composite legislation, though the observations
must be under-stood in the context of the supremacy of the
British Parliament and one of unlimited powers and which is,
under no inhibitions unlike a federal polity, of
PG NO 801
distribution of legislative powers. Learned author refers
to:
" ’Ragbag’ Acts: Some Acts are ’rag bag’ Acts, covering
many areas. The annual Finance Act is an extreme example. It
is divided into Parts, dealing respectively with customs and
excise duty, value added tax, income tax, capital gains tax,
stamp duty, capital transfer tax and so on. Even within a
Part of a Finance Act the various provisions havnuite
different aims...."
In Hari Krishna Bhargav v. Union of India and Anr., [1966] 2
SCR 22, this Court said:
"........ There is no prohibition against the
Parliament enacting in a single statute, matters which call
for the exercise of power under two or more entries in List
I of the Seventh Schedule. Illustrations of such legislation
are not wanting in our statute book, and the fact that one
of such entries is the residuary entry does not also attract
any disability .. .."
21. So far as, the exclusive competence of the Union
Parliament to legislate is concerned all that is necessary
is to find out whether the particular topic of legislation
is in List II or List III. If it is not, it is not necessary
to go any further or search for the field in List I. Union
Parliament has exclusive power to legislate upon that topic
or field. Of course, it has concurrent power also in respect
of the subjects in List III.
Contention (b) is, therefore, insubstantial.
22. Re: Contention (c)
This pertains to the validity of levy of additional
duties. The contention proceeds on the pre-supposition that
processing does not amount to ’manufacture’ under Section
3(1) of the Additional Duties Act. If it does, as has been
held on point (a), this argument does not survive at all.
The point, however, sought to be put across is that,
even if the concept of ’manufacture’ for purposes of levy of
excise duty under the ’Central Excise Act’ is validly
expanded or that a tax on processing is, otherwise,
PG NO 802
supportable under Entry 97(1), the position under the
’Additional Duties Act’ ;s quite different. The ’Additional
Duties Act’ does not expressly invoke or attract the
definition of ’Manufacture’ in Section 2(f) of the ’Central
Excise Act’; nor does the ’Additional Duties Act’ itself
contain a definition of ’manufacture’ in the broad terms in
which Section 2(f), as amended, contains. The result is, it
is urged, that the ordinary legal connotation of
’manufacture’, contained in the charging Section 3(1) of the
’Additional Duties Act’ can alone support the levy. It is
not, it is urged, permissible to import the artificial and
expanded definition of ’manufacture’ containing in Section
2(f), as amended, into Section 3(1) of the Additional Duties
Act.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 39
The following observations of this court in Pandit Ram
Narain v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and Ors., l1956] SCR
664 at 673 are pressed into service:
".....It was rightly pointed out that it is no sound
principle of construction to interpret expressions used in
one Act with reference to their use in another Act ...."
Again, the observations in Macbeth & Co. v. Chisten,
[1910] AC 220 at 224 referred to with approval by this court
in Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh v. Jaswant
Singh Charan Singh, [1967] 2 SCR 720 at 725-26 were relied
upon:
".....It would be a new terror in the construction Acts
of Parliament if we were required to limit a word to an
unnatural sense because in some Act which is not
incorporated or referred to such an interpretation is given
to it for the purposes of that Act alone’....."
It is further contended that a mere amendment of the
schedules to the ’Additional Duties Act’ purported by
Section 4 of the Amending Act VI of 1980 would be inadequate
to serve the purpose of a valid levy on the activity of
processing. It was also urged that Section 3(3) of the
’Additional Duties Act’ which provides that the provisions
of ’Central Excise Act’ and the rules made thereunder shall,
so far as may be, apply in relation to the ’levy and
collection" of the Additional Duties would not also enable
the wider definition of ’manufacture’ in Section 2(f) to be
imported into Section 3(1) of the Additional Duties Act to
justify levy of Additional Duties on ’processing’.
23. The contention was neatly and attractively presented
and appeared, at first blush, to merit a serious
PG NO 803
consideration of the validity of the levy of additional
duties. But on a closer examination of the concept of, and
the scheme for, levy and collection of the additional duties
and the specific statutory provisions, the tensile strength
of the argument breaks down. There are at least two
circumstances which render the definition of ’manufacture’
under Section 2(f) attracted to the additional levies.
Section 3(3) of the Additional Duties Act provides:
".....Ievy and collection of the additional duties as
they apply in relation to the levy and collection of the
duties of excise on the goods specified in sub-section (l) .
"
It is plain that the statute expressly makes the provision
in the "Central Excise Act" apply in relation to ’levy and
collection’ of the additional duties. The question is
whether this provision is sufficient to attract Section 2(f)
of the main Act as amended. This, in turn, depends upon what
the expression "levy" connotes and carries with it. The term
’levy’ it is held, is an expression of wide import. It
includes both imposition of a tax as well as its
quantification and assessment. In Assistant Collector of
Central Excise, Calcutta Division v. National Tobacco Co. of
India Ltd., [ 1973] I SCR 822 this Court held:
"The term "levy" appears to us to be wider in its import
than the term "assessment". It may include both of a tax as
well as assessment. The term imposition" is generally used
for the levy of a tax or duty by legislative provision
indicating the subject matter of the tax and the rates at
which it has to he taxed .....
24. That apart, Section 4 of Amending Act VI of 1980
has amended the relevant items in the schedule to the
Additional Duties Act. The expressions ’produce’ or
’manufacture’ in Section 3(1) of the Additional Duties Act
must be read along with the entries in the schedules.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 39
In Att. -Gen v. Lamplough, [1878] 3 Ex. D. 214, 229 it
is observed:
’A schedule in an Act is a mere question of drafting, a
mere question of words. The schedule is as much a part of
the statute, and is as much an enactment, as any other
part."
PG. NO. 804
Maxwell says (in Interpretation of Statutes 11th ed. p.
156):
" ....if an enactment in a schedule contradicts an
earlier clause it pevails against it."
Bennion (in Bennion’s Statutory Interpretation, p. 568-569)
referring to the place of schedules in statutes observes:
"The Schedule is an extension of the section which
induces it. Material is put into a Schedule because it is
too lengthy or detailed to be conveniently accommodation in
a section, ....."
"A Schedule must be attached to the body of the Act by
words in one of the sections (known as inducing words]. It
was formerly the practice for the inducing words to say that
the Schedule was to be construed and have effect as part of
the Act. (See, e.g. Ballot Act 1872 s. 28.) This is no
longer done, being regarded as unnecessary. If by mischance
the inducing words were omitted, the Schedule would still
form part of the Act if that was the apparent intention. "
" ....The schedule is as much a part of the statute, and
is as much an enactment, as any other par. (See also. to the
like effect, Flower Freight C o. Ltd. v. Hammond [19633] 1
QB 275; R v. Legal Aid Committee No. I [London] Legal Aid
Area. ex p. Rondel, [1967] 2 QB 482 and metropolitan Police
Commr. v. Curran., [1976] WLR 87.]"
What appears. therefore, clear is that what applies to
the main levy, applies to the additional duties as well, we
find no substance in Contention [c] either.
25. Re: Contention [d]
There is really no substance in the grievance that the
retroactivity imparted to the amendments is violative of
Article 19 [l] (g). A Competent legislature can always
validate a law which has been declared by courts to be
invalid, provided the infirmities and vitiating infactors
noticed in the declaratory-judgment are removed or cured.
Such a validating law can also be made retrospective. If in
the light of such validating and curative exercise made by
the Legislature-granting legislative competence--the earlier
judgment becomes irrelevant and unenforceable, that cannot
PG NO 805
be called an impermissible legislative overruling of the
judicial decision. All that the legislature does is to usher
in a valid law with retrospective effect in the light of
which earlier judgment becomes irrelevant. (See Sri Prithvi
Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. Broach Borough Municipality &
Ors., [1970] 1 SCR, 388)
Such legislative expedience of validation of laws is of
particular significance and utility and is quite often
applied, in taxing statutes. It is necessary that the
legislature should be able to cure defects in statutes. No
individual can acquire a vested right from a defect in a
statute and seek a windfall from the legislature’s mistakes.
Validity of legislations retroactively curing defects in
taxing statutes is well recognised and courts, except under
extraordinary circumstances, would be reluctant to override
the legislative judgment as to the need for and wisdom of
the retrospective legislation. In Empire Industries Limited
& Ors. Etc. v. Union of India & Ors. Etc., [ 19851 l Supp.
292 at 327 this court observed:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 39
"..... not only because of the paramount governmental
interest in obtaining adequate revenues, but also because
taxes are not in the nature of a penalty or a contractual
obligation but rather a means of apportioning the costs of
government amongst those who benefit from it".
In testing whether a retrospective imposition of a tax
operates so harshly as to violate fundamental rights under
Article l9(1)(g), the factors considered relevant include
the context in which retroactivity was contemplated such as
whether the law is one of validation of taxing statute
struck-down by courts for certain defects; the period of
such retroactivity, and the degree and extent of any
unforeseen or unforseable financial burden imposed for the
past period etc. Having regard to all the circumstances of
the present case, this court in Empire Industries’ case held
that the retroactivity of the Amending provisions was not
such as to incur any infirmity under Article 19( l)(g). We
arc in respectful agreement with that view.
There is no merit in contention (d) either.
26. Re: Contention (e)
This concerns the question of the correctness of the
determination of the assessable-value. The processors say
that they have filed classification lists under rule 173 B
PG NO 806
of the Central Excises and Salt Rules 1944 as they had no
other choice and that if the proper principles of
determination of the assessable-value do not legally justify
the consequences flowing from the classification, it is open
to them to contend against the validity of the
determination and they are not estopped from doing so.
Duties of excise are imposed on the production or
manufacture of goods and are levied upon the manufacturer or
the producer in respect of the commodity taxed. The question
whether the producer or the manufacturer is or is not the
owner of the goods is not determinative of the liability.
The essential and conceptual nature of the tax is to be kept
clearly distinguished from both the extent of the power to
impose and the stage at which the tax is imposed. Though the
levy is on the production or manufacture of the goods, the
imposition of the duty could be at the stage which the law
considers most covenient to impose as long as a rational
relationship with the nature of the tax is maintained.
27. The processors contend that, the assessable-value
could only be the job-work charges received by them for the
processing of ’Grey-fabric’ and cannot be the selling-price
at which the customer who entrusts the Grey fabric for
processing ultimately sells it in the market. Such a sale-
price, it is said, would, quite painly. include the value of
the Grey fabric, the processing-charges and also the
selling-profit of the customer. Even in regard to the price
of the Grey fabric itself which comes to the processing-
houses in fully manufactured condition would again depend
upon how many hands it has changed before reaching the
particular customer who brings them for processing. The
determination of assessable-value at the actual or
hypothetical selling-price of goods of like nature and
quality in the wholesale market would include the post-
manufacturing profits of the trader which cannot
legitimately be regarded as part of the assessable-value.
28. This contention was considered in detail in Empire
Industries case [ 1985] 1 Supp. SCR 293 at 327 wherein it
was held:
"When the textile fabrics are subjected to the processes
like bleaching, dyeing and printing etc. by independent
processes, whether on their own account or on job charges
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 39
basis, the value of the purposes of assessment under section
4 of the Central Excise Act will not be the processing
charges alone but the intrinsic value of the processed
fabrics which is the price at which such fabrics are sold
PG NO 807
for the first time in the wholesale market. That is the
effect of section 4 of the Act. The value would naturally
include the value of grey fabrics supplied to the
independent processors for the processing. However, excise
duty, if any, paid on the grey fabrics will be given pro
forma credit to the independent processors to be utilised
for the payment on the processed fabrics in accordance with
the Rules 56A or 96D of the Central Excise Rules, as the
case may be."
Even the Referring Bench did not doubt the correctness of
the inclusion in the assessable-value the cost of the Grey-
fabric and the processing charges. The Referring Bench held:
"We cannot accept the contention of the learned counsel
on behalf of the petitioners and the appellants that the
value of the grey cloth which is processed by the processor
should not be included in the assessable value of the
processed fabric ...... "
29. In the argument, as presented, that the assessable-
value would include what is referred to as the "post-
manufacture profits", there is an obvious fallacy. In Atic
Industries Ltd. v. H.H. Dave, Asstt. Collector of Central
Excise and Ors., [ 1975] 3 SCR p. 563 Bhagwati J. speaking
for the Court said:
"The value of the goods for the purpose of excise must
take into account only the manufacturing cost and the
manufacturing profit and it must not be loaded with post-
manufacturing cost or profit arising from post-manufacturing
operation ..... "
" .... It may be noted that wholesale market in a
particular type of goods may be in several tiers and the
goods may reach the consumer after a series of wholesale
transactions. In fact the more common and less expensive the
goods, there would be greater possibility of more than one
tier of wholesale transactions....."
" ......If excise were levied on the basis of second or
subsequent wholesale price, it would load the price with a
post manufacturing element, namely, selling cost and selling
profit of the wholesale dealer. That would be plainly
contrary to the true nature of excise as explained in the
PG NO 808
Voltas’ case (supra). Secondly, this would also violate the
concept of the factory gate sale which is the basis of
determination of value of the goods for the purpose of
excise......"
"There can, therefore, be no doubt that where a
manufacturer sells the goods manufactured by him in
wholesale to a wholesale dealer at arms length and in the
usual course of business, the wholesale cash price charged
by him to the wholesale dealer less trade discount would
represent the value of the goods for the purpose of
assessment of excise .... "
Explaining what really is the idea of "post-
manufacturing profit" referred to in Atic’s case this court
in Union of India & Ors. etc. etc. v Bombay Tyre
International Ltd. etc. etc., [ 1984] l SCR, p. 347 at 375
aid:
".....When it refers to post-manufacturing expenses and
post-manufacturing profit arising from post-manufacturing
operations, it clearly intends to refer not to the expenses
and profits pertaining to the sale transactions effected by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 39
the manufacturer but to those pertaining to the subsequent
sale transactions effected by the wholesale buyers in favour
of other dealers."
(Emphasis Supplied)
The principles for the determination of assessable-value are
laid down under section 4 of the Act. Section 4 of the
Central Excise Act’ envisages that the value of an article
for the purposes of duty shall be deemed to be; (a) The
wholesale cash price for which an article of the like kind
and quality was sold or was capable of being sold at the
time of removal of the article from the factory or premises
of manufacture for delivery at the place of manufacture or;
(b) Where such price was not ascertainable, the price at
which an article of the like kind and quality was sold or
capable of being sold at the time of removal of the article
chargeable with duty.
The nature of the excise duty is not to he confused
with, or tested with reference to, the measure by which the
tax is assessed. The standard adopted as the measure of
assessment may throw light on the nature of the levy but is
not determinative of it. When a statutory measure for
assessment of the tax is contemplated, it "need not contour
PG NO 809
along the lines which spell out the levy itself.", and "a
broader based standard of reference may be adopted for the
purposes of determining the measure of the levy." Any
statutory standard which maintains a nexus with the
essential character of the levy can be regarded as a valid
basis for assessing the measure of the tax.
30. In the case of processing-houses, they become liable
to pay excise duty not because they are the owners of the
goods but because they cause the ’manufacture’ of the goods.
The dimensions of the Section 4(1)(a) and (b) are fully
explored in number of decisions of this Court. Reference may
be made to the case of Bombay Tyres International.
Consistent with the provisions of Section 4 and the
Central Excise (Valuation) Rules, 1975, framed under Section
37 of the Act it cannot be said that the assessable-value of
the processed fabric should comprise only of the processing-
charges. This extreme contention if accepted, would lead to
and create more problems than it is supposed to solve; and
produce situations which could only be characterised as
anomalous. The incidence of the levy should be uniform,
uninfluenced by fortuitous considerations. The method of
determination of the assessable-value suggested by the
processors would lead to the untenable position that while
in one class of Grey-fabric processed by the same processor
on bailment, the assessable-value would have to be
determined differently dependent upon the consideration that
the processing-house had carried out the processing
operations on job-work basis, in the other class of cases,
as it not unoften happens, the goods would have to be valued
differently only for the reason the same processing-house
has itself purchased the Grey-fabric and carried-out the
processing operations on its own.
It is to solve the problem arising out of the circumstances
that goods owned by one person are "manufacture ’ by another
that at a certain stage under rule 174A, a notification was
issued by the Central Government exempting from the
operation of the rule 174A:
".... every manufacturer who gets his goods manufactured
on his account from any other person, subject to the
conditions that the said manufacturer authorises the person,
who actually manufactures or fabricates the said goods to
comply with all procedural formalities under Central Excises
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 39
and Salt Act, 1944 ( l of 1944) and the rules made
thereunder, in respect of the goods manufactured on behalf
PG NO 810
of the said manufacturer and, in order to enable the
determination of value of the said goods under section 4 of
the said Act, to furnish information relating to the price
at which the said manufacturer is selling the said goods and
the person so authorised agrees to discharge all liabilities
under the said Act and the rules made thereunder."
31. On a consideration of the matter, the view taken in
the matter in the Empire Industries case does not call for
reconsideration. Contention (e) is also held and answered
against the petitioner.
32. In the result the appeals preferred by the Union of
India are allowed and the Judgment of the Gujarat High
Court under appeal is set-aside. The appeals preferred by
the processors against the judgment of the Bombay High Court
and the writ petitions filed by the processors directly in
this court are dismissed. There will, however, be no orders
as to costs in the appeals and the writ-petitions.
The Union of India and its authorities shall be entitled
to recover the amounts due by way of arrears of excise-duty
and shall be entitled to take necessary steps to seek the
enforcement of the bank guarantees, if any, for the recovery
of the arrears.
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. I have had the advantage of
reading in draft the judgment proposed to be delivered by my
learned brother Venkatachaliah, J. I respectfully agree with
him. There is, however, one aspect of the matter in respect
of which I would like to say a few words. Contention (e) as
noted by my learned brother in his judgment deals with the
determination of the assessable-value. The processors in the
cases before us say that they have filed classification
lists under rule 173B of the Central Excises and Salt Rules,
1944 as they had no other choice and that if the proper
principles of determination of the assessable-value do not
legally justify the consequences flowing from the
classification it is open to them to contend against the
validity of the determination and they are nOt estopped from
doing so. The processors are right in contending that the
true principle should be followed in determining the
assessable-value. Then what is the true principle? Section 4
of the Act deals with the valuation of excisable goods for
purposes of charging of duty of excise. Section 4 [l] (a) of
the Act stipulates that the value should be subject to other
provisions of the Section the normal price thereof, that is
to say, the price at which such goods are ordinarily sold by
the assessee to a buyer in the course of wholesale trade for
delivery at the time and place of removal, where the buyer
PG NO 811
is not a related person and the price is the sole
consideration for the sale. For the present purpose, we are
not concerned with the provisos nor the situation where the
normal price of goods is not ascertainable for any reason.
In Empire Industries Limited & Others etc. v. Union of
India and Others etc., L [1988] Suppl. S.C.R. 292, it was
held that where for the purpose of calculating assessable
value, a notional sum is laid down by the legislature to be
arrived at one a certain basis, it is not permissible for
the courts to engraft into it any other deduction or
allowance or addition or read it down on the score that
unless the said deduction or allowance or addition is
authorised elsewhere in the Act or in the Rules. A statutory
charge should be measured by the method of its own
computation as laid down in the statute and not by any other
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 39
method of computation. The circumstances that thereby the
benefit of any exemption granted by the legislation may be
lost and that in some cases hardship might result are not
matters which would influence courts on the construction of
the statute. A tax payer is entitled only to such benefit as
is granted by the legislature. It was emphasised that the
taxation under the Act is the rule and the benefit and
exemption, the exception. And it was held that there was no
hardship in these cases. It was further reiterated that when
the textile fabrics are subjected to the processes like
bleaching, dyeing and printing etc. by independent
processes, whether on their own account or on job charges
basis, the value for the purposes of assessment under
section 4 of the Central Excise Act will not be the
processing charge alone but the intrinsic value of the
processed fabrics which is the price at which such fabrics
are sold for the first time in the wholesale market. That is
the effect of section 4 of the Act. The value would
naturally include the value of grey fabrics supplied to the
independent processors for the processing. However excise
duty, if any, paid on the grey fabrics will be given
proforma credit to the independent processors to be utilised
for the payment on the processed fabrics in accordance with
the relevant rules.
In M/s. Ujagar Prints v. Union of India, [1986] Suppl.
S.C.C. 652 Bhagwati C.J. held that the processes of
bleaching, dyeing, printing, mercerising etc. carried on by
a processor on job-work basis in respect of grey cotton
fabrics and manmade fabrics belonging to the customer and
entrusted by him for processing amount to manufacture with
the meaning of the Act prior to its amendment so as to
attract levy of excise duty on the processed fabrics and in
any event, after the Amendment Act, these processes amount
to manufacture and excise duty is leviable on the processed
fabrics. The learned Chief Justice also dealt with the other
PG NO 812
question, namely, what is the value of the processed fabrics
liable to be assessed. Referring to the aforesaid decision
of the Empire Industries, (supra), he illustrated the
problem by reference to the example set out in the judgment
(Page 654 of the report at para 2). In that example
illustrated by him the value of the grey cloth in the hands
of the processor was Rs.20. The value of the job-work was
Rs.5. B Trader’s selling price inclusive of his selling
profits etc. was put at Rs.30. Bhagwati C.J. at page 655 of
the report observed that the assessable value of the
processed fabric must obviously be taken to he the wholesale
cash price of the processed fabric at the factory gate that
is when the processed fabric leaves the factory of the
processor and it cannot possibly include the selling profit
of the trader who subsequently sells the processed fabrics.
The learned Chief Justice reiterated that it is at the point
when the processed fabric leaves the factory of the
processor that its assessable value has to be determined and
that assessable value cannot include the selling profit of
the trader. Empire Industries, (supra) did not say that the
post-manufacturing profits or post-manufacturing costs could
be included in the assessable-value of the processed fabric.
If the trader who entrusted cotton or man-made fabrics to
the processor for processing on job-work basis, would give a
declaration to the processor as to what would be the price
at which he would be selling the processed goods in the
market that would be taken by the Excise authorities as the
assessable-value of the processed fabrics and excise duty
would be charged to the processor on that basis. Where a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 39
manufacturer sells the goods manufactured by him in
wholesale to a wholesale dealer at the arms length and in
the usual course of business, the wholesale cash price
charged by him to the wholesale dealer less trade discount
would represent the value of the goods for the purpose of
assessment of excise But the price received by the wholesale
dealer who purchases the goods from the manufacturer and in
his turn sells the same in wholesale to other dealer, would
be irrelevant for determination of the value of the goods
and the goods would not be charged on that basis. This has
been explained in Atic Industries Ltd. v. H.H. Dave. Asstt.
Collector of Central Excise and Ors., [ 1975] 3 S.C.R . 563.
This has also been explained in Union of India & Ors. etc.
etc. v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd. etc. etc. . [1984] l
S.C.R. 347 at 375. It has to he reiterated that the
valuation must be on the basis of wholesale cash price at
the time when the manufactured goods enter into the open
market. See in this connection the ratio of this Court in
Union of India and Ors. v. Cibatul Ltd., [ 1985] Suppl 3 SCR
95 and the Joint Secy. to the Govt of India & Ors. v. Food
Specialities Ltd., 11985] Suppl 3 SCR 165. It was
emphasised in Union of India & Ors. v. Cibatul, (supra) that
the value of the trade-marks was not be taken into account
PG NO 813
in computing the assessable value as the affixation of the
trade-marks of a particular brand was extraneous to
manufacture. The values of such extraneous or additional
factors do not enter into the computation of assessable
value and as such the wholesale cash price at which the
goods enter into the wholesale market would be independent
of the value of the trade-marks. So that cannot be taken
into the computation of the assessable value. Similarly, in
the case of Joint Secretary to the Govt. of India and others
v. Food Specialities Ltd., (supra), it was held that the
value of Nestle’s trade marks could not be to the wholesale
price charged by the dealer to Nestle’s for the purpose of
computing the value of the goods manufactured. The goods in
both these cases were manufactured independently of the
addition of the trade-marks. The price thereof at the
factory gate was not after taking into account the value of
the trade-marks. If that was the position the value of the
trade-marks cannot be added to the wholesale cash price
charged by the dealer. Affixation of trade-marks for
enhancement of the value thereof is extraneous to and
independent of the process of manufacture. The charges for
the same are not part of the assessable value and cannot
enter into computation of the whole-sail cash price on the
basis of which excise duties ale to be levied.
In the aforesaid view of the law and tor the reasons
mentioned by my learned brother, l agree with his answer to
this contention. The assessable value would. therefore.
include the value of the grey cloth in the hands of the
processors plus the value of the job-work done plus
manufacturing expenses whatever would be included in the
price at the factory gate. The correct assessable value
must be the value of the fabric at the factory gate, that is
to say, the value at which manufactured goods leave the
factory and enter the main stream.
One more aspect will have to be reiterated. Computation
of the assessable-value is one question and as to who would
be liable for the same is another. Duties of excise are
imposed on production or the manufacture of goods and are
levied upon the manufacturer or the producer in accordance
with the relevant rules. This is quite independent of the
ownership of goods. It is, therefore. necessary to reiterate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 39
that the value for the assessment under section of the Act
will not be the processing charge alone but the intrinsic
value of the processed fabrics which is the price at which
the fabrics are sold for the first time in the wholesale
market. The rules are clear on the computation of that
value. If the valuation is made according to the rules as
adumbrated in Empire Industries (supra) and as clarified by
my learned brother in this judgment no difficulty should
arise.
PG NO 814
RANGANATHAN, J. I agree but I should like to add a few
words on two of the points argued before us.
First, I should like to clarify the nature of the
decision in Hindustan Milkfood Manufacturers Ltd. v. Union,
(the HMM case) 1980 E.L.T. 480 (to which I was a party),
since learned counsel for the petitioners sought to rely on
my judgment in that case as supporting his contention that
the Union cannot seek to uphold the amendment presently in
question by reference to Entry 97 of List I in the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. In that case, the Delhi High
Court was concerned with the interpretation of the amendment
to S. 4 of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 by Act 22
of 1975. The pre-amendment section postulated the
determination of excise duty on the basis of the wholesale
cash price of the excisable goods at "the factory gate";
and, an explanation provided that, in determining this
price, no abatement or deduction shall be allowed in respect
of trade discount and the amount of duty payable at the time
of the removal of the goods from the factory. The post-
amendment section made certain changes in the concept of
sale at the factory gate by excluding therefrom sales
effected in favour of a category of persons defined as
"related persons" with which we are not concerned here. The
amendment also defined the assessable "value" so as to
include packing charges but to exclude the amount of excise
duty, sales tax and other taxes as well as trade discount.
The question was whether this amendment precluded the
deduction, from the wholesale factory gate price, of post-
manufacturing expenses and profits. The question had been
answered by several High Courts in the negative principally
on the ground that the duty sought to be levied under the
Act was an excise duty, the very nature of which required a
proximate connection with production or manufacture and that
what had passed beyond this region and entered the domain of
sale could not pass as excise duty. Counsel for the Union of
lndia. with a view to overcome these decisions, had
contended that since Entry 97 of List I in the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution enabled Parliament to enact a
legislation even beyond the purview of an excise duty
covered by Entry 84 of that list, the Court should not read
into the amended section the limitations that had been
considered inherent in the section before its amendment. It
was in repelling this contention that certain observations
were made by me in paras 30 to 32 of the judgment to which
Sri Soli Sorabjee drew our attention. It will, however, be
clear from the discussion in the paragraphs referred to
that the contention was repelled not on the ground that the
legislature could not make a wider levy by reference to
Entry 97 but only on the ground that the history, context
and language of the amendment did not warrant the wider
interpretation. This will be clear from the following two
sentences in para 31 where I said:
PG NO 815
"Mr. Chandrasekharan’s contention .. that the
language of the new section should be given an enlarged
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 39
scope and interpretation by relating it to Entry 97 of List
I of Seventh Schedule cannot, in our opinion, be accepted.
We do not think, in considering this amendment, that it is
necessary for us to discuss whether, if Parliament were to
enact a law imposing on goods manufactured or produced a
duty based not only on the manufacturing cost/profits, but
also including in the dutiable value the whole or some part,
post manufacturing cost/profits, such a law would be intra
vires or not: because it appears to us that no such law has
been enacted in this case. We shall assume with Mr.
Chandrasekharan, that in view of Entry 97 in the Union List
under the Constitution, it is open to and competent for the
legislature to expand or even modify the nature of the levy.
The question, however, will be whether it has done so."
It was concluded, after referring to the previous position
as well as the statement of objects and reasons for the
amendment, that there was nothing to show that the
legislature had intended to make ally change and that the
rule against a presumption of implicit alteration of the law
should be invoked in the context. In other words, the HMM
decision was based not on the scope of legislative Entry 97
in List 1 but on the language and scope of the amendment
actually effected. It was considered not necessary or
possible to stretch the language of the definition in s. 4
beyond the ambit of the provision as delineated in the
earlier decisions. The question decided was not that the
legislature could not, but that it did not, make any radical
change in the nature of the levy.
The position considered in the HMM case may be
illustrated by an analogy. Entry 82 in List I of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution permits the enactment, by the
Union Legislature, of a law relating to taxation of
’income. The entry does not restrict such laws only to the
income of a ’previous year’, though this was the pattern of
the prevelent Income Tax Acts activated by annual Finance
Acts. Between 1948 and 1955, however, the Finance Acts
purported to impost a tax on "excess dividends" which, in
brief, was a tax on dividends declared out of profits of
past years. The effect of these enactments was considered by
the Bombay High Court as well as this Court. In C.I.T. v.
Elphinstone Spinning & Weaving Mills Co. Ltd., [1960] 3 SCR
953, this Court held that the language of the relevant
provision in the Finance Acts was so framed that it could
not be read as an independent charging section. It will be
appreciated that the Finance Acts were also enactments of
the Union Legislature and a taxation of profits, even of
past years, by an independent and specific enactment could
certainly have been brought within the scope of Entry 97, if
not Entry 82 itself. Nevertheless, the enactments were held
ineffective not because they could not but because they did
not contain the words necessary to effectuate the result.
The position in the HMM case was somewhat similar. The
legislature retained the levy on the basis of the wholesale
cash price at the factory gate as before and only introduced
a definition of the expression ’value’ in terms a little
more elaborate but basically not very different from what
had been contained in the earlier section. The Court saw no
reason to read into the language of the amended provision a
meaning much wider that had been attributed to the provision
before its amendment. The amendment gave no indication that,
contrary to what had been decided earlier, it was the
intention of the legislature to bring into the assessable
value even an element of post manufacturing cost/profit.
PG NO 816
But here the position is entirely different. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 39
amendment has specifically enlarged the meaning and concept
of the word "manufacture". If such extended concept is
within the range of duties of excise as envisaged under
Entry 84-and I agree that with my learned brothers that
is-, there is no difficulty. But, if, as contended for by
Sri Sri Soli Sorabjee, that legislative entry permits a duty
levied with on the process of ’manufacture", stricto sensu,
and the processing in this case cannot be brought within
that definition then this expended definition cannot be
fitted into that entry. Nevertheless the specific statutory
definition cannot be ignored and it it cannot be held valid
by reference to Entry 84, its validity has to be considered
with reference to the residuary Entry 97. The definition of
manufacture in a limited sense. It explictly enlarges the
scope of the levy of excise duty and, if it is not
permissible to bring it within the scope of Entry 84, a
resort to Entry 97 cannot be ruled out. In my view,
therefore, there is nothing in the decision in the HMM case
that supports the contention of the petitioners have that
the amendment of the definition of "manufacture" cannot be
PG NO 817
sustained by reference to Entry 97 of List I in the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution of India, if it cannot be
upheld as falling under the purview of Entry 84.
The second point, on which I feel inclined to add a few
words is in regard to the contention on behalf of the
petitioners that the definition of the term "manufacture"
enacted in the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944 as enlarged
by Amendment Act 6/80, cannot be read into the provisions of
the Additional Duties of Excise Act (No. 58), 1957. The
argument is in three phases and runs thus:
(i) S. 3 of the 1957 Act, which is the charging section,
fastens the charge of duty at the state of ’manufacture out
this e expression is deliberately left undefined, though the
statute takes special care in s. 2 to adopt, for its
purposes, the definition of the specified goods as contained
in the 1944 Act. This excludes the definition of
’manufacture’ enacted in s. 2(f) of the 1944 and enlarged
from time to time .
(ii) S. 3(3) cannot help the Revenue in this regard, as
its only purpose and effect is to avoid a repetition. in
this Act of the procedural provisions of the 1944 Act. The
charge or imposition of the tax having been said under S. 3
[1], the purpose of .S. 3(3) is only to say that this charge
shall be qualified, demanded of the 1944 Act. This sub-
section cannot be read as having the effect of incorporating
the substantive definition of "manufacture" in the 1944 Act
particularly when s. 2 chose to incorporate only the
definition of the specified goods as contained in the 1944
Act.
[iii] Even if the language of S. 3( 3 ) is construed
more liberaly, it will be effective with only to incorporate
the definitions contained in the 1944 Act as on the date of
commencement of the 1957 Act but not its subsequent
legislative expansions.
In my opinion. there is no warrant or justification for
giving such a narrow interpretation to the wide language of
s. 3[3] of the 1957 Act. Learned counsel for the petitioner,
in advancing this argument, apparently has in mind the
famous dictum of Lord Dunedin in Whitney v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners, [1927] A.C. .7 echoed in several decisions of
this Court and of the various High Courts in India:
PG NO 818
"Now, there are three stages in the imposition of a tax:
there is the declaration of liability, that is the part of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 34 of 39
the statute which determines what persons in respect of what
property are liable. Next, there is the assessment.
Liability does not depend on assessment. That, ex hypothesi,
has already been fixed. But assessment particularizes the
exact sum which a person liable has to pay. Lastly come the
methods of recovery, if the person taxed does not
voluntarily pay."
The argument, founded on the above figurative analysis,
seeks to equate the expressions "levy and collection" used
in s. 3(3) with the stages of assessment and collection
concerned with the procedure for quantification and recovery
of a duty that has already been imposed. The first stage of
"charge", according to counsel, has already been dealt with
in the first sub-section of s. 3, which has fastened a
charge on the production of manufacture of specified goods.
The third sub-section, it is said, only relates to the
quantification or recovery of the charge imposed under s.
3(1) . I do not see any force in this argument.
In the first place, even s. 3(1) which, according to the
counsel, is the charging section, uses the same words
"levied and collected. These are the same as the words used
in Article 265 of the Constitution, which have been
interpreted as comprehending the entire process of taxation
commencing from the imposition of the tax by enacting a
statute to the actual taking away of money from the pocket
of a citizen. They take in every stage in the entire process
of taxation. The words "levied" is a wide and generic
expression. One can say with as much appropriateness that
the Income tax Act levies a tax on income as that the the
Income Tax Officer levies the tax in accordance with the
provisions of the Act. It is an expression of wide import
and takes in all the stages of charge, quantification and
recovery of duty, though in certain contexts it may have a
restricted meaning. In the context of sub-section (1) the
word "levied" admittedly means "charged " as well as
"assessed. The words "levy and collection’ in sub-section
(3) cannot be construed differently from the words levied
and collected used in sub-section (1). S. 3(3), therefore,
also covers the entire gomut of s. 3 (1) and cannot be
construed as becoming operative at a somewhat later stage.
Its operation cannot be excluded in determining the scope of
the charge.
PG NO 819
In this context, reference has to be made to a decision
of this Court which had to consider a provision, almost
identical with S. 3(3) of the 1957 Act, appearing in the
Finance Act 1965, in a somewhat indirect manner, as the
decision contains some observations, which, at first sight,
appear to support the line of argument of the petitioner
herein. Such a provision has been annually repeated in all
Finance Acts--vide, the Finance Act from 1963 to 1983--and
imposes what has been described as "special", "regular" or
"auxiliary" duties of excise and customs. The decision I am
referring to is that of this Court in Associated Cement Co.
Ltd. v. Director of Inspection, [1985] 2 SCC 7 19. This
decision was really concerned with s. 280 ZD of the Income
Tax Act, 1961, which in turn called for a reference to s. 80
of the Finance Act, 1965 which is in the following terms:
"(I) When goods of the description mentioned in this
section chargeable with a duty of excise under the Central
Excises Act .... are assessed to duty, there shall be
levied and collected--
(a) as respects (certain) goods ............ , a
special duty of excise equal to 10 per cent of the total
amount so chargeable on such goods;
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 39
(b) as respects (certain other) goods ...... ...,
a special duty of excise equal to 20 per cent . . .: and
(c) as respects (certain other) goods ...... ...,
a special duty of excise equal to 33- 1/3 per cent . . .
(2) xxx xxx
(3) The duties of excise referred to in sub-section ( l)
chargeable on such goods under the Central Excise Act or any
other law for the time being in force . ..
(4) The provisions of the Central Excises Act and the
rules thereunder. including those relating to refunds and
exemptions from duty, shall. so far as may be. apply in
relation to the levy and collection of the duty of excise
leviable under this section in respect of any goods as they
apply in relation to the levy and collection of the duties
of excise on such goods under that Act or rules."
PG NO 820
Section 280 ZD of the Income Tax Act, 1961 enabled an
assessee, in certain circumstances, to obtain a "tax credit"
certificate in respect of a percentage of the amount of
"duty of excise payable by him." "Duty of excise" was
defined by the section to mean "the duty of excise leviable
under the Central Excises & Salt Act". The question was
whether the tax credit could also be given in respect of the
amount of the special duty of excise levied and collected
under the Finance Act. This Court held that, obviously, the
special duty levied under s. 80 could not be regarded as
having been levied under the Central Excise Act. It said:
"It is true that the expression ’leviable’ is an
expression of wide import and includes stages of
quantification and recovery of the duty but in the context
in which that expression has been used in clause (b) of sub-
section (6) of s. 280 ZD, it is clear that it has been used
in the sense of chargeability to duty. In other words, the
duty of excise in respect whereof tax credit is available
would be in respect of such duty of excise as is chargeable
under the Excise Act and clearly the Special excise duty in
respect whereof additional tax credit is sought by the
appellant company is not chargeable under the Excise Act but
chargeable under the Excise Act."
Having said this, the Court added:
"’Sub-clauses [3] and (4) of s. 8() of the Finance Act
on which reliance has been placed by counsel for the
appellant company in terms refers to the procedural aspect
such as the qualification and collection of the special duty
and simply because the qualification and collection of the
special duty under the Finance Act is to he done in
accordance with the provisions of the Excise Act such duty
does not become leviable that is to say chargeable, under
the Excise Act."
The above observations no doubt lend some support to the
contention of the petitioner, as the wording of s. 80(4) of
the 1965 Finance Act is identical with that of s. 3(3) and
has been interpreted as attracting only the procedural
aspect of the Central Excise Act. But in my opinion, while
that may have been true of s. 80(4) of the Finance Act,
1965, it will not be correct to draw the same conclusion
about the 1957 Act. For, s. 80(1) of the Finance Act, 1965
fully exhausted the aspect of charge of the special duty. It
PG NO 821
specified the goods to be taxed and also laid down that the
special duty was to be a percentage of the normal excise
duty chargeable on those goods. Nothing else remained except
the quantification and the collection. But here the position
is different. There are three ingredients of the charging
provision viz. s. 3(1). The additional duties are charged
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 36 of 39
(a) on manufacture, storage of production (b) of certain
named goods (c) at the rates specified in the first
schedule. Of these, only aspect (b) finds mention in the
t957 Act but in relation to the definitions contained in the
1944 Act. Aspect (c), clearly is not complete without a
reference to the main Act. For, turning to the First
Schedule of the Act, originally it specified rates on the
basis of length, weight or number on all items except
"cigarettes" where the duty was to be ad valorem. The
Amendment Act, No. 6 of 1980, substituted the rate per metre
specified under the original schedule in respect of the
items with which we are concerned to ad valorem rates. Now
the assessable value is to be determined on the basis of
which the special duty will have to be worked out cannot be
found out from the 1957 Act which contains no definition or
indication in this regard. The statute cannot be worked
atleast in respect of goods where an ad valorem rate is
prescribed unless s. 3(l) is read with s. 3(3 ) and the
definition of "assessable value" in s. 14 of the 1944 Act
is read with the Finance Act. In like manner, I think. the
content of aspect (a) cannot be understood differently from,
or independently of, the definition in the main enanctment.
Having regard to the nature and content of the levy
indicated in s 3(1), it is obvious that s. 3(3) has to have
the effect of attracting not only the purely procedural and
machinery provisions of the 1944 Act but also some of its
charging provisions. It is, therefore difficult to consider
section 3(1) of the 1(1957 Act--in contrast to the Finance
Act of 1965---As covering the entire ambit of the charge
imposed. In short, the language of s. (3) has to he given a
wider meaning than under the Finance Act, 1985. I have
referred to the fact that a provision similar to that in s.
80 of the Finance Act, 1965 is also found in other Finance
Acts. On perusal of these provisions, it will be found that
a like position exists there also. These provisions are all
self-contained and completely specify the scope of the
charge either as a percentage of the excise duty normally
chargeable under the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944 or as
a percentage of the ’assessable value determined under s. 4
of the 1944 Act.’ This, in my view, is a very important
reason why the observations in the Associated Cement Co.’s
case (supra) cannot be of application in the context of the
1957 Act.
A question has been raised as to why, if it were the
intention of the Legislature to take in all the provisions
PG NO 822
including definitions from the 1944 Act, it was considered
necessary to make a specific reference to the definitions of
the various goods on which additional duty was being imposed
as contained in the schedule to the 1944 Act. Counsel says
that this enactment of specific definitions drawn from the
1944 Act should lead to an inference that no other
definitions from that Act were intended to be incorporated
in the 1957 Act. A careful examination will, however. show
that this is not the effect. Actually, s. 2 is not much of a
’definition’ section. Cl. (a) is not strictly necessary and
cl. (b) is only intended to clarify that the proceeds of the
duties are not be distributed to Union Territories. So far
as clause (c) is concerned, it is necessary to make a
reference to s. 7 of the Act, which reads thus:
"7. It is hereby declared that the following goods,
namely, subject, tobacco, cotton fabrics, rayon or
artificial fabrics and woolen fabrics, are of special
importance in inter-state trade of commerce and every sales
tax law of a State shall, in so far as it imposes or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 37 of 39
authorises the imposition of a tax on the sale or purchase
of the declared goods, he subject, as from the 1st day of
April, 1958, to the restrictions and conditions specified in
s. 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956."
The effect of this provision, as held in M/s Mahendra
Pratap Rama Chandra v. Commercial Tax Officer & Others, AIR
1965 Cal. 203 is that "the contents of s. 15 became a part
of section 7 from the moment when s. ’, was enacted.’’ S. 15
of the Central Sales Act applies to "declared" goods as
defined in s. 2(c) and enumerated in s. 14 of that Act as
being of special importance in inter-state trade and
commerce. S. 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.
enumerates various items of goods among which arc the six
items specified in s. 3(1) of the 1957 Act and this list
further specifies that they shall have the same meaning as
is attached to the respective items in the First Schedule to
the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944 vide items (ii-a),
(vii), (viii), (ix). (x) and (xi). Thus, it was always clear
that the specified goods have to be understood in the way
they were defined in the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944.
The idea in 1956 was to restrict the powers of the States to
levy sales tax in respect of such goods and other goods. In
1958, the idea was conceived of the Centre levying an
additional excise duty on these goods and distributing the
same to the States subject to the condition specified in
Schedule II that such States did not impose any sale or
purchase tax on these commodities. Subsequently, perhaps. it
was realised that s. 7 served no specific purpose under the
Act except that of the definitions which was an aspect
PG NO 823
already covered by s. 2(c). In these circumstances, not much
significance need be attached to s. 2(c) much less can it be
construed as negativing the import of other definitions from
the 1944 Act.
The next question that arises for considerion is,
whether, even assuming that the terms of s. 3(3) are
applicable, its terms are wide enough to take in not merely
the provisions of the Central Excises and & Salt Act, 1944
and, in particular its definition clauses, as they stood in
1957 on the date when the 1957 Act came into force but also
the amendments effected therein from time to time. The
answer to this question depends upon the general principles
applicable to what is described as ’referential legislation’
of which this is an instance. Legislatures sometimes take a
short cut and try to reduce the length of statutes by
omitting elaborate provisions where such provisions have
already been enacted earlier and can be adopted for the
purpose on hand. While, on the one hand, the prolixity of
modern statutes and the necessity to have more legislation
then one on the same or allied topics render such a course
useful and desirable, the attempt to legislate by reference
is sometimes everdone and previty is achieved at the expense
of lucidity. However, this legislative device is quite well
known and the principles applicable to it fairly well
settled.
Referential legislation is of two types. One is where an
earlier Act or some of its provisions are incorporated by
reference into a later Act. In this event, the provisions of
the earlier Act or those so incorporated, as they stand in
the earlier Act at the time of incorporation, will be read
into the later Act. Subsequent changes in thc earlier Act or
the incorporated provisions will have to be ignored
because, for all practical purposes, the existing provisions
of the earlier Act have been re-enacted by such reference
into the later one, rendering irrelevant what happens to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 38 of 39
the earlier statute thereafter. Examples of this can be seen
in Secretary of State v. Hindustan Cooperative Insurance
Society, AIR 1931 P.C. 149; Solani Ores Ltd. v. State, AIR
1975 S.C. 17 and Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd. v. Union, AIR
1979 S.C.798. On the other hand, the later statute may not
incorporate the earlier provisions. It may only make a
reference of a broad nature as to thc law on a subject
generally, as in Bhajiyu v. Gopikabai. [1978] 3 SCR 561; or
contain a general reference to the terms of an earlier
statute which are to be made applicable. In this case any
modification, repeal or re-enactment of the earlier statute
will also be carried into in the later, for here, the idea
is that certain provisions of an earlier statute which
become applicable in certain circumstances are to be made
use of for the purpose of the latter Act also. Examples of
PG NO 824
this type of legislation are to be seen in Collector of
Customs v. Nathella Sampathu Chetty, [1962] 3 SCR 786; New
Central Jute Mills Co. Ltd. v. Assistant Collector, [1971] 2
SCR 92 and Special Land Acquisition Officer v. City
Improvement Trust, [1977] 1 SCR 569. Whether a particular
statute falls into the first or second category is always a
question of construction. In the present case, in my view,
the legislation falls into the second category. S. 3(3) of
the l957 Act does not incorporate into the 1957 Act any
specific provisions of the 1944 Act. It only declares
generally that the provisions of the 1944 Act shall apply
"so far as may be", that is, to the extent necessary and
practical, for the purposes of the 1957 Act as well.
That apart, it has been held, even when a specific
provision is incorporated and the case apparently falls in
the first of the above categories, that the rule that
repeals, modifications or amendments of the earlier Act will
have to be ignored is not adhered to incertain situations.
These have been set out in State of Madhya Pradesh v.
Narasimhan. [ 1976] 1 SCR 6. In that case. the Supreme Court
was considering the question whether the amendment of s.
21 of the Penal Code by the Criminal Law Amendment Act.
195X, was also applicable for purposes of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947, which by section 2 incorporates, for
the purposes of that Act, the definition of ‘public servant’
in s 2l of the Penal Code. Answering thc (question in the
affirmative, the Court outlined the following proposition:
"Where a subsequent Act incorporates provisions of a
previous Act. then the borrowed provisions become an
integral and independent part of the subsequent Act and are
totally uneffected by any repeal or amendment in the
previous Act This principle. however will not apply in the
following, cases:
(a) where the subsequent Act and the previous Act are
supplemental to each other;
(b) where the two Acts are in pari materia:
(c) where the amendment in the previous Act, if not
imported into the subsequent Act also, would render the
subsequent Act wholly unworkable and uneffectual; and
(d) where the amendment of the previous Act, either
PG NO 825
expressly or by necessary intendment, applies the said
provisions to the subsequent Act. "
The present case falls within the scope of these
exceptions, even if s. 3(3) is construed as incorporating
certain specific provisions of the 1944 into itself. The
legislation presently in question is clearly in pari materia
with the 1944 Act. It is also merely supplemental. While the
1944 Act imposes a general levy of excise duty on all goods
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 39 of 39
manufactured and produced, and aim of the present Act is to
supplement the levy by an additional duty of the same nature
on certain goods. The duration of the applicability is
undefined but the statute is clearly enforceable as long as
it is in the statute book side by side with the normal
excise duties. The clear intention is that the same
provisions shall govern both the levies except that the duty
under the later Act is confined to certain goods only and
its distributability among the States may perhaps follow a
different pattern from the principal duty. There is no
reason or logic why all the incidents attaching under the
earlier legislation, in so &r as they are not clearly
inconsistent with the later one should not be extended to
the later legislation as well. As has been pointed out
earlier, the Finance Acts which levied special or regular or
additional excise duties contained in themselves all the
elements of charge of duty. The goods were mentioned and the
duty as to be levied either at a percentage of the normal
excise duty payable under the 1944 Act or at a percentage of
the value of the assessable goods as determined under the
1944 Act. All that was further needed was the applicability
of the procedural provisions of the 1944 Act Here, however,
the 1957 Act is incomplete as to the basis of the charge and
its provisions would become totally unworkable unless the
concepts of "manufacture" and "assessable value?’ as
determined under the 1944 Act are carried into it.
In the circumstances, I agree that we should give full
and literal effect to the language of s. 3(3) and hold that
it has the effect not only of attracting the procedural
provisions of the 1944 Act but also all its other
provisions, including those Containing the definition.
M.L.A.