28 February 1996
Supreme Court
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COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE,HYDERABAD ETC.ETC. Vs M/S.VAZIR SULTAN TOBACCO COMPANYLIMITED, HYDERABAD ETC.ETC.

Bench: JEEVAN REDDY,B.P. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 3199 of 1986


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PETITIONER: COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE,HYDERABAD ETC.ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: M/S.VAZIR SULTAN TOBACCO COMPANYLIMITED, HYDERABAD ETC.ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       28/02/1996

BENCH: JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J) BENCH: JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J) SEN, S.C. (J) NANAVATI G.T. (J)

CITATION:  1996 SCC  (3) 434        JT 1996 (3)   112  1996 SCALE  (2)603

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D E M E N T B.P. JEEVAN REDDY,J.      Subsection (1)  of Section 37 of the Finance Act, 1978, levied a special duty of excise equal to five percent of the amount of  excise duty  chargeable on  goods. The  levy came into effect  on and  from March 1, 1978 and was to remain in force till March 31, 1979. Sub-section (3) provided that the said levy  shall be  in addition  to the  duties  of  excise chargeable on such goods under the law in force. Sub-section (4) provided  that the  provisions of the Central Excise Act and the rules made thereunder shall apply, as far as may be, in relation to the levy and collection of the special duties of excise  levied under  the said  section. The  question in this batch  of appeals  is whether  the  goods  manufactured prior to March 1, 1978 but removed on or after March 1, 1978 are liable  to pay  the special  duty of  excise. Section 37 reads as follows:      "(1)   In   the   case   of   goods      chargeable  with   duty  of  excise      under the  Central  Excise  Act  as      amended from  time  to  time,  read      with any  notification for the time      being  in   force  issued   by  the      Central Government   in relation to      the duty  so chargeable there shall      be levied  and collected  a special      duty  of   excise  equal   to  five      percent of the amount so chargeable      on such goods.      (2) Sub-section  (1) shall cease to      have effect  after the  31st day of      March,  1979,  except  as  respects      things done  or omitted  to be done      before such  case and  section 6 of

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    the General  Clauses Act,  1897 (10      of 1897) shall apply upon such case      as if the said sub-section had then      been repeated by a Central Act.      (3)  The  special  duty  of  excise      referred  to   in  sub-section  (1)      shall be  in addition to any duties      of excise  chargeable on such goods      under the Central Excise Act or any      other law  for the  time  being  in      force.      (4) The  provisions of  the Central      Excise  Act   and  the  rules  made      thereunder,     including     those      relating to  refunds and exemptions      from duties shall as far as  may be      apply in  relation to  the levy and      collection of the special duties of      excise leviable under this section,      in respect  of any  soods  as  they      apply in  relation to  the levy and      collection of  the duties of excise      on such  goods under  that  Act  or      those rules as the case may be."      It is  not necessary  to refer  to  the  facts  to  the several appeals  before us.  It would  be enough if we state the facts  in Civil  Appeal No.3199 of 1986. The respondents M/s. Vazir sultan Tobacco Company Limited, is engaged in the manufacture of cigarettes. The appeal relates to the levy of special excise  duty on cigarettes removed by the respondent between March  1, 1978  and March 12, 1978. The respondent’s case was  and is  that though  cleared an  or after March 1, 1978, they  were manufactured  prior to  the said  date.  It contended that  inasmuch as  the special duty of excise like any other  duties of  excise  is  upon  the  manufacture  or production of  excisable articles  and not  upon removal, no duty is  leviable upon  the said cigarettes. The authorities rejected the  contention and levied the duty.  Subsequently, the respondent filed an application for refund agitating the very same  issue, which  too was  rejected by  the Assistant Collector. An  appeal before  the Collector (Appeals) proved fruitless. The  respondent then carried the matter by way of further appeal  to the Tribunal. The matter was heard by the Special Bench of the Tribunal. They allowed the appeal under the  impugned   order  upholding   the  contention   of  the respondent.      Sri Joseph Vellapally, learned counsel for the Revenue, assailed the  correctness of  the view taken by the Tribunal on several  grounds. He  submitted that Section 37 evolved a simple  formula,  viz.,  wherever  central  excise  duty  is payable on  certain goods, special excise duty shall also be payable at  the rate  of five  percent of the central excise duty. Counsel  submitted that the levy and collection of the central excise  duties is  governed  by  Section  3  of  the Central Excise  and Salt Act, 1944 read with Rules 9, 9A and 9B of  the Central  Excise Rules.  According to these Rules, the levy  and collection is at the stage of clearance of the goods from  the factory  or warehouse,  as the  case may be. Both for  the purpose of rate and valuation, one has to look to the  date of  removal and  it  is  the  said  date  which determined  the   levy,  the  rate  and  the  valuation.  He submitted that  the question  at issue  in these  appeals is concluded by  the decision  of this  Court in  Wallace Flour Mills Company  v. Collector  of Central  Excise  [1989  (44) E.L.T.590]. The  fact that  duties of excise are levied upon

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the production  or manufacture of goods, the learned counsel contended, does not detract from the clear position emerging from the provisions of the Act and the Rules.      Sri Soli  J.Sorabjee,  learned  counsel  appearing  for respondents, supported  the reasoning  and conclusion of the Tribunal.  He  submitted  that  the  duties  of  excise  are leviable only  upon the  manufacture or  production  of  the goods as  contemplated by  Entry 84 of List-I of the Seventh Schedule to  the Constitution.  The mere  fact that, for the sake of  convenience, the  duty is collected at the stage of removal cannot and does not change the character pf the tax. It is upon the manufacture or production of goods and not on any other  basis. The  special excise duty is a separate and distinct levy  from the  Central Excise duties. It is levied for the first time by Section 37 of the Finance Act, 1978 on and with  effect from  March 1, 1978. Counsel submitted that when the  goods in  question were manufactured, there was no levy of  special excise duty. If there is no levy of special excise duty  on the date of their manufacture or production, it cannot  attach at the stage of removal. Saying otherwise, the learned  counsel contended,  would detract from the very concept of  duties of  excise. Learned  counsel also  relied upon certain decisions both of this Court and High Courts in support of his submission.      We are inclined to agree with Sri Sorabjee. Entry 84 of List-I of  the Seventh Schedule to the constitution empowers the Parliament to make a law providing for levy of duties of excise on  tobacco and  other goods manufactured or produced in  India   [except,  of  course,  certain  goods  mentioned therein]. Indisputably, the special excise duty is an excise duty and  is relatable  to Entry 84. If so, the levy must be on the  manufacture or  production of goads. That is how the words "goods  manufactured or produced in India" in Entry 84 have been understood by this Court throughout. Once the levy is not  there at the time when the goods are manufactured or produced in  India, it  cannot be  levied at  the  stage  of removal of  the said  goods. The  idea of  collection at the stage of  removal is devised for the sake of convenience. It is not as if the levy is at the stage of removal; it is only the collection  that  is  done  at  the  stage  of  removal. Admittedly, the  special excise  duty is an independent duty of excise  separate and  distinct from  the duties of excise levied by  the Central  Excise and Salt Act, 1944. This levy came into  effect only on and from March 1, 1978 which means that the  goods produced prior to that date were not subject to such  levy. If that is so, the levy cannot attach nor can it be  realized because  such goods  are removed on or after March 1,  1978. The provisions of the Central Excise Act and the Rules, in our opinion, do not say otherwise. Section 3(1) of the Central Excise Act says:      (i)  There   shall  be  levied  and      collected in  such manner as may be      prescribed duties  of excise on all      excisable  goods  other  than  salt      which are  produced or manufactured      in, or  imported by  land into, any      part of India as, and at the rates,      set forth in the First Schedule."      The expression "prescribed" is defined in clause (g) of Section 2 to mean prescribed by Rules made under the Act.      It is  evident that the words "in such manner as may be prescribed" qualify  the word  "collected" and  not the word "levied". While the levy is created by Section 3 itself, the collection of  the duty is left to be regulated by the Rules made under the Act.

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    Rules 9 and 9-A are relevant for our purpose. Rule 9(1) provides that:      "No  excisable   goods   shall   be      removed from  any place  where they      are     produced,      cured     or      manufactured   or    any   premises      appurtenant thereto,  which may  be      specified by  the Collector in this      behalf  whether   for   consumption      export or  manufacture of any other      commodity  in   or   outside   such      places  until   the   excise   duty      leviable thereon  has been paid  at      such place and in such manner as is      prescribed in these Rules or as the      Collector may require and except on      presentation of  an application  in      the proper  form and  on  obtaining      the  permission   of   the   proper      officer on the form."      Rule 9 says that "no excisable goods" should be removed from the  place  of  their  manufacture  until  excise  duty leviable thereon  has been  paid "at  such place and in such manner" as  is prescribed  in these Rules. It is relevant to notice  that  the  Rule  specifically  uses  tho  expression "excisable goods"  - and  not "goods" - and for good reason. The expression "excisable goods" has been defined in clause (d)  of Section  2 to  mean "goods  specified in  the First Schedule  as being  subject to  a duty  of  excise and includes salt."  The goods  removed must  be excisable goods first -  which means  that   the   goods were subject to the levy of  duty before  their removal  Rule 9-A is to the same effect. Sub-rules (1) to (3-A) of Rule 9-A may he set out in their entirety  in view  of the  reliance placed by both the counsel upon them. They read:      "(1) The  rate of  duty and  tariff      valuation, if  any,  applicable  to      any excisable  goods shall  be  the      rate and valuation in force.      (i) in  the case  of goods  removed      from the  premises  of  a  cure  on      payment of  duties on  the date  on      which the duty is assessed; and      (ii) the case of goods removed from      a factory or a warehouse subject to      sub-rules (2),  (3) and  (3)(a), on      the date  of the  actual removal of      such goods  from  such  factory  or      warehouse.      (2) If  the goods  have  previously      been removed from a warehouse to be      rewarehoused, and  the duty is paid      on such  goods without  their being      rewarehoused    the     rate    and      valuations   if   any,   applicable      thereto  shall   be  the  rate  and      valuation, if  any, in force on the      date on  which duty  is paid or, if      the  duty   is  paid   through   an      account-current maintained with the      Collector under rule 9, on the date      on  which  an  application  in  the      proper form  is  delivered  to  the      officer-in-charge of  the warehouse      from which the goods were removed.

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    (3)  Where   any  person   who  has      removed excisable  goods for export      in  bond  fails  to  export  or  to      furnish proof of such export to the      satisfaction of  the  Collector  or      diverts   the    goods   for   home      consumptions  the   rate  of   duty      leviable and  the tariff valuations      if any  in respect  of  such  goods      shall be  the rate and valuation in      force on the date on which the duty      is paid.      (3A) Where  duty becomes chargeable      an any  material or component parts      in respect  of which credit of duty      had been  allowed under  rule  56A,      the rate  of duty  leviable and the      tariff  valuation,   if   any,   in      respect   of   such   material   or      component parts  shall be  the rate      and valuation  in force on the date      on which the duty is paid."      According to sub-rule (1) of Rule 9-A, the rate of duty [apart from  tariff valuation]  applicable to any "excisable goods" shall  be the  rate in  force on  the date  of actual removal of  such goods from the factory or the warehouses as the case  may be.  This is  the general rule. Sub-rules (2), (3) and  (3A) provide  certain exceptional  situations which are not relevant for the purpose of these appeals. It is the general rule  contained in  sub-rule (1)  and in  particular clause (ii)  of sub-rule  (l) -  that is  relevant here.  In other words,  the rate  of duty  as well as the valuation of goods shall  be the rate and the valuation as on the date of actual "removal".  This rule  too opens  with the expression "excisable goods".      Sri   Vellapally    contended   that   if   the   above interpretation is  adopted, it  may  lead  to  an  enigmatic situation. He  explains his  apprehension thus:  the special excise duty  is levied  only for the period March 1, 1978 to February  28,  1979;  Take  a  case,  where  the  goods  are manufactured on  or before  February 28, 1979 are romoved on or after March 17, 1979, what would be the rate of duty [and which would  be relevant  date for  valuation purposes]; the assessee may  say that  on the  date of removals neither the levy is  in force  nor are Rules 9 and 9A and, hence he need not pay any special excise duty on such goods. We do not see any valid  basis for  this apprehension.  In  the  situation contemplated by  Sri vellapally,  the date of removal has to be taken  as February  28, 1979.  It cannot be otherwise. If Rules 9  and 9A  are held  inapplicable, it  would logically follow that  the moment  the goods are manufactures the levy becomes payable  and, in the circumstances, the last date of levy can  reasonably be  taken to be the date of removal. Of course, an  absurd consequence  would follow  if it  is held that in  the above  situation, no  special  excise  duty  is payable if the removal is on or after March 1, 1979. Such an absurd consequence  could  not  be  presumed  to  have  been intended by the Parliament.      We are  of the opinion that Section 3 cannot be read as shifting  the   levy  from   the  stage  of  manufacture  or production of goods to the stage of removal. The levy is and remains upon  the manufacture  or production alone. Only the collection part  of it  is shifted  to the stage of removal. Once this is so, the fact that the provisions of the Central Excise Act  are applied in the matter of levy and collection

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of special  excise  duty  cannot  and  does  not  mean  that wherever the  Central Excise  duty is  payable, the  special excise duty  is also payable automatically. That is so as an ordinary rule.  But insofar  as the  goods  manufactured  or produced prior to March 1, 1978 are concerned, the said rule cannot apply  for the  reason that  there  was  no  levy  of special excise  duty on  such goods  at the stage and at the time of  their manufacture/production.  The removal of goods is not  the taxable  event. Taxable event is the manufacture or production of goods.      "Excise is a duty on manufacture or      production. But  the realization of      the  duty   may  be  postponed  for      administrative convenience  to  the      date of  removal of  goods from the      factory. Rule  9A of the said rules      merely  does   that.  That  is  the      scheme of  the Act.  It does not in      our opinions  make removal  be  the      taxable event. The taxable event is      the manufacture,  But the liability      to pay  the duty  is postponed till      the time  of removal  under Rule 9A      of  the   said   Rules.   In   this      connections reference  may be  made      to the  decision of  the  Karnataka      High Court in Karnataka Cement Pipe      Factory   v.    Superintendent   of      Central    Excise     (1986    (23)      E.L.T.313)  where  it  was  decided      that the words ‘as being subject to      a  duty  of  excise’  appearing  in      Section 2(d)  of the  Act are  only      descriptive of the goods and not to      the actual  levy. ’Excisable  goods      it  was   helds   do   not   become      nonexcisable goods  merely  by  the      reason of the exemption given under      a notification.  This view was also      taken by  the Madras  High Court in      Tamil Nadu  (Madras State) Handloom      Weavers Co-operative  Society  Ltd.      v. Assistant  Collector of  Central      Excise (1978 (2) E.L.T. (J.57)). On      the basis  of Rule  9A of  the said      rules,    the     Central    Excise      authorities   were    within    the      competence  to   apply   the   rate      prevailing on  the date of removal.      We are  of the  opinion  that  even      though the  taxable  event  if  the      manufacture or the production of an      excisable article,  the duty can be      levied and  collected  at  a  later      date       for       administrative      convenience."      Sri Sorabjee  relied strongly upon the decision of this Court in  D.R. Kohli  & Ors. v. Atul Products Ltd. [1985 (2) S.C.C. 77]. But that was a case which turned on its peculiar facts and  the main discussion in that case was with respect to the applicability of Rules 10 and 10-A as in force at the relevant  time.   The  Court  found  that  the  Revenue  was virtually inveigled into a trap by the respondent suggesting that it  was too  eager to  pay excise duty on certain goods which to the knowledge of the respondent were not liable for

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excise duty  with the  object of  getting the benefit of the right to  clear its  products which  were liable  for higher excise duty  [because  of  their  increased  value]  without paying any  duty at  all. In  those facts,  the question  of applicability of  Rule 10  and for  that matter,  Rule  10-A arose. It  was held  that while  Rule 10 was not applicable, Rule 10-A was attracted.      Sri Sorabjee  also relied  upon the  decision  of  this Court in  Union of India & Ors. v. Modi Rubber Limited [1986 (4) S.C.C.  66] to  emphasis his submission that the central excise duties  leviable under  the Central  Excise and  Salt Act, 1944  are distinct and different from the special duty, additional duty or any other duty of excise levied under any other Parliament  enactment. Since the aforesaid proposition is not in dispute, it is not necessary to refer to the facts in the said decision.      Before we  conclude, it  is necessary  to notice  a few facts having  a bearing  upon the  relief to  be granted  in these matters. The special excise duty was being levied from 1963 upto  1971 by  various Finance Acts passed from time to time. It  was discontinued  from 1972 until 1978 when it was revived by  the Finance  Act, 1978. Thereafter, it was being levied  from   year  to  year  by  annual  Finance  Acts.The provisions of  these Finance  Acts,insofar as  the  lecy  of special excise  duty  is  concerned,are  identical.  In  the Finance Acts  of 1987  and 1988,however,the  rate of special excise duty was raised to ten percent but then notifications were issued  exempting the  duty on  all goods  in toto.  In other words,with  effect from  March  1,1986,  there  was,in effect,no special  excise duty  until February 28,1988. With effect from  March 1,1988,  the duty  was again imposed @ 5% while excepting  certain  essential  commodities  and  other priority  items   from  the   said  impost.   We  have  held hereinabove  that  the  goods  manufactured/produced  before March 1,  1978 but cleared on or after March 1, 1978 are not exciable to  special excise  duty. At the same time, we have also  expressed   before  February   28,  1979  but  cleared thereafter would  be liable to pay the said duty at the rate and valuation in force as on February 28, 1979. In the light of the  fact that  the duty was continued from 1978 to 1986, indeed upto  February 28,  1989 and  also  in  view  of  the principle behind the presumption incorporated in Section 12- b of  the Central Excise Act inserted by the Central Excises and Customs  Law [Amendment]  Act,  1991-  which  is  not  a legislative recognition  of a  widely accepted presumption - we think  it appropriate to correct that the assessees shall not be  entitled to  refund of amount collected from them by way of  special excial excise duty on or after Match 1, 1978 in respect  of goods  manufactured prior  to the  said date. Looked at  from the  standpoint of avoidance of multiplicity of proceedings  and of  unending legal quibbling also, it is desirable to  desirable  to  give  a  quietus  to  his  this controversy. To avoid any discriminatory consequences, it is further directed  that if any amounts are due and are yet to be recovered  in respect of such goods on account of special excise duty, the same can be recovered according to law. for the  above reasons,  the appeals filed by the appellant- state  are   dismissed  and   the  appeals   filed  by   the respondents-assessees  are  allowed  subject  to  the  above directions. there shall be no order as to costs.