19 October 1989
Supreme Court
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COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE Vs POND'S INDIA LTD.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2043 of 1989


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PETITIONER: COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: POND’S INDIA LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/10/1989

BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) RANGNATHAN, S.

CITATION:  1990 AIR  374            1989 SCR  Supl. (1) 479  1989 SCC  (4) 759        JT 1989 (4)   137  1989 SCALE  (2)849

ACT:     Central    Excises   and   Salt   Act   1944:    Section 4(4)(d)(i)--Cost of packing--Whether includible in value  of goods for purposes of assessment to excise duty.

HEADNOTE:     The  Respondent--assessee  used  to  manufacture  talcum powder and face powder and were clearing the same on payment of  excise duty. The assessee claimed deduction of  cost  of packing  for transportation in respect of small packings  of powder  ranging  from  0.27 paise to 0.76  paise  per  dozen packings  and the same was first approved by the  Department but later the Department having noticed that the small packs were first packed in dozen, and thereafter packed in second- ary packings for easy transportation to the wholesale  deal- er, disallowed the claim of deduction.     The Assistant Collector in view of this Court’s decision in  postmanufacturing expenses cases took the view that  the amount  claimed  by the Respondent was  not  deductible  and accordingly  issued  a show cause notice to  the  Respondent raising  a demand on the respondent to pay the  differential duty  on the cost of secondary packings which was stated  to be  Rs.3,46,151.92  P.  for  the  period  from  2.12.85   to 31.5.1986.  The Asstt Collector by his order  dated  27.2.87 disallowed the Respondent’s claim for exclusion of the  cost of packing for transportation and thus rejected the claim.     The  Respondent preferred an appeal to the Collector  of Customs  but did not succeed and thus appealed to  the  Cus- toms,  Excise and (;old (Control) Tribunal.  The  Respondent relied  on the decision of this Court in Union of  India  v. Godfrey  Philips  India  Ltd., [1985] 3 Suppl  SCR  123  and contended  that in view of the decision of this  Court,  the cost of third stage packing, the outer cartons, intended for transport could be included in the assessable value only  if packing was necessary for the sale of goods in the wholesale market. The Tribunal however relying on the decision of this Court in Union of India & Ors. v. Bombay Tyre  International Ltd., [1984] 1 SCR 347 held that the Cost of outer or bigger cartons in which the smaller cartons containing powder  tins are 480

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packed  is  not includible in the assessable  value  as  the delivery of the goods can be taken in smaller cartons at the factory gate by a buyer in the course of wholesale trade.     Being aggrieved by that decision the Revenue came up  in appeal to this Court under Section 35L(b) of the Act.     Allowing the appeal and remanding the case to the Tribu- nal with directions, this Court, HELD: (Per Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. )     What is to be included in the value has to be determined in terms of Section 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act. [485F]     The  question is not for what purpose a particular  kind of  packing  is done but the test is  whether  a  particular packing is one in order to put the goods in the condition in which they are generally sold in the wholesale market at the factory gate and if they are generally sold in the wholesale market  at the factory gate in a certain  packed  condition, whatever  may  be the reason for such packing, the  cost  of such  packing would be includible in the value of the  goods for assessment to excise duty. [490B-C]     In the present case, it has been factually found by  the Collector that the talcum powder and face powder are  packed either  in  metal containers or in plastic  containers,  and thereafter  they are put in dozen packing also of  cardboard packings,  which are inner cartons, and contain  one  dozen. The  same are then put in the master carton for  purpose  of delivery to wholesale dealers. [490C-D]     The  correct position seems to be that the cost of  that much  of packings, be they primary or secondary,  which  are required to make the articles marketable would be includible in  the  value. How much packing is necessary  to  make  the goods  marketable is a question of fact to be determined  by application  of the correct approach. Packing which is  pri- marily done or mainly done for protecting the goods, and not for  making  the goods marketable should  not  be  included. [491H; 492A]     The  Tribunal  was in error in approaching  the  problem before  it  by  looking at the question  whether  the  goods packed  in the smaller cartons could be sold in a  wholesale market in the course of wholesale trade at the factory  gate without the outer cartons in which the smaller 481 cartons are packed. The question is not whether these  goods could be so sold but the question is whether these goods are so  sold  usually and as such used to become  marketable  in such manner. [492B-C] (Per S. Ranganathan, J.)     Section 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act lays down that where goods are delivered by the factory gate in a packed condition, the cost  of  the packing should be included in  the  assessable value.  The clause makes no distinction between primary  and secondary packing or further subsequent packing. [492G]     There  is therefore, much to be said for the view  that, in  judging  the condition of packing whose cost  is  to  be included  in  the  assessable value, one should  go  by  the conduct  of  the parties and the nature of  the  packing  in which  the goods generally are--not, can be--placed  in  the wholesale market. [493H; 494A]     M/s.  Hindustan  Polymers v. The  Collector  of  Central Excise, [1989] 3 SCR 974 case, referred to.

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2043 (NM) of 1989.

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   From  the  Judgment and Order dated  28.11.1988  of  the Customs.  Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal,  New Delhi in Appeal No. E.A. No. 3302/87A in Order No. 558/88-A.     K.  Parasaran,  Attorney General, A.K.  Ganguli  and  P. Parmeshwaran for the Appellant.     Soli J. Sorabji, S. Ganesh, R. Narain, P.K. Ram and D.N. Mishra for the Respondent. The following Judgments of the Court were delivered     SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. This is an appeal under  section 35L(b) of the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944  (hereinafter called  ’the Act’) from the judgment and order of  the  Cus- toms, Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi, (hereinafter  called  ’the Tribunal’)  date  28th  November, 1988. M/s.  Ponds  India Ltd., (hereinafter referred  to  as  ’the respon- 482 dent’)  used  to manufacture talcum powder and  face  powder falling under tariff item 14F of the Central Excise  Tariff, which are now under sub-heading No. 3304.00 and were  clear- ing the same on payment of duty. The assessee claimed deduc- tion  of  cost of packing for transportation in  respect  of small  packings  of  15, 18, 20, 30, 40 &  100  gms.  powder ranging from 0.27 paise to 0.76 paise per dozen packings and the  same  was approved provisionally by the office  of  the Asstt.  Collector of Central Excise, Pondicherry.  The  said approval  was by an order dated 10th December, 1985.  It  is alleged that it was later noticed that the small packs  were first packed in dozen and then packed in secondary  packings for easy transportation to the wholesale dealer, and it  was found  that the secondary packings were a must for  delivery to  the wholesale dealers, (emphasis indicated). The  Asstt. Collector came to the conclusion that the amount as  claimed by  the  respondent was not deductible as per  this  Court’s decisions  in respect of postmanufacturing expenses. In  the premises,  a show-cause notice was issued to the  respondent on October 30, 1986 and a demand was made for the  differen- tial duty on the cost of secondary packings which was stated to be Rs.3,46,151.92 for the period from December 2, 1985 to May 31, 1986. The Asstt. Collector by his order dated Febru- ary 27, 1987 disallowed the respondent’s claim for exclusion of  the cost of packing of transportation and thus  rejected its claim. He inter alia, observed as follows:               "Therefore,  I consider that the cost of  sec-               ondary  packings viz, card board  cartons  are               rightly includible in the assessable value  of               items  mentioned  in  PL  No.  405/85-86   and               406/85-86   dated   10.12.85   under   Section               4(4)(d)(i)  of  the Central Excises  and  Salt               Act, 1944, and the provisional assessments are               to be finalised accordingly. The assessees are               also  liable for payment of differential  duty               of  Rs.3,46, 15 1.92 as demanded in  the  show               cause  notice cited under Section 11A  of  the               Central Excises and Salt Act read with rule 9B               of the Central Excise Rules, 1944."     There  was an appeal to the Collector of  Customs  which was  disposed of by an order dated 15th September, 1987.  It is necessary to set out the said observations of the Collec- tor, in view of the contentions sought to be raised in these matters. He, inter alia, observed as follows:               "I have carefully considered the submission of               the appellants made in their grounds of appeal               and repeated during               483

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             personal hearing. I find that the  appellant’s               claim  is solely based on the judgment of  the               Hon’ble  Supreme Court in the case of  Godfrey               Philips and which has been followed by differ-               ent High Courts also from time to time.  First               of  all, it is necessary to  consider  whether               the  goods sold by the appellants viz.  talcum               powder  and  face  powder  required  an  outer               carton packing for purpose of safety in trans-               it,  which  was the case  before  the  Hon’ble               Supreme Court in case of M/s Godfrey  Philips.               It  cannot be disputed that talcum powder  and               face  powder are packed either in  metal  con-               tainers  or in plastic packing also  of  card-               board  packings, which are inner  cartons  and               contain  one dozen. The same are then  put  in               the  master carton for purpose of delivery  to               wholesale  dealers.  In  the  Hon’ble  Supreme               Court’s judgment, it is stated that the corru-               gated fibre board containers are employed only               for  purpose  of  avoiding  damage  or  injury               during transit. But that is not as in the case               of  the appellants. There is no likelihood  of               any damage or injury to the tins or the  plas-               tic  containers employed as a primary  packing               even if the goods are transported without  the               outer  packing. Unlike cigarettes, even  damp-               ness is not going to affect the goods  because               they  are hermetically sealed when put in  the               primary  packing. Therefore, the ratio of  the               judgment  of Hon’ble Justice Pathak  which  is               quoted  by the appellants is not available  in               the  case  of different goods  which  are  not               perishable aS cigarettes are. The second point               is  that cigarettes are sold by carton of  200               cigarettes each, even in wholesale trade. That               is  not the case in the appellant’s  wholesale               trade  where the goods are sold by  number  of               dozens and in some cases by numbers of tins or               other packings which are primary packing (this               was  seen  from the  invoice  produced  during               personal  hearing).  Therefore, it  cannot  be               said that the outer cartons are employed  only               for  the purpose of avoiding damage or  injury               to the goods during transit. In view  thereof,               the  Hon’ble Supreme Court’s decision  in  the               case  of  MRF becomes applicable. In  case  of               talcum powder and face powder, it is necessary               to  put  the dozen cartons  inside  the  outer               cartons,  for giving delivery whether  at  the               factory gate, or at a place of delivery  other               than  the  factory  gate, because  it  is  not               convenient  for the wholesale dealers to  col-               lect  the goods in dozens’ packing.  Wholesale               trade is not generally in quantities less than               a dozen. Therefore, even while giving               484               delivery  by the wholesale dealers,  to  other               dealers,  the  outer carton  is  necessary  as               otherwise it will become difficult for him  to               give such delivery of 50 dozens or 100  dozens               of  the  goods. It is not  disputed  that  the               outer  carton packing is the packing in  which               the  goods are cleared from the  factory,  and               are   put   into  the  stream   of   wholesale

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             trade  .......  the ratio of the Godfrey  Phi-               lips case is not applicable in the appellant’s               case.  I find that the talcum powder and  face               powder are cleared in the master carton  pack-               ing  in the factory and it is in that  packing               the  same are put in the stream  of  wholesale               trade. Further, I do not find that the  master               cartons  are  employed solely for  purpose  of               protecting  the goods during transit. But  the               same are used for giving delivery in wholesale               trade by the appellants. Therefore, the  order               of the Asstt. Collector, including the cost of               master  cartons  in assessable  value  of  the               goods  is  correct  and proper  and  needs  no               interference.  That being the only  point  for               determination in appeal, the appeal is reject-               ed."     There was an appeal to the Tribunal. It was contended on behalf of the respondent herein before the Tribunal that the only  question  for determination was, whether the  cost  of third  stage packing, the outer carton, intended for  trans- port can be included in the assessable value. It was pleaded that  all goods were cleared from the factory in  the  outer cartons with the smaller carton containing dozen  containers of  powder. It was further contended that the facts of  this case  were same as in the case of cigarettes dealt  with  by this Court in Union of India & Ors. v. Godfrey Philips India Ltd.,  [1985] 3 Suppl SCR 123. It is contended that in  view of  the  said decision of this Court, cost  of  cartons  was included  only  if packing was necessary .for  the  sale  of goods  in the wholesale market. It is submitted that it  was not  so  necessary  for sale. The Tribunal  noted  that  the question  of inclusion of cost of secondary packing in  Sec- tion 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act, be it at the first stage, second or  third stage of packing, has to be decided in  each  case depending upon the facts applicable. The Tribunal found that so far as the smaller carton is concerned, the inclusion  of the  cost  of the same in the assessable value  was  not  in dispute  and the appellants have conceded that the value  is includible  following  the  ratio of the  judgment  of  this Court.  It  also noted that it was nobody’s  case  that  the number  of tins contained in the smaller  carton  constitute retail  packing rather than wholesale packing. The  Tribunal felt  that the only question to be decided was, whether  the goods  packed  in the smaller cartons could be sold  to  the wholesale buyer in the course of wholesale trade at the 485 factory gate without the outer carton in which the number of smaller  cartons were packed. It is important  to  emphasise this  question  in view of the contentions  raised  in  this appeal.  The  case of the revenue was that since  the  goods were  sold in lots packed in the bigger outer  cartons,  the value  of  the same should be included for  the  purpose  of assessment. According to the Tribunal, there was however, no plea,  raised by the revenue as to the capability or  other- wise  of the sale of powder tins in the wholesale market  in the smaller cartons described as the inner-outer. The Tribu- nal noted that in the facts of the instant case, the  talcum powder  packed in tin containers is in no danger so  far  as the  contamination of the powder is concerned and the  pack- ing,  it was pleaded before them, was required for the  pur- pose  of preventing damage to the tin containers which  were sophisticated  in  nature taking into  account  the  product being  marketed, and it recorded that inner cartons  contain 12  tins or so which is a wholesale packing and it  was  not

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made  out  that  the smaller carton was  not  sufficient  to protect  the  tins  or that the sale could be  made  in  the course of wholesale trade at the factory gate. There was  no plea  on  record that the smaller carton is flimsy  and  not sufficient  for the purpose of marketing the tins and  their storage  in  the  course of wholesale  trade.  the  Tribunal referred to the observations of this Court in Union of India & Ors. v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd., [1984] 1 SCR  347, and following the same came to the conclusion that the  cost of  outer  or bigger cartons in which  the  smaller  cartons containing powder tins are packed, is not includible in  the assessable  value as the delivery of the goods can be  taken in  smaller  cartons at the factory gate by a buyer  in  the course of wholesale trade. The outer cartons were held to be for  the  purpose  of transport of the goods  and  were  not required for the sale of the goods at the factory gate.  The revenue seeks to challenge this basis.     What  is to be included in the value, has to  be  deter- mined  in terms of section 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act. The  ques- tion  has  been examined from all points of  views  by  this Court.     The  question of secondary packing was examined by  this Court  in Bombay Tyres International’s case (supra).  There, this Court observed that for the purpose of determining  the ’value’,  broadly speaking both old s. 4(a) and the  new  s. 4(1)(a)speak  of the price for sale in the course of  whole- sale trade of an article for delivery at the time and  place of  removal, namely, the factory gate. Where the price  con- templated  under the old s. 4(a) or under new s. 4(1)(a)  is not ascertainable, the price is determined under the old  s. 4(b) or the new s. 4(1)(b). Now, the price of an article  is related to its value (using this 486 term  in  a general sense) and into that value  have  poured several components, including those which have enriched  its value  and  given to the article its  marketability  in  the trade.  Therefore, the expenses incurred on account  of  the several factors which have contributed to its value upto the date  of sale, which apparently would be the date of  deliv- ery, are liable to be included. Consequently, where the sale is  effected at the factory gate, expenses incurred  by  the assessee  upto  the date of delivery on account  of  storage charges,  outward handling charges, interest on  inventories (stocks  carried  by  the  manufacturer  after   clearance), charges  for  other services after delivery  to  the  buyer, namely, after-sales service and marketing and selling organ- isation expenses including advertisement expenses  marketing and  selling organisation expenses and  after-sales  service promote the marketability of the article and enter into  its value  in the trade. Where the sale in the course of  whole- sale  trade  is effected by the assessee through  its  sales organisation at a place or places outside the factory  gate, the  expenses  incurred  by the assessee upto  the  date  of delivery  under  the  aforesaid heads cannot,  on  the  same grounds,  be deducted. This Court further observed that  the new s. 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act has made express provision  for including  the cost of packing in the determination of  ’va- lue’  for the purpose of excise duty. The packing, of  which the cost is included, is the packing in which the goods  are wrapped, contained or wound when the goods are delivered  at the  time  of removal, (emphasis supplied).  Therefore,  the cost which is incurred for making the goods available in the wholesale market and in which the goods are generally avail- able in such market, would be the ’value’ which is  includi- ble under s. 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act. There is no dispute that

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the cost of primary packing, that is to say, the packing  in which  the  article  is contained and in which  it  is  made marketable  for the ordinary consumer, must be  regarded  as failing within s. 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act. There is often,  as in  this  case, secondary packing which consists  of  larger cartons  in which a standard number of primary  cartons  (in the  sense mentioned earlier) are packed. The large  cartons may be packed into even larger cartons for facilitating  the easier  transport of the goods by the wholesale dealer.  The question  with which this Court was concerned in  that  case was: is all the packing, no matter to what degree, in  which the  wholesale  dealer  takes delivery of the  goods  to  be considered for including the cost thereof in the ’value’? Or does  the  law require a line to be  drawn  somewhere?  This Court observed that one must remember that while packing  is necessary  to  make the excisable article,  marketable,  the statutory  provision calls for strict  construction  because the  levy is sought to be extended beyond  the  manufactured article itself. Therefore, this Court observed that the 487 degree  of secondary packing which is necessary for  putting the excisable article in the condition in which it is gener- ally sold in the wholesale market at the factory gate is the degree of packing whose cost can be included in the  ’value’ of  the article for the purpose of the excise duty. To  that extent,  this Court observed, the cost of secondary  packing cannot  be  deducted from the wholesale cash  price  of  the exciseable article at the factory gate. It was further  held therein that if any special secondary packing is provided by the  assessee at the instance of a wholesale buyer which  is not generally provided as a normal feature of the  wholesale trade,  the cost of the such packing shall be deducted  from the  wholesale cash price. Therefore, it is clear by  virtue of  that decision that the cost of ’packing which is  neces- sary  to make the exciseable article marketable, that is  to say,  in which it is generally sold in the wholesale  market at the factory gate’, is to be included. Therefore,  accord- ing  to the said decision and by virtue of the terms of  the section,  the cost of that much of secondary packing,  which is necessary only to put the exciseable good in condition in which it is generally sold in wholesale market is the degree of packing which cost can be included and not beyond that.     In the application of this principle, about which  there is no dispute, there has been some divergence of the  empha- sis put on by what criterion that cost should be determined. This question came up for consideration in Union of India v. Godfrey  Philips India Ltd., [1985] Supp. 3 SCR 123.  There, Chief  Justice  Bhagwati observed that whenever  a  question arises whether the cost of any particular kind of  secondary packing  is liable to be included in the value of the  arti- cle,’ the question to be asked is does the packed  condition in  which  the article is generally sold  in  the  wholesale market  at the factory gate include such secondary  packing? The learned Chief Justice observed that if it does, it would be liable to be included in the value of the article for the purpose of excise duty. It, therefore, followed that if  the packed condition in which the cigarettes manufactured by the respondents  were generally sold in that case in the  whole- sale  market at the factory gate included packing in  corru- gated  fibre board containers, the cost of  such  corrugated fibre  board  containers was liable to be  included  in  the value of the cigarettes for the purpose of excise duty.  The learned  Chief Justice further observed that  the  condition for applicability of the inclusive definition of "value"  in s. 4(4)(d)(i) of the act is that the goods are delivered  at

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the  time of removal "in a packed condition" and where  this condition  is  satisfied,  the "value" of  the  goods  would include  "the cost of such packing" and "such packing"  must obviously mean the packing in which the goods are when  they are 488 delivered  at the time of removal. Therefore,  according  to the learned Chief Justice, the question to be asked is--what is  the packed condition in which the goods are when  deliv- ered at the time of removal? Whatever is the packing of  the goods  at  the time when they are delivered at the  time  of removal,  the  cost of such packing would be  liable  to  be included in the ’value’ of the goods. The Explanation to  s. 4(4)(d)(i)  of the Act provides an exclusive  definition  of the  term "packing" and it includes not only  outer  packing but also what may be called inner packing. The question that the Chief Justice posed was not for what purpose a  particu- lar kind of packing was done. The test was whether a partic- ular  kind of packing was done in order to put the goods  in the  condition  in which these were generally  sold  in  the wholesale  market  at  the factory gate and  if  these  were generally  sold in the wholesale market at the factory  gate in  a certain packed condition, whatever may be  the  reason for such packing, the cost of such packing would be includi- ble in the value of the goods for assessment to excise duty. Pathak, J. (as the learned Chief Justice was then) and  Sen, J.  gave separate judgments in the aforesaid  case.  Setting out  the passage from the Bombay Tyres International’s  case (supra), which is referred to hereinbefore, Pathak, J. posed the  question:  is  the packing necessary  for  putting  the cigarettes in the condition in which they are generally sold in  the wholesale market at the factory gate? And  answering that  question, Pathak, J. held it is not. It is  true  that there  is  a divergence between the views of Bhagwati  C  J, Pathak, J and Sen, J. But in my opinion, there is a unanimi- ty  in the test that is to be applied, that is to say,  that much  of the cost would be included only which is  necessary for  putting  the article in the condition in  which  it  is generally sold in the wholesale market. The principle behind this  is--in  order for manufacture to be  taxable,  article must become goods. In order to become goods, these must come to  the  market  or be capable of coming to  the  market  as definite  and identifiable goods. So whatever  expenses  are necessary  for making that possible, that much of  the  cost would be included in the "value". But what is subsequent  to that, that is to say, any cost merely facilitating transport or  merely ensuring security in transit are costs which  are post-manufacture, i.e. after articles have become goods as a result  of manufacture and are capable of becoming  manufac- tured and thereafter dealt with. This, in my opinion, is the true  test and read in that light, I do not find that  there is  really any divergence of opinion between Bhagwati, C  J, Pathak,  J.  and Sen, J. of course, there is  divergence  of emphasis  in  the approach in which the question has  to  be looked  into. This aspect of the matter was also dealt  with by this Court in M/s Hindustan Polymers v. The Collector  of Central Excise, [1989] 3 SCR 974 (Civil Appeals Nos. 4339-41 of 1986)--judgment in 489 which  was delivered on 23rd August, 1989, where one  of  us (Sabyasachi Mukharji, J) after analysing these several cases of this Court observed that:               "In order, therefore, to be manufacture, there               must  be activity which brings  transformation               to the article in such a manner that different

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             and distinct article comes into being which is               known as such in the market. If in order to be               able to put it in the market, a certain amount               of  packing or user of containers or  wrappers               or putting them either in drums or containers,               are  required, then the value or the  cost  of               such  wrapper  or container or  drum  must  be               included  in the assessable value and  if  the               price  at  which the goods are sold  does  not               include that value then it must be so included               by  the  very  force  of  the  terms  of   the               section."     Therefore, in all cases, according to that decision, the question  must be examined whether packing, and if so,  what packing is necessary to make the article marketable as  such or  could these goods be sold without the containers,  drums or  packing? This Court in that case took into  account  the fact that 90% of the goods were delivered in tankers belong- ing to the assessee and only 10% of the goods were in packed condition  at  the  time of removal. This was  taken  as  an indicia of in what condition of packing the goods are  sold. As  mentioned hereinbefore, that principle has been  clearly laid  down in the Bombay Tyres International’s case  (supra) in  the  sense that only that degree  of  secondary  packing which is necessary for putting the assessable article in the condition  in  which it is generally sold in  the  wholesale market should be included in the ’value’ of the article. The majority  judgment  in Godfrey Philips’  case  (supra)  also clarified this position. It is true that Pathak, J. and Sen, J. made it clear that secondary packing does for the purpose of  "facilitating transport and smooth transit of the  goods to  be delivered to the buyer in the wholesale  trade  would not  be included in the value". Chief Justice Bhagwati  held in  the said case that the fibre board containers  in  which the  cigarettes  were packed fell within the  definition  of ’packing’  in the Explanation to s. 4(4)(d)(i) and if  these formed  part of the packing in which the goods  were  packed when  delivered  at the time of removal, then such  cost  of corrugated  fibre  board containers would be  liable  to  be included  in  the  value of cigarettes.  But  Chief  Justice emphasised  that the test to determine whether the  cost  of any  particular  kind of secondary packing is liable  to  be included in the value of the article is whether a particular kind  of  packing is done in order to put the goods  in  the condition in which they 490 are  generally sold in the wholesale market at  the  factory gate. In my opinion, the views expressed by the majority  of the  Judges in Godfrey Philips’ case (supra) were in  conso- nance  with the view of the this Court in the  Bombay  Tyres International’s  case (supra). The question is not for  what purpose a particular kind of packing is done but the test is whether  a  particular packing is done in order to  put  the goods  in the condition in which they are generally sold  in the  wholesale  market at the factory gate and if  they  are generally  sold in the wholesale market at the factory  gate in certain packed condition, whatever may be the reason  for such  packing, the cost of such packing would be  includible in the value of the goods for assessment to excise duty.     In  the  present case, it has been  factually  found  as indicated  hereinbefore,  by the Collector that  the  talcum powder and face powder are packed either in metal containers or  in  plastic containers, and thereafter they are  put  in dozen  packing also of cardboard packings, which  are  inner cartons, and contain one dozen. The same are then put in the

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master carton for purpose of delivery to wholesale  dealers. But in Godfrey Philips’ case (supra), the corrugated  fibre- board  containers were employed for the purpose of  avoiding damage or injury during transit. On the other hand, in  this case, it was found that there was no damage or injury to the tins  or  plastic containers employed as a  primary  packing even if the goods are transported without the outer packing. The  second point is that cigarettes are sold in cartons  of 200  cigarettes each, even in wholesale trade. That  is  not the case in the appellants’ wholesale trade herein where the goods  are  sold by number of dozens and in  some  cases  by numbers of tins or other packings which are primary packing. Therefore,  it  cannot be said that the  outer  cartons  are employed  only for the purpose of avoiding damage or  injury to the goods during transit. But it may be indicative of the fact that the goods are so sold.     It  may be mentioned in this connection that our  atten- tion  was drawn to the unanimous order of three-Judge  Bench presided over by the Chief Justice Bhagwati of this Court in Civil Appeals Nos. 642-45 of 1982 in Geep Industrial  Syndi- cate  Ltd. v. The Union of India & Ors. There, the  question that arose for determination was whether the cost of second- ary packing in wooden boxes was liable to be added in deter- mination  of  the  value of batteries and  torches  for  the purpose  of excise duty. The torches and batteries  manufac- tured by the appellants were first packed in polythene boxes and  then  these polythene boxes were  placed  in  cardboard cartons.  There  were certain varieties of  batteries  which were packed directly in cardboard cartons. There was 491 no  doubt that packing in polythene bags and cardboard  car- tons  was  includible in the determination of the  value  of batteries  and  torches for the purpose of  levy  of  excise duty. The question was whether the wooden boxes in which the cardboard cartons were placed at the time of delivery at the factory  gate was to be includible in the value.  There  was some  dispute  between  the parties  whether  the  cardboard cartons  were  packed in wooden boxes in all cases.  It  was stated  that when they were delivered in the course  of  the wholesale trade at the factory gate, they were not packed in wooden  boxes as a matter of course but they were packed  in wooden boxes only in those cases where delivery was taken by wholesale  dealers  outside the city of  Allahabad  in  that case.  This Court found that it was not necessary to  deter- mine the disputed question of fact. It was held that even if the  cardboard  cartons were packed in wooden boxes  in  all cases, it was clear that the cost of such secondary  packing in  wooden boxes was not includible in determination of  the value  of batteries and torches. This Court agreed with  the Godfrey  Philips’s case (supra) that  corrugated  fibreboard containers  were used as secondary packing only in order  to ensure  cartons  or outers against injury or  damage  during transport  and  that it was not necessary  for  putting  the cigarettes in the corrugated fibreboard containers for their sale  in  the wholesale market at the factory gate  and  the cost  of such secondary packing was therefore not liable  to be included in determination of the value of the  cigarettes for the purpose of excise duty.               The  Tribunal in the instant case observed  as               under:               "We  observe that in the facts of the  present               case,  the  rationale of the judgment  of  the               Hon’ble  Supreme Court above is  squarely  ap-               plicable.  We hold following with  respect  to               the ratio of the decision above that the  cost

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             of  the  outer or bigger carton in  which  the               small  cartons containing the powder tins  are               packed,  is not includable in  the  assessable               value  as  the delivery of the  goods  can  be               taken  in smaller cartons at the factory  gate               by  a buyer in the course of wholesale  trade.               The outer carton have to be held to be for the               purpose of transport of the goods and are  not               required  for  the sale of the  goods  at  the               factory gate."                                                    (emphasis               supplied).     In my opinion, the correct position seems to be that the cost of that much of packings, be they primary or secondary, which are required to make the articles marketable would  be includible in the 492 value.  How  much  packing is necessary to  make  the  goods marketable is a question of fact to be determined by  appli- cation of the correct approach. Packing, which is  primarily done  or mainly done for protecting the goods, and  not  for making  the goods marketable should not be included. In  the instant case, therefore, could the powder be sold in smaller cartons  at the wholesale market? The fact that  these  were usually sold in the wholesale market would be a good pointer for this question. Having considered the order of the Tribu- nal, which I have set out hereinbefore, I am of the  opinion that  the Tribunal was in error in approaching  the  problem before  it  by  looking at the question  whether  the  goods packed  in the smaller cartons could be sold in a  wholesale market in the course of wholesale trade at the factory  gate without  the outer cartons in which the smaller cartons  are packed. The question is not whether these goods could be  so sold,  but the question is whether these goods are  so  sold usually  and as such used to become marketable in such  man- ner.  In  my opinion, there has been a misdirection  by  the Tribunal  on this aspect of the matter. If the above be  the true  test, then the judgment and the order of the  Tribunal must  be  set aside and the appeal must be allowed  and  the matter  remanded  back to the Tribunal to  determine  afresh this question from the stand point indicated above.     I  accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the  judgment and order of the Tribunal and remand the matter back to  the Tribunal  to  decide  it in accordance  with  the  aforesaid directions. In the facts and the circumstances of the  case, there will be no orders as to costs.     RANGANATHAN,  J. I agree. But, as it has been  contended by Sri Soli Sorabjee that the Tribunal’s conclusion in  this case  has to be upheld straightaway in view of the  decision of this Court in Godfrey Philips, [1985] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 123 and Geep, (C.A. Nos. 642-45 of 1982, I should like to add  a few words.     S. 4(4)(d)(i) of the Act lays down that where goods  are delivered  at  the factory gate in a packed  condition,  the cost  of  the packing should be included in  the  assessable value.  The  clause  makes no  distinction  between  primary packing and secondary or further subsequent packing.  Howev- er,  a  restriction was read into the wide language  of  the clause by this Court in the Bombay Tyre International  case, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 347. Posing the question whether the cost of all  packing, no matter to what degree, in which the  whole- sale dealer takes delivery of the goods, should be  included in  determining  the assessable value or a  line  should  be drawn somewhere, the Court indicated that while the 493

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cost  of  primary packing was indisputably  includible,  the position would be different in regard to secondary  packing. The  Court  observed that "the degree of  secondary  packing which is necessary for putting the excisable article in  the condition  in  which it is generally sold in  the  wholesale market  at the factory gate, is the degree of packing  whose cost  can  be included in the value of the article  for  the purpose of the excise levy. "If any special secondary  pack- ing  is provided by the assessee", the Court  observed,  "at the  instance  of a wholesale buyer which is  not  generally provided  as  a normal feature of the wholesale  trade,  the cost  of such packing shall be deducted from  the  wholesale cash price." The exclusion indicated by these words is  very limited  and  clearly  does not extend to the  cost  of  any packing  in which the goods are generally sold by the  manu- facturer in the wholesale market.     However,  the  reference  in Bombay  Tyres,  (supra)  to secondary  packing  "which is necessary" led  to  a  further refinement in Godfrey Philips and Geep. In these cases,  the conclusion of the Court was that the cost of packing of  the goods  in "corrugated fibre containers" and  "wooden  boxes" respectively was not includible in arriving at the  assessa- ble  value.  Had the matter been free  from  authority,  one might  have  been inclined to agree with  the  reasoning  of Bhagwati,  C.J., that the condition of packing in which  the goods  are usually placed in the wholesale market  would  be conclusive of the issue and that, the condition in which the goods are generally placed in the wholesale market  notwith- standing,  a theoretical enquiry by the  excise  authorities into  the  purpose  of such packing or as  to  whether  such packing  was  "necessary" or not would be  totally  uncalled for.  Indeed, this was the test applied by one of  us  (Muk- harji,  J.) in Hindustan Polymers for holding that the  cost of  drums  for packing fusel oil was not includible  in  the assessable value because the goods viz. fusel oil was gener- ally sold in the wholesale market in the raw state,  without any  packing whatever, leaving it to the wholesale  consumer to  draw it from the manufacturer’s tanks into  his  trucks, containers  or  drums. It will be appreciated that  if  this position  were not to be accepted and an enquiry were to  be made  as to whether..such general packing is "necessary"  or not,  such  an investigation might operate  both  ways.  For example, on that basis, it could be argued, in the Hindustan Polymers  case,  that though the goods  were  actually  sold wholesale  in a free condition, a container  is  "necessary" from  a theoretical stand point to place the fluid goods  on the market and that, therefore, the cost of the drums  would have  to be included in the assessable value. But  this  was not the view taken by this Court. There is, therefore,  much to  be said for the view that, in judging the  condition  of packing whose cost is to be included in the 494 assessable  value, one should go by the conduct of the  par- ties and the nature of the packing in which the goods gener- ally are--not, can be-placed in the wholesale market.     It  is, however, urged for the respondent that  such  an enquiry has been held necessary by Godfrey Philips. But,  as pointed  out by my learned brother, even the majority  deci- sion  in  that case does not go to the length  suggested  on behalf  of the appellant and justify an investigation as  to the  state of packing in which the goods could be placed  in the  market. That would only be an exercise  in  theoretical speculation.  On  that basis, for instance, in  the  present case,  it could be said, for the same reasons as  have  been given  by  the Tribunal, that the goods could  be  collected

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from the factory even in units of tin containers, leaving it free  to  the purchasers to make their own  arrangements  to pack them in cardboard cartons to convey them to their place of  business. This would render even the cost of  the  first outer  packing  of cardboard containers  irrelevant  in  the determination  of  the assessable value. That  was  not  the contention even of the respondents and indeed, if carried to its  logical conclusion, would render the cost of all  pack- ing, other than primary packing, excludible from the assess- able  value. It seems to me, therefore, that what is  to  be really  seen is this: What is the condition of packing  con- sidered by the manufacturers, having regard to the nature of the business, the type of goods concerned, the unit of  sale in  the wholesale market and other relevant  considerations, to be generally necessary for placing the goods for sale  in the wholesale market at the factory gate. In Godfrey Philips and  Geep, this Court was concerned with a special  type  of packing  which  seemed intended more to protect  the  packed goods  against  injury or damage rather than  to  enable  it being placed on the market. Indeed, in Godfrey Philips, this was a factual position that had been accepted by the depart- mental authorities earlier for a period of a little over six years which they later wanted to go back upon. Can the  same be  said  of  the goods and the packing with  which  we  are concerned here is a question to be decided on the facts,  as the appellate controller did and not as a proposition of law settled by, or the automatic consequence of the decision in, the Godfrey Philips case, as seems to have been done by  the Tribunal  and  as  is being argued for  the  respondents.  I would,  therefore, agree that the matter should be  remanded to be reconsidered in the light of our observations. Y. Lal                               Appeals allowed. 495