19 September 1989
Supreme Court
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APHALI PHARMACEUTICALS LTD. Vs STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.

Bench: SAIKIA,K.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1845 of 1974


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PETITIONER: APHALI PHARMACEUTICALS LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1989

BENCH: SAIKIA, K.N. (J) BENCH: SAIKIA, K.N. (J) OZA, G.L. (J)

CITATION:  1989 AIR 2227            1989 SCR  Supl. (1) 129  1989 SCC  (4) 378        JT 1989 (3)   720  1989 SCALE  (2)617

ACT:     Medicinal  and Toilet Preparations (Excise  Duties)  Act 1955-Amendment Act 19 of 1961--Finance Act 1962--Section  18 thereof-Levy of excise duty on the product "Ashvagandharist" manufactured by the appellant--Whether permissible under the schedule to the Act as amended--Effect and Interpretation of Explanation  I added to the Schedule of the Act  by  Finance Act 1962--Circular dated May 31, 1962 issued by the  Govern- ment of Maharashtra----Whether in conformity with the provi- sions of the Act and Explanation I of the Schedule.     Medicinal  and Toilet Preparation (Excise Duties)  Rules 1956-Rules 64 to 66 whether consistent with the schedule and the circular dated 31.5.1962.

HEADNOTE:     The appellant is a company having its registered  office at  Ahmednagar  in Maharashtra. It carries  on  business  as manufacturers  of Ayurvedic preparations  including  "Asvas" and  "Aristhas".  At  the material time  the  appellant  was manufacturing and selling an Ayurvedic product,  "Ashvagand- harist"  which is a medicinal preparation  containing  self- generated  alcohol  but  not capable of  being  consumed  as ordinary alcoholic beverages.     Medicinal  and Toilet Preparations (Excise  Duties)  Act 1955  came into force on 1.4.1957. The schedule to the  said Act  contained  two items specifying "medicinal  and  toilet preparations  containing  alcohol"  which  are  prepared  by distillation  or to which alcohol has been added  and  which are capable of being consumed as ordinary "alcoholic  bever- age"  and "medicinal and toilet preparations  not  otherwise specified  containing alcohol" as the commodities  excisable under the provisions of the Act. The said  "Ashvagandharist" was treated and accepted by the Excise Authorities as  being exempt  from the payment of excise duty upon the  basis  and footing that the same was an Ayurvedic preparation  contain- ing  self-generated alcohol which was not capable  of  being consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverage and which fell under item  2(i) of the schedule in respect of which, the rate  of excise duty prescribed in the schedule was "Nil". 130     The Act was amended by Amendment Act 19 of 1961  whereby

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concept of "patent and proprietary" medicine was  introduced in the schedule. The Amendment Act, by an Explanation intro- duced in the schedule the definition of "patent and proprie- tary" medicine contained in the Drugs Act 1940. Despite  the said  amendment  in  the schedule  the  appellants’  product continued to be treated as exempt from the liability to  pay excise  duty  on the ground that it was covered  under  item 2(i) of the schedule which item was re-numbered as item 3(i) of the schedule. Thereafter by section 18 of the Finance Act 1962, the Act was further amended by substitution of  Expla- nation  I to the schedule of the Act. By the  said  explana- tion,  a "patent and proprietary" medicine was defined as  a medicinal preparation of the description and the type speci- fied  in  the Explanation. The said  Explanation  was  given retrospective  effect from April 23, 1962. In  pursuance  of the said Explanation I brought by the Finance Act,  Director of  Prohibition  and Central Excise, Govt.  of  Maharashtra, Bombay  issued  a circular dated May 31, 1962,  which  inter alia  directed  that the medicinal  preparations  containing self-generated alcohol but not capable of being consumed  as alcoholic  beverage were to be treated as  products  falling under Item No. I and not Item 3 of the schedule. As a result of that circular, the Respondents levied excise duty on  the appellants’  product  amounting  to  Rs.2,  18,282.16p.  and realized the same from the appellant. The appellant paid the amount "under protest".     With  a  view  to recover the  aforesaid  amount,  which according  to the appellant, was illegally recovered by  the Respondents, the appellant filed a suit, being special  suit No.  23  of 1965 in the Court of Civil Judge  Sr.  Division, Ahmednagar.     The  Civil Judge by his order dated 27.3.69 decreed  the appellantplaintiff’s suit with interest at 6% per annum from the date of the suit till realisation.     The  Respondents appealed to the High Court against  the Order  of  the Civil Judge and the High  Court  allowed  the appeal, reversed the Judgment and decree passed by the Civil Judge and dismissed the appellant’s suit. Hence this  appeal by the plaintiff-appellant by special leave. Allowing the appeal, this Court,      HELD: From Explanation I of the Schedule of the Act  as substituted  by  Act 5 of 1964 it is clear  that  patent  or proprietary medicine 131 means any medicinal preparation which is not specified in  a monograph  in a Pharmacopoeia, Formulary or  other  publica- tions  notified in this behalf by the Central Government  in the Official Gazette. [144C]     To be a patent medicine one would be required to have  a patent.  A patented article means an article in  respect  of which a patent is in force, [144D]     A  patent  medicine will, therefore,  mean  medicine  in respect of which a patent is in force. [144E]     Patent  means  a grant of some  privilege  property,  or authority, made by the Government or sovereign of a  country to one or more individuals. A proprietor is one who has  the legal right or exclusive title to anything. It is synonymous with  owner. A person entitled to a trade mark or  a  design under  the Acts for the registration or patenting  of  trade mark  or design is called a proprietor of the trade mark  or design. [144E-F]     A Schedule in an Act of Parliament is a mere question of drafting. It is the legislative intent that is material.  An Explanation to the Schedule amounts to an Explanation in the Act itself. [147F]

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   The Schedule may be used in construing provisions in the body of the Act. It is as much an Act of the Legislature  as the Act itself and it must be read together with the Act for all  purposes of construction. Expressions in  the  Schedule cannot  control or prevail against express enactment and  in case  of  any  inconsistency between the  schedule  and  the enactment,  the enactment is to prevail and if any  part  of the  schedule cannot be made to correspond it must yield  to the Act. [147H; 148A-B]     An  explanation is different in nature form  a  proviso, for a proviso excepts, excludes or restricts while an expla- nation explains or clarifies. Such explanation or clarifica- tion may be in respect of matters whose meaning is  implicit and not explicit in the main section itself. [149F]     Bihta Marketing Union v. Bank of Bihar, AIR 1967 SC 389: [1967] 1 SCR 848; State of Bombay v. United Motors, AIR 1953 SC  252: [1953] SCR 1069; Collector of Customs v. G. Dass  & Co.,  AIR 1966 SC 1577; Burmah Shell Oil Ltd. v.  Commercial Tax  Officer, AIR 1961 SC 315: [1961] 1 SCR 902;  Dattatraya Govind  Mahajan  v. State of Maharashtra, AIR  1977  SC  915 (928): [1977] 2 SCR 790 and Hiralal 132 Ratanlal v. State of U. P., [1973] 1 SCC 216.     Ex praecedentibus et consequentibus optima fit interpre- tatio.  The  best interpretation is made from  the  context. Injustum  est  nisi tota lege inspecta, de una  aliqua  ejus particula proposita judicare Vel respondere. It is unjust to decide or respond as to any particular part of a law without examining  the whole of the law. Interpretare et  concordare leges ligibus, est optimus interpretendi modus. To interpret and  in  such a way as to harmonize laws with laws,  is  the best mode of interpretation. [151G-H]     Jura  eodem modo distituentur quo  constitutuntur.  Laws are  abrogated by the same means (authority) by  which  they are made. [152A]     Every  word  in a Statute is to be given  a  meaning.  A construction  which would leave without effect any  part  of the  language of a statute will normally be rejected.  Every clause of a statute is to be construed with reference to the context  and other clauses of the Act so as to make, as  far as  possible, a consistent enactment of the  whole  statute. [152B]     A  specific provision to include Ayurvedic  preparations containing  self-generated alcohol which are not capable  of being  consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverages  was  neces- sary.  That having not been done by the Explanation  itself, it  was not permissible to include it by the  Circular.  The Explanation  I  could  not have been in  conflict  with  the provisions  of the Act and the Circular could not have  been in  conflict with the Explanation, the Schedule,  the  Rules and the Act. [152E-F]     The  Court  set aside the order of the  High  Court  and restored that of the Civil Judge decreeing the suit. [152G]     Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Gittus, [1920] I KB 563; Baidyanath  Ayurved Bhawan Pvt. Ltd. v. The  Excise  Commis- sioner, U.P., [1971] 2 SCR 590; Mohanlal Maganlal Bhavsar v. Union of India, [1986] 1 SCC 122; Commissioner of Sales  Tax v.  The  Modi Sugar Mills Ltd., [1961] 2 SCR  189  and  Cape Brandy Syndicate v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue,  [1921] 1 KB 64, referred to.

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1845  (N)

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of 1974.     From  the  Judgment and Decree dated 6/7.3.1974  of  the Bombay High Court in First Appeal No. 586 of 1969. 133 S.K. Dholakia and H.S. Parihar for the Appellant.     A.K. Ganguli, A.M. Khanwilkar, A. Subba Rao, C.V.  Subba Rao and A.S. Bhasme for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     SAIKIA,  J- This plaintiff’s appeal by special leave  is from the Appellate Judgment and Decree of the High Court  of Judicature at Bombay reversing those of the trial court  and dismissing plaintiff’s special suit.     The appellant is a Limited Company registered under  the Companies Act having its registered office situate at Ahmed- nagar within the State of Maharashtra. The appellant carries on  business,  inter  alia, as  manufacturers  of  Ayurvedic preparations  including "Asavas", "Aristhas". At  all  times material to this appeal, the appellant was manufacturing and selling an Ayurvedic product called "Ashvagandhaarist" which is a medicinal preparation containing self-generated alcohol but  not  capable of being consumed  as  ordinary  alcoholic beverage. Under  the provisions of the Medicinal and  Toilet  Prepara- tions  . (Excise Duties) Act, 1955, hereinafter referred  to as  "the  Act", which came into force on  1st  April,  1957, excise  duties were levied on medicinal and toilet  prepara- tions  specified  in the Schedule to  the  Act,  hereinafter referred to as "the Schedule". The Act, as originally  stood in  1955,  inter alia, contained two items in  the  Schedule respectively  specifying "medicinal and toilet  preparations containing alcohol which are prepared by distillation or  to which alcohol has been added and which are capable of  being consumed as ordinary "alcoholic beverage" and "medicinal and toilet  preparations  not  otherwise  specified   containing alcohol",  being the commodities excisable under the  provi- sions  of the Act. The said "Ashvagandhaarist"  was  treated and accepted by the Excise Authorities as being exempt  from the payment of any excise duty upon the basis and the  foot- ing  that the same was an Ayurvedic  preparation  containing self-generated  alcohol which was not capable of being  con- sumed  as ordinary alcoholic beverage, and which fell  under item  2(i) Of the Schedule in respect of which the  rate  of excise duty postulated in the Schedule was "Nil".      The  Act was amended by the Amendment Act 19  of  1961. The amendment, inter alia, introduced the concept of "patent and pro- 134 prietary  medicine"  in  the Schedule.  The  amendment  Act, however,  by an Explanation, introduced in the Schedule  the definition  of  the "patent and proprietary  medicine"  con- tained  in the Drugs Act, 1940. Even after the  introduction of  the  said amendment, the appellant’s  aforesaid  product continued to be treated as exempt from the liability to  pay any excise duty on the self-same ground, namely, that it was covered under item 2(i) of the Schedule which item 2(i)  was renumbered  as item 3(i) of the Schedule as amended  by  the Amendment Act of 1961.     By  Section  18 of the Finance Act, 1962,  the  Act  was further  amended by substitution of an Explanation No. 1  to the  Schedule  of the Act. By virtue of and under  the  said Explanation,  a patent and proprietary medicine was  defined as  a medicinal preparation of the description and the  type specified  in  the Explanation. The  Explanation  which  was brought in by the Finance Act was given retrospective effect from April 23, 1962.

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   In  purported pursuance of the said  Explanation  and/or upon  the basis thereof, a circular dated May 31,  1962  was issued  by  the  then Director of  Prohibition  and  Central Excise, Government of Maharashtra, Bombay which, inter alia, directed  that the medicinal preparations  containing  self- generated  alcohol  but  not capable of  being  consumed  as alcoholic  beverage were to be treated as  products  falling under  item  1 and not item 3 of  the  Schedule.  consequent thereupon,  the  respondents levied and recovered  from  the appellant diverse sums aggregating to Rs.2, 18,282.16  being the alleged amount of the excise duty payable in respect  of the product "Ashvagandharist". The amounts were paid by  the appellant "under protest".     With a view to enforcing their rights in respect thereof and/or recovering the said amount illegally recovered by the respondents,  on July 14, 1965, the appellant filed a  suit, being  Special  Suit No. 23 of 1965 in the  Court  of  Civil Judge, Senior Division, Ahmednagar.     On March 4, 1966, the respondent No. 4 filed its written statement and similarly on the 4th April, 1966 the  respond- ent  Nos.  1 to 3 filed written statements. In  the  written statements, filed on behalf of the respondents it was, inter alia,  contended that the said product of the appellant  was "the  unrestricted ayurvedic preparations"  manufactured  by the plaintiff (appellant) labelled and marked by the 135 plaintiff (appellant) under their brand name and trade mark. This, therefore, fell within the scope of patent or proprie- tary  medicine as given in Explanation 1 below the  Schedule annexed  to  the  Act, as inserted from April  23,  1962  by Finance Act (No. 2) 1962.     By  his  Judgment and Decree dated March 27,  1969,  the learned  Civil Judge was pleased to decree  the  appellant’s suit  for Rs.2,22,582.07 together with future interest at  6 per  cent per annum from the date of the suit till  realisa- tion.     Aggrieved  by  the Judgment and Order  dated  March  27, 1969,  the respondents (being the defendants  therein)  pre- ferred an appeal to the High Court of Judicature at  Bombay, which  was registered as First Appeal No. 586 of  1969.  The said  appeal  was heard by the High  Court  alongwith  other appeals being First Appeals Nos. 136 of 1968 and 93 of  1970 as  also suits being Suit Nos. 230 of 1965 and 319 of  1965. The appeals and the suits were heard together having  regard to  the  common questions of law involved  therein.  By  its judgment and decree the High Court was pleased to allow  the said first appeal of the respondents, reversing the judgment and decree of the Trial Court and to dismiss the appellant’s special suit. Hence this appeal by special leave.     Mr. S.K. Dholakia, the learned counsel for the appellant submits, inter alia, that the findings of the High Court are repugnant  to the relevant provisions of the Act and/or  the rules  framed thereunder and/or the scheme, intendments  and purposes  thereof.  It  is contended  that  the  appellant’s product "Ashvagandhaarist" fell squarely within item 3(i) of the  Schedule and as such wholly exempt from the payment  of excise  duty;  that in view of the  admitted  position  that until 1962 "Ashvagandhaarist" was exempt from the payment of excise duty as being a commodity falling under item No. 2(i) of  the Schedule, simply by reason of the Explanation  which was introduced in the Act by the Finance Act of 1962, as the explanation  could  never  be considered to be  or,  in  any event, in the scheme of the provision of the Act, was not  a substantive provision of the Act and the explanation was not intended  to and it did not seek to disturb the  enumeration

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of  the categories or the respective fields assigned to  the various items of the schedule in existence prior thereto. It is  submitted  that  item 3 of the amended  Schedule  was  a specific item and enumerated categories of Ayurvedic medici- nal  preparations  covered thereby and that  being  so,  all commodities  answering  description  set  out  therein  fell within the 136 ambit thereof and was excluded from the purview of the other items  contained in the said schedule and that  the  express language  of item 3(i), namely, of  "Ayurvedic  preparations containing self-generated alcohol which were not capable  of being consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverages" were exempt- ed  and that the appellant’s product "Ashvagandhaarist"  was admittedly and obviously an Ayurvedic preparation containing self-generated  alcohol which was not capable of being  con- sumed  as ordinary alcoholic beverage and as such  it  could not be made excisable on the ground that it fell within  any other  item  of the schedule but  it  constituted  residuary clause of the schedule in so far as the medicinal and toilet preparations  containing  alcohol  were  concerned.  Counsel further  submits that the expression "not  otherwise  speci- fied"  occurring in item 3 of the schedule did not  restrict the scope of the enumerated categories under item 3 but  was merely  a  marginal note showing that the said  item  3  was residuary item and comprised of three sub-groups of commodi- ties specified therein; and that item No. 1 was not a speci- fied item. Mr. Dholakia further submits that the interpreta- tion that "ashvagandhaarist" fell within item No. 1 rendered the provisions of item No. 3 wholly nugatory inasmuch as  if an  Ayurvedic preparation containing self-generated  alcohol but incapable of being used as ordinary alcoholic  beverage, is  treated  as  failing  under item 1  there  would  be  no Ayurvedic  medicine which would factually fail under item  3 of the schedule and that the Explanation newly introduced by the  Finance Act, 1962 could not add to, amend or  alter  or vary the classification of the goods existing prior  thereto as  covered by the various items of the said  schedule;  nor could it otherwise nullify or add to, amend or alter or vary the substantive provisions of the schedule and it could  not be  considered to be a substantive provision of the Act  nor could  it be allowed to abrogate the substantive  provisions of  the Act. In other words, the submission is that in  view of  the  fact that the product of the appellant  was  exempt from payment of duty because the duty against item No.  3(i) in  the amended Schedule of 1961 was mentioned to  be  ’nil’ the  High Court ought to have held that the said  legal  and factual  position could not be transformed to the  detriment of  the  appellant by shifting the said commodity  from  the field covered by item 3(i) to that covered by item 1 of  the Act merely on the basis of the Explanation which was  intro- duced  by the Finance Act of 1962. Counsel argues that  this was more so because "ashvagandhaarist" was not a name within the  contemplation of the explanation but was merely  a  de- scriptive appellation of the medicine manufactured and  sold by the appellant and it being a standard preparation accord- ing to the Ayurvedic system could be manufactured by any one conversant with the said system, and it did 137 not have a brand name in the hands of the appellant and  the High  Court’s  interpretation that a mere description  is  a name  is inconsistent with the scheme of the  definition  of "patent and proprietary medicines" in the Explanation.  This was  the reason, it is argued, why Asavas and Aristhas  were expressly  made non-dutiable after 25.9.6,4.  by  subsequent

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amendment by the Government.      Mr.  A.K.  Ganguli, learned counsel appearing  for  the respondents,  demurring, submits that there can be no  doubt that "Asavas" and "Aristhas" fall under item 1 of the sched- ule  to the Act as substituted by Finance Act 2 of 1962  and hence  taxable at 10% ad valorem; and those being  Ayurvedic preparations are specified preparations and they could never fail  under  item  3 or any part thereof  which  deals  with medicinal  preparations not otherwise  specified  containing alcohol. Item 1, Mr. Ganguli submits, specifically describes that  medicinal and toilet preparation which  has  alcoholic contents  and  which alcohol comes to be  present  in  those medicines by use of one of the two methods described in that item. First of such methods contemplates alcohol contents in the  medicine  which  is prepared by  distillation  and  the second  method is addition of alcohol to the  medicine.  The medicinal preparation which is prepared by distillation  and which  contains alcohol and other medicinal preparations  to which alcohol is added fall in category I and such medicines would  cover  medicinal  preparations  belonging  either  to Allopathic  or  Ayurvedic system or I any  other  system  of medicines.  For every system of medicines,  counsel  argues, item No. 1 is not general item but it is a specific item  in the sense it covers only those medicines which are  prepared by  distillation  and contain alcohol and  others  to  which alcohol has been added. According to counsel, such medicines belonging  to any system whether indigenous or  foreign  are covered by item 1 and would be taxable as per that item  and the  disputed goods are undoubtedly  medicinal  preparations and  they are also patent and proprietary medicines in  view of  the Explanation 1 and these Ayurvedic  preparations  are medicinal preparations being patent or proprietary medicines containing  alcohol which are not capable of being  consumed as alcoholic beverages and as such they squarely fall  under item 1 of the Schedule, and the main Act and the Explanation is a self-contained provision which eliminates the reference either to Drugs Act or to the Rules made under the Act;  and one  has  to read only the provision of the  Schedule  as  a whole  including  the Explanation, and their  meaning  being simple and plain, they must be given their full effect. 138     To appreciate the rival contentions we can appropriately refer to the provisions and the Schedule of the Act and  the legislative  changes thereof. The Act was meant  to  provide for  the levy and collection of duty of excise on  medicinal and  toilet preparations containing alcohol,  opium,  Indian hemp  or other narcotic drug or narcotic. The  statement  of objects  and  reasons  as notified in Gazette  of  India  of 16.9.1954, Part II, S. 2, Ext., page 596 said that by virtue of  entry 40 in List II in the Seventh Schedule to the  Gov- ernment  of India Act, 1935, medicinal and  toilet  prepara- tions containing alcohol, etc., were subjected to Provincial excise  duties.  In  order to secure  uniformity  the  entry relating to excise duty on medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol, etc. were transferred under the  Consti- tution  from the State list to the Union List. The  Act  was intended to implement this provision in the Constitution and proposed  uniform rates of excise duty and a uniform  proce- dure  for the collection thereof. The Act came in  force  on 1.4.57.     The Act in Section 2(a) defined "alcohol" to mean "ethyl alcohol  of  any  strength and purity  having  the  chemical composition C2H5OH"; and it defined "medicinal  preparation" in Section 2(g) to include "all drugs which are a remedy  or prescription prepared for internal or external use of  human

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beings or animals and all substances intended to be used for or in the treatment, mitigation or prevention of disease  in human  beings  or animals". It did not  define  "drug".  The Drugs Act, 1940, as it was substituted by the Drugs  (Amend- ment) Act, 1955 (16.4.55) had defined "drug" in Section 2(b) to  include "(i) all medicines for internal or external  use of human beings or animals and all substances intended to be used  for  or  in the diagnosis,  treatment,  mitigation  or prevention of disease in human beings or animals other  than medicines  and substances exclusively used or  prepared  for use  in  accordance with the Ayurvedic or Unani  systems  of medicine; and (ii) such substances (other than food) intend- ed to affect the structure or any function of the human body or  intended  to be used for the destruction of  vermins  or insects  which cause disease in human beings or animals,  as may be specified from time to time by the Central Government by notification in the Official Gazette."                                         (Emphasis supplied)     Section  3(i) of the Act provides that "there  shall  be levied  duties  of  excise, at the rates  specified  in  the Schedule, on all dutiable goods manufactured in India." The original Schedule to the Act in 1955 read: 139                             THE SCHEDULE                            (See section 3) Item Description of dutiable                    Rate of No. goods.                                      duty. 1.  Medicinal and toilet preparations,        Rupees  seven- containing alcohol, which are prepared        and annas eig- which are prepared by distilation or          ht per gallon to which alcohol has been added, and          of strength which are capable of being consumed as        of London ordinary alcoholic  beverages.                proof spirit. 2.  Medicinal and toilet preparations not     otherwise specified containing alcohol     (i) Ayurvedic preparations containing     Nil     self-generated alcohol, which are     not capable of being consumed as     ordinary alcoholic beverages.     (ii) Ayurvedic preparations containing    Rupees three     self-generated alcohol, which are         per gallon.     capable of being consumed as     ordinary alcoholic beverages.     (iii) All others.                         Rupees five                                               per                                               gallon of the                                               strength of                                               London proof                                               spirit 3.  Medical and toilet preparations,          Nil     not containing alcohol, but containing     opium, Indian hemp, or other     narcotic drug or narcotic. It  would thus be clear that medicinal and  toilet  prepara- tions were classified into those which were capable of being consumed  as  ordinary alcoholic beverages and  those  which were  not  capable of being consumed as  ordinary  alcoholic beverages. Again, medicinal and toilet preparations contain- ing  alcohol prepared by distillation or adding  alcohol  is differentiated  from medicinal and toilet preparations  ’not otherwise specified containing alcohol’. Further, under this ’not 140 otherwise  specified’ category Ayurvedic  preparations  have been classified into three groups, namely, Ayurvedic  prepa-

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rations  containing  self-generated alcohol not  capable  of being consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverages, those  capa- ble  of being consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverages;  and others.  These three divisions were not drugs as defined  in Drugs Act then. The first category of Ayurvedic preparations had  not been subjected to duty while the other two  catego- ries had been.     Admittedly, under the above Schedule the product of  the appellant  ’ashvagandhaarist’ was not dutiable  which  meant that  it was included in item 2(i). It would also  be  clear that   ’Ayurvedic  preparations  containing   self-generated alcohol  which  were capable of being consumed  as  ordinary alcoholic  beverages’ were dutiable at the rate of Rupees  3 per gallon and the third category of others was also  dutia- ble  at the rate of Rupees 5 per gallon on the  strength  of London proof spirit. Alcohol and self-generated alcohol were treated differently.     The  Schedule was amended by the Amending Act No. 19  of 1961 and the amended Schedule stood as follows: Item No. Description of dutiable goods            Rate of                                                   duty 1.     Medicinal preparations, being patent    Ten per cent        or proprietary medicines, contain-      ad valorem.        ing alcohol and which are not        capable of being consumed as        ordinary alcoholic beverages. 2.     Medicinal preparations, containing     Rupees three        alcohol,  which  are                      and   eight        prepared by distillation or to which   five naye        alcohol  has been added,               paise per        and which are  capable of being        litre of        consumed as ordinary alcoholic         the streng-        beverages.                             th of Londo-                                               n proof spi-                                               rit. 3.    Medicinal preparations not otherwise        specified containing alcohol-      (i) Ayurvedic preparations containing   Nil      self’generated alcohol which are      not capable of being consumed as      ordinary alcoholic beverages. 141     (ii) Ayurvedic preparations, contain-    Thirty eight     ing self-generated alcohol, which        naye paise per     are capable of being consumed as         litre.     ordinary alcoholic beverages.     (iii) All others.                        Rupee one and                                              ten naye paise                                              per litre of                                              the strength                                              of London proof                                              spirit.   Explanation  I: "Patent or proprietary medicines" has  the same meaning as in clause (h) of Section 3 of the Drugs Act, 1940 (23 of 1940). The statement of objects and reasons of the Amendment  Bill, as  published in Gazette of India, 8.3.1961, Pt. II,  S.  2, Ext., page 106, said:                "Consequent  on the decision to adopt  metric               units from the 1st April, 1961, in the sale of               alcohol and collection of duty thereon, it  is               proposed  to provide for the levy and  collec-               tion  of excise duty on medicinal  and  toilet               preparations in terms of metric units.               ............................................

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                      Under  existing  item  2(ii)  of  the               Schedule  to the Act,  Ayurvedic  preparations               containing  self-generated alcohol  which  are               capable of being consumed as ordinary alcohol-               ic beverages are subjected to duty at the rate               of Rs.3 per gallon. However, by virtue of  the               provision  contained in section 19(2)(xix)  of               the Act, read with Rule 8 of the Medicinal and               Toilet  Preparations  (Excise  Duties)   Rules               1956,  the rate of duty with respect  to  such               preparations has been reduced to Rs. 1.75  per               gallon  with effect from the  10th  September,               1960,  and  it is this reduced rate  that  is,               proposed  to be expressed in terms  of  metric               units in the Bill."     It  would  thus be clear that the main purpose  was  the levy  and collection of excise duty on medicinal and  toilet preparations in terms of metric unit. while there was refer- ence to them existing item 2(ii) of the Schedule of the Act, namely, Ayurvedic preparations containing 142 self-generated alcohol which were capable of being  consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverages the duty whereof was reduced to  Rs. 1.75 per gallon from Rs.3 per gallon, there  was  no mention that item No. 2(i) of the Schedule, namely, Ayurved- ic preparations containing self-generated alcohol which were not  capable of being consumed as ordinary alcoholic  bever- ages  was  subjected  to tax. The statement  of  object  and reasons was silent about item No. 2(i).     In  the  amended Schedule we find that item  1  for  the first time mentioned medicinal preparations being patent  or proprietary medicines, containing alcohol and which are  not capable  of being consumed as ordinary  alcoholic  beverages and the earlier item No. 1 has been re-numbered as item  No. 2 and the earlier item No. 2(i), (ii) and (iii) remained  as they were as 3(i), 3(ii) and 3(iii). As regards levy of duty item  2(i)  of the old Schedule was kept duty free  in  item 3(i) of the Schedule. Thus, there has been no fresh charging of duty on what was 2(i) and is now 3(i) under which catego- ry  the appellant’s product ’ashvagandhaarist’ was  exempted from  duty before the amendment of the Schedule.  There  is, therefore,  no  doubt that item 1 & 2(i)  remained  mutually exclusive or in other words, they would not be  overlapping. Item 1 in the amended Schedule deals with medicinal prepara- tions being patent or proprietary medicines and not  medici- nal preparations ’not otherwise specified.’     The Explanation I says that patent or proprietary  medi- cines has the same meaning as in clause (h) of Section 3  of the  Drugs Act, 1940. The High Court has found that  re-num- bered definition 3(h) was earlier 3(d) and read as follows:               "3(d) ’Patent or proprietary medicine’ means a               drug  which is a remedy or  prescription  pre-               pared  for internal or external use  of  human               beings  or animals, and which is not  for  the               time being recognised by the Permanent Commis-               sion  on  Biological  Standardisation  of  the               World  Health  Organisation or in  the  latest               edition  of the British Pharmacopoeia  or  the               British  Pharmaceutical  Codex  or  any  other               Pharmacopoeia authorised in this behalf by the               Central Government after consultation with the               Board." Thus, patent or proprietary medicines meant a drug which was defined in the Drugs Act and not in the Act. The High  Court rightly held that Ayurvedic medicine was not a drug at  all.

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The  definition  of  drug expressly excluded  them.  So  the definition of patent or proprietary medicine 143 was  exclusive  of Ayurvedic medicinal  preparations,  those being  excluded from the definition of drug. The  definition of patent and proprietary medicines till then did not  apply to  Ayurvedic preparations. This position  continued  indeed till  the amendment of Drugs Act by the Drugs and  Cosmetics (Amendment)  Act, 1964. Several amendments were effected  by that  Amendment  Act of 1964. Section 33A and Chapter  IV  A were  inserted. Section 33A said that Chapter IV was not  to apply to Ayurvedic (including Siddha) or Unani drugs.  "Save as otherwise provided in this Act, nothing contained in this Chapter shall apply to Ayurvedic (including Siddha) or Unani drugs".  Chapter IVA made.provisions relating  to  Ayurvedic (including Siddha) and Unani drugs. This shows that prior to this amendment of 1964 Ayurvedic preparations were expressly not drugs under the Drugs Act.     The  Drugs  and  Cosmetics Act in  the  amendment  First Schedule after the amendment Act of 1964 included  Ayurvedic (including  Siddha)  and Unani system drugs  prepared  under Section  3(a)  which  contains  the  definition:  "Ayurvedic (including  Siddha)  or Unani drugs includes  all  medicines intended  for  internal or external use of human  beings  or animals and all substances intended to be used for or in the diagnosis, treatment, mitigation or prevention of disease in human beings and animals, mentioned and process and manufac- ture  exclusively in accordance with the formula  prescribed in the authoritative book on Ayurvedic (Siddha) Unani system of medicines specified in the first schedule." This  defini- tion  was also inserted by Drugs and  Cosmetics  (Amendment) Act,  1964  (13 of 1964) Section 2(a)(i)  with  effect  from 15.9.1964.     The same exclusion remained in the related Central Acts. For  example, the Drugs Control Act, 1950 (Act 26  of  1950) replaced the Drugs Control Ordinance, 1949 (6 of 1949) which was  promulgated on 3.10. 1949 in order to ensure that  cer- tain essential imported drugs and medicines were sold in the reasonable  price  in the  Chief  Commissioner’s  provinces. Similar  ordinances  were issued by all the  provinces.  The necessity  for continuing price control of  these  essential drugs continued. That was an Act to provide for the  control of  sale, supply and distribution of drugs. Drug  meant  any drug  as  defined in clause (b) of Section 3 of  Drugs  Act, 1940, in respect of which a declaration had been made  under Section 3 which defined drug. It may be noted that Pharmaco- poeia  authorised  for the purpose of Section  3(h)  of  the Drugs Act, 1940, were: The Indian Pharmacopoeia, the Pharma- copoeia of the United States, the National formulary of  the United States, the International Pharmacopoeia and the State Pharmacopoeia 144 of  the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, vide  S.O.  701 Gazette of India, 1961, Pt. II, S. 3(ii), p. 725. There  was thus  no Ayurvedic Pharmacopoeia prescribed for the  purpose of that Act. Pharmacopoeia is a book containing the list  of drugs  with directions for use. The fact that  no  Ayurvedic Pharmacopoeia  had  been notified at the relevant  time  was because  Ayurvedic preparations were not drugs for the  pur- pose  of  Drugs Act and, for that matter, of  Medicinal  and Toilet  Preparations  (Excise Duties) Act, at  the  relevant time.  It  could  be for this reason that  in  the  original Schedule  the expression medicinal and  toilet  preparations ’not  otherwise specified’ was used and  Ayurvedic  prepara- tions of different categories were put under item 2. In  the

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Schedule as amended by the 1962 Act, this expression contin- ued in item 3, The same definition of ’drug’ also  continued in the Drugs Act.     From  the  Explanation I of the Schedule of the  Act  as substituted by Act 5 of 1964 also it is clear that patent or proprietary  medicine means any medicinal preparation  which is  not specified in a monograph in a Pharmacopoeia,  Formu- lary  or other publications notified in this behalf  by  the Central Government in the Official Gazette.     To be a patent medicine one would be required to have  a patent.  A patented article means an article in  respect  of which a patent is in force. "Patent" means a patent  granted under  the Indian Patent and Designs Act, 1911, and now  the Patent  Act, 1970. A patent medicine will,  therefore,  mean medicine in respect of which a patent is in force. "Proprie- tary"  means of a proprietor, that is,  holding  proprietary rights. Patent means a grant of some privilege, property, or authority, made by the Government or sovereign of a  country to one or more individuals. A proprietor is one who has  the legal right or exclusive title to anything. It is synonymous with  owner. A person entitled to a trade mark or  a  design under  the acts for the registration or patenting  of  trade mark  or design is called a proprietor of the trade mark  or design.  Under  the Trade and Merchandise Marks  Act,  1958, "trade mark" means:               "(i)  in  relation to Chapter  X  (other  than               section 81), a registered trade mark or a mark               used  in relation to goods for the purpose  of               indicating  or so as to indicate a  connection               in  the course of trade between the goods  and               some person having the right as proprietor  to               use the mark; and               (ii)  in relation to the other  provisions  of               this  Act, a mark used or proposed to be  used               in relation to goods for the               145               purpose  of indicating or so as to indicate  a               connection in the course of trade between  the               goods and some person having the right, either               as  proprietor or as registered user,  to  use               the  mark whether with or without any  indica-               tion  of  the  identity of  that  person,  and               includes a certification trade mark               registered  as  such under the  provisions  of               Chap. VIII." As defined in s. 2(a), registered proprietor in relation  to a trade-mark means a person for a time being entered in  the register  as  proprietor  of the  trade-mark.  A  registered trade-mark  means  a  trade-mark which is  actually  on  the register.     By s. 18 of the Finance (No. 2) Act, 1962, the  Schedule to the Act was further amended substituting the  Explanation 1 by the following:               "Explanation  1: "Patent or proprietary  medi-               cines"  means any medicinal preparation  which               bears either on itself or on its container  or               both a name which is not specified in a  mono-               graph  in a Pharmacopoeia, Formulary or  other               Publications  notified in this behalf  by  the               Central Government in the Official Gazette, or               which  is  a brand name, that is a name  or  a               registered  trade  mark under  the  Trade  and               Merchandise  Mark Act, 1958 (43 of  1958),  or               any  other  mark such as a  symbol,  monogram,               label,  signature  or invented  words  or  any

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             writing  which  is  used m  relation  to  that               medicinal  preparation  for  the  purpose   of               indicating  or so as to indicate a  connection               in the course of trade between as  preparation               and  some  person having the right  either  as               proprietor  or  otherwise to use the  name  or               mark  with  or without any indication  of  the               identity of that person." This  amendment of the Explanation came into force in  June, 1962 with retrospective effect from 23rd April, 1962.     The Director of Prohibition and Excise, for  Maharashtra State,  Bombay, thereafter issued the circular  dated  31.5. 1962  (Ext.  44).  It said that the  patent  or  proprietary medicines as defined in clause (d) of s. 3 of the Drugs  Act of 1940 (23 of 1940) and falling under items No. 1 and No. 4 of  the Act as substituted by the Amendment Act, 1961  were, prior to 23rd April, 1962, subject to levy of duty at 10 per cent ad 146 valorem by virtue of the Explanation I below the Schedule to the  Act which has now been deleted from 23rd  April,  1962. According  to  new  definition of  ’Patent  and  Proprietary Medicines’  as  given in the new Explanation as  amended  by Finance (No. 2) Act, 1962 medicinal preparations  containing alcohol,  opium,  Indian  hemp or other  narcotic  drugs  or narcotic  falling  under item 3(i), 3(iii) and 3(v)  of  the said Schedule, were with effect from 23rd April, 1962 liable to  duty  not under the said items but under item No.  1  or item  No. 4 of the said Schedule at 10 per cent ad  valorem, if  such preparations are "patent or proprietary  medicines" as defined in the Explanation. Excise duty on all ’patent or proprietary  medicinal preparations’ (Alopathic,  Ayurvedic, Unani  and  Homoeopathic preparations)  containing  alcohol, opium, Indian hemp or other narcotic drug or narcotic, which fall within the purview of the new definition of ’patent  or proprietary  medicines’  given in  the  Explanation,  should therefore, be recovered at the rate of 10 per cent ad  valo- rem from the holders of the licences granted under the  said Act and the rules thereunder in accordance with the instruc- tions contained in their Circular No. DQ 64-31/61 dated 22nd July,  1961. A note received from the Government  of  India, explaining  the  scope of the new definition of  ’patent  or proprietary  medicines’  was also enclosed  along  with  the circular.     It  is in evidence in the instant case that two  bottles containing Asavas were produced in the Court as Exhibit 42/1 and  Exhibit 42/2. Both the bottles contained the same  kind of Asavas. The ingredients of the two were the same and  the preparation  of the two was also the same. When  the  Asavas were  sold  during the period beginning from June,  1962  to February,  1964,  no excise duty was levied because  on  the label  there  was no trade mark of  patent  and  proprietary right printed. If the Asavas were sold in the bottle  having a  label with no trade mark as at Exhibit 42/1, no duty  was recovered from the plaintiff. These Asavas were supplied  to Employees’  State Insurance as per their tender without  the trade  mark  on the label to see that  the  plaintiffcompany were not taxed the excise duty which would have been charged had  they put the patent mark on the label. But in order  to fight  for  blemish of cheating, the  plaintiff  thought  it necessary to have the trade mark on such bottles without any difference.  As soon as the goods were sought to be sold  in the  above manner the excise duty was levied and was  sought to  be recovered from the plaintiff’s fund. No  excise  duty was  recovered after February, 1964 even though Asavas  were

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sold  with  their trade mark. It is also  in  evidence  that there  were two sub-groups in the group of Asavas and  Aris- thas  known as ’restricted’ and  ’unrestricted’.  Restricted means preparations which 147 could  be  used  as alcoholic beverages. In  this  case  the period from 26.7.62 to 29.2.64 is alone material inasmuch as by the Finance Act of 1964 with reference to item No. 1, the Ayurvedic  and  Unani  medicines  containing  self-generated alcohol  and  which were not capable of  being  consumed  as ordinary alcoholic beverages were exempted from the levy  of excise  duty. In other words, the position prior to  Finance Act  of  1962  was continued and  thereafter  the  medicinal preparations, namely, Asavas and Aristhas ceased to be taxed from 1964.     It  would be noted that the Explanation itself  did  not specifically  mention  "Allopathic,  Ayurvedic,  Unani   and Homoeopathic  preparations"  as was done in  the  Director’s Circular. On a comparison of the earlier Explanation and the substituted  Explanation  one  would  notice  that   earlier "patent  and  proprietary medicines" meant a  drug.  In  the substituted Explanation it means any medicinal  preparation. However, it can not be lost sight of that the words "medici- nal  preparation" as continued to be defined in s.  2(g)  of the Act "includes all drugs which are a remedy or  prescrip- tion  prepared for internal or external use of human  beings or animals and all substances intended to be used for or  in treatment,  mitigation  or prevention of diseases  in  human beings  or animals." We have already noticed that the  Drugs Act  continued  to exclude Ayurvedic preparations  till  its amendment in 1964. It has been stated that even after amend- ment  of the Schedule after 1961 amendment  the  appellant’s product was exempted from duty, till the Director’s Circular disturbed the position.     This brings us to the question of interpretation of  the Act  and the Schedule with the Explanation. in view  of  the submission that the Explanation could not have rendered item 3(i)  of  the Schedule redundant. Was there  any  change  of intention of the Legislature in this regard?     A Schedule in an Act of Parliament is a mere question of drafting. It is the legislative intent that is material.  An Explanation to the Schedule amounts to an Explanation in the Act itself. As we read in Halsbury’s Laws of England,  Third Edition, Vol. 36, para 551: "To simplify the presentation of statutes, it is the practice for their subject matter to  be divided, where appropriate, between sections and  schedules, the former setting out matters of principle, and introducing the latter, and the latter containing all matters of detail. This is purely a matter of arrangement, and a schedule is as much a part of the statute, and as much an enactment, as  is the section by which it is introduced." The schedule may  be used in construing provisions in the 148 body of the Act. It is as much an act of Legislature as  the Act itself and it must be read together with the Act for all purposes of construction. Expressions in the Schedule cannot control or prevail against the express enactment and in case of any inconsistency between the schedule and the  enactment the enactment is to prevail and if any part of the  schedule cannot be made to correspond it must yield to the Act.  Lord Sterndale, in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Gittus, [1920] 1 K.B. 563 said:               "It  seems to me there are two  principles  of               rules  of  interpretation which  ought  to  be               applied  to the combination of Act and  Sched-

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             ule.  If the Act says that the Schedule is  to               be used for a certain purpose and the  heading               of the part of the Schedule in question  shows               that it is prima facie at any rate devoted  to               that  purpose, then you must read the Act  and               the  Schedule  as  though  the  Schedule  were               operating  for  the purpose, and  if  you  can               satisfy  the language of the  section  without               extending it beyond that purpose you ought  to               do it. But if in spite of that you find in the               language of the Schedule words and terms  that               go clearly outside that purpose, then you must               give effect to them and you must not  consider               them as limited by the heading of that part of               the Schedule or by the purpose mentioned in               the Act for which the Schedule is prima  facie               to  be used. You cannot refuse to give  effect               to clear words simply because prima facie they               seem  to  be  limited by the  heading  of  the               Schedule and the definition of the purpose  of               the Schedule contained in the Act."      The  above  observation was not disapproved  in  appeal (1921)  2 A.C. 81. However, the basic principle is  that  in case  of  a  conflict between the body of the  Act  and  the Schedule, the former prevails. In the instant case we do not find any such conflict.      An  Explanation, as was found in Bihta Marketing  Union v.  Bank  of Bihar, AIR 1967 SC 389: (1967) 1 SCR  848,  may only  explain and may not expand or add to the scope of  the original  section. In State of Bombay v. United Motors,  AIR 1953  SC 252: (1953) SCR 1069,it was found that an  Explana- tion  could  introduce,  a finction or settle  a  matter  of controversy.  Explanation  may  not be made  to  operate  as "exception"  or "proviso". The construction of  an  Explana- tion, as was held in Collector of Customs v. G. Dass &  Co., AIR  1966 SC 1577, must depend upon its terms and no  theory of its purpose can be entertained 149 unless  it is to be inferred from the language used. It  was said in Burmah Shell Oil Ltd. v. Commercial Tax Officer, AIR 1961  SC  3 15: (1961) 1 SCR 902, that the  explanation  was meant to explain the Article and must be interpreted accord- ing  to  its own tenor and it was an error  to  explain  the Explanation  with  the aid of the Article to  which  it  was annexed.  We  have to remember what was held  in  Dattatraya Govind  Mahajan  v. State of Maharashtra, AIR  1977  SC  915 (928): (1977) 2 SCR 790, that mere description of a  certain provision, such as "Explanation" is not decisive of its true meaning. It is true that the orthodox function of an  expla- nation  is  to explain the meaning and effect  of  the  main provision to which it is an explanation and to clear up  any doubt or ambiguity in it, but ultimately it is the intention of  the  legislature which is paramount and mere  use  of  a label  cannot  control or deflect such intention.  State  of Bombay  v. United Motors, (supra) laid down that the  inter- pretation must obviously depend upon the words used therein, but  this must be borne in mind that when the  provision  is capable of two interpretations, that should be adopted which fits the description. An explanation is different in  nature from a proviso for a proviso excepts, excludes or  restricts while an explanation explains or clarifies. Such explanation or clarification may be in respect of matters whose  meaning is implicit and not explicit in the main section itself.  In Hiralal  Ratanlal v. State of U.P., [1973] 1 SCC 216  (225), it was ruled that if on a true reading of an Explanation  it

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appears  that it has widened the scope of the main  section, effect  be given to legislative intent  notwithstanding  the fact that the Legislature named that provision as an  Expla- nation.  In  all these matters courts have to find  out  the true intention of the Legislature. In D.G. Mahajan v.  State of Maharashtra, (supra) xx this Court said that  legislature has  different  ways of expressing itself and  in  the  last analysis the words used alone are repository of  legislative intent  and  that if necessary an Explanation must  be  con- strued  according  to its plain language and ’not on  any  a priori consideration’.     Applying the above principles we do not find any differ- ence between the Schedule and the Explanation I; the  latter has not amended the Schedule by either deleting item 3(i) or by adding or including Ayurvedic preparations in item 1.  No change of legislative intent is indicated.     In the Medicinal and Toilet Preparations (Excise Duties) Rules,  1956  Section C Medicinal and  Toilet  preparations, Allopathic   preparations,  Homoeopathic  preparations   and Ayurvedic preparations are dealt with separately. So far  as Ayurvedic preparations are concerned, 150 Rule 64 dealing with types of preparations said: "Asavas and Aristhas  are the principal types of Ayurvedic  preparations in  which alcoholic content is self-generated and not  added as  such." Rule 65 on Pharmacopoeia for  Ayurvedic  prepara- tions  said: "Until a standard Ayurvedic  pharmacopoeia  has been  evolved by the Central Government, the  pharmacopoeias that are in vogue in the various States shall be  recognised as  standard Ayurvedic pharmacopoeias." Rule  66  classified the  preparations  containing  self-generated  alcohol   for purposes of levy of duty. It said: "No duty shall be  levied on Ayurvedic preparations containing self-generated  alcohol in  which  the alcohol content does not exceed 2  per  cent. Where  the percentage of proof spirit is in excess of 2  per cent, duty will be leviable under item 2(ii) or 2(i) of  the Schedule to Act the according as the preparations are  capa- ble  of  being consumed as ordinary  alcoholic  beverage  or not." Thus Ayurvedic preparations containing  self-generated alcohol  which  are not capable of being used  as  alcoholic beverages fall under original 2(i) and now 3(i).     The above Rules, which have not been shown to have  been amended  clearly  say  that where the  percentage  of  proof spirit is in excess of 2% the preparation would be  dutiable under  item 2 which became item No. 3 in the amended  Sched- ule. This Rule is consistent with the Schedule but is wholly inconsistent with the Director’s circular.     Mr.  Ganguli relies on (1971) 2 SCR 590: (1971) 1 SCC  4 Baidyanath  Ayurved Bhawan Pvt. Ltd. v. The  Excise  Commis- sioner  of  U.P., The question there was  whether  medicinal preparation  containing tincture, spirit etc. was  dutiable. The tincture and spirit in their turn contained alcohol.  It was  contended that alcohol was not directly added  but  was component of the tincture or spirit. It was, however conced- ed  that  the preparations were medicinal  preparations  and that tincture was a component of that preparation and  alco- hol was a component of tincture. Therefore, this Court  held that it was difficult to see how it could be urged that  the preparation  did  not contain alcohol. All  that  the  plain language of the provision required was that the  preparation should  contain  alcohol.  The  question  whether  Ayurvedic preparation  was a drug to be included in the definition  of medicinal preparation was not involved. Whether  self-gener- ated  alcohol  was to be treated differently  was  also  not there.

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   In Mohanlal Maganlal Bhavsar v. Union of India. [1986] 1 SCC 122 it was held that before a medicinal preparation  can fall under Item 151 1 of the Schedule three conditions are required to be satis- fied:  (A) the preparation must be a patent  or  proprietary medicine;  (2) it must contain alcohol; and (3) it must  not be capable of being consumed as an ordinary alcoholic bever- age.  The fact that ointments and liniments  were  medicinal preparations containing alcohol in semi-liquid form did  not make any difference. However it was not in dispute that  the articles were medicinal preparations for the purposes of the Act and that they were patent and proprietary medicines.  In the instant case the question is whether Ayurvedic  prepara- tions,  in view of the definition of medicinal  preparations in the Act, could be regarded as drugs and could be dutiable under Item 3 and not Item 1. In Commissioner of Sales Tax v. The Modi Sugar Mills Ltd., [1961] 2 SCR 189 it was held that a taxing statute must be interpreted in the light of what is clearly expressed therein and nothing can be implied nor can provisions be imported into them so as to supply an  assumed deficiency. In Baidyanath Ayurved Bhawan (supra) this  Court quoted the observation of Rowlatt, J. in Cape Brandy  Syndi- cate  v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, [1921] 1  K.B.  64 that  "in  a taxing Act one has to look at what  is  clearly said.  There  is  no room for any intendment.  There  is  no equity  about  a  tax. There is no presumption  as  to  tax. Nothing is to be read in, nothing is to be implied. One  can only look fairly at the language used." The question in  the instant  case, however, is whether the  appellant’s  product being  an  Ayurvedic preparation could be a drug  for  being included in the definition of medicinal preparation for  the purpose  of  the Act. This question was not  raised  in  the above cases.     As  Mr. Dholakia points out, the Circular  would  render item 3(i) of the Schedule wholly redundant. It has been  the consistent policy of legislature to exempt item 3(i) hither- to  2(i),  from  duty. The legislature has not  in  any  way changed  it. The Explanation has not in any way altered  the classification in the Schedule. The substituted  Explanation no doubt stressed on patents and trade marks. But it has not expressly  envisaged  in  item  I,  patented  trade   marked Ayurvedic preparations contrary to the classification in the Schedule.  Ex  praecedentibus et consequentibus  optima  fit interpretatio.  The  best interpretation is  made  from  the context. Injustum est nisi tota lege inspecta, de una aliqua ejus  particula  proposita judicare Vel  respondere.  It  is unjust  to decide or respond as to any particular part of  a law without examining the whole of the law. Interpretare  et concordare  leges legibus, est optimus interpretendi  modus. To  interpret  and in such a way as to harmonize  laws  with laws,  is  the best mode of interpretation. In  the  instant case  the  Director’s Circular is not in harmony  with  item 3(i) or with the classifi- 152 cation  of  Ayurvedic preparations in separate  item  3.  It would  not  be in conformity with  definition  of  medicinal preparation’ in s. 2(g) of the Act. Jura eodern modo dislit- uentur  quo constitutuntur. Laws are abrogated by  the  same means  (authority)  by which they are made.  The  Director’s Circular  is  not shown to have been a  piece  of  delegated legislation. The Explanation on its tenor does not amend the Schedule. No part of a Statute is to be taken as superfluous or  redundant.  Every  word in a Statute is to  be  given  a meaning. A construction which would leave without effect any

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part of the language of a statute will normally be rejected. Every clause of a statute is to be construed with  reference to  the context and other clauses of the Act so as to  make, as  far  as possible, a consistent enactment  of  the  whole Statute.     The High Court accepted the submission that it  provided a selfcontained definition of ’patent and proprietary  medi- cines’  for  the  purpose of the main Act  and  severed  the connection  between the provisions of the Drugs Act  as  was contemplated in earlier Explanation I, and consequently  one need not look to the Drugs Act at all for its interpretation and the Schedule was thence to be interpreted as it  existed along with that self-containing definition in Explanation I. In  doing  so,  the position that  "Patent  and  Proprietary medicines"  means  "any medicinal  preparation"  which  very "Medicinal  preparation"  includes  all drugs  which  are  a remedy  or  prescription etc. as defined in s. 2(g)  of  the Act. So a reference to the Drugs Act was still necessary. No doubt this is an inclusive definition. To enlarge its  deno- tation  a specific provision to include  Ayurvedic  prepara- tions containing selfgenerated alcohol which are not capable of being consumed as ordinary alcoholic beverages was neces- sary.  That having not been done by the Explanation  itself, it  was not permissible to include it by the  Circular.  The Explanation  I  could  not have been in  conflict  with  the provisions  of the Act and the Circular could not have  been in  conflict with the Explanation, the Schedule,  the  Rules and the Act.     In  the result, we set aside the judgment and decree  of the High Court and restore those of the Civil Judge  decree- ing the suit. We leave the parties to bear their own costs. Y.    Lal                                             Appeal allowed. 153