12 December 1988
Supreme Court
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GOVT. OF INDIA, REPRESENTED BY SECRETARY,MINISTRY OF FINANC Vs DHANALAKSHMI PAPER AND BOARD MILLSTIRUCHIRUPALLI

Bench: SHARMA,L.M. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 6 of 1976


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PETITIONER: GOVT. OF INDIA, REPRESENTED BY SECRETARY,MINISTRY OF FINANCE

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: DHANALAKSHMI PAPER AND BOARD MILLSTIRUCHIRUPALLI

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/12/1988

BENCH: SHARMA, L.M. (J) BENCH: SHARMA, L.M. (J) MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)

CITATION:  1989 AIR  665            1988 SCR  Supl. (3)1051  1989 SCC  Supl.  (1) 596 JT 1988 (4)   677

ACT:     Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 Central Excise  Rules 1944:   First   Schedule  Item  No.  17(3)/Rule   8(1)   and Notification dated March 1, 1964 Strawboard and  pulpboard-- Exemption from duty--Clause (a) proviso (3) of  Notification held Ultra vires--Choice of date-- Relevancy of.

HEADNOTE:     The  respondent-assessee  built  up a  factory  for  the manufacture  of  paper  and  paper  boards,  which   started production on 7.5.1964. The respondent claimed that the duty in  respect of the paper boards manufactured in the  factory during  the period 7.5.1964 to June 1966 was payable at  the concessional  rates  allowed  by  the  Government  of  India notification  dated 1st March, 1964. The claim  was  however rejected  by the Revenue on the ground that the factory  had not  come  into  existence  on or  before  the  9th  day  of November, 1963 as stipulated in clause (a) of Proviso (3) of the said notification.     The respondent’s writ application before the High  Court was allowed by the Single Judge and the appellant’s  Letters Patent  appeal was dismissed in limine. The High  Court  has accepted  the respondent’s contention that the date ’9th  of November, 1963’ mentioned in the notification was arbitrary.     On behalf of the Revenue it was contended that the  date (9.11.1963)  was  selected because an  earlier  notification bearing No. 110  had required applications to be made on  or after  9.11.1963. It was further contended that a  statutory provision  had necessarily to be arbitrary in the choice  of date and it could not be challenged on that ground.     On  behalf of the respondent it was contended  that  the said  date did not have any significance whatsoever and  did not bear any rational relationship  to the object sought  to be achieved by the notification.                                                   PG NO 1051                                                   PG NO 1052     Dismissing the appeal, it was     HELD:  1. A rule which makes a difference  between  past and present cannot be condemned as arbitrary and  whimsical. [1056D]     2. In cases where choice of the date is not material for the  object   to be achieved. the provisions  are  generally

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made prospective in operation. [1056D]     3. The Revenue has not been able to produce notification No. l 10. Unless the nature and contents of notification No. 110  and  its   relevance  with  reference  to  the  present notification are indicated, it is futile to try to defend of the  choice  of  the  date in  clause  (a)  on  its   basis. [1055A;1056E]     4. In the present case, the benefit of concessional rate was  bestowed  upon the entire group  of  assesses  referred therein  and  by  clause (a) of Proviso (3)  the  group  was divided  into two classes without adopting  any  differentia having   a   rational  relation  to  the   object   of   the Notification. [1057F]     5. Clause (a) of the Proviso (3) of the Notification was ultra  vires  and the benefit allowed  by  the  Notification would  be  available  to  the  entire  group  including  the respondent. [1057G]     Union  of India v. M/s. P. Match Works [1975]2  SCR  573 Jagdish   pandey  v. The chancellor,  University  of  Bihar. [19681  I SCR 237 and   U.P. M. T. S.N.A. Samiti,  Varanasi v. State of  U.P.,[1987]2 SCR 453, distinguished.     Dr .Sushma Sharma v. State of Rajasthan, [1985] Supp.SCC 45;  and  D.S. Nakara v. Union of lndia, [1983]  I  SCC  365 referred  to.

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal  No.  6  of 1976.     From  the  Judgment and Order dated  12.11.1973  of the Madras  High Court in Writ Appeal No. 390 of 1969.     V.C.  Mahajan,  C.V. Subba Rao and K.M.M. Khan  for  the Appellants     K.N. Bhat and Vineet Kumar for the Respondent.                                                   PG NO 1053     The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     SHARMA, J. This appeal arises out of a writ  application allowed by the Madras High Court striking down Clause (a) of the  Proviso  (3) of the Notification dated the  1st  March, 1964  issued  by  the  Union of India  in  the  Ministry  of Finance,  under Rule 8(1) of the Central Excise Rules,  1944 and    granting   consequential   relief.   The    aforesaid notification  granted  certain exemptions  from  payment  of excise  duty,  but  the  benefit  was  denied  to  the  writ petitioner,  respondent  before this Court, in view  of  the impugned clause.     2.   The   respondent  assessee,  a   business   concern functioning  under the name of M/s. Dhanalakshmi  Paper  and Board Mills, decided to set up a factory for the manufacture of paper and paper boards and  allied products, and obtained a  lease  of  certain premises in June 1963  and  put  up  a suitable  structure  for  the factory by  August  1963.  The necessary machineries for running the factory, however, were received in April 1964 and application for licence  therefor was filed on 27.4.1964. The licence was granted on  6.5.1964 and  production  in the factory started the next  day,  i.e. 7.5.1964.     3.  The respondent claimed that the duty in  respect  of the  paper  boards manunactured in the  factory  during  the period 7.5.1964 to June 1966 was payable at the concessional rate  allowed by the Notification, relevant portion  whereof reads as follows:                     GOVERNMENT OF lNDIA               MINISTRY OF FINANCE (DEPARTMENT

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                       OF REVENUE)            NEW DELHI,THE 1ST MARCH, 1964/PHALGUNA                       11, 1885 (SAKA)                         NOTIFICATION                        CENTRAL EXCISE     CSR: In exercise of the powers conferred by Sub-rule (1) of  Rule  8  of  the Central  Excise  Rules,  1944,  and  in supersession of the notification of the Government of  India in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) No. 57/60 Central Excise dated 20th April. 196() and No. 37/63 Central Excise  dated the 1st March, 1963 the Central  Govt.  hereby exempts  strawboard  and  pulpboard  including,    greboard, calling  under  Sub-item  (3) of Item No. 17  of  the  First                                                   PG NO 1054 Schedule  to  the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944  (1  of 1944),  takes  together  up to the  quantity  prescribed  in column (1) of Table 1 (omitted), cleared by any manufacturer for home consumption during any financial year, from so much of  the  leviable  thereon as is in  excess  of  the  amount specified  in the corresponding entry in column (2)  of  the same Table:     TABLE- 1 (being not relevant, omitted)     Provided that--     (1)................................     (2) .......................................     TABLE-2 (being not relevant, omitted)     (3)  nothing contained in this notification shall  apply to  a  manufacturer who applied or applies for a licence  on or  after the 9th day of November 1963, unless he  satisfies the Collector of Central Excise--     (a)  that  the factory for which the licence was  or  is applied  for was owned on the 9th day of November, 1963,  by the applicant;"     The   benefit  of  the  Notification  claimed   by   the respondent  assessee  was denied by the  appellants  on  the ground  that the factory did not come into existence  on  or before the 9th day of November, 1963, the date mentioned  in the  impugned  clause (a). The respondent  moved  the   High Court  in  its writ jurisdiction under Article  226  of  the Constitution,  and the application was allowed by a  learned Single  Judge.  An appeal therefrom under Clause 15  of  the Letters Patent was dismissed in limine. The appellants  have by special leave challenged the decision before this Court.     3.  The  ground urged on behalf of  the  assessee  which found favour with the High Court is arbitrary nature of  the date,  ’9th  of November, 1963’ mentioned  in  the  impugned clause  (a). It has been contended that the said  date  does not have any significance  whatsoever and does not bear  any rational relationship to the object sought to be achieved by the  Notification.  The learned counsel  for  the  appellant defended  the  validity  of the impugned  provision  on  the ground  that  the date (9.11.1963) was selected  because  an                                                   PG NO 1055 earlier   notification   bearing  no.   110   had   required applications  to  be  made  on  or  after  9.11.1963.   This notification  is  not  on the records of the  case  and  the learned counsel has stated th8t he has also not been able to examine the same inspite of his unsuccessful request to  the Department   concerned for a copy thereof. He has  mentioned about this notification in his argument on the basis of  the reference in the judgment of the High Court. The High  Court judgment  does  not  throw any light on the  nature  of  the notification no. 110, and the learned counsel could not draw any inference about its provisions from the judgment. It  is not  claimed that the said notification was before the  High

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Court  or  the Judges had any occasion to  examine  it.  The present  appeal was filed in 1976 and even now  the  learned counsel  for the appellants is not in a position  either  to produce  it or to tell us what it was about. The  result  is that no explanation for the choice of the date in clause (a) is forthcoming.     4. Sri V.C. Mahajan, learned counsel for the appellants, contended  that a statutory provision has necessarily to  be arbitrary in the choice of date and it cannot be  challenged on  that  ground. He relied upon the  observations  of  this Court in Union of India v. M/s Parmeswaran Match Works etc., 119751 2 SCR 573 (at page 578) as quoted below:     "To   achieve   that  purpose,  the   Government   chose September 4, 1967, as the date before which the  declaration should be filed. There can be no doubt that any date  chosen for  the  purpose would to a certain extent,  be  arbitrary. That is inevitable"     Reliance  was  also  placed on  Jagdish  Pandey  v.  The Chancellor,  University of Bihar and Another, [1968]  1  SCR 237  and U.P.M. T.S.N.A. Samiti, Varanasi v. S ate of U.  P. and  Others,  [1987] 2 SCC 453. We are afraid, the  argument has no merit and has to be rejected.     5. In Union of India v. M/s P. Match Works, (supra)  the question   related  to  concessional  rate  of  excise  duty leviable on the manufacture of match boxes. Match  factories were  classified  on the basis of their  output  during  the financial year and matches produced in different  categories of  factories were subject to varying rates   of  dutyhigher rate  being levied on matches produced in  factories  having higher  output. In pursuance of a change in the policy,  the match  factories were later classified as  mechanised  units and non-mechanised  units and by a notification dated July ’                                                   PG NO 1056 l, 1967 a concessional rate of  duty was allowed in  respect of units certified according to the provisions therein.     The  notification also contained a proviso. The  purpose of   these    provisions  was  to  grant  the   benefit   of concessional rate of  duty only to small manufacturers. This Court  while analysing  the notification observed  that  the proviso  "would  have   defeated the very  purpose   of  the notification,  namely,  the  grant of concessional  rate  of duty  only  to small manufacturers". In order to  cure  this self-defeating  position,  the notification dated  July  21, 1967  was  amended  by Notification No. 205  of  1967  dated September 4, 1967. The latter notification mentioned the 4th September,  1967  as  the cut-off date. The  attach  on  the choice of this date was met by the observations relied  upon by  the   learned  counsel for  the  appellants  and  quoted earlier.  It will be observed  that the date,  September  4, 1967, was the date on which the amending Notification itself was  issued.  The  crucial date,  therefore,  could  not  be condemned as one "taken from a hat’ . It was the date of the notification itself. A rule which makes a difference between past  and  present  cannot be  condemned  as  arbitrary  and whimsical.  In cases  where choice of date is  not  material for the object to be achieved, the provisions are  generally made  prospective  in operation. In that  sense  this  Court observed  in  M/s P. Match Works case that the  date  chosen would  to  a  certain  extent  be  arbitrary  and  this  was inevitable.  In the present case the  relevant  Notification was  dated March 1, l964 and not 9.11.1963. It is true  that as  mentioned  in  the  High  Court  judgment   some   other notification  required applications referred therein  to  be made  on  or after ’,h 11.1963, but unless  the  nature  and contents  of  that  notification  and  its  relevance   with

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reference  to the present notification are indicated, it  is futile to try to defend the choice of the date on its basis. The  appellants have miserably failed to do so.  inspite  of more than a decade available to them     6.  The  other two cases relied upon On  behalf  of  the appellants  instead of supporting their case. indicate  that the   view   taken  by  the  High  Court   is   correct   in U.P.P.M.T.S.N.A.  Samiti,Varanasi  v.  State  of  U.P..  and Others  (supra)  this Court observed in paragraph l  of  the judgment:  "The  legislature  could  not  arbitrarily  adopt January  1984, as the cut-off date ......"  After  examining the circumstances of the case it was held in paragraph 2:     "We agree with the High Court that fixation of the  date January  3  1984  for purposes  of  regularisation  was  not arbitrary or irrational but had a reasonable nexus with  the object sought to be achieved."                                                   PG NO 1057     Similarly   in   Jagdish  Pandey  v.   The   Chancellor, University of Bihar and  Another it was held:     "There is no doubt that if the dates are arbitrary, s. 4 would  be  violative of Art. 14 for then there would  be  no justification for singling out a class of teachers who  were appointed or dismissed etc. between these dates and applying s.4  to them while the rest would be out of the  purview  of that section .     The  Court then proceeded to examine the purpose of  the legislation  and the attendant circumstances and upheld  the section     7. Another learned counsel who appeared on behalf of the appellants for the final reply placed reliance on paragraphs 38,  44  and  45 of the judgment in Dr.  Sushma  Sharma  and Others  v. State of RaJasthan and Others, [1985]  SUPP.  SCC 45.  In  paragraph  38 it was said that wisdom  or  lack  of wisdom  in  the action of Government or Legislature  is  not justiciable by the Court, and to find fault with the law  is not  to  demonstrate  its invalidity. We  are  afraid,  this aspect  is  wholly  irrelevant in the  case  before  us.  In paragraph  44, the Case of Union of India v. M/s. P.  .Match Works  Ltd.,  already  discussed above.  was  mentioned.  In paragraph  45  the  case of D.S.Nakara v.  Union  of  India, [1983] I SCC 305, was distinguished in the following words:     "But  as  we have mentioned  hereinbefore,  Nakara  case dealt  with  the problem of benefit to all  pensioners.  The choice  of the date of April l. 1979 had no nexus  with  the purpose and object of the Act. The facts in the instant case are, however, different."     In  the present case also benefit of  concessional  rate was  bestowed   upon the entire group of  assesses  referred therein  and  by  clause (a) of Proviso (3)  the  group  was divided  into two classes without adopting  any  differentia having   a   rational  relation  to  the   object   of   the Notification,  and  the benefit of one class  was  withdrawn while  retaining  it  in  favour  of  the  other.  It  must, therefore,  be  held  that the impugned clause  (a)  of  the Proviso  (3) of the Notification in question is ultra  vires and the benefit allowed by Notification is available to  the entire group including the respondent.     8. We, therefore, hold, There is no merit in this appeal which is dismissed without costs. R.S.S.                              Appeal dismissed.