22 January 1971
Supreme Court
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N.B. SANJANA, ASSISTANT COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, BOMBA Vs ELPHINSTONE SPINNING & WEAVING MILLS CO. LTD.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1467 of 1967


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PETITIONER: N.B. SANJANA, ASSISTANT COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE,  BOMBAY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: ELPHINSTONE SPINNING & WEAVING MILLS CO.  LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT22/01/1971

BENCH: VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A. BENCH: VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A. SHELAT, J.M.

CITATION:  1971 AIR 2039            1971 SCR  (3) 506  CITATOR INFO :  R          1991 SC 456  (5)

ACT: Central Excise Rules, 1944, rr. 9, 10 and 10A-Scope of. ’Levy’, ’Short Levy’ ’paid’ in r. 10, meaning of.

HEADNOTE:  Under r. 8 of the Central Excise Rules, 1944, made under the  Central  Excise  and Salt Act, 1944 the  Central  Government  issued  a notification exempting cotton fabrics from  excise  duty.   The  respondents owned a textile mill  and  factory.  They  manufactured  grey cloth which- was removed  from  the  mill  and kept in a godown and later removed to the  factory  for  being processed into leather cloth which was stored  in  another  godown in the factory, from where it was taken  Out  as  finished  product.  The removal at each stage  was  done  after  filling the prescribed forms and with the  permission  of  the  Excise Inspector Incharge.  In each  of  the  forms  filled  by  the respondents upto July 30, 1960.  the  Excise  Inspector  had made an assessment showing the rate  of  duty  and  the amount of total duty payable as ’nil’.  Later,  the  excise  authorities  thought  the  goods  were  not  of  the  description exempted under the notification and on  November  3,  1961, two notices were issued calling upon  the  respon-  dents  to  make certain payments, one under r. 10A  and  the  other  under r. 9 of the Rules.  The  respondents  protested  and filed a writ petition in the High Court.  The High Court  held  that the proper rule applicable was r. 10 but that  as  the  demand  notices  were not issued within  3  months  .Is  required by that rule, the notices were illegal and void.  In appeal to this Court,  HELD  : (1) Rule 10A cannot apply when a short levy is  made  ,through error or misconstruction on the part of an  officer  as  such  a  case is specifically provided  for  by  r.  10,  because,  r.  10A deals with residuary powers and  does  not  apply  when  specific provision for collection  of  duty  is  provided or by other rules. [516 H; 517 A: 521 D]  (2)  The  proper  provision under which action  should  have  been  taken, if at all, is r. 10.  Under r. 10, when  duties  or  charges  have  been  shortlevied  through  inadvertence,  error,  collusion  or  Misconstruction on  the  part  of  an  officer, the person chargeable with the duty or charge shall  pay the deficiency on written demand being made within three

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month from     the  date  on which the duty  or  charge  was  paid.  Though the words used  are ’short-levied’ and   paid,  in order to attract r. 10 it is not necessary     that  some  amount  of duty Should have been assessed and that the  said  amount  should also have been actually paid.              It  will apply even duty later on assessed must be considered to  be the duty originally short-levied. 1519 F-G; 520 E-F;  521  D-E]  (a)  The  expression  ’levy’ is not used in the Act  or  the  Rules as meaning    actual collection, because, s. 3(1)  of’  the Act use.,,, both the ’levied’ and ’collected’. 1514 G-H]  507  (b)  The expression ’paid’ in r. 10 should not be read in  a  vacuum and it will not be right to construe it literally  as  ’actually  paid’.  The word will have to be  understood  and  interpreted  in  the context in which it  appears.   If  the  literal  construction is accepted, then in a case  where  an  assessee, in collusion, manages to have a very petty  amount  of duty assessed, he can, if he paid the amount, effectively  plead limitation of three months, but, when no duty has been  levied  there  would, be no period of limitation,  a  result  which   would   be   anomalous.    Therefore,   the   proper  interpretation  to  be placed on the  expression  ’paid’  is  ’sought to have been paid.’  (c)  This  interpretation will not cause any  difficulty  in  calculating  the  period of three months.  The Act  and  the  Rules  provide very elaborately the stage and the time  when  the  duty is to ’be paid and that must be considered  to  be  the  stage,or time when the duty ’ought to have been  paid’,  and  the  period of three months will be counted  from  that  time. [519 G-H]  Gursahai  Saigal  v.  C.I.T. Punjab,  [1963]  3  S.C.R.  893  followed,  Allen v. Thorn Electrical Industries Ltd. (1968) 1 Q.B. 487,  referred to.  (3)  Rule  9 does not also apply to the facts of  the  case.  Rule  9(1)  provides for the time and manner of  payment  of  duty.  To attract r. 9(2) the goods should have been removed  in contravention of sub-r. (1), that is, clandestinely and  without  assessment;  but  in this case  there  is  no  such  clandestine  removal without assessment.   Moreover,  sub-r.  (2)  is a penal provision applicable where there is  evasion  of payment of duty, since the party is also made liable to a  penalty and confiscation. [520 G-H; 521 A-C]  J. K.  Steel v.  Union. [1969] 2 S.C.R. 481, followed.  Therefore,  the  demands  having been made  long  after  the  expiry  of the period of three months referred to in r.  10,  the demands are not valid,

JUDGMENT:  CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1467 of 1967.  Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 1, 2, 1965  of  the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 69 of 1963.  V.   A. Seyid Muhammad and S. P. Nayar, for the appellants.  C.   K. Daphtary, Anil B. Diwan, Suresh A. Shroff, Ravinder  Narain and O. C. Mathur, for the respondent.  S. J. Sorabjee and O. C. Mathur, for the intervener.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by  Vaidialingam,  J  This  appeal by  certificate  is  directed  against the judgment and order of the Division Bench of  the  Bombay  High  Court  dated July  1/2,  1965  confirming  the  decision dated August 6/7, 1963 of the learned Single  Judge  in  Miscellaneous petition No. 20 of 1962 quashing  the  two

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notices  of  demand  dated November 3, 1961  issued  by  the  second  appellant as also the notice dated December 2,  1961  issued  by  the first appellant for payment  of  the  amount  covered by the said two notices.  The  circumstances  leading  up to the filing  of  the  writ  petition  may be mentioned.’, The respondents own a  textile  mill at  508  Elphinstone  Road,  Parel, Bombay  where  they  manufacture,  inter  alia, grey cloth.  They also have a factory  situated  at  Tulsi Pipe Lane Road, Bombay for processing  grey  cloth  into  various other .goods like leather cloth, book  binding  cloth  and other coated fabrics.  Under s. 3 of the  Central  Excise and Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter to be referred as the  Act)  duty  is Imposed on all ,excisable goods  produced  or  manufactured  in India at the rates set forth in  the  First  Schedule to the Act.  Item 19 of the First Schedule includes  cotton  fabrics.  Section 3 of the Act provides that  excise  duty is to be collected in such manner as may be  prescribed  by  rules made under the Act.  On cotton fabrics  additional  excise  duty called handloom cess is also imposed under  the  additional  Duties of Excise (Goods of  Special  Importance)  Act,   1957   and  Khadi  and  other   Handloom   Industries  Development  (Additional  Excise Duty on Cloth)  Act,  1953,  respectively.   Under  :S.  37  of  the  Act,  the   Central  Government has made rules called the Central Excise  Rules,  1944  (hereinafter  to be referred as the ,Rules).   Rule  8  gives   power  to  the  Central  Government  to  exempt   by  notification subject to such conditions as may be  specified  therein  any excisable goods from whole or any part of  duty  leviable on such goods.  Accordingly the Central  Government  issued a notification Ex.  A dated January 5, 1957 exempting  cotton  fabrics mentioned therein wholly from  excise  duty.  hem  No.  2,  related  to ’leather  cloth  and  inferior  or  imitation  leather cloth ordinarily .Used in book  binding’.  The exemption granted in respect of this item and  another  item  was  withdrawn by the Central Government  with  effect  from  July  30, 1960 by notification Ex.  D dated  July  29,  1960.  There  does not appear to have been any  controversy  before  the  High Court that the two notices dated November 3,  1961  and the notice dated December 2, 1961 related only to  goods  falling  under item No. 2. of the notification Ex.   A.  The  respondents   between  July  4,  1958  and  July  30,   1960  manufactured grey cloth in the textile mill and sent some of  those  items  to  their  factory  for  being  processed  and  manufactured into leather cloth and imitation leather cloth.  During  the material period the company used to  manufacture  grey,  cloth  and  used to store them in  a  bonded  godown.  Periodically  they  used to send to the factory  such  quan-  tities  of grey cloth as were required after filling in  the  necessary forms prescribed by the rules and after  obtaining  the  necessary  permission in the manner prescribed  by  the  rules  from  the Excise Inspector Incharge  of  the  textile  mill.   The  respondents  had,  however,  not  obtained  the  requisite licence and so they paid excise duty on grey-cloth  manufactured  in their mill during the period July  4,  1958  and   July   30,  1960  manufactured  grey  cloth   in   the  manufacturing  leather  cloth  and  imitation  cloth.    The  respondents later on obtained the necessary licence with the  result that  509  they  became entitled to remove the grey-cloth  manufactured  at their textile mill to their factory without paying excise  duty  on  the  grey-cloth at the time when  the  goods  were

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removed.  The grey-cloth so removed after September 30, 1959  and  before  July  30, 1960 used to be kept  in  the  bonded  godown.   Those  goods  were removed to  the  factory  after  filling up the necessary forms and obtaining the  permission  of the Excise Inspector Incharge of the factory.  The  grey-  cloth after it was processed and made into leather cloth  or  imitation  leather cloth was again stored in another  bonded  godown  in the factory and they were removed by the  company  as finished products after filling in form A.R.I. prescribed  by  the  rules.  There is again no dispute that in  each  of  these A.R.I. forms the company had shown and made a declara-  tion  that the excise duty payable on the goods governed  by  the   forms  was  ’nil’.   Under  the  heading   ’Assessment  Memorandum.’ in the said form the particulars regarding rate  of  duty  and  amount of total duty  payable  on  the  goods  referred  to in the form had to be filled up and  signed  by  the Excise Inspector.  There is no controversy that in  each  of  the  A.O.1. forms filed by the  respondents  during  the  period July 4, 1958 and July 30, 1960, the Excise  Inspector  Incharge,  Leather Cloth Division has made an assessment  in  the  appropriate portion of those forms showing the rate  of  duty  and the amount of total duty payable as "nil’ and  has  affixed  his signature under such  ’Assessment  Memorandum’.  Therefore,  it  will be seen that all the goods  removed  by  the,  respondents during the said period were shown by  them  as not liable to pay any excise duty and were also  assessed  by the Excise Inspector as not liable to pay any duty.  Later on, the excise authorities appear to have  entertained  some  doubt whether the goods covered by these A.R.I.  forms  were  of  the description exempted under item No. 2  of  the  notification Ex.  A. Some correspondence took place  between  the  department and the respondents. On November  3,  1961,  the  second appellant issued two notices marked Ex.  G.  The  first notice- issued under rule 10A required the respondents  to  pay  a sum of Rs. 1,07,146,39.  In  the  particulars  of  demand  it  was stated that the amount represented  duty  on  leather  cloth manufactured out of (i) non-duty  paid  cloth  and  (ii)  duty paid cloth cleared without payment  of  duty  from October 1, 1959 to March 31, 1960.  The second notice of the same day issued under rule 9 called  upon   the  respondents  to  pay  a  sum  of  Rs.   1,502,24  representing  the  extra processing duty  on  leather  cloth  manufactured  out  of duty paid cloth from July 4,  1958  to  September 30, 1959.  These  two notices were followed by the first  appellant  by  issuing  a letter of demand dated December 2, 1961, Ex.   H,  calling  510  upon the respondents to pay up the amount as per the  notice  issued  by  the  second  appellant.   The  respondents  were  advised  that if they are aggrieved with the  decision  they  may  go  up in appeal to the Collector  of  Central  Excise,  Bombay.   The  respondents sent a reply dated  December  28,  1961  Ex.   I,  contesting validity  of  the  notices  dated  November 3, 1961 and December 2, 1961.  They objected to the  demand  on  the  ground that the notices  were  illegal  and  neither rule 9 nor rule 10A gave power to the authorities to  issue such notices.  They further contended that the demands  were  barred  by  time.  The respondents  also  addressed  a  letter on the same lines to the Central Board of Revenue.  As  there  was no favourable response  from  the  appellants  they,   filed  the  writ  petition,  out  of   which   these  proceedings arise, in the High Court to quash Exhibits G and  H.  The respondents contended before the High Court that neither

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rule  9 nor rule 10A gave power to the appellants  to  issue  the  demand notices.  Their stand was that if at all it  was  rule 10 that applied and as the demands have been made  long  after  the  period of three months prescribed  in  the  said  rule, the notices were illegal and void.  On behalf of the appellants it was urged that rule 10 has no  application  as  that rule will apply only when  duties  and  charges  have been ’short levied’.  As initially  no  amount  has  been levied in this case, rule 10 has  no  application.  According  to  the appellants the rule applicable  was  rule  10A.   Alternatively it was contended that if rule I OA  did  not  apply, the demands made by them were amply  covered  by  rule 9(2).  The learned Single Judge accepted the contention of the res-  pondents  and  held that rule 10 applied and as  the  demand  notices  had  been  issued long after the  expiry  of  three  months,  Ex.  G and H, the notices, were illegal  and  void.  In  this  view  the learned Single Judge  quashed  the  said  notices.   On appeal the Division Bench confirmed the  order  of the learned Single Judge.  This is a convenient stage to refer to the relevant  rules.  They  are  rules  7, 9, 10, 10A, 52  and  52A(1).   We  have  already  referred to the fact that the rules have been  made  by  the  Central Government under S. 37 of the  Act.   Those  rules, referred to above, are as follows :  "(7) Recovery of Duty :-Every person who produces, cures, or  manufactures any excisable goods, or who stores, such  goods  in  a  warehouse, shall pay the duty or duties  leviable  on  such goods, at such time and place and to such person as may  be designated, in or   511  under  the authority of these Rules whether the  payment  of  such duty or duties is secured by bond or otherwise.  (9)  Time and manner of payment of duty:-  (1)  No  excisable  goods shall be removed  from  any  place  where  they  are  produced, cured  or  manufactured  or  any  premises appurtenant thereto, which may be specified by  the  Collector  in this behalf, whether for consumption,  export,  or  manufacture  of any other commodity in or  outside  such  place, until the excise duty leviable thereon has been  paid  at  such place and in such manner as is prescribed in  these  Rules  or  as  the  Collector  may  require  and  except  on  presentation  of  an application in the proper form  and  on  obtaining the permission of the proper officer on the form;  Provided that such goods may be deposited without payment of  duty  in a store-room or other place of storage approved  by  the  Collector  under rule 27 or rule 47 or in  a  warehouse  appointed  or  licensed under rule 140 or  may  be  exported  under bond as provided in rule 13;  Provided  further that such ’goods may be removed  on  part-  payment of duty leviable thereon if the Central  Government,  by notification in the Official Gazette, allow the goods  to  be so removed under rule 49;  Provided  also that the Collector may, if he fit instead  of  requiring  payment  of  duty in  respect  of  each  separate  consignment  of  goods removed from the  place  or  premises  specified in this behalf, or from a store-room or  warehouse  duly  approved, appointed or licensed by him keep  with  any  person  dealing  in  such goods an  account-current  of  the  duties payable thereon and such account shall be settled  at  internal,  not  exceeding one month and  the  account-holder  shall  periodically make deposit therein sufficient  in  the  opinion of the Collector to cover the duty due on the  goods  intended to be removed from the place of production, curing,  manufacture or storage.

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(2)  If  any excisable goods are, in contravention  of  sub-  rule (i) deposited in, or removed from, any place  specified  therein, the producer or manufacturer thereof shall pay  the  duty leviable on such goods upon written demand made by  the  proper officer, whether such demand is delivered  personally  to him, or is left at his dwelling house, and shall also  be  liable to a penalty which  512  may  extend to two thousand rupees, and such goods shall  be  liable to confiscation.  (10) Recovery   of  duties  or  charges   short-levied,   or  erroneously refunded-  When  duties  or  charges  have  been  short-levied  through  inadvertence,  error, collusion or mis-construction  on  the  part  of  an  officer, or through  misstatement  as  to  the  quantity, description or value of such goods on the part  of  the  owner,  or when any such duty or charge,  after  having  been  levied, has been owing to any such cause,  erroneously  refunded, the person chargeable with the duty or charge,  so  short-levied,  or to whom such refund has  been  erroneously  made, shall pay the deficiency or pay the amount paid to him  in  excess,  as the case may be, on written  demand  by  the  proper officer being made within three months from the  date  on  which  the duty or charge was paid or  adjusted  in  the  owners  account-current, if any, or from the date of  making  the refund.  (10-A)  Residuary  powers  for  recovery  of  sums  due   to  Government-  Where these Rules do not make any specific provision for the  collection of any duty, or of any deficiency in duty if  the  duty  has for any reason been short levied, or of any  other  sum of any kind payable to the Central Government under  the  Act  or  these Rules, such duty, deficiency in duty  or  sum  shall,  on a written demand made by the proper  officer,  be  paid  to  such  person and at such time and  place,  as  the  proper officer may specify.  (52) Clearance on payment duty-  When the manufacturer desires to remove goods on payment  of  duty,  either  from the place or a premise  specified  under  rule  9  or  from a store-room or  other  place  of  storage  approved  by  the  Collector under rule 47,  he  shall  make  application in triplicate (unless otherwise by rule or order  required) to the proper officer in the proper Form and shall  deliver  it  to the officer at least twelve hours  (or  such  other  period  as  may be elsewhere  prescribed  or  as  the  Collector  may  in  any particular case  require  or  allow)  before it is intended to remove the goods.  The  officer, shall, thereupon, assess the amount  of  duty  due on the goods and on production of evidence   513  that this sum has been paid into the Treasury or paid in the  account of the Collector in the Reserve Bank of India or the  State Bank of India, or has been despatched to the  Treasury  by money-order shall allow the goods to be cleared.  52A-(1) Goods to be delivered on a Gatepass-  No excisable goods shall be delivered from a factory  except  under a gatepass in the proper Form or in such other form as  the  Collector may in any particular case or class of  cases  prescribe   signed   by  the  owner  of  the   factory   and  countersigned by the proper officer.."  Dr. Syed Mohammad, learned counsel for the appellants  urged  that  going by a plain reading of rule 10, it is clear  that  the said rule  will  apply  only  to cases  :  (1)  when  an  assessment  has been made that same amount is due as  duty  and(2) when the said amount so assessed has been paid by the

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party  concerned.  In this case, he pointed out,  there  has  been, no doubt, an order of assessment passed when the goods  were cleared by the party, but that order of assessment  was  not  one  making the party liable to pay any  duty,  on  the  other hand, it was an order of ’nil assessment’ under  which  the party was to pay no duty whatsoever.  In consequence  of  such  assessment,  no duty having been paid,  it  cannot  be  stated  that  there  has been a short levy for  any  of  the  reasons  mentioned  in rule 10.  According  to  the  learned  counsel  rule  10  will apply only when there  has  been  an  assessment  making  the party liable to pay some  ,duty  and  that  amount  so  assessed has also been  actually  paid  or  adjusted by the party, as the case may be.  When later on it  is  found that the amount so levied and paid falls short  of  the  correct amount that ought to have been levied and  paid  by  the  ,party,  rule 10 will  stand  attracted.   In  this  connection  he placed very great reliance on the  concluding  part  of  rule 10 where a period of three months by  way  of  limitation  has been provided for calling upon the party  to  pay  the deficiency and the period of three months is to  be  calculated  "from the date on which the duty or  charge  was  paid...... He stressed that the use of the expression "paid"  clearly  indicates  that some duty must have  been  actually  paid  by a party on a particular date and if that  were  not  so,  it would be difficult to calculate the period of  three  months within which a party can be called upon to make  good  the deficiency.  The counsel also urged that the word ’levy’  in  rule  1 0 means actual collection and that  short  levy,  therefore,  denotes that full duty has not  been  collected.  He also urged that rule 10A covers all cases of short  levy  or non-levy for any reason whatsoever and the notices issued  by  the  appellants in this case are legal  and  valid.   He  finally urged that even if it is held that rule 10A does not  514  apply  , the notices could be sustained under rule  9(2)  in  as  much  the  respondents have removed  the  goods  without  payment  of  duty in contravention of rule 9(1).   The  mere  fact  that  one of the notices issued on  November  3,  1961  refers  to rule 10A is not ,on that ground invalid when  the  authorities have ample., power to issue, such notices under  rule 9(2).  Mr.  Daphtary, learned Counsel for the respondents  and  Mr.  Sorabjee,  learned  counsel  for an  intervener,  have  both  contended that the notices issued by the appellants squarely  come  under rule 10 and as they have been issued beyond  the  period  of three months, they have been rightly held  to  be  invalid  and  illegal.  ’Though the words used  in  rule  10  "duty or charge so paid", reading the rule as a whole it  is  clear  that  the rule does not contemplate that  any  amount  should  have been levied as a duty and that the said  amount  should  have been paid.  ’Me word "paid" has only been  used  to  provide a starting point of limitation of three  months.  Though the ordinary meaning of the expression "paid" is that  some amount should have been actually paid as such, both the  counsel pointed out, that the said word should be  construed  in the context in which it appears.  So read, it is  pointed  out that the proper interpretation to be placed on the  word  "paid" is that it has been used to denote the stage or  time  when  the duty or ,charge ought to have been paid.   Such  a  reading  will not do any violence to the language  of  rule  10.   It is further pointed out that the  expression  "short  levied" in rule 10 will cover cases not only levy of smaller  amount  that what is due but also of making the party  not  liable to pay any duty.  In one case the short-levy will ’be  the difference of the amount actually levied and the correct

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amount due; and in the other case the short levy will be the  entire amount of duty that is found to be actually due by  a  party.   Ile counsel further pointed out that rule 10A  will  apply  only to those ,cases where no specific provision  for  collection  of duty or any deficiency in duty has been  made  by  the rules and that will apply also to any other sum  of.  any  other kind payable to the Central Government under  the  Act or the Rules.  In this case, as the party admittedly has  been  assessed to ’nil duty’ by the officers  concerned  and  allowed  to  remove the goods, the  specific  provision  for  recovery  of any short-levy is specifically provided for  by  rule  10,  which will exclude rule 10A.  On  these  grounds,  both  the ,counsel urged, that the High Court was  right  in  holding  that  rule 10 applies and that the  notices  having  been  issued beyond the period of three months  are  illegal  and invalid.  We  are  not inclined to accept the contention of  Dr.  Syed  Mohammad that the expression ’levy’ in rule 10 means  actual  collection  of some amount.  The charging provision  section  3(i) specifically says "There shall be levied and  collected  in such, a  515  manner as may be prescribed ’the duty of excise...... It  is  to  be noted that sub-section (i) uses both the  expressions  ,levied  and  collected"  and that  clearly  show  that  the  expression "levy" has not been used in the Act or the  Rules  as  meaning  actual collection.  Dr.  Syed.Mohammad  is,  no  doubt, well founded in his contention that if the appellants  have  power  to issue notice either under rule 10A  or  rule  9(2),  the  fact that the notice refers  specifically  to  a  particular rule, which may not be  applicable, will not make  the  notice  invalid on that ground as has be held  by  this  Court in J. K. Steel Ltd. v. Union of India(1) :  If  the  exercise of a power can be traced to  a  legitimate  source,  the fact that the same was purported to  have  been  exercised  under  a  different power does  not  vitiate  the  exercise, of the power in question.  This is a well  settled  proposition  of  law.   In  this  connection  reference  may  usefully  be  made  to the decisions of  this  Court  in  B.  Balakotaiah  v. The Union of India and ors  (2  ) and  Afzal  Ullah v. State of U.P.(3).  In  this  case, the officer who issued the  two  notices  is  competent to make demands under both rules 9(2) and rule 10-  A.   But  in  order to sustain the validity  of  the  demand  either  under  rule 9(2) or rule 10-A, the  appellants  will  have  to  go further and establish that the demands  can  be  justified under either of the rules.  Before  we deal with the contentions of the learned  counsel  we may state that rule 10-A was incorporated because of  the  decision  of  the  Nagpur High Court  in  Messrs  Chhotabhai  Jethabhai Patel v. Union of India(4).  The assessees in that  case were a firm of tobacco merchants and manufacturers  of  bidis  holding licence under the Central Excise  Rules.   On  the  introduction  in Parliament of Bill No. 13 of  1951  on  February 28, 1951, the assessees paid the requisite duty  on  tobacco  stored by them under the declared provision  read  with sections 3 and 4 of the Provincial Collection of  Taxes  Act, 1931.  The assessees cleared tobacco from the warehouse  between  March 1, 1951 and April 28, 1951,  after  obtaining  clearance  certificates  from  the  Range  Officer,  Central  Excise.  The rate of duty payable on un-manufactured tobacco  was increased by the Finance Act of 1951. On June 4, 1951 a  demand was made by the Range Officer, Central Excise at  the  increased  rate and the assessees therein were asked to  pay  the  said  increase.  The assessees  challenged  the  demand

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before the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution  on  various  grounds.  The Nagpur High Court held that  rule  10  did not apply and that the demand was invalid.  (1)  [1969] 2 S.C.R.481.  (3)  [1964] 4 S.C.R. 991.  (2)  [1958] S.C.R 1052.  (4)  I.L.R. [1952] Nag., 156.  516  After  the  decision of the Nagpur High Court,  the  Central  Government by a notification dated December 8, 1951  amended  the Central Excise Rules, 1944 by the addition of a new rule  10-A.   On  the basis of this rule in respect  of  the  same  assessees a further and fresh demand was made for payment of  duty   as  per’  the  Finance  Act,  1951.   The   assessees  challenged the validity of the demand on the same ground  as  before.   The Full Bench of the Nagpur High  Court  rejected  the  assessees’ contention and held that rule 10A  covers  a  case  for  increased levy on the basis of a change  of  law.  This decision was sought to be challenged before this  Court  but  without any success.  In fact this Court in  Chhotabhai  Jethabhai Patel and Co. v. The Union of India and another(1)  specifically  rejected the assessees’ claim  regarding  non-  applicability   of  rule  10A  stating  that  it  had   been  specifically designed "for the enforcement of a demand  like  the  one  arising in the circumstances of  the  case".   The  decision  of this Court is an illustration of certain  types  of cases to which rule 10-A will apply.  This  now takes us to the question of proper  interpretation  to be placed on the expression "short-levied" and "paid"  in  rule 10.  Does the expression "short-levied" mean that  some  amount  should have been levied as duty as contended by  Dr.  Syed Mohammad or will that expression cover even cases where  the  assessment  is  of  ’nil duty’,  as  contended  by  Mr.  Daphtary.  What is the meaning of the word "paid" in rule 10  ? It is contended on behalf of the appellants that it  means  "actually paid", whereas, according to the respondents’,  it  means "ought to have been paid".  Taken literally, the  word  "paid"  does mean actually paid in cash.  That means that  a  party  or  an assessee must have paid some  amount  of  duty  whatever may be the quantum.  If this literal interpretation  is placed on the expression "paid" in rule it is needless to  state that it will support in a large measure the contention  of  Dr. Syed Mohmmad that rule 10 contemplates a  short-levy  in  the  sense  ,that the amount which falls  short  of  the  correct amount has been assessed and actually paid.  In  our  opinion,  the  expression  "paid" should not be  read  in  a  vacuum  and it will not be right to construe the  said  word  literally,  which means actually paid.  That word will  have  to be understood and interpretted in the context in which it  appears  in order to discover its appropriate  meaning.   If  this  is  appreciated and the context is  considered  it  is  apparent  that there is an ambiguity in the meaning  of  the  word "paid".  It must be remembered that rule 10 deals  with  recovery  of duties or charges short levied  or  erroneously  refunded.  The expression "paid" has been used to denote the  starting  point of limitation of three months for the  issue  of a written demand.  The Act and the  (1) [1962] Supp. [2] S.C.R. 1.   517  Rules  provide  in great detail the stage at which  and  the  time when the excise duty is to be paid by a party.  If  the  literal  construction  that  the  amount  should  have  been  actually paid is accepted, then in case like the present one  on  hand when no duty has been levied, the  Department  will  not  be  able to take any action under rule 10.   Rule  10-A

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cannot  apply  when a short-levy is made. through  error  or  misconstruction on the part of an officer, as such a case is  specifically provided by rule 10, Therefore, in our opinion,  the  proper  interpretation to be placed on  the  expression  "’paid"   is   "ought   to  have  been   paid".    Such   an  interpretation  has  been placed on  the  expression  "paid"  occuring in certain otherenactments as in Gursahai Saigal v.  Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab(") and in Allen v.  Thorn  Electrical  Industries Ltd. (2 . In Gursahai Saigal  v.  The  Commissioner  of Income-tax, Punjab(1), the  question  arose  as-  follows : In certain assessment proceedings  under  the  Indian  Income-tax Act, 1922, an assessee was  charged  with  interest under subsection (8) of s. 18A of that Act.   Under  that sub-section interest calculated in the manner laid down  in  sub-section  (6) of s. 18A was to be added  to  the  tax  assessed.   Sub-section  3 of s. 18A dealt with cases  of  a  person who has not been assessed before and he was  required  to  make his own estimate of the tax payable by him and  pay  accordingly.   Sub-section (3) of s. 18A was  applicable  to  the  assessee in that case.  However, he  neither  submitted  any  estimate  nor did he pay any advance tax.   Under  sub-  section’ (6) of s. 18A it was provided :  "Where  in  any  year an assessee has paid  tax  under  sub-  section  (2)  or  sub-section (3) on the basis  of  his  own  estimate,  and the tax so paid is less than eighty Per  cent  of  the  tax determined on the basis of  regular  assessment  simple  interest at the rate of six per cent per annum  from  the  1st day of January in the financial year in’ which  the  tax  was paid up to the date of the said regular  assessment  shall  be payable by the assessee upon the amount  by  which  the tax so paid falls short of the said eighty per cent."  This  sub-section  is to apply to cases where tax  has  been  paid’ by an assessee according to his own estimate but  that  estimate  was on regular assessment found to  be  deficient.  Further,  interest has to be calculated from 1st January  of  the  Financial Year in which tax mentioned therein was  paid  and calculation has to be made on the short fall between the  amount paid and eighty. per cent of’ the tax which was found  payable  on  regular assessment.  Subsection (8) of  s.  18A  provided :  (1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 893.             (2) 1968 1 .Q.B. 487.  518  .lm15  "where,  on  making the regular  assessment  the  Income-tax  Officer  finds  that  no payment of tax  has  been  made  in  accordance  with the foregoing provisions of  this  section,  interest  calculated in the manner laid down in  sub-section  (6) shall be added to the tax as determined on the basis  of  the regular assessment."  The  assessee  in  that  case  did  not  dispute  that  sub-  section(3) ,of s. 18A applied to him and that he should have  made  an  estimate and paid advance tax.  He  also  admitted  that  he never made an estimate nor did he pay  any  advance  tax whatsoever.  While admitting that sub-section (8) of  s.  18-A  applied  to him, the assessee  contended  before  this  Court  that since he had not paid any tax at all, it is  not  possible  to calculate interest in the manner laid  down  in  sub-section  (6).  According to the assessee ’there  was  no  1st day of January of a financial year in which the tax  was  paid  and  there  was no question of a  short  fall  between  eighty per cent of the tax payable on regular assessment and  the  ,amount  paid  because he.  had  paid  nothing.   While  rejecting the said contention this Court held :  "The proper way to deal with such a provision is to give  it  an  interpretation  which,  to use the words  of  the  Privy

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Council   in  Mahairam  Kamjidas’s  (case)  (1)  makes   the  machinery  workable utres valeat potius quam  pereat".   We,  therefore,  think  that  we  should  read  sub-section   (6)  according  to  the  provision of which interest  has  to  be  calculated  as provided in subsection (8) in a manner  which  makes it workable and thereby prevent the clear intention of  sub-section (8) being defeated.  Now, how is that best done?  As we have earlier said sub-section (6) deals with a case in  which tax has been paid and therefore it says that  interest  would,  be  calculated "from the 1st day of January  in  the  financial  year in which the tax was paid".  This  obviously  cannot literally be applied to a case where no tax has  been  paid.   If  however the portion of subsection (6)  which  we  have  quoted above is read as "from the 1 st day of  January  in  the financial year in which the tax ought to  have  beep  paid",  the  provision becomes workable.  It  would  not  be  doing  too much violence to the words used to read  them  in  this  way.  The tax ought to have been paid on one or  other  of  the  dates earlier mentioned.  The  intention  was  that  interest should be charged from January 1, of the  financial  year in which the tax ought to have been paid.  Those,   519  who paid the tax but a smaller amount and those who did  not  pay  tax  at  all would then be put  in  the  same  position  substantially  which  is  obviously  fair  and  was  clearly  intended."  Regarding  the  further contention that there was  no  short  fall, as no tax has been paid it was observed :  "With  regard  to the other question about  there  being  no  shortfall between eighty per cent of the amount of tax found  payable on the regular assessment and the amount of tax paid  in a case where no tax was paid, it seems to us the position  is  much  simpler.  If no tax is paid, the  amount  of  such  shortfall will naturally be the entire eighty per cent.   We  also  think that the case before us is very near to  Allen’s        case.(1)"  The above decision establishes two propositions : (1) though  the  expression  used was "paid" it is open to  read  it  as  "ought  to have been paid" having regard to the  context  in  which  it appears and to make the provision of law in  which  that  expression  appears workable; and (2) the  short  fall  will  be the entire eighty per cent referred  to  subsection  (6) of s. 18A.  Applying  the  above  principles to the case  on  hand,  the  expression  "paid"  in  rule 10 can be  reasonably  read  as  "ought  to have been paid".  Similarly even in  cases  where  there  has been a nil assessment due to one or other of  the  circumstances  mentioned in, rule 10 and if subsequently  it  is  found  that duty is payable, then the entire  amount  of  duty  should be considered to have been  short-levied.   The  literal meaning of the expression "paid" as actually paid in  cash  has again not been adopted by the Court of  Appeal  in  Allen v. Thorn Electrical Industries Ltd.(2). Having  regard  to the context in which the said expression appeared in  the  particular  provision which came up for interpretation,  the  Court of Appeal construed the expression to mean "contracted  to be paid".  Therefore, the contention of Mr. Daphtary that  the expression "Paid" should be construed as "ought to  have  been  paid"  and even when no duty has  been  assessed,  the  entire duty when subsequently assessed will be a short-levy,  which  is  also supported by the decision of this  Court  in  Gursahai Saigal v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Puniab(3) has  to  be accepted.  It follows that in order to  attract  rule  10,  it  is not necessary that some amount of’  duty  should  have been assessed and that the said amount should have also

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been actually paid.  That provision will apply even to cases  where  there  has been a nil assessment in  which  case  the  entire  duty later on assessed must be considered to be  the  duty  (1) 22 T.C. 15, 16, 17.  (2) [1968] 1 Q.B. 487.  (3) [1963] 3 S.C. R. 893.  520  originally  short-levied.   There is also no  difficulty  in  calculating  the  period of three months.   As  pointed  out  above,  the Act and the Rules provide very  elaborately  the  stage  and the time when the duty is to be paid and if  that  is  so that must be considered to be the stage or time  when  the  duty  ought to have been paid and if so the  period  of  three  months will run from the time when the duty ought  to  have been paid.  Dr.  Syed Mohammad referred us to certain decisions  of  the  High Courts where a demand has been sustained under rule  10  or  rule 10A.  We have considered those decisions.  In  some  of  those decisions there has been a short-levy due  to  the  reasons  mentioned in rule 10 and the demand also  has  been  issued  within  the  period of three months  and  hence  the  notice had been sustained under rule 10.  In other cases, it  was specifically held that the demand covered by the  notice  issued under rule 10A has not been specifically provided for  by  any  other  rule and the demand  therefore,  was  valid.  These  decisions,  in  our opinion, do  not  in  any  manner  advance  the case of the appellants and we do not  think  it  necessary to deal with them individually.  We  may point out that if the contention of Dr. Syed  Moham-  mad  that  in order to constitute  short-Levy,  some  amount  should have been assessed as payable by way of duty so as to  make  rule  10 applicable, is accented the  result  will  be  rather  anamolous.  For instance if due to collusion  (which  means  collusion  between  a party and  an  officer  of  the  Department)  a sum of Rs. 2/- is managed to be  assessed  by  way of duty when really more than thousand times that amount  is payable anD if the smaller amount of duty so assessed has  been  paid, the Department will have to take  action  within  three  months for payment of the proper amount of duty.   On  the  other hand, if due to collusion again an order  of  nil  assessment is passed, in which case no duty would have  been  paid,  according to the appellants rule 10A will apply.   We  do  not  see any reason to distinguish the above  two  cases  one’ ’from the other.  Both are cases of collusion and if an  assessee in collusion manages to have a petty amount of duty  assessed  and  paid he can effectively plead  limitation  of  three  months under rule 10.  Whereas in the same  case  of  collusion  where  no duty has been levied there will  be  no  period  of limitation.  In our opinion, that will not  be  a  proper  interpretation to be placed on rule 10A by  us.   By  the  interpretation  placed by us on rule 10,  the  position  will be that an assessee who has been assessed to a  smaller  amount  as well as an assessee who has been assessed to  nil  duty will all be put on a par and that is what is  intended  by rule 10.  The  above reasoning leads to the conclusion that  rule  10A  ,does  not apply to the case on hand.  Then the question  is  whether  521  the  demands could be justified under rule 9(2).  Even  here  we  find considerable,- difficulty in sustaining the  notice  under  this rule.  Sub-rule (1) of rule 9 provides  for  the  time and the manner of payment of duty.  In this case  there  is  no controversy that whenever goods were cleared  by  the

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respondents,  necessary  applications had been made  to  the  officer  concerned  and  the latter  had  passed  orders  of  assessment  to nil duty.  To attract sub-rule 2 of  rule  9,  the goods should have been removed in contravention of  sub-  rule  (1).   It is not the case of the appellants  that  the  respondents  have not complied with the provisions  of  sub-  rule 1. We are of the opinion that in order to attract  sub-  rule 2, the goods should have been removed clandestinely and  without   assessment.   In  this  case  there  is  no   such  clandestine removal without assessment.  On the other  hand,  goods  had been removed with the express permission  of  the  Excise  authorities and after order of assessment was  made.  No  doubt  the duty payable under the assessment  order  was  nil.   That, in our opinion, will not bring the  case  under  sub-rule  (2).   That sub-rule (2) is a penal  provision  is  shown  from the fact that apart from the duty  payable,  the  party  is also made liable to a penalty and he  also  incurs  the  risk  of the goods being confiscated.  That  rule  9(2)  applies  only to cases where there has been an evasion  from  payment of duty is clear from the decision of this Court  in  J.  K. Steel Ltd. v. Union of India(1).  Though  on  certain  other  aspects  there was a difference of view  amongst  the  learned  Judges, on this aspect the decision  is  unanimous.  There  is  absolutely no material placed before  us  by  the  appellants  which  would justify the issue,  of  the  notice  under rule 9(2).  To  conclude  rule  10A  does  not  apply  as  the  specific  provision  for  collection  of duty to cases  like  the  one  before us is specifically provided by rule 10 nor does  rule  9(2) apply to the case on hand.  The proper provision  under  which  action should have been taken if at all is  rule  10.  The  demands  having  admittedly been made  long  after  the  expiry  of  the period of three months, referred to  in  the  said rule, it follows that the demands were not valid.   The  High Court was justified in striking down the notices  dated  November 3, 1961 Ex.  G as well as the demand dated December  2, 1961 under Et.  H.  The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.  V.P.S.                                                Appeal  dismissed.  (1) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 481.  522