Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STEEL AUTHORITY OF INDIA LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, BOLPUR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/1997
BENCH:
S.B. MAJMUDAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Mujmudar. J.
This appeal under Section 35(L) of the Central Excise &
Salt Act, 1994 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’) is
brought by the appellant-assessee on being aggrieved by the
decision rendered by the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control)
Appellate Tribunal (CEGAT for short) dismissing the
assessee’s appeal against the order in original passed by
the Collector of Central Excise, Bolpur.
A few relevant facts leading to this appeal deserve to
be noted at the outset. The appellant, Steel Authority of
India Ltd. is a wholly owned Government of India Company.
The appellant-company has several steel plants and Durgapur
Steel Plant (DSP), situated at Durgapur in West Bengal, is
one of the integrated steel plants of the appellant-company.
DSP manufactures pig iron, steel ingots and several steel
products. These products of DSP prior to 1983 were
classified under the erstwhile Tariff Items 25, 26 and 26AA.
The appellant-company has been paying excise duty on these
items under reference following the principles of "later the
better". The appropriate central excise duty was determined
and paid on iron and steel products, when cleared. The
evidence led by the appellant explained the process of
production. That in the integrated steel plant of the
appellant-company at Durgapur the process of production is
as under|-
Iron ore
Sinter
Limestone put into Blast
Manganese Ore Furnace
Dolamite
BHQ
Molten iron is produced in the blast furnace. Molten
iron goes to steel furnaces of steel melting shop (SMS)
directly and other ingredients are mixed. The product from
SMS is steel. In other words, iron is converted into steel
in SMS. Raw materials like iron ore, sinter, coke limestone
etc. are fed into blast furnace which produces pig iron. At
this stage, the molten metal is called pig iron. Once this
molten metal is fed into steel making furnace which produces
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steel, the produce which comes out, out of the steel melting
shop (SMS) is known as steel and not iron and will fall into
Tariff Item 26. It is only when the steel ingots are
further processed and the various products like structurals,
rails, wire-rods, etc. are produced, they would come under
Tariff Item 26AA. According to the appellant, the steel
melting scrap is specifically covered under Tariff Item 26
and once a produce comes out of SMS, it is known as steel
and not iron. In the process of production of steel at SMS,
some scrap arises which is known in the industry as ‘steel
melting scrap’. While most of this steel melting scrap is
captively consumed by DSP itself, a small portion is also
sold to other steel plants manufacturing steel ingots,
steel casting and semi-finished steel with the aid of
electric furnace. The procedure set out in Chapter X of the
Central Excise Rules, 1994 is followed while selling the
steel melting scrap which is cleared at nil rate of duty.
It is the case of the appellant-company that the
clearance of steel melting scrap was being done in
accordance with Chapter X of the Central Excise Rules and
the said Clearance was governed by the terms of Notification
No.150/77 dated 18.6.1977 as amended by Notification
No.209/77 dated 2.7.1977. This practice of removal of steel
melting scrap as per the procedure laid down by the
aforesaid notification was being followed by the appellant-
company since the date of the said notification i.e.
18.6.1977.
The facts leading to the present proceedings stem out
of the show cause notices issued to the appellant-company by
the Superintendent of Central Excise, Durgapur. The first
show cause notice dated 21.11.1980 alleged that the
appellant-company had not paid duty on the iron contained in
crude form in ‘steel melting scrap’. It was alleged in the
said show cause notice that as per Tariff Item 25 iron in
crude form attracted central excise duty @ Rs.70/- per
metric ton and there was no clear exemption from payment of
duty on iron used for manufacturing of steel ingots and
steel melting scrap. That Notification No. 18/71-CE dated
27..3.1971 provided a set off of duty paid on iron in crude
form against the duty payable on steel ingots and steel
melting scrap. It was further alleged in the show case
notice that since specified steel melting scrap chargeable
to nil rate of duty, the question of set off of duty on
steel melting scrap cleared without payment of duty, was
chargeable. The aforesaid notice was in respect of the
period from 12.12.1977 to 30.9.1980. On similar terms
another demand notice was issued for the period from April
1981 to October 1981. The total duty so demanded was about
Rs.25.50 lakhs. The appellant-company submitted replies to
the said show cause notices and pointed out that the notices
were misconceived and the demands raised were not
sustainable. The Collector of Central Excise by his order in
original dated 9.6.1987 confirmed the demand of
Rs.25,50,593.87 on iron in crude form used by the appellant-
company in manufacture of 34,346.327 metric tons of steel
melting scrap which had been cleared without payment of
duty.
The appellant-company being aggrieved by the aforesaid
order of Collector of Central Excise, Bolpur, carried the
matter in appeal before the CEGAT, New Delhi. The said
appeal was partly allowed by the CEGAT by its order dated
21.12.1990 whereby the CEGAT quashed the demands in respect
of the period prior to 6 months of the issue of the
respective show cause notices dated 21.11.1980 and
23.11.1981 on the ground that for earlier period notices
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were time barred. However, the CEGAT upheld the demand of
the department for duty for the period of 6 months computed
backward from the dates of the respective show cause
notices. As per the aforesaid order of the CEGAT, total
demands covered by both the notices worded out to about Rs.6
lakhs. It is the aforesaid order of the CEGAT that has been
brought on the anvil of scrutiny of this Court in the
present appeal.
RIVAL CONTENTIONS :
Learned counsel for the appellant in support of the
appeal submitted that the CEGAT had patently erred in
upholding the demands for duty payable on iron in crude form
which had already resulted into duty paid steel ingots
manufactured by the appellant out of the said crude iron.
That steel melting scrap which resulted in the process of
manufacture of steel ingots from crude iron was purely a by-
product which was already exempted and bore nil duty on
account of Notification dated 18.6.1977 being Notification
No.150/77. That integrated steel plant like DSP was meant to
produce pig iron and various steel products but not scrap.
Scrap was not a conscious production. That the iron in crude
form which had not borne duty at the time of its production
had already resulted in the manufacture of duty paid steel
ingots. Even in the light of Notification No.18/71-CE dated
23.3.1971 full excise duty was paid by the appellant-company
on the steel ingots which were the ultimate product
manufactured by the appellant by utilising the entire input
of iron in crude form. Hence, even if set off of duty on
utilised iron crude form was not available as duty was not
paid at the relevant time when iron in crude form was
manufactured, save and except demanding full duty on
manufactured steel ingots, there would remain no occasion
for the revenue to bring to tax the very same utilised iron
in crude form which during the process of manufacture of the
final product of steel ingots might have resulted in a by-
product like steel melting scrap which in its turn was fully
exempted from the excise duty because of Notification No.
150/77. According to the learned counsel for the appellant,
the impugned notices of demand and the final order of
adjudication even for a period of six months immediately
preceding the impugned show cause notices were ex facie
unauthorised and not sustainable in law.
Learned counsel for the revenue, on the other hand,
submitted that at the time when the input of crude iron i.e.
pig iron was produced, no duty was paid by the appellant.
The said input was utilised by the appellant for
manufacturing two excisable items, namely, (i) steel ingots
and (ii) steel melting scrap though an excisable item, did
not bear any duty in view of the exemption Notification
No.150/77. Consequently, the input of pig iron to the
extent to which it resulted into the final product of steel
melting scrap remained liable to pay excise duty as no final
duty on steel melting scrap was available for
proportionately setting off duty payable on the input to the
extent of which it had resulted in the manufacture of steel
melting scrap. It was submitted that steel melting scrap was
itself an excisable item which had a market of its own and
was not like a by-product which had no value whatsoever and
was not exigible to central excise. Consequently, when the
final product of steel melting scrap had not borne excise
duty because of the exemption notification, as aforesaid,
the non-duty paid input which was embedded in it, which in
its turn was exigible to tax had to be brought tax when the
final product steel melting scrap got cleared and that is
precisely what the demand notices sought to do and hence the
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adjudication order was correctly passed by the CEGAT.
Having given our anxious consideration to the rival
contentions, we find that the CEGAT has patently erred in
sustaining the impugned demands of excise duty even for the
period of six months prior to the dates of respective show
cause notices. At the outset, we may note that it is not in
dispute between the parties that the appellant which is a
wholly owned Government of India company, in the process of
manufacturing the final product at its Durgapur Steel Plant
produces as an input for captive consumption molten metal
called pig iron. This pig iron as an input results in
manufacture of two excisable commodities, namely, steel
ingot as well as melting scrap. We may, for the purpose of
the present proceedings, proceed on the basis that steel
melting scrap which gets manufactured is an excisable
commodity and has its own market if not captively consumed.
However, the moot question remains as to whether the input
of pig iron ultimately bears full burden of excise duty as
leviable on the said pig iron at a stage when the said
input results into the final product. We may note at this
stage that at the relevant time, the tariff, item concerned
which made the input of pig iron exigible to excise duty was
Tariff Item 25 and rate of duty was Rs.70/- per metric ton.
The final products which resulted by utilising this input,
as noted above, were steel ingots as well as steel melting
scrap. Both of them were covered by Tariff Item 26 and were
liable to tax @ Rs.350/- per metric ton. There was Tariff
Item 26AA which dealt with iron or steel products which were
manufactured by utilising steel melting scrap as an input by
the appellant-company and those steel products enumerated in
the said Entry 26AA were of various types and were liable to
bear excise duty as mentioned in the said tariff item. The
short question for our consideration is whether pig iron in
crude form which was utilised as an input by the appellant-
company in manufacturing the final products of steel ingots
and steel melting scrap had been subjected to full payment
of excise duty under Tariff Item 25, if not at an earlier
stage when it was manufactured, it least at a latter stage
when it got embedded in steel melting ingots and steel
melting scrap. It has to be appreciated that it is not the
case of the department not is there anything on record to
indicate that out of the input of crude iron or pig iron, a
particular portion thereof was separately utilised by the
appellant as an input for manufacturing steel ingots was in
uniform, composite and a combined process and in the said
process of manufacturing steel melting scrap. In fact the
entire process of manufacturing steel ingots was a uniform,
composite and a combined process and in the said process of
manufacturing of steel ingots the entire input of crude iron
got exhausted and utilised but in the very same process two
commodities emerged, namely, steel ingot and steel melting
scrap. There is a substance in the contention of the learned
counsel for the appellant that the integrated steel plant
like DSP owned by the appellant was meant to produce pig
iron and various steel products. However, the process was
such that certain amount of scrap arises due to
technological necessity and it was not a conscious
production and, still it might be excise duty under the
concerned Tariff Item 26. We are not concerned in the
present proceedings with the taxability of the final
product, the steel melting scrap, as admittedly the said
steel melting scrap as a final product is not liable to pay
any liable duty and is exigible to nil duty on account of
exemption Notification no.150/77 dated 1.6.1977. It is not
in dispute between the parties that steel melting scrap
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which is the final by-product in the process of manufacture
of steel ingots undertaken by the appellant by utilising the
input of pig iron has earned full exemption from payment of
excise duty under the aforesaid notification. In fact, that
is the very basis of the show cause notices. The department
accepts that steel melting scrap is not liable to pay any
excise duty but its contention is that the proportionate
input of pig iron which was embedded in the said field final
product and which by itself did not bear any duty earlier
though it was liable to pay duty under Tariff Item 25 had
escaped excise duty thereon. If that is so, the question
remains whether the remaining and the main final product,
namely, steel ingot, which was exigible to central excise as
per Tariff Item 26 @ Rs.350/- per metric ton and which had
utilised the same input of crude iron, namely, pig iron
could be said to have accounted for payment of excise duty
on input of crude iron which was fully utilised by it when
it got manufactured in the steel melting furnace as a result
of the same and uniform manufacturing process. The basis of
the impugned show cause notices which in their turn got
upheld by the CEGAT to the extent of six months demands
prior to the dates of issue of these notices, being
Notification No.18/71 dated 27.3.1971 is, therefore,
required to be reproduced. The said notification reads as
under|-
"18/71-CE dt. 27.3.71: In exercise as of the powers
conferred by Rule. 8(1) of the
Central Excise Rules, 1994, and in
supersesion of the notification of
the Government of India in the
M.F.(D.R.& I) No.67/78-CE dt.
30.3.68, the Central Government
hereby exempts :
(a) steel ingots falling under Item No.25 of the First
Schedule to the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944
(1 of 1944), and
(b) iron and steel products falling under Item No.26AA
of the First Schedule
in which duty paid iron in any crude form,
including pig iron, scrap iron, molten iron or
iron cast in any other shape or size, is used,
from so much of the duty as is proved to have been
paid on the said iron in any crude form;
(Provided that in relation to the exemption under
this notification the procedure set out the Rule
56A of the aforesaid rules is followed)."
Now a mere look at the aforesaid notification shows
that it seeks to permit a set off of excise duty payable on
the final product manufactured by the appellant by utilising
the input of pig iron to the extent of the amount of excise
duty which might have been paid by the assessee on the
utilised input of pig which ultimately resulted resulted
into the final products. Those final products are either
steel ingots covered by Tariff Item 26AA. It is pertinent to
observe that the said exemption/set off notification does
not cover final product of steel melting scrap mentioned in
Tariff Item 26 which obviously results as an unplanned by-
product. Learned counsel for the respondent is right when he
contends that on the facts of the present case, the benefit
of the set off of excise duty payable on pig iron would not
be available to the appellant so far as its liability to pay
excise duty on the finished products was concerned as the
input of pig iron which emerging by-product of steel melting
scrap. In the absence of such bifurcation, the impugned
notices would obviously result in double taxation on the
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input of pig iron which embedded in steel ingots that became
liable to bear full excise duty and for which there is no
dispute between the parties. As the process for
manufacturing steel ingots by utilising the input of crude
iron was a single uniform process, such birfurcation even
otherwise was not possible even if it was so attempted by
the respondent-department. The impugned show cause notices
make clear, in this connection, that they seek to levy
basic excise duty for the relevant period on the entire
input of pig iron by seeking to bring it to tax on the basis
of the entire output of steel melting scrap. In other words
notices seek to equate total quantity of steel melting scrap
with the embedded proportionate input of pig iron. This is
clearly impermissible. It is obvious that steel melting
scrap, as a final product, is exigible to nil rate of duty
as there is no dispute between the parties that it is fully
covered by exemption Notification No. 150/77 dated
18.6.1997. In fact, that is the very basis for the impugned
notices, as seen earlier. If that is so, the impugned
notices indirectly seek to bring to tax the entire quantity
of steel melting scrap resulted into steel ingots had not
already borne the excise duty under Tariff Item 25 at the
time when it was manufactured. But the said fact does not
improve the case of the respondent-department any further.
The reason is obvious. Even though such set off from duty
payable on steel ingots as finished product @ Rs.350/- per
metric ton as per Tariff Item 26 might not be available to
the appellant-company, still the entire input of pig iron
which got utilised by the appellant in manufacturing steel
ingots got reflected in the full and final duty payable by
the appellant on the final product, which namely, steel
ingots. All that resulted was the deferred payment of excise
duty @ Rs.350/- per metric ton without any set off. That was
the only logical effect of the non-availability of the
benefits of Notification No.18/71 dated 27.3.1971. In the
absence of relevant data being available or even tried to be
produced by the respondent-department on the record of this
case, it is impossible to bifurcate and try to find out as
to what part of the input of pig iron resulted into the
manufacturing of steel ingots and what part of the very same
input of pig iron got embedded in the by treating it to be
resulting from the total input of pig iron, which directly
could not have been brought to tax. Once entire quantity of
steel melting scarp is exempted from excise duty as per
Notification of 18.6.1977, it is difficult to appreciate how
the very same quantity of scarp can be taken as a basis for
levying tax on input of pig iron embedded therein when
admittedly a substantial part of the very same input had
resulted in a different duty paid product, namely steel
ingots and for manufacturing the same substantial quantity
of pig iron had stood utilised.
The moot question that survives for our consideration
is as to whether the input of pig iron which itself was an
exigible commodity as per Tariff Item 25 had been subjected
to the requisite excise duty by way of deferred payment of
duty not at the time of manufacture of crude iron but at the
time when it got embedded in the final product of steel
ingots. In order to answer this question, we may take a
single illustration. Let us assume that 100 metric tons of
iron in crude form i.e. pig iron manufactured by the
appellant at a given point of time which was being utilised
by it in the uniform manufacturing process for ultimately
producing the steel ingots out of it. As per Tariff Item 25
the rate of excise duty was Rs.70/- per metric ton on pig
iron. Therefore, 100 metric ton of pig iron when
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manufactured would have been liable to pay excise duty of
Rs.7,000/-. would have been available to the appellant to be
adjusted against the final product, namely, the steel ingot
was cleared by it. For the purpose of this illustration, let
us assume that by utilising 100 metric tons of pig iron, 90
metric tons of steel ingot and 10 metric tons of steel
melting scarp emerged. So far as 10 metric tons of scarp was
concerned, it was not exigible to excise duty payable
thereon as per Tariff Item 26 was Rs. 350/- per metric ton.
Therefore, accordingly 90 metric tons of steel ingots would
have been required to bear total excise duty of Rs.31,500/-
(90 metric tons x Rs.350/-). Towards this total liability of
Rs. 31,500/- of excise duty on the final product of the
steel ingots, the appellant would have been entitled to a
set off Rs.7,000/- in all as it had utilised 100 metric tons
of pig iron as input for manufacturing this 90 metric tons
of steel ingots especially in the absence of there being any
bifurcation of the input of pig iron between the final
emerging products, namely, 90 metric tons of steel ingots on
the one hand and 10 metric tons of steel scarp on the other.
But that would have been possible if the input of 100 metric
tons of pig iron had already been subjected to payment of
excise duty at the time of clearance for captive
consumption. Then in that case the net duty liability on 90
metric tons of steel ingots would have been Rs.24,500/- only
(Rs.31,500- Rs.7,000/-). However, the set off of Rs. 7,000/-
in all is not available to the appellant on the excise duty
payable on 90 metric tons of steel ingots as at the relevant
time when the input of pig iron was manufactured, the same
had admittedly not borne any duty and the payment of duty
was deferred. Therefore the notification No.18/71 dated
23.3.1971 could not be of any avail to the appellant. The
net result was that the appellant had to pay the full duty
of Rs.31,500/- on the 90 metric tons of steel ingots which
had utilised non-duty paid 100 metric tons of pig iron. In
the process the appellant accounted for full duty payable on
steel ingots of 90 metric tons i.e. Rs.24,500/- and also
accounted for full duty on the input of 100 metric tons of
pig iron i.e. Rs.7,000/-. A conjoint operation of
Notification No.18/71 dated 23.7.1971 and Tariff item 26,
therefore, projects the following picture. Excise duty
payable on final output of steel ingots would work out to
Rs.350/- per metric ton consisting of Rs. 70/- per metric
ton being the duty on the embedded input of pig iron had
suffered the octroi duty at the time of its clearance for
captive consumption, the appellant would have been required
to pay only Rs.280/- per metric ton as excise duty on the
final product of steel ingots. On the other hand, if input
of pig iron had not borne such duty on its clearance for
captive consumption, and the duty thereon was deferred, the
steel ingots on clearance would bear full bear duty Rs.350/-
per metric ton which in its turn would result in deferred
payment of excise duty on input of pig iron on Rs. 70/- per
metric ton. Thus as per the illustration under
consideration, if the Notification No.18/71 dated
23.3.1971 operated in the field, the department would have
got Rs. 7000/- by way of excise duty on the manufacture of
input of pig iron of 100 metric tons when it was cleared for
captive consumption and it would have got excise duty of
Rs.24,500/- on 90 metric tons of steel ingots in the light
of the set off permissible under the said Notification i.e.
in all Rs.31,500/-. If the benefit of the said notification
was not available . As a matter of fact it is not available
as the input of 100 metric tons pig iron had not borne any
duty at the relevant time and the department had permitted
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the appellant to adjust it ultimately at the stage of
manufacture of final product of 90 metric tons steel ingots
which utilised the entire 100 metric tons of pig iron for
its production, in the absence of separate bifurcation, the
net result would still remain the same. Full excise duty of
Rs.31,500/- on 90 metric tons of steel ingots @ Rs.350/- per
metric ton without giving any benefit of adjustment would
become available to the department. In either case, the
appellant would be out of pocket to the requisite amount of
Rs. 31,500/- by way of excise duty which would fully meet
the department’s demand of the full excise duty of Rs.
7000/- payable on the total input of 100 metric tons of pig
iron. When the amount of excise duty so recovered on 90
metric tons of steel ingots which had exhausted the entire
pig iron, accounted for fully duty on the entire quantity of
input of pig iron, it is difficult to appreciate as to how
the very same quantity of 100 metric tons of pig iron as
input can again be subjected to excise duty because a
further unintended product of 10 metric tons of steel scarp
also resulted from the very same process of manufacture
undertaken by the appellant in its steel making furnace.
Consequently, it must be held that the impugned demands of
excise duty twice on the input of pig iron utilised by the
appellant in manufacturing the final product of steel ingots
and which in the same process as a by-product of steel
ingots and which was fully exempted from excise duty on
account of the concerned exemption notification.
In this connection, we may note that the reasoning of
the CEGAT as noted in paragraph 7 of the impugned judgment
is clearly unsustainable. The CEGAT has observed that in
this case steel melting scarp falling under Tariff Item 26
has been cleared without paying the duty or following the
procedure of Chapter X as stipulated in Notification No.
150/77 dated 18.6.1977. It has been further observed that
the department was justified in recovering duty at the stage
prior to the last stage as in the last stage the produce,
i.e. steel melting scarp is subject to nil rate of duty.
With respect, the error committed by the CEGAT is to the
effect that it had failed to appreciate that though duty on
the input of pig iron at prior stage was not paid, whole of
that duty got paid on clearance of steel ingots which were
the main final product and the emergence of a minor by-
product like steel melting scarp which might have been
cleared on payment of nil duty had no impact whatsoever for
enabling the department to once again bring to tax the same
input of pig iron.
We may also note that the reliance placed by the
learned counsel for the appellant on two decisions of this
Court in M/S Swadeshi Polytex Ltd. vs. Collector of Central
Excise[(1990) 2 SCC 358] and in Union of India & Ors. etc.
vs. Indian Aluminium Co. Ltd. etc. [(1995) Supp. (2) SCC
465] may not be strictly apposite on the facts of the
present case as the by-products which were dealt with in
these cases were not excisable goods at all and had no
independent market. In the present case even according to
the appellant steel melting scarp had a market value and was
capable of being sold outside if not captively consumed by
the appellant. In ground no.(v) B in the memo. of appeal the
appellant in this connection, has averred as under|-
" Because Steel Melting scarp was
exempted in terms of Notification
No.150/77 dated 18.6.1977 upon
conditions mentioned therein. The
conditions having been fulfilled,
no central excise duty can be
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determined or demanded, on the said
‘steel melting scarp’ when sold to
the steel plants following the
Chapter X procedure."
It, therefore, cannot be urged by the learned counsel
for the appellant that steel melting scalp was not an
excisable commodity or that it could not be sold in the
market. Consequently, the aforesaid decisions cannot be
pressed in service by the appellant in the present case.
However as discussed earlier the impugned demand of duty on
the supposed embedded input of pig iron which resulted into
the steel melting scarp were clearly unauthorised and
incompetent. The appellant is entitled to succeed on this
ground alone. In the result, the appeal is allowed, the
judgment and order of the CEGAT is set aside, the impugned
demands pursuant to both the notices dated 21.11.1980 and
23.11.1981 and the consequential adjudication thereon as
confirmed by the CEGAT are quashed and set aside. The
question of refund of Rs. six lakhs deposited by the
appellant pursuant to the order of the CEGAT will have to
be processed by the Collector of Central Excise, Bolpur in
accordance with law and in the light of the decision of this
Court in Mafatlal Industries Ltd. vs. Union of India (1977
ELT 247). The proceedings for this aforesaid limited
purpose will stand restored to the file of the Collector,
Central Excise, Bolpur. Ordered accordingly. In the facts
and circumstances of the case, there will be no order as to
costs.