Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
J K COTTON SPINNING & WEAVING MILLS COMPANY LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/03/1998
BENCH:
CJI, K.T. THOMAS, M. SRINIVASAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Thomas, J.
This moot point in this appeal this: Whether the period
of six months envisaged in Section 11A of the Central Excise
Act, 1944 (for short the Act), for issuing show cause
notice, stood extended by further period so as to enable the
Revenue to scale over the hurdle of limitation? Respondent
(Revenue) advanced two alternative premises in support of
the plea that the said period of six months stood extended.
First is, there was only a provisional assessment and hence
the ‘relevant date’ for issuing the show cause notice could
be counted only from final assessment, Second is that an
order of stay issued by the High Court of Delhi on 12.8.1981
virtually amounted to a bridle against issuing show cause
notice and hence the period stood extended by a entire time
when the stay order was in operation.
Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal
(CEGAT - the acronym hereafter) held that the assessment was
not provisional and hence the first premise was not
available to the Revenue. but it held by a majority of 2:1
that the interim order of the Delhi High Court dated
12.8.1991 operated as virtually a stay, though not expressly
so, against issuance of show cause notice and hence there
was no bar of limitation for recovering the amount of excise
duty levied. Thus, the Revenue was permitted by the CEGAT to
proceed to recover the duty. The said order of CEGAT is
challenged in this appeal.
The facts which led to the opening of the aforesaid
question can be summarised as follows: Appellant has a
textile mill consisting of various divisions, among which
the division where yarn is made is distinct from other
divisions. Yarn is to be used in the manufacture of fabric
which is the end product of the textile mill of the
appellant. Yarn is obtained at an intermediary stage in the
composite textile mill and is further processed in the mill
for making fabric. According to the Revenue, there is
removal of yarn from one area of the factory and hence that
commodity is exigible to excise duty as per Rules 9 and 49
of the Central Excises Rules irrespective of the Excise duty
payable on manufacture of fabric. Appellant challenged the
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aforesaid direction of the Department in a writ petition
filed before Delhi High Court and its contention was upheld
by judgment dated 16.10.1980. The Department then filed an
appeal in this Court by special leave. When the special
leave petition was pending the Department issued two notices
under Section 11 A of the Act for recovering the excise duty
on yarn for the period from 6.11.1980 to 31.3.1981. However,
the Department issued a notification on 20.2.1982 as a
precautionary step, amending Rules 9 and 49 of the Central
Excise Rules Creating a fiction of "deemed removal" of the
input goods at the intermediary stage within the factory.
That amendment later gained incorporation in a legislative
enactment also, vide Section 51 (2)(d) of the Finance Act
1982 by which it was given retrospective effect from 1944.
Though the appellant challenged the aforesaid amendments
first in the Delhi High Court and later in this Court its
validity remained undisturbed vide J.K. Spinning and Weaving
Mills Ltd. and Anr. V. Union of India and others, (32)
E.L.T1987. 234 - (AIR 1987 SC 191). A three-judge bench of
this Court in that decision upheld the validity of the
amendments to Rules 9 and 49 besides upholding the
retrospectivity granted to the provisions as per Section 51
of the Finance Act 1982.
However, in order to allay the apprehension of the
assessees that the judicial imprimatur accorded to the long
distant retrospectivity to Rules 9 and 49 of the Central
Excise Rules would precipitate them to unbearable financial
burden their Lordships put a rider that the retrospective
effect "must be subject to the provisions of Section 11A of
the Act."
It is advantageous at this stage to read Section 11-A *
Act:
"11A. Recovery of duties not levied
or not paid or short-levied or
short-paid or erroneously refunded.
When any duty of excise has not
been levied or paid or has been
short-levied or short-paid or
erroneously refunded, a Central
Excise Officer may, within six
months from the relevant date,
serve notice on the person
chargeable with the duty which has
not been levied or aid or which has
been short-levied or short-paid or
to whom the refund has erroneously
been made, requiring him to show
cause why he should not pay the
amount specified in the notice:
Provided that where any duty of
excise has not been levied or paid
or has been short-levied or short-
paid or erroneously refunded by
reason of fraud, collusion or any
wilful mis-statement or suppression
of facts, or contravention of any
of the provisions of the Act or of
the rules made thereunder with
intent to evade payment of duty, by
such person or his agent the
provisions of this sub-section
shall have effect, as if for the
words "six months" the words "five
years" were substituted.
Explanation - Where the service of
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the notice is stayed by the order
of a court, the period of such stay
shall be excluded in computing the
aforesaid period of six months or
five years, as the case may be.
(2) considering the representation,
if any, made by the person on whom
notice is served under sub-section
(1) determine the amount of duty of
excise due from such person (not
being in excess of the amount
specified in the notice) and
thereupon such person shall pay the
amount so determined.
(3) for the purposes of this
section.
(i) "refund" includes rebate of
duty of excise on excisable good
exported out of India or on
excisable materials used in the
manufacture of goods which are
exported out of India;
(ii) "relevant date" means"
(a) in the case of excisable goods
on which duty of excise has not
been levied or paid or has been
short-levied or short-paid-
(A) Where under the rules made
under this Act a monthly return,
showing particulars of the duty
paid on the excisable goods removed
during the month to which the said
return relates, is to be filed by a
manufacturer or producer or a
licensee of a warehouse, as the
case may be, the date on which such
return is so filed;
(B) where no monthly return as
aforesaid is filed, the last date
on which such return is to be filed
under the said rules;
(c) in any other case, the date on
which the duty is to be paid under
this Act or the rules made
thereunder;
(b) in a case where duty of excise
is provisionally assessed under
this Act or the rules made
thereunder, the data of adjustment
of duty after the final assessment
thereof,".
The period of six months envisaged in sub-section (1)
thereof can thus be extended only under three eventualities.
First is, if the impairment of the levy is attributable of
any fraud, collusion or wilful misrepresentation or
suppression of facts, the period of six months will stand
stretched upto five years. The second eventuality is, if the
original assessment was provisional, in which case the
period would start running only from the date of final
assessment. The third is , if the service of show cause
notice on the person chargeable with duty is stayed by a
court, in which case the entire period of stay shall be
excluded from computing the aforesaid limitation time.
The first eventuality mentioned above has no
application to the facts of this case and hence a discussion
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on that can conveniently be skipped. Regarding the second
contingency, though the department pleaded that only a
provisional assessment was made, that plea was repelled by
CEGAT in reversal of a finding made by the Assistant
Collector as well as the Collector (Appeals). It is the
third contingency which the Revenue has alternatively relied
on which secured approval from CEGAT.
Before we proceed to consider the merits of the case, we
have to deal with a preliminary objection raised by the
Revenue regarding maintainability of this appeal. In the
appeal petition it is stated that the appeal is filed under
Section 35L (b) of the Act which reads as under:
"35-L. Appeal to supreme Court _An
appeal shall lie to the Supreme
Court from-
(a) x x x x x x x x x x x
(b) any order passed by the
Appellate Tribunal relating, among
other things, to the determination
of any question having a relation
to the rate of duty of excise or to
the value of goods for purposes of
assessment."
We agree with the learned counsel for the Revenue that
the question sought to be determined in this appeal has
neither any relationship to the rate of duty of excise or to
the value of the goods for purpose of assessment. It may be
that the appeal could not have been filed under the
aforesaid Section on the facts of this case.
Be that as it may, we are no disposed to dismiss this
appeal on that technical ground at this stage because the
appellant could in that situation have sought for special
leave under Article 136 of the Constitution. With all the
papers available for deciding the question involved in this
appeal, we do not think it proper to drive the appellant to
file another special leave petition for that purpose
particularly because of the lapse of almost nine years since
the filing of this appeal. We, therefore, treat this appeal
as one filed by special leave.
We will now come down to the question to be determined.
Two vivid period are involved about which appellant raised
the contention that the bar under section 11-A of the Act
would
operate. The first period is between 6.11.1980 and 31.3.1981
and the second period is from 1.4.1981 to 5.12.1981 (there
is no dispute regarding the subsequent period as it falls,
indubitably, within the span of Section 11-A).
Shri Joseph Vallapalli, learned senior counsel for the
appellant fairly submitted that though the appellant raised
the contention relating to the aforesaid two periods (first
and second), he would confine his argument to the second
period only, as a decision of this Court in this appeal need
be given with reference to the second period.
According to the Revenue, there was a stay of service
of notice (to show cause as envisaged in Section 11-A of the
Act) from 12.8.1981. The said contention is made on the
strength of an order of stay passed by the Delhi High Court
on a Writ Petition filed by the appellant challenging a
circular issued by the Central Board of Excise and Customs
(for short ’the Board’) on 24.9.1980. That circular was
issued by the board purportedly in interpretation Rule 9 of
the Central Excise Rules. As per the said circular, the
Collector of Central Excise was required to specify in
addition to the place where excisable goods are produced or
cured or manufactured premises appurtenant thereto, if
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necessary, and to take immediate steps to ensure approval
to the place or production, and to delegate the powers of
the Collector under Rule 9(1) to the licensing authorities;
and further to demand the assesses to submit fresh ground
plans etc.
The appellant had moved a petition in the writ
application for an order of stay in terms of prayer (a)
thereof which consisted of the following limbs:
(i) Stay permitting the petitioners
to process yarn within its factory
without payment of duty;
(ii) restraining respondent from
giving effect to the contents of
the directive of the Board dated
24.9.1980; and
(iii) to stay further proceedings
pursuant to notices date 4th and
5th May, 1981 relating to the
period 6.11.1980 to 31.3.1981.
The High Court of Delhi has allowed the said petition
on 12.8.1981 in terms of the said prayer. The contention
which the Revenue pressed into service before CEGAT and
which was fond acceptance by them is that as per the second
limb, the stay became operative which virtually amounted to
stay of service of notice under Section 11-A of the Act.
Exclusion of any period from the time provided for
issuing notice which is contemplated in Section 11A of the
Act is mentioned in the Explanation which is incorporated as
part of that Section. Period of the stay can be excluded if
"the service of the notice is stayed by on order of a
court." The converse is if there is no stay of service of
notice, there is no scope for excluding any time from the
period of limitation as per this Explanation.
If a very strict interpretation is given, notice should
have been issued before passing the order of stay so that
service of the notice could be blocked. But such an extreme
view is not necessary for understanding the contours of the
Explanation.
In considering whether the extension of time permitted
in Section 11-A of the Act can be liberally construed or
that it should be a strict construction, we think it useful
to recall how this Court approached the challenge made
against Section 51 of the Finance Act, 1982 which afforded
retrospective operation to the amended Rules 9 and 49 of the
Central Excise Rules. Those provision were assailed in the
case of J.K. Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd. & Anr. (Supra)
attributing arbitrariness and unreasonableness to them
besides being violative of Article 19(1) (g) or the
constitution.
It was contended in that case that excessive
retrospective operation prescribed by a taxing statute would
amount to contravention of fundamental rights, and in
support of that contention, those appellants made reliance
on the decisions of this Court in Raj Ramakrishna & Others
v. The State of Rajasthan of Others, 1966 (1) SCR 890. In
the former decision, this Court has pointed out that if the
retrospective feature of a law is arbitrary and burdensome,
the statute will not be sustained and reasonableness of the
extent of retrospective operation of a statute will depend
upon he circumstances of each case. The apprehension of the
appellants in J.K. Spinning and Weaving Mill (supra) that
the long retrospectivity attached to the legislative
amendments would result in mulcting the taxpayer with
whopping financial burden has gained serious consideration
of this Court and an effort was made to find a way out to
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salvage those provisions by minimising the gravity of the
hardship on the assessees. That endeavour resulted in the
judicial pronouncement in J.K. Spinning and Weaving Mills
(supra) by placing those provisions subject to the time
limit fixed under Section 11-A.
If the said rider was not imposed by this Court as per
the decision in J.K. Cotton spinning and Weaving Co, case
(supra), what would have been the fate of Rules 9 and 49 (as
amended in the wake of the challenge to its vires cannot now
be reexamined. Whatever it be, the fact remains, that Rules
9 and 49 survived the challenge when this Court nailed their
sweep to the limitation specified in Section 11-A. Hence
that limitation period should not be stretched more than the
elasticity supplied in the Section itself. So, in our
opinion, the eventuality envisaged in Section 11-A for the
further lengthening of the limitation period must be
strictly construed.
The notice envisaged in Sub-section (1) of Section 11-A of
the Act can be issued under any one of the four conditions:
(1) when duty of excise has not
been levied on the commodity;
(ii) when such duty has been short-
levied; or
(iii) when such duty, though
levied, has not been paid; or
(iv) when such duty levied was only
short-paid.
If any one of the above condition exists, the notice
contemplated therein can be issued. It is an extremely
difficult proposition for acceptance that Collector of
Central Excise was prevented from issuing a notice to the
appellant in this case as the Delhi High Court has
restrained the department from "giving effect to the
contents of the directives of the board dated 24.9.1980".
The said directive of the Board was mainly intended to be
observed by the Collector of Central Excise as well as other
officials under him to carry out certain steps while
exercising powers under Rule 9(1) of the Act and also for
making delegation of such powers to the licensing
authorities. here the test is, if the said circular (or
directive) had not been issued at all, could the Collector
of Central Excise have issued a notice under sub-section (1)
to Section 11-A of the Act. The answer is, that the
Collector could still have issued a notice. If so, the
suspension of the circular by the order of the court would
not have prevented the Collector from issuing the notice.
The effect of the court order dated 12.8.1981 was only to
keep the circular in suspended animation so far as the
appellant is concerned and nothing more.
That apart, the mere fact that department issued three
notices during the time when the aforesaid order was in
force itself is sturdy proof that even according to the
Department, there was no stay of service of notice by a
court order. Nobody has advanced a contention, nor could any
such contention have been advanced, that the Collector of
Central Excise has flouted the stay order of the Delhi High
Court by issuing such notices.
Shri Gauri Shankar Murthi, learned counsel for the
Revenue adopted an alternative contention that the period of
limitation can be saved by holding that the assessment which
preceded the action was only a provisional one. Of course,
Section 11-A A permits the said six months time to go
further if the preceding assessment was only provisional as
could be noted from sub-section 3(ii) (b) of Section 11A.
The same contention was urged before the CEGAT but after a
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detailed discussion, it was repelled. Undaunted by such
adverse finding, Shri Gauri Shankar Murthi pleaded that the
Revenue must be allowed to canvass for reversal of the said
finding in this appeal in on the footing of the principle
adumbrated in Order 41 Rule 22 of Civil Procedure Code,
1908. Shri Joseph Vallapalli, learned senior counsel opposed
reopening the said finding on the premise that in this
appeal, even after it is treated as one by special leave
under Article 136 of the Constitution, the points raised by
the appellant alone can be canvassed.
A three-judge bench of this Court in Vashit Narain
Sharma v. Dev Chandra and Others, 1955 (1) SCR 509 did not
permit a respondent, in an appeal filed by special leave
under Article 136 to support the decision challenged in the
appeal on a ground which had been found against him. The
court held that the corresponding provision in the Civil
Procedure Code has no application to an appeal filed by
special leave under Article 136.
The aforesaid decision was cited before another three-
judge bench in the case of Sri Baru Ram v. Shrimati Prasanni
and Others 1959 SCR 1403 where it was not dissented from.
But in the light of the decision of the Constitution bench
of this Court in Ramanbhai Ashabhai Patel v. Dabhi Ajitkumar
Fulsinji and Others, 1965 (1) SCR 712, the ratio adopted in
the earlier mentioned two decisions is no more in vogue. The
Constitution Bench held that this Court has power to decide
all points arising from the impugned judgment and even in
the absence of an express provision like Order 41, Rule 22,
CPC, this Court can devise appropriate procedure to be
adopted at the hearing. The observations of the bench which
are relevant now are the following:
"There could be no better way of
supplying the deficiency than by
drawing upon the provisions of a
general law like the Code of Civil
Procedure and adopting such of
those provisions as are suitable.
We cannot lose sight of the fact
that normally a party in whose
favour the judgment appealed from
has been given will not be granted
special leave to appeal from it.
Consideration of justice,
therefore, require that this Court
should in appropriate cases permit
a party placed in such a position
to support the judgment in his
favour even favour even upon
grounds which were negatived in
that judgement. We are therefore,
of the opinion that in Vashisht
Narain Sharma’s Case, too narrow a
view was taken regarding the powers
of this Court".
We, therefore, concede that respondents cannot be
precluded in this appeal from canvassing for reversal of a
finding contained in the impugned judgment despite its end
result being in their favour.
However, on a consideration of the arguments raised on
the merits of that point, we find it is difficult to hold
that there was provisional assessment. CEGAT has adverted to
certain reasons for arriving at such a finding. Rule 9-B of
the Central Excise Rules has been quoted in the impugned
judgment. The title of the rule is "Provisional Assessment",
in which situations are detailed when provisional assessment
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could be made. CEGAT pointed out in the judgment certain
admissions made by the Department such as the absence of any
express order of provisional assessment as required under
Rule 9-B, absence of any circumstance for making a
provisional assessment, and that it was not stated in the
show cause notice that the assessment made during the
relevant period was provisional. The Assistant collector had
treated the assessment as provisional solely on the premise
that the matter was subjudice, and hence "all the
assessments for the period April 1981 to 15.3.1983 were,
therefore, made provisional". CEGAT has rightly found that
the said yardstick was hardly sufficient to make an
assessment provisional.
Shri Gauri Shankar Murthi, in order to surmount a
difficult situation confronted by the aforesaid Rule 9-B of
the Central Excise Rules adopted a new contention as under:
Rule 9-B was incorporated in the Central Excise Rules
with effect from 1-8-1059 whereas the ‘Self Removal
Procedure" by manufacturers themselves has been introduced
in the Rules with effect from 14.7.1969 which provides for a
self assessment, the finalization of which could be made as
indicated in Rule 173-F. Learned counsel contended that with
the introduction of the said procedure a self removal by
itself would amount to provisional assessment. In support of
the contention, learned counsel cited the decision of this
Court in Seraikella Glass Works vs. Collector of Central
Excise, Patna [1997 (91) ELT 497] wherein implication of a
self assessment has been considered and held it to be
nothing but a provisional assessment which is subject to
final assessment.
Shri Joseph Vallapalli, learned senior counsel for the
appellant pointed out, in reply to the said contention, that
the concept of provisional assessment adverted to in Section
11-A has a connotation which can be traced in rule 9-B which
requires a specific order to the made for provisional
assessment and it should be followed by compliance with
certain statutory requirements, In the absence of any such
order there was no provisional assessment as envisaged in
Section 11-A of the Act, according to the learned counsel.
he further contended that respondent cannot be permitted to
advance a new ground for supporting his theory of
provisional assessment. On the factual side also, learned
counsel submitted that pursuant to the judgment of the High
Court dated 16.10.1980, the appellant has totally excluded
captively consumed yarn from assessment and hence there was
no self assessment at all on yarn because it was a case of
non-levy of a particular commodity and not one of short
levy. The corollary according to the counsel, is that there
was no provisional assessment at all.
It is a fact that Revenue has never adopted a stand
based on self Removal procedure envisaged in Chapter VII-A
of the Rules for establishing that there was a provisional
assessment. It is one thing to say that respondent can, in
an appeal filed by the opposite party, re-canvass for
reversal of a finding reached against him in the judgment,
(the operative part of which the respondent is now
supporting), and it a different thing to permit the
respondent to put forth absolutely new grounds for it. hence
it is not necessary to further consider whether there was
any self-assessment. We are, therefore, not persuaded to
disturb the finding reached by the CEGAT regarding the plea
of provisional assessment.
In the result, we allow this appeal and set aside the
impugned judgement. We hold that recovery of excise duty for
yarn from the appellant for the period between 1.4.1981 and
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5.12.1981 is barred by the period of limitation prescribed
in section 11-A of the Act. The appeal is thus allowed
without any order as to costs.