Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2901 of 2000
PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF CENTRAL EXCISE, MUMBAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. FISHER ROSEMOUNT (INDIA) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/11/2001
BENCH:
N. Santosh Hegde & Ashok Bhan
JUDGMENT:
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
In a dispute pertaining to determination of the valuation
of goods imported by the respondent herein from M/s.
Rosemount Inc. USA, the Assistant Collector of Customs,
Special Valuation Bench, Bombay, held that the respondent
herein is a related person to M/s. Rosemount Inc. of USA,
hence, it assumed that both the said companies are interested in
the business of each other and that the prices are not the sole
consideration. Therefore, it held that the valuation of the goods
imported by the respondent herein from M/s. Rosemount Inc.
USA will have to be done under Section 14(1)(b) of the
Customs Act, 1962 read with the Customs Valuation Rules,
1963. The said authority refused to accept the CIF value of the
goods imported by the respondent, consequently, it made an
addition of 2.4 per cent over and above the CIF value shown by
the respondent of the goods imported by it. As stated above,
this was done on the basis that the two companies, named
hereinabove, had the status of related persons.
An appeal filed against the said determination by the
respondent herein before the Collector of Customs (Appeals),
Bombay, came to be dismissed, upholding the findings of the
original authority.
The aggrieved respondent preferred an appeal before the
Customs, Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal,
Regional Bench at Mumbai (for short the tribunal) which
having reversed the said order of the original and appellate
authority, the Commissioner of Central Excise, Mumbai, is
before us in this appeal. The tribunal in this case, relying upon
its own judgment in the case of Collector of Customs, Bombay
v. Maruti Udyog Ltd., Gurgaon [1987 (28) ELT 390] came to
the conclusion that mere holding of a certain percentage of
stock by the foreign collaborator in the Indian company like the
respondent herein, was not sufficient to constitute the
relationship so as to make the two persons as related persons. It
further held that for two parties to be related, it also required the
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existence of interest by both in the business of each other. On
the said basis, it came to the conclusion that mere fact that M/s.
Rosemount Inc. USA, had the 40 per cent equity share in the
respondent company and had provided technical data base for
the manufacture of electronic pressure transmitters ipso facto
did not make the two companies related persons. In the absence
of any other material, the tribunal held that there was no reason
to reject the price declared by the respondent for the purpose of
valuation. On the said basis, the tribunal reversed the findings
of the authorities below and allowed the appeal of the
respondent.
It is contended on behalf of the appellant before us that
M/s. Rosemount Inc. USA and M/s. Fisher Rosemount (India)
Ltd., (the respondent herein) are related persons and have
interest in the business of each other. Therefore, the valuating
authority was justified in loading the declared value with extra
20%, more so because there was difference in the value of the
goods exported by the American Company to Singapore and
Australia on one hand and to the respondent on the other. It was
also contended that the judgment of the tribunal in the case of
Maruti Udyog Ltd. (supra) was wrongly relied upon by the
tribunal, hence, the order under appeal is liable to be set aside.
The applicability of Section 14(1)(b) of the Act, to the
facts of the case by the original and the appellate authority was
solely based on the factum of related persons without there
being any other acceptable evidence. This finding of related
person was again based on the fact of the equity participation of
the US Company in the Indian Company and the technical data
base supplied by the US Company to the Indian Company.
In the case of Maruti Udyog Ltd. (supra), the tribunal had
held :
It is, no doubt, correct that Suzuki held
26% shares in Maruti and, for that reason,
had a proportional representation on the
Board of Directors of Maruti also. But
Maruti had no share holding in Suzuki nor
any representation on the Board of
Directors of Suzuki. To rule out valuation
under Section 14(1)(a), the seller and the
buyer should have interest in the business
of each other. One-sided interest is
therefore, not enough; there has to be a
mutuality of interest and Maruti is right in
pleading that such mutuality of interest did
not exist [1984 (17) ELT 323 (SC) Union
of India & Ors. v. Atic Industries Ltd.].
Confronted with this situation, the learned
representative of the department argued that
Maruti had an indirect interest in the
business of Suzuki since Maruti was
interested in technical knowhow from
Suzuki not only for the current models and
their components but also for future models
and their components. We do not agree with
the departments plea. The transfer of
technical knowhow from Suzuki to Maruti is
a separate commercial transaction governed
by the Licence Agreement and Suzuki
charges a price for it. That does not create an
interest of Maruti in the business of Suzuki,
Japan.
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Based on the above finding, the tribunal in that case had
held that in the absence of any other material, it is not correct to
load the import price. It also held in that case that no evidence
had been led before it to show that even the payment of royalty
induced any extra commercial reduction in the import price.
This judgment of the tribunal has since been accepted by this
Court in the case of Collector of Customs, Bombay v. Maruti
Udyog Ltd., Gurgaon [1989 (22) ECR 482 (SC)]. Though by a
brief judgment, this Court held that after examining the
provisions of the Act and the facts found by the tribunal, the
tribunal was right in its conclusion. On the said basis, the
appeal of the Collector of Customs came to be dismissed,
affirming the judgment of the tribunal. Therefore, the tribunal
in the present case rightly relied on the said judgment in Maruti
Udyog (supra), the facts of which case are almost similar to the
facts of this case.
As noticed hereinabove, the original authority as well as
the appellate authority proceeded on the basis that merely
because the US Company owned 40 per cent of equity shares in
the Indian Company and that provided the technical data base to
the Indian Company as also the Indian Company got the licence
to manufacture the electrical pressure transmitters in
accordance with the said technical data, the same was sufficient
to hold that the two companies were related persons. On this
basis they drew an inference that the CIF value was not the sole
consideration for sale of the goods imported by the respondent.
Once, we find that the very basis relied upon by the original and
the appellate authority suffers from the lack of acceptable
material, then ipso facto the inference drawn from such
conclusion also is liable to be set aside. If that be so, then there
is hardly any other material to come to the conclusion that the
CIF value declared by the respondent did not truly represent the
correct value of the goods imported.
Shri Jaideep Gupta, learned counsel appearing for the
appellant, pointed out that it is quite evident from the material
on record that the CIF value of the goods imported by the
respondent did not include the freight as could be seen from the
documents available on record like the CIF value of the goods
supplied by the said American Company to the other buyers at
Australia and Singapore, hence, the authorities were justified in
loading the cost declared by the respondent with 20% addition.
Per contra, it is pointed out to us by Shri Joseph Vellapally,
learned senior counsel for the respondent, that assuming it is so
even then the value of the goods imported by the respondent
was much higher than the value of the goods supplied by the
American Company to the purchasers at Australia and
Singapore. Therefore, no adverse inference could have been
drawn on this count. Be that as it may, it is sufficient for us to
hold that once the case of the Revenue that the American and
the Indian Company (respondent) are related persons, fails, we
think the tribunal was justified in setting aside the orders of the
original as well as the appellate authority and we find no reason
to interfere with the same.
For the reasons stated above, this appeal fails and the
same is hereby dismissed. No costs.
J.
(N.Santosh Hegde)
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..J
November 6, 2001. (Ashok Bhan)
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