04 May 1962
Supreme Court
Download

EAST INDIA COMMERClAL CO., LTD. CALCUTTA AND ANOTHER Vs THE COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, CALCUTTA

Case number: Appeal (civil) 383 of 1960


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 22  

PETITIONER: EAST INDIA COMMERClAL CO., LTD. CALCUTTA AND ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/05/1962

BENCH: SARKAR, A.K. BENCH: SARKAR, A.K. SUBBARAO, K. MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1893            1963 SCR  (3) 338  CITATOR INFO :  D          1963 SC1470  (12,14)  RF         1966 SC1586  (9)  R          1969 SC 110  (8)  R          1971 SC 170  (1893  RF         1972 SC2466  (15,16)  RF         1973 SC 106  (145,146)  RF         1991 SC 647  (5,6)  R          1992 SC1417  (20)

ACT: Import--Law  enabling  Government  to  issue   notifications prohibiting or restricting Import--Import licence--Breach of conditions--If   amounts  to  import  without   licence--Law declared  by  High  Court--If  binding  on  authorities   or tribunals  under its superintendence--Sea Customs Act,  1878 (8  of 1878), ss. 19, 167(8)--Imports and  Export  (Control) Act,  1947  (18 of 1947), ss. 3, 5--Constitution  of  India, Arts. 226, 227.

HEADNOTE: On  October  8, 1948, the appellant company  was  granted  a licence  to  import from the U. S. A. a  large  quantity  of electrical  instruments.  The licence was issued subject  to the  condition  that the goods would be  utilised  only  for consumption  as raw material or accessories in  the  licence holder’s  factory and that no portion thereof would be  sold to any party.  After the goods arrived in India in February- March, 1949, the company took delivery of them on payment of customs duty.  On information alleged to have been  received by the authorities concerned that the goods were being  sold in  the market in breach of the conditions of  the  licence, the  Police,  after  obtaining a  search  warrant  from  the magistrate seized a large stock of the goods from the godown of  the  appellant.   On  January  12,  1951,  the   customs authorities filed a complaint before the Magistrate under s. 5  of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act,  1947,  against the second appellant, who was a director of the company, and others,  on the allegation that the accused persons had,  in violation  of  the conditions of the  licence,  disposed  of portions  of  the  goods  covered  by  it.   The  Magistrate discharged  the accused and his order was confirmed  by  the

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 22  

High Court on March 3, 1955, on the ground that s. 5 of  the Act  penalised  only  a contravention of an  order  made  or deemed  to  have been made under the said Act, but  did  not penalise  the  contravention of the  conditions  of  licence issued under the Act or issued under a statutory order  made under the Act.  On January 16, 1953, the High Court made  an order  directing  the seized goods to be sold and  the  sale proceeds  kept  with the Chief  Presidency  Magistrate.   On August 28, 339 1955,  the Collector Customs served a notice on  the  appel- lants  under  s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act,  1873,  read with s. 3 (2) of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947 to show cause why the moneys lying with the Chief Presidency Magistrate  representing  the imported goods should  not  be confiscated  and also why penalty should not be  imposed  on them,  inasmuch as they had infringed the conditions of  the licence  issued  to them by selling a portion of  the  goods imported  to  others.  The appellants filed  an  application under Art. 226 of the Constitution of India before the  High Court  of  Calcutta  praying  for  a  write  of  prohibition restraining the respondent from proceeding with the  enquiry on the ground that it was without jurisdiction. Held,  (Per  Subba  Rao  and  Mudholkar,  JJ.,  Sarkar,  J., dissenting), that : (1) that the application under Art.  226 of the Constitution was maintainable, because, if on a  true construction of the provisions of law under which the notice was  issued, the respondent had no jurisdiction to  initiate proceedings in respect of the acts alleged to have been done by  the appellants, the respondent could be prohibited  from proceeding with the same. (2) under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, read  with s.3(2) of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947,  only the  goods imported in contravention of an order  under  the latter  Act were liable to be confiscated, but  the  section did  not expressly or by necessarly implication empower  the authority concerned to consficate the goods imported under a valid licence on the ground that a condition of the  licence not  imposed  by the order was infringed or  violated.   The infringement  of  a  condition in the  licence  was  not  an infringement of the order and did not, therefore, attract s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act. (3)  public  notices  issued  by  the  Government  of  India governingthe  issue  of  import licences  were  not  orders issued under s. 3of  the  Imports and  Exports  (Control) Act. (4)  in the present case, as the goods were imported  tinder a valid licence they could not be considered as goods either prohibited or restricted within the meaning of s. 167 (8) of the  Sea  Customs  Act and,  therefore,  the  Collector  ’of Customs  had  no jurisdiction to proceed  with  the  enquiry tinder that section. Per  Subba  Rao and Mudholkar,JJ,-The law  declared  by  the highest Court in the State was binding or, authorities 340 or  tribunals under its superintendence and that they  could not ignore it either in initiating a proceeding or  deciding on the rights involved in such a proceeding.   Consequently, the High Court of Calcutta, having by its order dated  March 3, 1955, held that a contravention of a condition imposed by a licence issued under the Act was not an offence under s. 5 of the Act, the notice dated August 28, 1955, signifying the launching  of proceedings contrary to the law laid  down  by the High Court, was invalid. Per  Sarkar,  J.-(I) The application under Art. 226  of  the

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 22  

Constitution was not maintainable, because the Collector had jurisdiction  to decide what was a breach of an  order  and, therefore,  whether the breach of a condition of  a  licence was breach of an order. (2) Even assuming that the decision of the High Court  dated March 3, 1955, was binding on the Collector, that would  not affect  his  jurisdiction  in the  present  case  to  decide whether the goods were liable to confiscation. an ordermade under the Imports and Exports (Control) Act 1947, was a breach of the order itself. (4) Where after crossing the customs barrier lawfully, goods are  disposed  of  in contravention of  a  restriction  duly imposed,  they  must  be considered to  have  been  imported contrary to the restriction.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No.   383     of 1960, Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated January 5, 1959, of the Calcutta High   Court in Appeal from Original Order No. 54 of 1957. A.V. Vishvanatha Sastri, E. R. Mayer, Noni Kumar Chakravarti and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellants. Daulat Ram Prem and D. Gupta, for the respondent. 1962.   May 4. Sarkar J. delivered his own Judgment and  the judgment  of Subba Rao and Mudholkar, JJ., was delivered  by Subba Rao, J.  341 SARKAR,  J.-The appellants had brought into India  from  the U.S.A.  a large quantity of electrical instruments  under  a licence.    The  respondent,  the  Collector   of   Customs, Calcutta,  started  proceedings for  confiscation  of  these goods  tinder  s.167(8) of the Sea Customs Act,  1878.   The appellants contend that the proceedings are entirely without jurisdiction as the Collector can confiscate only when there is  an  import in contravention of an order  prohibiting  or restricting  it  and in the present case the  Collector  was proceeding  to confiscate on the ground that a condition  of the licence under which the goods had been imported had been disobeyed.   The  appellants, therefore, ask for a  writ  of prohibition directing the Collector to stop the proceedings. The   question  is,  has  the  Collector   jurisdiction   to adjudicate  whether the goods are liable to be  confiscated? The  decision of that question, however, depends on  certain statutory  provisions  and the fact of the  case  to  which, therefore, I shall immediately turn. Sub-section (1) of s. 3 of the Import and Exports  (Control) Act,  1947,  provides  that  the  Government  may  by  order prohibit, restrict or otherwise control the import of goods. By  Notification No. 23-I.T.C./43 issued under r. 84 of  the Defence of India Rules which by virtue of s. 4 of the Act of 1947 is to be deemed to have been issued under that Act,  it was  ordered that DO electrical instrument could be  brought into  India except under a licence.  By another  order  made under  s. 3 of the Act and contained in Notification No.  2- ITC/48,  dated  March  6, 1948, it  was  provided  that  the licence  to  import electrical instruments might  be  issued subject  to  the  condition  that the  goods  would  not  be disposed  of  or otherwise dealt with  without  the  written permission of the licensing authority. The  first appellant is a company and the second  appellant, one of its directors.  On October 8, 342

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 22  

1948, a licence was granted to the appellant to import  from the  U.S.A.  a  large quantity  of  electrical  instruments, namely  fluorescent tubes and fluorescent fixtures.  In  the application  for  the licence it was stated that  the  goods were not required for sale but for modernising the  lighting system of the appellant’s factory at Ellore in Madras.   The licence  was issued subject to the condition that the  goods would  be utilised only for consumption as raw  material  or accessories  in  the licence holder’s factory  and  that  no portion thereof would be sold to any party. The goods duly arrived in India and were cleared out of  the customs  sometime  about the end of  February,  1949.   Soon thereafter,  the authorities concerned are said to have  got information that the goods were being sold in the market  in breach  of  the  condition of the  licence.   Thereupon  the police took steps and after obtaining a search warrant  from a Magistrate in Calcutta on August 12, 1949, seized a  large stock of the goods from the godown of the appellants. Thereafter  on  January  12, 1951, two  proceed.  ings  were started.  One of them was a prosecution of various  officers of  the  appellant company including  the  second  appellant under  s. 420 read with s. 120 of the Indian ’Penal Code  on the  allegation that the licence bid been obtained on  false and fraudulent representations as there was no intention  at any  time to use the goods for any factory.   After  certain proceedings to which it is unnecessary to refer, the accused persons  were  discharged  by  a  Presidency  Magistrate  of Calcutta  on  July  27, 1953, under s. 253 of  the  Code  of Criminal  Procedure  and the prosecution under so.  420  and 120B  of  the  Penal  Code came  to  an  end.   The  learned Magistrate  held  that  it  had not  been  proved  that  the licensing authority had been deceived by any  representation of the accused officers of the company nor that "right 343 from the time of applying for the licence, the intention was to sell the goods or part thereof". The  other  proceeding  was  a  prosecution  of  the  second appellant  and another person under s.5 of the Act of  1947. That  section provides that "if any person  contravenes  any order  ... under this Act, he shall ... be  punishable  with imprisonment...".  It was alleged that the  accused  persons had  in violation of the conditions of the licence  disposed of  portions  the goods covered by it and,  therefore,  com- mitted  an  offence  under s, 5 of the Act  of  1947.   This proceeding resulted in a acquittal by the trial Court  which was  confirmed  by the High Court at Calcutta  on  March  3, 1955.  Sen J., who delivered the judgment of the High  Court said  that it was difficult to hold that a condition of  the licence  amounted to an order under the Act and  unless  the penal section included the contravention of the condition as an  offence it could not be held that such  a  contravention amounted to an offence under the section. While  these proceedings were pending an order was  made  by the  High  Court on January 16, 1953, directing  the  seized goods  to be sold and the sale proceeds kept with the  Chief Presidency Magistrate, Calcutta.  Pursuant to this order the goods  were  sold  for a sum of Rs. 4,15,000  and  the  sale proceeds  have  since been lying with the  Chief  Presidency Magistrate. After  the  aforesaid proceedings had come to  an  end,  the Collector of Customs, Calcutta on August 28, 1955, served  a notice  on the appellant to show cause why the moneys  lying with  the  Chief  presidency  Magistrate  representing   the imported goods should not be confiscated under s. 167(8)  of the  Sea Customs Act, read with s. 3(2) of the Act  of  1947

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 22  

and why further penalty should not be imposed on them  under these provisions.  It is this notice which gave rise to  the proceedings with which we 344 are concerned.  The notice stated that a prohibition on  the import  of  the  goods except under a  special  licence  and subject to the conditions stated in it was imposed under  s. 3(1)  of  the  Act  of  1947 and  that  by  virtue  of  this prohibition the importation of the goods would be deemed  to be  illegal unless "(I) at the time of importation of  goods were  covered by a valid special licence which had not  been caused  to  be issued by fraudulent  misrepresentation,  (2) after  importation  the goods or any part of them  were  not sold or permitted to be utilised by any other party,  except the  importers  for consumption as raw  material."  It  also stated  that investigation had revealed that portion of  the goods were sold by the appellants to other people. After  receipt of the notice the appellants moved  the  High Court  at Calcutta under Art. 226 of the Constitution for  a writ   of  prohibition  prohibiting  the   respondent,   the Collector  of Customs, Calcutta, from taking any  proceeding pursuant to the notice under ss. 167 and 182 of the Sea Cus- toms Act against the appellants.  The application was  first heard  by  Sinha, J, and was dismissed.  An  appeal  by  the appellants  to  an appellate bench of the  High  Court  also failed.   The appellants have now approached this  Court  in further appeal by special leave. Sub-section  (2)  of s. 3 of the Act of 1947  provides  that "all  goods to which any order under subsection (1)  applies shall  be deemed to be goods of which the import  or  export has  been  prohibited or restricted under s. 19 of  the  Sea Customs  Act, 1878 and all the provisions of that Act  shall have effect accordingly".  Section 19 of the Sea Customs Act is  contained in Chapter IV of that Act.  Section 167(8)  of the   Sea  Customs  Act  states  the  "If  any  goods,   the importation or exportation 345 of  which is for the time being prohibited or restricted  by or  under  Chapter  IV  of this Act,  be  imported  into  or exported   from  India  contrary  to  such  prohibition   or restriction ... such goods shall be liable to  confiscation; and any person concerned in any such offence shall be liable to  a penalty".  Section 182 of this Act authorises  various Customs Officers including a Customs Collector to adjudicate on questions of confiscation and penalty under s. 167(8). As earlier stated the question is one of jurisdiction.   The contention  of  learned counsel for the  appellant  is  that under  s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act read with s. 182  of that Act under which the Collector of Customs is proceeding, he  has jurisdiction only to decide whether goods have  been imported contrary to the prohibition or restriction  imposed by an order made under s. 3(1) of the Act of 1947 but he has no jurisdiction under these sections to decide any  question of  confication  of  goods for breach of a  condition  of  a licence  issued  under such an order.  It, is said  that  it appeared from the notice served by the Collector that he was proceeding  to  decide  whether the  goods  were  liable  to confiscation because they had been disposed of in breach  of the  condition  of  the licence under which  they  had  been imported  which he has no jurisdiction to do and  hence  the appellants were entitled to a writ of prohibition which they sought.   For  the purpose of this argument  the  appellants proceed  on the assumption that there has been a  breach  of the condition but this they do not, of course, admit. The  basis of the appellant’s contention is the  proposition

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 22  

that a breach of the conditions of a licence is not a breach of  the  order under which the licence was granted  and  the condition imposed and that no offence under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act is committed if a condition of the 346 licence  is contravened.  In  my view this  proposition  is not  well  founded.  But assume it is correct.  Even  so  it seems  to  me that there is no lack of jurisdiction  in  the Collector   in   the  present  case.   He   has   admittedly jurisdiction to decide whether there has been a breach of an order.   It follows that he has jurisdiction to decide  what is  a breach of an order and, therefore, whether the  breach of  a condition of a licence is breach of an order.  To  say that  the breach of a condition is not a breach of an  order is  only  to  set  up a defence that  the  goods  cannot  be confiscated  for such a breach.  Such a contention does  not oust the jurisdiction of the Collector to decide whether the breach  of  a,  condition is breach of  an  order.   If  the Collector decides that the breach of a condition is a breach of  an  order, his decision, on the assumption that  I  have made,  would  be wrong but it would not be a  decision  made without  jurisdiction.   This  is the  view  which  all  the learned Judges of the High Court took and it seems to me to be the correct view. Further I think in the, present case one of the  allegations in the notice is that the goods had been imported without  a licence  and therefore in direct violation of an order  made under  s. 3(1) of the Act of 1947.  Clearly,  the  Collector has  jurisdiction to decide the question raised by  such  an allegation.   Now the notice served by the Collector on  the appellants contains a statement that an importation of goods would  be illegal unless it was covered by a  licence  which has  not been procured by fraudulent  misrepresentation  and that  in the present case the licence had been  obtained  by fraudulent misrepresentation.  The notice hence alleges that the  goods had been imported really without a licence,  that is,  in breach of an order.  Even if it be assumed,  as  the appellants  contend  that  an importation  under  a  licence fraudulently 347 procured is not an importation without a licence, that would only  show  that  there has been no  importation  without  a licence,  that is, in breach of an order, but it  would  not deprive  the  Collector of his jurisdiction to  decide  that question.   Likewise the fact that a Magistrate has  decided that  the licensing authority had not been deceived  by  the appellants in the matter of the issue of the licence  which, if  binding  on  the Collector, would  only  show  that  the licence had not been fraudulently procured and cannot affect the Collector’s jurisdiction in any way. It is also said that the decision of a High Court on a point of  law  is  binding on all inferior  Tribunals  within  its territorial jurisdiction.  It is, therefore, contended  that the Collector is bound by the decision of Sen. J., to  which I have earlier referred, that the breach of a condition of a licence is not a breach of the order under which the licence was issued and the condition imposed, As at present  advised I am not prepared to subscribe to the view that the decision of a High Court is so binding.  But it seems to me that  the question  does  not arise, for even if the decision  of  the High  Court  was binding on the Collector,  that  would  not affect  his  jurisdiction.  All that it would  establish  is that   the  Collector  would  have.  while  exercising   his jurisdiction, to hold that the breach of a condition of  the licence is not a breach of an order.  Its only effect  would

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 22  

be   that  the  appellants  would  not  have  to   establish independently  as  a proposition of law that a breach  of  a condition  of a licence is not the breach of an order  under which it had been issued but might for that purpose rely  on the judgment of Sen, J. I  think, therefore, that the Collector has jurisdiction  in this  case  to  decide  whether the  goods  were  liable  to confiscation.   If he has this jurisdiction, he has  clearly also the jurisdiction to 348 decide  whether the appellants are liable to have a  further pecuniary penalty imposed on them under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act.  If this is the correct view, as I think it is, then the appellants are not entitled to the writ. But suppose I am wrong in what I have said so far about  the Collector’s   jurisdiction.   Suppose  as   the   appellants contend,  he  had  in this case no  jurisdiction  to  decide whether the goods are liable to confiscation.  That would be because  the  breach of a condition of a licence  is  not  a breach  of  an  order  under which it  was  issued  and  the Collector has no jurisdiction to decide whether it is so  or not.  This is how the appellants themselves put it.  It  has not  been  contended, and indeed it cannot be, that  if  the breach of a condition of a licence is the breach of an order under  which  it  was  issued,  the  Collector  would   have jurisdiction to decide whether in the present case the goods are liable to confiscation. I  am  unable to agree that the breach of a condition  of  a licence issued under an order made under the Act of 1947  is not  a breach of the order.  In my view, such a breach is  a breach  of the order itself.  Subsection (1) of s 3  of  the Act   of  1947  empowers  the  Government  to  make   orders prohibiting, restricting or otherwise controlling the import of  goods.   Now  clearly,  one  method  of  restricting  or controlling  the import of goods would be to regulate  their use  or disposition after they had been brought into  India. Therefore, under the Act of 1947 the Government has power to restrict  or control imports in this way; it could  lawfully drovide that the goods would not after import be dealt  with in a certain way.  It would follow that Notification No.  2- ITC/48  was  quite competent and intra vires  the  Act  and, therefore, the condition in the licence issued in this  case that the goods would not be sold after they had been brought 349 into India had been legitimately imposed.  The contrary  has not indeed been seriously contended.  When, therefore,  such a   condition  is  contravened,  it  is  really  the   order authorising its imposition that is contravened.  That  seems to  me  to  be the clear intention of  the  legislature  for otherwise  the efficacy of the Act of 1947 would be  largely destroyed.   That Act was intended to preserve  and  advance the economy of the State on which the welfare of the  people depended.   In such a statute large powers have to be  given to the Government and they were undoubtedly so given in  the present case.  The statute clearly intended and it should be so  read  that these power could be  effectively  exercised. Therefore   the   breach  of  a  condition  of   a   licence legitimately  imposed  in exercise of that power has  to  be read  as  a  breach  of the order by  which  the  power  was exercised  and the condition imposed.  It follows  that  the Collector has jurisdiction to-decide whether there has  been a breach of a condition of a licence and whether,  therefore confiscation  should be ordered under s. 167(8) of  the  Sea Customs Act and further penalty imposed. I  observed  that  Son, J., in  dealing  with  the  argument

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 22  

advanced on behalf of the customs authorities that a  breach of  a condition of a licence imposed under an  order  issued under  the  Act would be a breach of that  order  said  that there might be some substance in it in the present case,  if notification  No. 23-ITC/43 which provided  that  electrical instrument  could  not  be imported without  a  licence  had itself  provided that the licence might impose condition  as to  how the goods were to be dealt with after they had  been brought  into India but that that had not been done.   I  am unable  to appreciate this reasoning.  Notification No.  23- ITC/ 43 has to be read along with Notification No. 2-ITC/48. The latter provided that a licence to import might be issued subject to a condition like 350 the one which we have in the present case.  The licence that was  issued in this case was subject to these  notifications and was issued under both of them.  The position, therefore, is  the  same as if one order had provided  that  the  goods could  not  be imported except under a licence  which  could impose  the condition.  I am unable to agree with  Sen,  J., and  also  Sinha, J., who expressed the  same  view  without giving any reason to support it. I  find  that  the view that I have taken  is  supported  by authority.   Willingale  v. Norris (1) is a  case  fully  in point  and  is a much stronger case That case dealt  with  a prosecution under s. 19 of the London Hackney Carriages Act, 1853,  which  provided that "for every offence  against  the provisions  of  this  Act for which no  special  penalty  is hereinbefore  appointed  the offender shall be liable  to  a penalty  not  exceeding forty shillings" A  cab  driver  was prosecuted under the section for breach of a regulation made under  s. 4 of the Hackney Carriages Act, 1850.  Section  21 of  the Hackney Carriages Act, 1853, provided that the  Acts of  1850  and 1853 were to be considered as  one  Act.   The driver  was held liable to be penalised under s. 19  of  the Act of 1953.  It was observed at p. 66.               "How are the words ’against the provisions  of               the Act’ to be read ? The two statutes are  to               be construed as one.  In my opinion, to  break               the regulations made under the authority of  a               statute  is to break the statute  itself,  and               therefore   s.  19  of  the   London   Hackney               Carriages  Act, 1823 must be read  thus:  (For               every  offence against the  regulations  prom-               ulgated  under these two Act, which are to  be               read  as  one, a penalty not  exceeding  forty               shillings may be imposed’." (1) [1909] 1 K.B. 57,66. 351 That  case received the full approval of the House of  Lords in  Wicks v. Director of Public Prosecutions where  Viscount Simon said,               "There  is,  of course, no doubt that  when  a               statute  like the Emergency  Powers  (Defence)               Act, 1939, enables an authority to make  regu-               lations,  a regulation which is  validly  made                             under  the Act, i.e., which is intra  vires  o f               the  regulation-making  authority,  should  be               regarded   as   though  it  were   itself   an               enactment." I  think these observations fully apply to an Act  like  the Imports and Exports (Control) Act.  Then I find that in  our country  too the same view has been taken.  Thus in  Emperor v. Abdul Hamid Mullick, J., observed,

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 22  

             "When a notification is issued by an executive               authority in exercise of a power conferred  by               statue, that notification is as much a part of               the law as if it had been incorporated  within               the  body  of the statute at the time  of  its               enactment." It  has,  therefore, to be held that where an  order  passed under  the  Act authorises the impostion of  a  condition  a breach  of the condition would be punishable as a breach  of the order under the Act. I might now notice another argument.  It was this: Under  s. 167  (8)  of  the  Sea Customs Act, it  was  the  import  in contravention  of the restriction that was an offence.   The contention  was  that  once  the  goods  had  been  imported validly, that is to say, once they bad been allowed to cross the  Customs barrier under a valid licence, there could  not be an import contrary to any prohibition or restriction.  It seems to me that this is taking too narrow a view of s.  167 (8).   Suppose the order under s. 3 (1) of the  Imports  and Exports (Control) Act had itself (1) [1947] A.C. 362, 365.  (2) A.I.R. 1923 Pat. 1. 352 said  that  goods imported shall not be sold in  the  market without the permission of a certain authority and the  goods imported   were  notwithstanding  this  sold  without   such permission.  It would to my mind make nonsense of a. 167 (8) if it were to be said even in such a case that the goods bad not  been  imported  in  contravention  of  the  restriction imposed  by  a legitimate order duly made.  I  have  earlier stated that the coditions in the licence have to be  treated as conditions contained in an order issued under the Act  of 1947  itself.   Therefore, the breach of  such  a  condition would amount to a contravention of an order restricting  the import of goods.  Such a contravention is clearly punishable under s. 167 (8).  The word ,import" has not been defined in the Sea Customs Act.  In order that the Act of 1947 does not become  infructuous, which result the legislature could  not have intended, it must be held that where after crossing the Customs   barrier  lawfully,  goods  are  disposed   of   in contravention of a restriction duly imposed, they have  been imported contrary to the restriction. It remains only to consider the argument that under the  Sea Customs  Act only the goods imported can be confiscated  and therefore,   the  money  now  lying  with   the   Presidency Magistrate cannot be confiscated.  I think this argument  is wholly  untenable.   The money represents  the  goods.   The order  for sale was made by the High Court with the  consent of  both the parties because the goods  were  deteriorating. Therefore  there can be no doubt that the sale  proceeds  of the   goods  which  could  be  confiscated,  can   also   be confiscated. I think that the appeal fails and should be dismissed. J.  SUBBA RAO, J.-This appeal by special leave  is  directed against  the judgment of a division Bench of the High  Court at Calcutta dated January 353 5,  1957,  confirming the order of a single  Judge  of  that Court dismissing the petition filed by the appellants  under Art. 226 of the Constitution. The  dispute  which  culminated in this  appeal  has  had  a tortuous  career  and had its origin in the year  1948.   To appreciate the contentions of the parties it is necessary to survey  broadly  the  events covering a  long  period.   The appellants  are Messrs.  East India Commercial Co., Ltd.,  a company  having  its registered office in Calcutta  and  the

10

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 22  

Director  of  that  Company.  On  September  27,  1948,  the appellant-Company  filed  an  application  with  the   Chief Controller of Imports, New Delhi for the grant of a  licence to  import 20, 000 fluorescent tubes and  2,000  fluorescent fixtures from the United States of America.  The application was accompanied by a covering letter.  In the application it was mentioned that the goods were required for the Company’s own  use as industrial raw material or accessories;  but  in the  covering  letter  it was stated  that  the  goods  were required  primarily for their mills at Ellore in the  Madras Presidency  where  they  where planning to  arrange  for  an up-to-date lighting system.  The Chief Contoller of  Imports issued  a  special licence to the appellants on  October  8, 1948.   The  licence granted was in respect  of  fluorescent tubes  and  fixtures  of the approximate CIF  value  of  Rs. 3,33,333  equivalent to $100,000 and the shipment was to  be made within one year from the date of issue of the  licence. The licence issued had a rubber stamp which ran thus:               "This licence is issued subject to the  condi-               tion that the goods will be utilised only  for               consumption as raw material or accessories  in               the  licence  holder’s  factory  and  that  no               portion thereof will be sold to any party." The  licence did not impose any restriction as  regards  the number of tubes and fixtures to be 354 imported, but a ceiling was placed on the value of the goods as  stated  supra.  Between March 21, 1949,  and  March  26, 1949,  the  appellants took delivery of the said  tubes  and fixtures of the specified value and cleared them on  payment of customs duty.  The number of tubes and fixtures  imported was larger than that mentioned in the application, but it is common case that the value did not exceed the ceiling  fixed under  the  license.  On information alleged  to  have  been received  by  the  Chief  controller  of  imports  that  the appellant-Company was selling the goods to various  parties, the  matter  was  placed before  the  Special  Police  Esta- blishment  Government, of India, Now Delhi.  On  August  31, 1949,  the  said  Police  establishment  obtained  a  search warrant from the Chief presidency Magistrate, Calcutta,  and seized,  among others, from the appellants’ godown  a  large stock of fluorescent tubes and fixtures, and left them  with the  appellants  on  their  executing a  bond.   It  may  be mentioned at this stage that the value of the stock imported was  about  Rs.  4,66,000 i.e., the purchase  price  of  Rs. 3,33,333,  together with the customs duty paid on  the  said goods.  In the sale subsequently made at the instance of the High Court, the stock seized fetched a sum of Rs.  4,15,000. On  December  9, 1950, the appellants filed  an  application before  the Chief Presidency Magistrate, Calcutta,  for  the return of the seized goods, whereupon the learned Magistrate called  for a report from the Special Police  Establishment, New  Delhi.   On  January  9  12,  1951,  the  said   Police Establishment  submitted a Challan against appellant  No.  2 and  others  for alleged offences under s. 4201120B  of  the Indian Penal Code and the same was registered as Case No. C. 121  of 1951.  On the same day, the Assistant  Collector  of Customs filed a complaint before the said Magistrate against appellant No. 2 and others for committing an 355 offence  under  s. 5 of the Imports  and  Exports  (Control) Act,,  1947 (hereinafter called the Act, for having  sold  a portion  of the stock of fluorescent tubes and  fixtures  in contravention  of the terms of the licence and the same  was registered  as Case No.  C. 120 of 1951.  On June 28,  1951,

11

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 22  

the learned Presidency Magistrate discharged all the accused in  both  the  cases under s. 253 of the  Code  of  Criminal Procedure  after holding that no prima facie case  had  been made  out  against any of them.  Two  revisions  were  filed against  that order in the High Court-one by the  State  and the  other  by the Customs Authorities.   Chunder,  J.,  who heard the revisions, set aside the orders of discharge  made by  the  Presidency Magistrate and remanded  the  cases  for fresh  disposal.  On June 8, 1952, the appellants  filed  an application  before the Chief presidency Magistrate for  the release  of  seized  goods  on the  ground  that  they  were deteriorating,  but that was dismissed.  But in  a  revision against  that  order,  the High Court  on  January  16,1953, directed  the goods to be sold by the Presidency  Magistrate and the sale proceeds to be kept in his custody.  The  goods were sold accordingly and they fetched a sum of Rs. 4,15,000 and the money has since then been in the custody of the said court.   After  remand, the Presidency Magistrate  took  the evidence  of innumerable witnesses for the  prosecution  and for  the  defence,  considered a  number  of  documents  and discharged appellant No. 2 in both the cases.  He held  that appellant  No. 2 was neither guilty of the offence under  s. 420 of the Indian Penal Code, as, in his view, there was  no fraudulent  or dishonest inducement at the time  the  appli- cation for licence was made, nor of any contravention of the provisions of the Act.  Though he discharged appellant   No. 2. he did not make over the   sale  proceeds to him.  though the  said appellant filed an application for payment of  the same: the learned Magistrate adjourned the said application 356 till  August 29, 1953.  The Assistant Collector  of  Customs filed  a  revision to the High Court against  the  order  of discharge  of appellant No. 2 passed in case No. C.  120  of 1951’  and the same was registered as Criminal Revision  No. 1124 of 1953; he also obtained an interim stay of the return of  the money to appellant No. 2. But no revision was  filed against  the order of the Presidency Magistrate  discharging appellant  No- 2 of the offence under s. 420,  Indian  Penal Code.   The  Criminal Revision (No. 1124 of  1953)  came  up before  a  division  Bench  of  the  Calcutta  High   Court, Consisting  of Mitter and Sen, JJ., and the learned  Judges, by  their  judgment  dated  March  3,  1955,  dismissed  the revision holding that there had been no contravention of the order made or deemed to be made under the Act.  The  learned Judges  construed  a. 5 of the Act and held  that  the  said section  penalised only a contravention of an order made  or deemed  to  have been made under the said Act, but  did  not penalise  the  contravention of the  conditions  of  licence issued under the Act or issued under a statutory order  made under  that Act, and dismissed the revision.  On  March  24, 1955,  the appellants filed an application before the  Chief Presidency  Magistrate for making over the sale proceeds  to them;  and  the  said  Magistrate issued  a  notice  to  the Assistant Collector of Customs and also to the Delhi Special Police  Establishment to show cause on or before  April  19, 1955.  On April 19, 1955, the Superintendent, Special Police Establishment,  did  not  show  cause,  but  the   Assistant Collector  of Customs asked for an adjournment and the  same was  granted till May 7, 1955; and again on May 7, 1955,  he took  another adjournment of the hearing of the  application on  the  ground that departmental proceedings  were  pending against  the  appellants.  On May 9,  1955,  the  appellants filed a revision in the High Court, presumably, against  the order  adjourning the application and the said revision  was numbered  as  Revision  Case  No. 582 of  1955  and  it  was

12

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 22  

adjourned from time to time at 357 the  request  of  the  respondent.  On  May  28,  1955,  the respondent  started  a proceeding purported to be  under  s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, read with s. 3(2) of the  Act and  called  upon  the appellants by notice  to  show  cause within  seven  days  from  the date  thereof  why  the  said proceeds, namely, Rs. 4,15,000 should not be confiscated and also why Penal action should not be taken against them.   It was stated in the notice that the special licence was issued on the express condition that the goods covered by the  said licence  should be utilised for consumption as raw  material or assessories in the factory of the licence holder and that no part thereof should be sold or permitted to be  utilities by  any other party, that the appellants sold a  portion  of the  goods  imported  under the said licence  to  others  in Breach  of  the said condition and that, as  the  appellants infringed  the  said  condition, the  goods,  or  the  money substituted in its place, were liable to be confiscated.  On June 3, 1955, the appellant filed an application in the High Court at Calcutta under Art. 226 of the Constitution for the issue of an appropriate writ, including a writ in the nature of  prohibition,  against  the  Collector  of  Customs  from continuing  with  the  proceedings initiated  by  him.   The application,  in the first instance, came up  before  Sinha, J.,  who  by his order dated March 18, 1957,  dismissed  the application  as  premature;  but,  in  the  course  of   his judgment, the learned Judge agreed with the earlier division Bench,  which disposed of the revision against the order  of discharge, that a breach of a condition alone would not be a violation of the order passed by the Central Government, but he observed that the learned Judges on the earlier  occasion did  not decide the question as to what was permitted to  be imported:  he  drew  a distinction between  a  licensee  who imported  goods perfectly bona fide for his own  consumption but 358 who later changed his mind and a licensee who, even from the inception,  knew that he did not require the goods  for  his own  use, but entered into the transaction fraudulently;  in the  second situation, he learned Judge proceeded to  state, the  goods  imported  were  never  goods  required  for  the petitioner’s  company  for  its  own  use.   The  appellants preferred  an  appeal  to a division Bench of  of  the  High Court,  consisting of Das Gupta, C.J., and Bachhwat, J.  The learned  Judges  dismissed the appeal solely on  the  ground that  it  was within the jurisdiction of  the  Collector  of Customs to ascertain whether there had been a  contravention of  the  relevant provisions of the Act as would  entail  an order  of confiscation and that, therefore, Sinha,  J.,  was right  in refusing to issue a writ; but they made  it  clear that all the questions raised in the case were left open for decision  by  the Chief Controller of  Imports.   Hence  the present appeal. Mr. Vishwanatha Sastri, learned counsel for the  appellants, raised  before  us the following points: (1)  The  Assistant Collector  of  Customs  has  no  jurisdiction  to   initiate proceedings  under a. 167 (8) of the Sea Customs Act,  1878, read with s.   3(2)  of  the Imports and  Exports  (Control) Act, 1947, in the circumstances of the case, and  therefore, the High Court should have issued an order in the nature  of a  writ of prohibition restraining him from proceeding  with the said inquiry. (2) A division Bench of the High Court  of Calcutta in Criminal Revision No. 1124 of 1953, to which the respondent was a party, declared the law on the construction

13

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 22  

of  the  provisions  of s.5 of the  Act,  read  with  s.3(2) thereof, viz., that it penalizes only a contravention of  an order made or deemed to have been made under the Act and not a contravention of a condition imposed by the licence issued under  the Act or issued under a statutory order made  under the Act; and 359 after  that  declaration,  which  is  binding  on  all   the authorities  and  tribunals within  the  territorial  juris- diction of that court, the respondent has no jurisdiction to ignore  the said order and proceed with a fresh  inquiry  in direct contravention of the law so declared. (3) That apart, the  proposition so laid down by the said division Bench  is sound  and,  if  so,  the  respondent  could  not   initiate proceedings  under  s.  167(8) of the  Sea  Customs  Act  in respect of a contravention of a condition of the licence, as it  is neither a part of an order nor a condition laid  down by the Order within the meaning of s. 3 of the Act. (4)  The chief  Controller  of Imports has no  jurisdiction  to  take action under s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act on the  ground that  a  condition  inserted in a  licence  is  subsequently infringed  by  an importer, for it is said,  the  rule  only enables  the  Customs Authorities to  confiscate  the  goods imported  without a license whereas in the present case  the goods  were imported under a valid subsisting  licence.  (5) Clause  (8)  of  a. 167 of the Sea  Customs  Act  does  only authorize the confiscation of goods so imported and not  the sale  proceeds  of the said goods, for the reason  that  the said  money could not conceivably be goods in any  sense  of the term. Mr. Prem, learned counsel for the respondent, argued contra. His  argument may be summarized thus: (1) The  Collector  of Customs has jurisdiction to consider under s. 167(8) (if the Sea  Customs Act whether the goods are imported contrary  to the restrictions imposed under the Act, and, therefore,  the High Court could not issue a writ of prohibition against the said  authority  from proceeding with the inquiry.  (2)  The notice  issued  is  not a statutory notice but  is  only  an intimation  to  the  appellants of  the  initiation  of  the proceedings  and,  therefore, the question  of  jurisdiction could not be decided on the contents of the said notice. (3) The Customs Authorities have a concurrent jurisdiction  with the 360 criminal Court to deal with matters entrusted to them  under the Acts and, therefore, the findings of a criminal court or even  of a High Court on the same or similar  matters  could not bind them and they could come to a different  conclusion of  their  own  both on the question of law as  well  as  on fact,% from those of criminal courts, though the decision of the  High Court may have persuasive influence on  them.  (4) The  condition  imposed in a licence is under  the  relevant order  issued by the Central Government in exercise  of  its power  under  s.  3  of the  Act,  and,  as  the  appellants infringed  that condition, the goods imported are liable  to be  confiscated under s.167(8) of the Sea Customs Act,  read with s.3(2) of the Act. (5) As the appellants imported goods on a misrepresentation, in law the import must be deemed  to be  one  made  without a licence  and  therefore  the  goods imported  are goods either prohibited or  restricted  within the  meaning  of s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act.  (6)  The Customs Collector has jurisdiction to confiscate goods after they  have  left the customs barrier, and, as the  money  in deposit in court is the proceeds of the sale directed to  be held by the High Court in the interest of both the  parties,

14

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 22  

it represents the said goods, and, in any view, as the order of the High Court is binding on both the parties, it is  not open  to  the  appellants to plead that the  goods  are  not represented by the said money, The  first  question is whether the petition  filed  by  the appellants under Art. 226 of the Constitution for the  issue of  a writ in the nature of prohibition is  maintainable  in the circumstances of the case.  A writ of prohibition is  an order  directed to an inferior Tribunal forbidding  it  from continuing with a proceeding therein on the ground that  the proceeding is without or in excess of jurisdiction or 361 contrary  to the laws of the land, statutory  or  otherwise: Mackonochie  v.  Lord  Penzance(1) and  Halsbury’s  Laws  of England, 3rd Edn: Vol. 11, p, 52. The argument of’ learned counsel for the appellants is  that on the face of the notice dated May 28, 1955, issued by  the respondent,  the  latter  has no  jurisdiction  to  initiate proceedings  under  a. 167(8) of the Sea Customs  Act,  read with s.3(2) of the Act.  Learned counsel for the  respondent argues  that the said notice is not a statutory  notice  but only   a  memorandum  informally  sent  to  the   appellants intimating  them that proceedings have been started  against them,  that the said notice is neither full  nor  exhaustive and  that jurisdictional facts could be ascertained only  by the Customs Collector in the course of the said  proceedings on  full inquiry, We do not see any justification  for  this argument,  The respondent proposed to take action  under  s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, read with s. 3(2) of the Act. It  cannot  be denied that the proceedings  under  the  said sections  are  quasijudicial in nature.  Whether  a  statute provides  for  a  notice or not, it is  incumbent  upon  the respondent to issue notice to the appellants disclosing  the circumstances  under  which  proceedings are  sought  to  be initiated against them.  Any proceedings taken without  such notice  would be against the principles of natural  justice. In  the  present case, in our view, the  respondent  rightly issued  such  a notice wherein  specific  acts  constituting contraventions  of  the  provisions of the  Acts  for  which action was to be initiated were clearly mentioned.  Assuming that a notice could be laconic, in the present case it was a speaking   one  clearly  specifying  the  alleged   act   of contravention.   If on a reading of the said notice,  it  is manifest  that on the assumption that the facts  alleged  or allegations  made therein were true, none of the  conditions laid down in the specified sections (1)  (1881) 6 App.  Cas. 424. 362 was  contravened, the respondent would have no  jurisdiction to  initiate proceedings pursuant to that notice.  To  state it differently, if on a true construction of the  provisions of the said two sections the respondent has no  jurisdiction to  initiate proceedings or make an inquiry under  the  said sections  in  respect of certain acts alleged to  have  been done  by  the appellants, the respondent  can  certainly  be prohibited  from  proceeding with the same.   We  therefore, reject this preliminary contention. The  next question is, what is the true construction of  the provisions of the relevant sections?  It would be convenient at  this stage to read the relevant parts of ss. 3 and 5  of the Act and as, 19 and 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act.               Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947               Section 3. (1) The Central Government may,  by               order published in the Official Gazette,  make               provisions  for  prohibiting,  restricting  or

15

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 22  

                           otherwise  controlling,  in  all  cases  or  i n               specified  classes  of cases, and  subject  to               such exceptions, if any, as may be made by  or               under the order:-               (a) the import, export, carriage coastwise  or               shipment  as  ship  stores  of  goods  of  any               specified description,               (b)  the  bringing into any port or  place  in               India  of goods of any  specified  description               intended  to  be taken out  of  India  without               being  removed from the ship or conveyance  in               which they are being carried.               (2)  All goods to which any order  under  sub-               section  (1)  applies shall be  deemed  to  be               goods  of which the import or export has  been               prohibited  or restricted under section 19  of               the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (VIII of 1878) and 363               all  the  provisions of that  Act  shall  have               effect  accordingly, except that  section  183               thereof  shall have effect as if for the  word               "shall"   therein   the   word   "may"    were               substituted.               Section  5. Penalty-If any person  contravenes               or   attempts  to  contravene.  or   abets   a               contravention  of any order made or deemed  to               have  been  made  under this  Act,  he  shall,               without  prejudice  to  any  confiscation   or               penalty  to which he may be liable  under  the               provisions of the Sea Customs Act, 1878  (VIII               of  1878),  as applied by sub-section  (2)  of               section 3, be punishable with imprisonment for               a  term which may extend to one year, or  with               fine, or with both.               The Sea Customs Act, 1878.               Section  19.  The Central Government may  from               time  to  time, by notification in  the  Offi-               cial   Gazette,  prohibit  or   restrict   the               bringing or taking by sea or by land goods  of               any specified description into or out of India               across any customs frontier as defined by  the               Central Government.                Section  167.  The offences mentioned in  the               first  column of the following schedule  shall               be  punishable to the extent mentioned in  the               third 364 column   of  the  same  with  reference  to  such   offences respectively :                     Section of this      Offences        Act to which           Penalties                      offences has                       reference. 8. If any                 such goods shall goods, the                be liable to con- importation               fiscation, and any or exporta-               person concerned tion of which             in any such offen- is for the     18 and 19  ce shall be liable time being                to a penalty not prohibited or             exceeding   three restricted by             times the value of or      under             the goods, or not Chapter IV                exceeding     one

16

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 22  

of this Act,              thousand rupees. be imported into or ex- ported from India contr- ary to such prohibition or restriction. The  essence of the offence is a contravention of any  order made or deemed to have been made under the Act.  All  orders under this Act can only be made by the Central Government in exercise of the power conferred upon it by s. 3 of the  Act, and  "all  orders made under r. 84 of the Defence  of  India Rules  or that rule as continued in force by  the  Emergency Provisions  (Continuance) Ordinance, 1946 (XX of 1946),  and in  force immediately before the commencement of  this  Act, shall  continue  in force and be deemed to  have  been  made under  this  Act".   The contravention  of  only  these  two categories of orders attracts the provisions of s. 19 of the See, 365 Customs Act.  By reason of s. 3(2) of the Act, all goods  to which  any order under sub-s. (1) of s. 3 applies  shall  be deemed  to be goods of which the import or export  has  been prohibited  under s. 19 of the Sea Customs Act and  all  the provisions of the Sea Customs Act, with some  modifications- with  which  we  are not concerned  now-shall  apply.   This provision in its turn attracts. along with others a. 167 (8) of  the Sea Customs Acts, and under that section, read  with a.  3(2) of the Act, the goods imported in contravention  of an  order under the Act shall be liable to  be  confiscated. But   the  section  does  not  expressly  or  by   necessary implication  empower the authority concerned  to  confiscate the goods imported under a valid licence on the ground  that a  condition  of  the licence not imposed by  the  order  is infringed or violated.  If that be the true construction  of the  said  provisions, the question arises  whether  in  the instant  case the allegations made in the notice  bring  the goods  imported  within the scope of the  provisions  of  s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act.  We shall now proceed to deal with that question. As  we  have  already noticed in the earlier  stage  of  the judgment,  the notice issued by the respondent  charges  the appellants thus:               "One of the conditions of the special  licence               was  that  the  goods would  be  utilized  for               consumption as raw material or accessories  in               the factory of the licence-holder and no  part               thereof would be sold to other parties, but in               contravention of that condition the appellants               sold  a part of the goods imported to a  third               party  and as the goods had been caused to  be               issued  by fraudulent misrepresentation,  they               were liable to be confiscated under s.  167(8)               of the Sea Customs Act." 366 Section  167 (8) of the Sea Customs Act can be invoked  only if  an  order  issued under s. 3 of the  Act  was  infringed during  the  course of the import or export.   The  division Bench  of  the  High Court held that a  contravention  of  a condition  imposed by a licence issued under the Act is  not an offence under s. 5 of the Act.  This raises the  question whether  an  administrative  tribunal  can  ignore  the  law declared  by  the highest court in the  State  and  initiate proceedings  in  direct violation of the  law  so  declared.

17

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 22  

Under Art,. 215, every High Court shall be a court of record and shall have all the powers of such a court including  the power to punish for contempt of itself.  Under Art. 226,  it has  a  plenary power to issue orders or writs for  the  en- forcement  of  the  fundamental rights  and  for  any  other purpose to any person or authority, including in appropriate cases  any Government, within its territorial  jurisdiction. Under  Art.  227  it has jurisdiction over  all  courts  and tribunals throughout the territories in relation to which it exercise  jurisdiction.   It would be anomalous  to  suggest that  a  tribunal over which the High  Court  has  superint- endence can ignore the law declared by that court and  start proceedings in direct violation of it.  If a tribunal can do so, all the sub-ordinate courts can equally do so, for there is no specific, provision, just like in the case of  Supreme Court, making the law declared by the High Court binding  on subordinate  courts.   It  is  implicit  in  the  power   of supervision  conferred on a superior tribunal that  all  the tribunals  subject to its supervision should conform to  the law laid down by it.  Such obedience would also be conducive to their smooth working: otherwise there would be  confusion in  the  administration  of law and respect  for  law  would irretrievably  suffer.   We,  therefor, hold  that  the  law declared  by  the highest court in the State is  binding  on authorities or tribunals under its supreintendence, and that they cannot  367 ignore  it either in initiating a proceeding or deciding  on the  rights involved in such a proceeding.  If that  be  so, the notice issued by the authority signifying the  launching of  proceedings  contrary to the law laid down by  the  High Court  would  be in. valid and  the  proceedings  themselves would be without jurisdiction. We shall now proceed to consider the merits, Sub-section (2) of  s.  3 of the Act clearly lays down that  all  goods,  to which  an order under sub-s. (1) thereof applies,  shall  be deemed  to be goods of which the export or import  has  been prohibited or restricted under s. 19 of the Sea Customs Act. Therefore, a. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act can be attracted only if there was a contravention of the order issued  under s. 3 of the Act.  Does any order so issued by its own  force impose  such  a  condition  ?   The  Import  Trade   Control Notification dated July 1, 1943, reads thus:               The notification of the Government of India in               the late Department of Commerce No. 23 ITC/43,               dated  the 1st July, 1943,  incorporating  all               amendments upto the 25th November.. 1951.               In  exercise of the powers conferred  by  sub-               rule  (3) of rule 84 of the Defence  of  India               Rules     the    Central     Government     is               pleased  .................................  to               prohibit  the bringing into British  India  by               sea, land or air from any place outside  India               of any goods of the descriptions specified  in               the   Schedule  hereto  annexed   except   the               following, namely.,               (xiii)  any  goods of  the  descriptions  spe-               cified in the schedule which are covered by  a               special   licence   issued  by   any   officer               specially 368               authorised  in  this  behalf  by  the  Central               Government. It  is not disputed that the goods imported in  the  present case were specified in the schedule.  This order prima facie

18

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 22  

does  not  impose  a condition in the matter  of  issuing  a licence for the specified goods.  On March 6, 1948,  another notification  No.  2-ITC/48 was issued by  the  Ministry  of Commerce.  The relevant part of it reads:               In   exercise  of  the  powers  conferred   by               subsection (1) and sub-section (3) of  section               3  of the Imports and Exports  (Control)  Act,               1947  (XVIII of 1947), the Central  Government               is pleased to make the following order, namely               :-               (a)  any  officer  issuing  a  licence   under               clauses (viii) to (xiv) of the Notification of               the Government of India in the late Department               of  Commerce No. 23ITC/43, dated the 1st  July               1943,  may  issue the same subject to  one  or               more of the conditions stated below :               (i)  that goods covered by the  licence  shall               not  be  disposed of or otherwise  dealt  with               without  the written permission of the  licen-               sing  authority or any person duly  authorised               by it;               (v) that such other conditions may be  imposed               which the licensing authority considers to  be               expedient  from  the administrative  point  of                             view  and which are not inconsistent  with  th e               provisions of the said Act.               (b)   Where  a  licensee  is  found  to   have               contravened the order or the terms and  condi-               tions embodied in or accompanying a licence, 369               the  appropriate  licensing authority  or  the               Chief  Controller  of Imports may  notify  him               that,  without  prejudice to  any  penalty  to               which  he may be liable under the Imports  and               Exports  (Control) Act, 1947 (XVIII of  1947),               or  any other enactment for the time being  in               force,  he shall either permanently or  for  a               specified   period  be  refused  any   further               licence for import of goods. It will be seen from this order that it does not provide for a condition in the licence that subsequent to the import the goods  should  not be sold.  Condition (y) of cl.  (a)  only empowers the licensing authority to impose a condition  from an  administrative  point of view.  It cannot  be  suggested that  the condition, with which we are now concerned,  is  a condition imposed from an administrative point of view,  but it  is  a  condition which affects the  rights  of  parties. Learned  counsel  for the respondent argues  that  a  public notice  issued  by the Government on July 26,  1948,  is  an order made in exercise of the power conferred on the Central Government under a. 3 of the Act and that the order  directs the  imposition of a condition not to sell to a third  party the  goods permitted to be imported and that that  condition was contravened.  The public notice dated July 26, 1948, was published  in  the Gazette on July 29, 1948.   The  relevant part of it reads                     Government of India                     MINISTRY OF COMMERCE                        PUBLIC NOTICES                New Delhi, the 26th July, 1948               Subject  :-Principles governing the  issue  of               import licences for the period  July-December,               1948.               No.  1  (13)-l.T.C./47  (i).   The   following

19

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 22  

             decisions made by the Government of India 370               governing  the  issue of import  licences  for               goods  falling  under  Parts II to  V  of  the               Import  Trade Control Schedule for the  licen-               cing  period  July-December, 1948  are  hereby               published  for  general  information.    These               decisions do not apply to goods falling  under               Capital  Goods and H.E.P.  Licensing  procedure               which has been prescribed in the Public Notice               issued on 10th April, 1948. Under  paragraph  5, importers are requested  to  study  the Appendix carefully and avoid making applications for  import licences  for articles which will not be licensed;  para.  7 prescribes the form of application; para. 8 says that in the case  of  articles  which are subject  to  overall  monetary limits, where goods are raw materials and accessories  used in  Industrial concerns, applications from actual  consumers of  goods  will  receive  consideration,  and  that   actual consumers should clearly specify in their application  their past  and estimated consumption of the article concerned  as required in para. 6 of the form of application.   Paragraphs 6  to 10 deal with would-be applicants.  Paragraph  11  says that no time limit has been fixed for receiving applications from  importers who are actual consumers of  industrial  raw material   and  accessories  and  who  have   imported   the commodities  concerned  during any  financial  year  between 1938-39 and 1947-48 (inclusive) and that it is hoped to deal with   these  applications  chronologically  as   and   when received.   Paragraph 13 describes the authorities  to  whom applications should be made.  A perusal of this notice shows that  it  is intended to give information to the  public  as regards the procedure to be followed in the matter of filing of  applications by different categories of applicants.   It not  only  does not on its face purport to  be  a  statutory order  issued under a. 3 of the Act, but also  the  internal evidence furnished by it clearly shows that it could not  be one  371 under  that section.  That apart, this order does not  amend the previous orders or direct the imposition of a  condition on  an  importer not to sell the goods to a third  party  or provide for a penalty for doing s0. Learned  counsel  for the respondent asserts that  the  said public  notice  is an order made in exercise  of  the  power conferred  on the Central Government under a. 3 (1)  of  the Act.  On the other hand, learned counsel for the  appellants contends  that public notices are not such orders  but  only information given to the public for their guidance. Firstly,  the  said  notice does not purport  to  have  been issued  under  s.  3  (1) of the  Act,  whereas  the  orders referred  to earlier, that is, notifications Nos.  23-ITC/43 and 2-ITC/48 and similar others, were issued by the  Central Government in exercise of the power conferred on it by  sub- r. (3) of r. 84 of the Defence of India Rules or s. 3 (3) of the Act, as the case may be.  The Central Government  itself makes a clear distinction in the form adopted in issuing the notice.  Secondly, while the notifications issued under s. 3 of  the  Act  are  described  as  orders,  the  notices  are described as "public notices"; while the notifications under s.  3 of the Act regulate the rights of parties, the  public notices  give  information  to  the  public  regarding   the principles  governing  the  issue  of  import  licences  for specified periods.  It is also clear that the orders  issued under  s. 3 of the Act, having statutory force, have  to  be

20

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 22  

repealed,  if  the  new  order in  any  manner  modifies  or supersedes  the  provisions  of  an  earlier  order;  public notices   are  issued  periodically  without  repealing   or modifying   the  earlier  notices  or  notifications.    For instance,  on  December 7, 1955, the Central  Government  in exercise of the power conferred by ss. 3 and 4-A of the  Act made an order and under el. 12 thereof the orders  contained in 372 Schedule  IV were repeated; Schedule IV only mentioned  five notifications  issued under s. 3 of the Act, but  no  public notice  was included in that list.  To put  it  differently, orders  made  under a. 3 of the Act  have  statutory  force, whereas    public    notices    are    policy     statements administratively   made   by  the  Government   for   public information.  The foreword to the Import Trade Control Hand- book  of Rules and Procedure, 1952, under the  signature  of the Secretary to the Government of India, in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry brings out this distinction thus :               "In  the past the half-yearly  publication  on               Import  Control, popularly known as  the  "Red               Book",  has included not only a  statement  of               policy  for the ensuing six months but also  a               reproduction of various notifications relating               to Import Control and detailed information  on               points of procedure". It  is  true the Chief Controller made an affidavit  in  the High Court that the policy-statements are issued under s.  3 of  the  Act.   But,  as  we have  said,  that  is  only  on information which has no support either in the form  adopted or  the practice followed or the matter incorporated in  the notifications.  We have no hesitation in holding that public notices are not orders issued under s. 3 of the Act. It  follows  from  the  above that  the  infringement  of  a condition  in the licence not to sell the goods imported  to third  parties  is not an infringement of  the  order,  and, therefore, the said infringement does not attract s. 167 (8) of the Sea Customs Act. Nor is there any legal basis for the contention that licence obtained  by  misrepresentation makes the licence  non  est, with the result that the goods should be deemed to have been imported without 373 licence  in contravention of the order issued under a. 3  of the Act so as to bring the case within cl. (8) of s. 167  of the Sea Customs Act.  Assuming that the principles of law of contract  apply to the issue of a licence under the  Act,  a licence obtained by fraud is only voidable : it is good till avoided  in the manner prescribed by law.  On May  1,  1948, the  Central Government issued an order in exercise  of  the power  conferred  on  it by s.3 of the Act  to  provide  for licences obtained by misrepresentation, among others, and it reads:               "The  authorities  mentioned in  the  Schedule               hereto  annexed may under one or other of  the                             following circumstances cancel licences  issue d               by  any  officer  authorised to  do  so  under               clauses (viii) to (xiv) of the notification of               the Government of India in the late Department               of  Commerce,  No. 23-ITC/43, dated  1st  July               1943,  or  take such action as  is  considered               necessary  to  ensure that the  same  in  made               ineffective, namely:-               (i)  when it is found subsequent to the  issue

21

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 22  

             of  a  licence that the same has  been  issued               inadvertently,  irregularly  or  contrary   to               rules,  fraudulently  or  through   misleading               statement  on  the part of the  importer  con-               cerned; or               (iii)  when it is found that the licensee  has               not  complied  with any one or more  of  the               conditions  subject to which the  licence  may               have been issued. 374                         SCHEDULE ------------------------------------------------------------- Clauses                Licensing        Cancelling                        Authority        authority Clause (xiii)    Any officer authorised Chief Con-                  by the Central Govern- troller of                  ment.                  Imports                                         and/or                                         Government                                         of India. This order, therefore, authorised the Government of India or the Chief Controller of Imports to cancel such licences  and make  them  ineffective.  The specified  authority  has  not cancelled the licence issued in this case on the ground that the condition has been infringed.  We need not consider  the question  whether  the Chief Controller of  Imports  or  the Government  of  India,  as the case may  be,  can  cancel  a licence  after the term of the licence has expired,  for  no such  cancellation  has  been  made in  this  case,  In  the circumstances,  we  must  hold  that  when  the  goods  were imported,  they  were  imported under a  valid  licence  and therefore it is not possible to say that the goods  imported were  those prohibited or restricted by or under Ch.  IV  of the  Act within the meaning of cl. (8) of s. 167 of the  Sea Customs Act. It follows that on the assumption that the allegations  made in the notice are true, the tribunal has no jurisdiction  to proceed with the inquiry under s.  167(8) of the Sea Customs Act. Learned counsel for the appellants further contends that  s. 167(8)  of the Sea Customs Act applies only to an  act  done before  or during the course of an import or export into  or out  of  India  in  contravention  of  the  prohibition   or restrictions  375 imposed  under  s.3 of the Act and that, as in  the  instant case the breach of the condition was committed subsequent to the importation of the concerned goods, the said goods could not  be confiscated, under the said section.  But we do  not propose to express our opinion on this question, as it  does not arise in view of our findings on other questions  raised in the case. Before  closing  we may briefly notice one  more  contention raised  by learned counsel for the appellants.  It  is  said that,  as the goods imported were converted into money,  the Customs Collector has no jurisdiction to confiscate the same and  that  he  can, at the best, only  trace  the  goods  in whosesoever hands they may be.  We have pointed out that the goods  were  sold only at the instance of the court  in  the interest  of both the parties, as they  were  deteriorating. The order is binding on the parties.  The sale proceeds  are preserved for the benefit of the party who finally succeeds. In  the  circumstances it is not open to the  appellants  to argue  that money deposited in the court does not  represent the goods.

22

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 22  

In the result, the order of the High Court is set aside  and the appeal is allowed with costs.  There will be an order of prohibition   restraining   the   Customs   Authority   from proceeding  with  the  inquiry under  s.167(8)  of  the  Sea Customs Act. By COURT: In view of the majority opinion of the Court,  the appeal  is  allowed with costs.  There will be an  order  of prohibition   restraining   the   Customs   Authority   from proceeding with the enquiry under s.   167(8) of the Sea Customs Act.                      Appeal allowed. 376