Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AHURA CHEMICAL PRODUCTS PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/09/1981
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1782 1982 SCR (1) 621
1981 SCC (4) 277 1981 SCALE (3)1365
ACT:
Central Excise and Salt Act 1944, Notification-Word
"open market"-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company manufactured various process
chemicals required for the Textile Industry. The process
chemicals so manufactured by them are substances known as
emulsifiers and wetting out agents and they fall within the
scope of tariff item 15AA of the first schedule to the
Central Excise and Salt Act 1944. The appellant purchased
164500 kgs. Of organic surface active agents from the
"Industrial General Products Pvt. Ltd.". The organic surface
active agents sold to the appellant by the Industrial
General Products Pvt. Ltd. had not been subjected to the
levy of excise duty in as much as the said supplier company
was eligible for exemption from payment of Excise Duty on
account of the fact that the goods were manufactured by it
without the aid of power.
Emulsifiers/wetting out agents etc. intended for use in
any industrial process were exempted from the levy of duty
under entry 15AA, by a notification dated 20.1.1968 issued
by the Government of India, subject to the condition that if
in respect of surface active agents used in the manufacture
of such emulsifiers, wetting out agents, softners and other
like preparations the appropriate amount of the duty of
excise or the additional duty under section 2A of the Indian
Tariff Act 1934 (32 of 1934), has already been paid or where
such surface active agents are purchased from the open
market on or after the 20th day of January, 1968. F
It is common ground that the organic surface active
agents used by the appellant as raw-material for the
manufacture of emulsifiers/wetting out agents were purchased
by it subsequent to the 20th day of January, 1968. The
Central Excise authorities originally treated the
manufactured product, namely the emulsifiers etc. as exempt
from levy of duty by virtue of the Notification dated
January 20, 1968. But, subsequently by a notice dt. August
6, 1974 issued by the superintendent of Central Excise, the
appellant was directed to show cause why an amount of Rs. 1,
21,709.57 should not be recovered from the appellant by way
of excise duty in respect of the period August 1973 to
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February 1974 on the ground that the said amount represented
escaped duty in respect of the emulsifiers/wetting out
agents manufactured by the appellant during the aforesaid
period. The appellant in reply contended that it was
entitled to the benefit of exemption from levy of duty in
respect of the manufactured products under the notification
dated 20.1.1968. This contention was rejected by the
Assistant
622
Collector and his order was confirmed by the appellate
collector of central excise.
A revision petition filed by the appellant before the
respondents (union of India) was rejected by order dated
August 3. 1978 wherein the Central Government took the view
that "purchases made from a particular manufacturer, the
production from whose factory is exempt from payment of
duty, being manufactured without the aid of power, cannot be
treated at par with purchases made from the open market". In
the appeal filed by special leave, it was contended that the
condition that the surface active agents should have been
purchased from the ’open market’ on or after the 20th day of
January 1968 was fully satisfied in the present case, and
hence the appellant was entitled to the benefit of the
exemption granted by the Notification.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The appellant Company is entitled to the
benefit of the exemption granted by the Notification dated
January 20, 1968 in respect of the emulsifiers, wetting out
agents, softners etc. manufactured by the Company for use
during the relevant period (August 1973 to February 1974).
[628 G]
2. In determining the eligibility of a person for the
benefit of the exemption conferred by the Notification on
the basis of the fulfillment of the second of the
aforementioned conditions, it is wholly irrelevant to
enquire whether duty of excise had already been paid in
respect of the surface active agents purchased and utilised
as raw material for the manufacture of the
emulsifiers/wetting out agents. [627 A-B]
3. Having due regard to the context in which the
expression ’open market" has been used in the Notification,
it would be wholly wrong to understand the said expression
"open market" as connoting only a market-yard, bazar or a
shopping complex where goods are offered for sale.
Industrial Chemicals (which have to be ordinarily purchased
in bulk for use as raw-material in the manufacture of
secondary products) are not commodities that are usually
exposed for sale in bazars and shops. Such bulk purchases of
chemicals etc., are effected by placing orders with the
concerned manufacturing units. [627 E-G]
4. If the transactions of sale and purchase are
effected under conditions enabling every person desirous of
purchasing the goods in question to place orders with such
manufacturing unit and obtain supplies, they will constitute
Purchases "from the open market". [627 G-H, 628 A]
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Clay, [1914] 3 K.B. 466
referred to.
5. In the present case, it was open to every person
desirous of purchasing the surface active agents to place
orders with the manufacturing company, namely MIS Industrial
General Products Private Limited, and obtain the supply on
payment of the price at the prevailing rate. The sales by
the said Company were not to a limited class only. Hence,
the purchases of the surface active agents effected by the
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appellant from M/s Industrial General Products Private
Limited have to
623
be treated as purchases made "from the open market". The
denial to the appellant of the benefit of the exemption
provided for by the Notification was, therefore, clearly
illegal. [628 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 220 I of
1978.
From the judgment and order dated the 13th September,
1978 of the Central Govt., Ministry of Finance Department
’of Revenue, New Delhi in order No. 819 of 1978.
V. J. Taraporavala, J. B. Dadachanji and Shri Narain
for the appellants.
N.C. Talukdar and R.N. Poddar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BALAKRISHNA ERADI, J. This appeal by special leave is
directed against an order dated August 3, 1978 passed by the
Government of India under Section 16 of the Central Excise
and Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter referred to as the Act),
rejecting a Revision Petition filed by the present appellant
and confirming the view taken by the Appellate Collector of
Excise, Bombay, that the appellant herein is not entitled to
the benefit of the exemption from duty of excise conferred
by a Notification No. 4/68-CE dated January 20, 1968.
The appellant-Company which has its factories at Sion
East and Andheri East in Bombay is engaged in the
manufacture of various process chemicals required for the
Textile industry. Amongst the process chemicals so
manufactured by them are substances known as emulsifiers and
wetting out agents. These products fall within the scope of
Tariff Item 15AA of the First Schedule to the Act, which
reads:
"Organic Surface Active Agents (other than soap);
Surface Active preparations and washing preparations,
whether or not containing soap."
For use as raw-material for the manufacture of the
emulsifiers wetting out agents, the appellant-Company had
purchased a total quantity of 1,64,500 kgs. Of organic
surface active agents from another company called ’The
Industrial General Products Private
624
Limited’. The aforesaid organic surface active agents sold
to the appellant by the Industrial General Products Private
Limited had not been subjected to the levy of excise duty
inasmuch as the said supplier-Company was eligible for
exemption from payment of excise duty on account of the fact
that the goods were manufactured by it without the aid of
power.
Emulsifiers/wetting out agents, etc. intended for use
in any industrial process were exempted from the levy of
duty under Entry 15AA of the First Schedule to the Act,
subject to certain conditions, by a Notification dated
January 20, 1968 issued by the Government of India. The
relevant part of that Notification is in the following
terms:
"The Central Government has exempted the excisable
goods specified in column (2) of the Table hereto
annexed and falling under this Item from the whole of
the duty of excise leviable thereon subject to the
conditions laid down in the corresponding entries in
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column (3) of the said Table.
TABLE
Sl. Description Conditions
No.
(1) (2) (3)
1. ... ... ... ...
2. ... ... ... ...
3. ... ... ... ...
4. Emulsifiers, wetting out If in respect of surface
agents, softness and active agents used in the
other like preparations manufacture of such
intended for use in any emulsifiers, wetting out
industrial process. agents, softners and other
like preparations the
appropriate amount of the
duty of excise or the
additional duty under
section 2A of the Indian
Tariff Act 1934 (32 of
1934), has already been paid
or where such surface active
agents are purchased from
the open market on or after
the 20th day of January,
1968.")
625
It is common ground that the organic surface active
agents A used by the appellant as raw-material for the
manufacture of emulsifiers/wetting out agents were purchased
by it. subsequent to the 20th day of January 1968. The
Central Excise authorities originally treated the
manufactured product, namely the emulsifiers etc. as exempt
from levy of duty by virtue of the Notification dated
January 20, 1968. But, subsequently, by a notice dated
August 6, 1974, issued by the Superintendent of Central
Excise, Inspection Group No. 1, Bombay Division V, the
appellant-Company was directed to show cause why an amount
of Rs. 1,21,709.57 should not be recovered from the Company
by way of excise duty in respect of the period August 1973
to February 1974 on the ground that the said amount
represented escaped duty in respect of the emulsifiers/
wetting out agents manufactured by the petitioner-Company
during the aforesaid period.
In reply to the said notice, the appellant-Company
objected to the said demand contending that it was entitled
to the benefit of exemption from levy of duty in respect of
the manufactured products under the Notification dated
January 20, 1968 inasmuch as surface active agents used in
the manufacture of the emulsifiers/wetting out agents had
been purchased by the appellant from the open market after
the 20th day of January 1968. This contention was rejected
by the concerned Assistant Collector. He took the view that,
in order to attract the exemption provided for in the
aforesaid Notification, duty should actually have been paid
in respect of the surface active agents used as raw-material
and since the appellant had purchased the raw-material from
a manufacturing unit which was exempt from the levy of
excise duty for the reason that the manufacture was carried
out by it without the aid of power, the conditions
prescribed in the Notification were not fulfilled. The said
- order was confirmed by the Appellate Collector of Central
Excise, Bombay, before whom the matter was carried in appeal
by the present appellant. While upholding the view taken by
the Assistant Collector that the benefit of the exemption
granted by the Notification would be available only in cases
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where the raw-material, namely, the surface active agents
had been subjected to duty at the primary stage, the
Appellate Collector went further and held that the purchase
of the aforesaid raw-material effected by the appellant from
M/s. Industrial General Products Private Limited could not
be regarded as "purchased from the open market" and that for
this
626
additional reason also, the appellant was ineligible to
claim the benefit of the exemption.
A Revision Petition filed by the appellant before the
Government of India was rejected by the order (Exh. ’A’)
dated August 3, 1978, wherein the Central Government took
the view that "purchases made from a particular
manufacturer, the production from whose factory is exempt
from payment of duty, being manufactured without the aid of
power, cannot be treated at par with purchases made from the
open market". It is against this order of the Government of
India that the appellant has come up to this Court with this
appeal.
The language used in Columns (2) and (3) of the Table
appended to the Notification dated January 20, 1968 is
simple and unambiguous. It shows that the benefit of the
exemption will be available in respect of the
emulsifiers/wetting out agents provided that either of the
following two conditions is fulfilled:
(a) Excise duty (inclusive of additional duty under
section 2A) should have been already paid in
respect of the surface active agents used as raw-
material in the manufacture of the emulsifiers,
wetting out agents, etc..
(b) The surface active agents used as raw-material for
the manufacture of the emulsifiers/wetting out
agents should have been purchased from the open
market on or after the 20th day of January, 1968.
The first of the aforementioned conditions was
obviously not satisfied in the present case since the
surface active agents were purchased by the appellant-
Company from a manufacturer who was exempt from payment of
excise duty on account of the fact that the process of
manufacture was being carried out without the aid of power.
The appellant-Company contends that the second of the
aforesaid conditions, namely, that the surface active agents
should have been purchased from the open market on or after
the 20th day of January 1968 was fully satisfied in the
present case, and hence it was entitled to the benefit of
the exemption granted by the Notification, That the
appellant had purchased the surface active agents used in
the manufacture of the emulisifiers/wetting out agents
subsequent to the 20th day of January, 1968 is undisputed.
The purchases of the raw-material had been made by the
appellant from
627
the Industrial General Products Private Limited. The short
question to be considered is, whether those transactions of
purchase effected by the appellant from the Industrial
General Products Private Limited can be regarded as
purchases "from the open market"?
In determining the eligibility of a person for the
benefit of the exemption conferred by the Notification on
the basis of the fulfillment of the second of the
aforementioned conditions, it is wholly irrelevant to
enquire whether duty of excise had already been paid in
respect of the surface active agents purchased and utilised
as raw material for the manufacture of the
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emulsifiers/wetting out agents. The sole question to be
examined is, whether the surface active agents used in the
manufacture of the emulsifiers were purchased "from the open
market" on or after the 20th day of January, 1968 ?
The Assistant Collector as well as the Appellate
Revisional Authorities have taken the view that the
exemption granted by the Notification will get attracted
only if the surface active agents used as raw-material had
been already subjected to levy of duty at the primary stage.
In our opinion, the said view is based on an erroneous
interpretation of the provisions contained in item 4 of the
Table appended to the Notification. The condition that the
duty of excise should have already been paid on the raw-
material (surface active agents) has no application to cases
covered by the second part of Column (3) of Sl. No. 4 of the
Table, namely, cases where the surface active agents were
purchased from the open market on or after the 20th day of
January, 1968.
That brings us back to the question, whether the
purchases effected by the appellant from M/s. Industrial
General Products Private Limited were purchases "from the
open market"? Having due regard to the context in which the
expression "open market’’ has been used in the Notification,
it would be wholly wrong to understand the said expression
"open market" as connoting only a market-yard, bazar or a
shopping complex where goods are offered for sale.
Industrial chemicals (which have to he ordinarily purchased
in bulk for use as raw-material in the manufacture of secon-
dary products) are not commodities that are usually exposed
for sale in bazars and shops. Such bulk purchases of
chemicals etc., are effected by placing orders with the
concerned manufacturing units. In our opinion, if the
transactions of sale and purchases are effected under
conditions enabling every person desirous of purchasing the
goods in question to place orders with such manufac-
628
turing unit and obtain supplies, they will constitute
purchases "from the open market". We may in this context
refer with advantage to the following observations of
Swinfen Eady, J. in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Clay(l),
where the Court of appeal had to consider the scope of the
expression "open market" occurring in section 25 (1) of the
Finance Act, 1910 (10 Edw. 7, c. 8):
"The market is to be the open market, as
distinguished from an offer to a limited class only,
such as the members of the family. The market is not
necessarily an auction sale. The section means such
amount as the land might be expected to realize if
offered under conditions enabling every person desirous
of purchasing to come in and make an offer, and if
proper steps were taken to advertise the property and
let all likely purchasers know that the land is in the
market for sale."
We fully agree with these observations.
In the present case, it was open to every person
desirous of purchasing the surface active agents to place
orders with the manufacturing Company, namely, M/s.
Industrial General Products Private Limited, and obtain the
supply on payment of the price at the prevailing rate. The
sales by the said Company were not to a limited class only.
Hence, the purchases of the surface active agents effected
by the appellant from M/s. Industrial General Products
Private Limited’ have to be treated as purchases made "from
the open market." The denial to the appellant of the benefit
of the exemption provided for by the Notification was,
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therefore, clearly illegal.
Accordingly, we allow this appeal, set aside the orders
passed by the Government of India, the Appellate Collector,
Bombay and the Assistant Collector of Central Excise,
Bombay, and declare that the appellant-Company is entitled
to the benefit of the exemption granted by the Notification
dated January 20, 1968 in respect of the emulsifiers,
wetting out agents, softners etc., manufactured by the
Company for use during the relevant period (August 1973 to
February 1974). The respondent shall pay costs to the
appellant Company in this appeal.
N.K.A. Appeal allowed.
629