19 September 2005
Supreme Court
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R.C. Tobacco Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. etc. Vs Union of India & Ors.

Bench: RUMA PAL,TARUN CHATTERJEE
Case number: Transfer Case (civil) 27 of 2004


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CASE NO.: Transfer Case (civil)  27 of 2004

PETITIONER: R.C. Tobacco Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. etc.                       

RESPONDENT: Union of India & Ors.                                     

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/09/2005

BENCH: Ruma Pal & Tarun Chatterjee

JUDGMENT: J U D G M E N T WITH C.A. Nos. 881-896/2004 TC ) Nos.23- 26 of 2004, 28-36 of 2004, TP ) No. 151 of 2004

RUMA PAL, J.

The dispute in these matters arises out of an exemption  which had been granted by the Central Government to new  industries by Notification No. 32/99-CE dated 8th July 1999  issued under Section 5A of the Central Excise Act, 1944  (referred to hereafter as ’the Act’).  The parties in the various  proceedings which are being disposed of by this judgment,  represent industries manufacturing cigarettes on the one hand  (whom we will refer to as "the petitioners") and the Union of  India and the excise authorities on the other (who are described  as "the respondents").  Almost all the petitioners are job  workers for large tobacco companies.  They set up their units  under agreements with the large tobacco companies and  admittedly produced the cigarettes with the brand names of  those companies.  The few exceptions to this are noted  subsequently.  In December, 1997 the Government of India had  announced  a separate industrial policy for the North Eastern  Region of the country which proposed to stimulate ’synergetic’  development of industries in the region by giving a package of  incentives which included exemption from excise duties,  transport subsidies, capital investment subsidies, interest  subsidies and other benefits.   Pursuant to this policy, a number of notifications were  issued by the concerned Ministries in the Government, the  relevant ones for our purpose being the Excise Notifications  Nos. 32/99 and  33/99 dated 8th July 1999  by which diverse  benefits were given.  Briefly stated, under the first notification all  excisable goods were exempt from duty under the Act if the  goods were produced  by new industrial units which  commenced their commercial production on or after               24th December 1997 and were located in defined areas  specified in the annexure to the notification.   The benefit was  given for a period of 10 years from the date of publication of the  notification or from the date of the commencement of  commercial production whichever was later.   The second  notification exempted goods produced in specified industries  located in areas outside the growth centres.  The procedure  envisaged  for obtaining the exemption under both notifications  was that the manufacturer of goods in such industrial units

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would have to pay excise duty and subsequently claim refund  from the excise authorities.   A notification was issued on 31st December 1999, being  Notification No. 45 of 1999 withdrawing the excise exemption to  cigarettes. However, the exemption was re-introduced on          17th January 2000 by  Notification No. 1 of 2001. The petitioners set up units in a specified growth centre  and claimed the benefit of Notification No. 32/99. This was  allowed to them initially for the first few months.  However, from  July to October 2000 although some of the petitioners made  payment of the excise duty, they were not refunded the amount.  Being aggrieved, the petitioners filed writ petitions before the  Gauhati High Court. An interim order was passed by the High  Court on 19.1.2001 directing the provisional refund of the  excise duty by the respondents to the petitioners. Although the  exemption was finally withdrawn  in respect of cigarettes by  Notification No. 1/2001 dated 22nd January 2001, the  respondents’ prayer for vacating the interim order was rejected  by the High Court by its order dated 8.2.2001.  While extending  the time for the respondents to comply with the interim order,  the High Court directed that in  verifying the claims for refund,  the State Government could not interfere with the exercise of  powers of the excise authorities but made it clear that: "This is not to say that the concerned  Assistant Commissioner or the Deputy  Commissioner of Central Excise Department  cannot take in to account any material  furnished by the State Govt. authorities in  deciding as to whether exemption is due to a  manufacturer claiming refund under the said  Notification.  He may consider such material  but the judgment will be that of the Assistant  Commissioner or the Deputy Commissioner of  Central Excise Department on the question as  to whether the amount claimed by the  manufacturer under the said Notification is  entitled to exemption and refund under the  Notification".   Relying on these observations separate orders were  passed by the Assistant Commissioner rejecting the claims for  refund of the petitioners for the months of July 2000 to January  2001 and also ordering recovery of the amounts already  refunded during April to June 2000 forthwith.   He found that no unit without a Permanent Registration  Certificate (PMT) issued by the Directorate of Industries &  Commerce, Government of Assam could "legally" go into  commercial production and that the earlier order of refund  passed "on the basis of such misinformation &  misrepresentation of fact with regard to the date of commercial  commencement of production would also be unjust/incorrect  and devoid of ’legal sanction".   The pending  writ petitions  were amended to incorporate  a challenge to this order. The writ petitions were allowed by the  learned Single Judge on 17th May 2002 who held that the  petitioners were entitled to refund of excise duty on the  cigarettes manufactured from the date of commercial  production till the date the benefit was withdrawn by the Central  Government in January 2001.  The judgment was affirmed on  4th April 2003 by the Division Bench in the writ appeal filed by  the Union of India.  The Union of India has challenged the  decision before us in the above noted appeals. Immediately after the decision of the Division Bench of  the Gauhati High Court, Section 154 of the Finance Act, 2003  was enacted by Parliament.  The section reads as follows:

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"154.Amendment of notifications issued  under Section 5-A of the Central Excise  Act.-(1) The notifications of the Government  of India in the Ministry of Finance (Department  of Revenue)Nos.G.S.R.508(E), dated the       8th July, 1999 and G.S.R.509(E), dated the     8th July, 1999, issued under sub-section (1) of  Section 5-A of the Central Excise Act read  with sub-section (3) of Section 3 of the  Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special  importance)Act, 1957 and sub-section (3) of  Section 3 of the Additional Duties of Excise  (Textiles and Textile Articles) Act, 1978, by  the Central Government shall stand amended  and shall be deemed to have been amended  in the manner as specified against each of  them in column (3) of the Ninth Schedule, on  and from the corresponding date specified in  column (4) of that Schedule retrospectively,  and accordingly, notwithstanding anything  contained in any judgment, decree or order of  any Court, Tribunal or other authority, any  action taken or anything done or purported to  have been taken or done under the said  notifications, shall be deemed to be and  always to have been, for all purposes, as  validly and effectively taken or done as if the  notifications as amended by this sub-section  had been in force at all material times."

(2) For the purposes of sub-section (1), the  Central  Government shall have and shall be  deemed to have the power to amend the  notifications referred to in the said sub-section  with retrospective effect as if the Central  Government had the power to amend the said  notifications under sub-section (1) of Section  5A of the Central Excise Act read with sub- section (3) of Section 3 of the Additional Duties  of Excise (Goods of Special Importance) Act,  1957 (58 of 1957) and sub-section (3) of  Section 3 of the Additional Duties of Excise  (Textiles and Textile Articles) Act, 1978 (40 of  1978), retrospectively at all material times.

(3) No suit or other proceedings shall be  maintained or continued in any court, tribunal or  other authority for any action taken or anything  done or omitted to be done, in respect of any  goods under the said notifications, and no  enforcement shall be made by any court,  tribunal or other authority of any decree or  order relating to such action taken or anything  done or omitted to be done as if the  amendments made by sub-section (1) had  been in force at all material times.

(4) Recovery shall be made of all amounts of  duty or interest or other charges which have not  been collected or, as the case may be, which  have been refunded but which would have  been collected or, as the case may be, which  would have not been refunded if the provisions  of this section had been in force at all material  times, within a period of thirty days from the day

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on which the Finance Bill, 2003 receives the  assent of the President, and in the event of  nonpayment of duty or interest or other charges  so recoverable, interest at the rate of fifteen per  cent, per annum shall be payable from the date  immediately after the expiry of the said period  of thirty days till the date of payment.

Explanation. -  For the removal of doubts, it is  hereby declared that no act or omission on the  part of any person shall be punishable as an  offence which would not have been so  punishable if the notifications referred to in sub- section (1) had not been amended  retrospectively by that sub-section.   

The Ninth Schedule referred to in Section 154(1) insofar  as it is relevant seeks to amend  Notification No. 32/99 dated    8th July 1999 with effect from 8th July 1999  by excluding  cigarettes falling under Chapter 24 of the First Schedule or the  Second Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985.  In  other words, the exemptions available to the manufacturers of  cigarettes from 1999 upto 27th January, 2001 (except for a short  period between 31st December 1999 and 17th January 2000  during which it was not available), was rescinded  retrospectively.  This  meant that the excise duties already  refunded to the petitioners would be liable to be recovered, no  further refund would be made and that the petitioners would be  liable to pay the excise duties not paid when the exemption was  in force i.e. between 8th July 1999 and  27th January 2001. A second batch of writ petitions  were filed by the  petitioners before the High Court challenging Section 154 as  being unconstitutional. They were transferred to this Court at  the instance of the Union of India and listed for hearing along  with the appeals and  are also being disposed of by this  judgment. If the challenge to the retrospective operation of Section  154 is rejected by us, any decision on the Union of India’s  appeals from the judgment of the High Court would necessarily  be rendered infructuous.   The petitioners challenge to Section  154,  therefore, is considered at the outset.   Mr. Harish N. Salve appeared for M/s R.C. Tobacco Pvt.  Ltd. (referred to briefly as ’RCT’)  in Transfer Case No. 27 of  2004.  RCT manufacturers cigarettes as a job worker under an  agreement with M/s Godfrey Philips India Ltd. Mr. Salve said  that there was no dispute that RCT was a new industrial unit  within the meaning of Notification No. 32 of 1999.  It was also  submitted that the exemption was granted without any condition  attached except that the unit must be a new unit and must be  located in one of the growth centres etc.  It is said that the High  Court had correctly held that  RCT fulfilled all the pre-requisites  for grant of the refund.  It is said that the inclusion of tobacco as  an exempted industry was not by accident.  In fact, when the  exemption was withdrawn in December 2000, it was  consciously re-introduced in January 2001. Mr. Salve conceded  the legislative competence of Parliament to enact laws that  have retrospective effect.  However, it is  contended the  retrospectivity particularly of   subordinate legislation must be  subjected to greater scrutiny.  No reasons were given for  retrospectively removing a benefit consciously granted. He says  that where the retrospective legislation is unreasonable it would  violate Article 14 and 19 of the Constitution and would have to  be struck down as unconstitutional.  It is submitted that a  change in policy, which is sought to be given a retrospective

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effect and which seeks to unsettle settled rights and to deprive  people of benefits already enjoyed and causes financial  burdens would clearly be unreasonable and arbitrary. The  unreasonableness was evident from the ’flip-flop’ of the Union  of India in issuing notifications granting, then withdrawing,   again granting, before finally withdrawing the benefit in respect  of cigarettes in the short space of about a year and a half.  The  final withdrawal of the exemption effected by Section 154 was  also followed by the re-grant of exemptions from duties above  8% to tobacco products other than cigarettes.  This erratic  behaviour was, according to Mr. Salve, the ground on which  this Court in Tata Motors v. Maharashtra (2004) 5 SCC 783   struck down retrospective legislation as arbitrary and  unconstitutional.  It was further submitted that although  promissory estoppel operates only against the executive and  not against statute, when the legislature violates promises and  representations made by the government, it is a facet of  unreasonableness that must be taken into account in evaluating  the constitutionality of the law under Articles 14 and 19. It is  argued that if the Government subsequently goes back on the  representations made in a tax exemption Notification by  causing Parliament to enact a law with retrospective effect to  reclaim the benefits so conferred, then the reasonableness of  the law must certainly be judged in the light of the  representations made by the Government.    Mr. R. Nariman appearing on behalf of Kreesna Industries  P. Ltd in Transfer Case No. 32 of 2004 has supported Mr. Salve  and adopted his arguments.  His client manufactures cigarettes  under an agreement with ITC Limited.  Mr. Nariman’s  submission is that the fact that the industrial units were set up  by job workers under an agreement was an irrelevant  consideration as far as the industrial policy  as declared by the  Central Government and the Notification No. 32 of 1999 were  concerned.  This was the concurrent finding of both the courts  below.  It is said that the Union of India had full knowledge of  the circumstances under which his client  set up the industrial  unit and gave the industry the benefit of the notification after  being satisfied that all pre-requisites under the notification had  been fulfilled.   As far as the retrospective denial of the  exemption is concerned, it is said that it stands on a different  footing from a validating act.  The former amounted to an  imposition of tax for the first time whereas the latter merely  rectified a defect in the statute by which the assessee was,  from the outset, intended  to be made liable.  Reliance has  been placed on the observations of  Beg, CJ in Madan Mohan  Pathak v. Union of India 1978 (3) SCR 334 at 344  as well as  the dissenting view of AN Sen, J in Lohia Machines Ltd. v.  Union of India (1985) 2 SCC 197.   It is submitted that in the  present case the retrospectivity was harsh and excessive since  there is in fact a retrospective imposition of excise duty.   It is  contended that the justification for such retrospective imposition  of a tax must be overwhelming.  No such overriding  consideration had been disclosed.  Furthermore, the unit would  be crippled if it were asked to pay the excise duty now.  In any  event,  it is submitted that after the enactment of Section 154, a  demand was made for the amount refunded and for payment of  excise duty for the remaining period.  According to Mr.  Nariman, the demand  which was raised cannot be sustained  as it was made without issuing any show cause notice and in  contravention of Section 11A of Central Excise Act, 1944.   He  has relied on the decisions in East India Commercial Co. Ltd.  vs. The Collector of Customs, Calcutta  1963 (3) SCR 338  as well  as M/s. J.K. Cotton Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd.  vs. Union of India  (1987) Supp. SCC 350 para 31, National  Agricultural Co-operative Marketing Federation of India

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Ltd. vs. Union of India & Ors.  (2003) 5 SCC 23 para 29 in  support of the submission.  Mr. Dave appearing on behalf of North East  Tobacco  Company in Transfer Case No. 25 of 2004 has claimed not to  be a job worker for any other company. He says that unlike  most other units his clients had not left the State of Assam after  the denial of exemption of excise duty. While adopting the  arguments of Mr. Salve and Mr. Nariman,  it is his submission  that Section 11A of the Central Excise Act, 1985 was clearly  attracted to the case and the non-compliance with the  provisions thereof rendered the demand inoperative.  This  argument of Mr. Dave is  sought to be sustained by the decision  in M/s. J.K. Cotton  Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd. v.  Union of India & ors. 1987 (Supp) SCC 350.  The benefit of  the  exemption as opposed to other units had been passed on  to his client’s customers and, it is submitted, it would be  inequitable to impose excise duty retrospectively at this stage. Mr. Goswami appeared on behalf of M/s. Kaziranga  Tobacco Products (P) Ltd. and New Zone India (P) Ltd.  in  Transfer Case Nos. 23 and 24 of 2004.  The two companies are  job workers for Vazir Sultan.  It is claimed that the units were  set up by  local persons who had made huge investments after  borrowing money for land and machinery and had been granted  the relief of exemption after a full disclosure of all the facts to  the excise authorities.  In fact whatever benefits had been  obtained, had been utilized by the unit to promote other  industries in the State.  Mr. Goswami also submitted that the  retrospective imposition of excise duty after three years was  unreasonable as has been held in Chairman, Railway Board  & Ors. v. C.R. Rangadhamaiah and Ors.  (1997) 6 SCC 623  at 638.  The policy of granting such exemption was the  outcome of experts opinion and after the exemption was  reintroduced in respect of cigarettes in January, 2000, it was  extended to  four other North Eastern States namely  Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland and Manipur before its final  withdrawal in January 2001.   Similarly, the A.S.S Cigarette Company  which was a job  worker under an agreement with Godfrey Phillips India has  stated in TC No. 26 of 2004 that their Unit was set up by local  industrialists and that they had deposited the excise duty after  borrowing and since the withdrawal of the exemption in 2001  they had been manufacturing non-tobacco products.  New Tobacco Company in TC No. 36 of 2004 has  claimed that it is not a job worker and in fact the unit still  continues to operate in Assam but has stopped the  manufacture of  cigarettes . ABN Company in TP) No. 151 of 2004 has said that it  has closed down the manufacture of cigarettes after the  withdrawal of the exemption.  Mr. A.K. Ganguly has appeared on behalf of Union of  India and sought to justify the validity of Section 154 by saying  that the Section merely gave effect to what was all along the  intention behind the Notification No. 32 of 1999.   The object of  the industrial policy declared in 1997 was to give long lasting  benefit to the State in the form of increased investments in  industries with consequential benefits by way of increased  employment opportunities to the local population.  The grant of  benefits was part of a package deal with the State getting  enduring benefits in return for a short term loss of revenue. The  operation of the notification did not attain this objective. The  manufacture of cigarettes was a controlled industry.  The large  tobacco companies avoided all the controls by setting up these  industrial units and taking undue advantage of the benefits  granted by the exemption Notification.  There was no delay in  Parliament stepping in since it clarified the law immediately

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after the decision of the Division Bench. The Central  Government which was exercising delegated power under   Section 5-A of the Act could not prevent Parliament from  undoing the clear error in the exercise of power by the Central  Government in granting the exemption or from correcting its  vacillating attitude.  Parliament’s right to legislate was  unimpeded. It was contended that the retrospective levy of  excise duty was justified in the circumstances particularly when  the liability to pay excise duty was merely suspended by the  exemption notifications.  The further argument is that there was  no question of issuing a fresh show cause notice after the  enactment of Section 154, as the demand related to and arose  out of proceedings which culminated in the orders of the Asstt.  Commissioner impugned before the High Court.  The orders  had not been appealed from under the Act.  According to Mr.  Ganguly, the previous orders of refund were only provisional  and the subsequent orders of the Assistant Commissioner were  the final orders rejecting the claims of refund.  The setting aside  of the order by the High Court was immediately followed by the  enactment of Section 154.  It is said that Section 154 stands by  itself and provides for the method of recovery and that the  section could not be said to be unreasonable.  It is submitted  that the fact that the section may operate harshly in individual  cases would not be sufficient reason for striking down the  Section as unreasonable.  In the majority of cases the units had  not passed on the benefits granted by the exemption to their  customers and had on the other hand realized the duty from  their customers.  The competence of Parliament and State legislatures to  repeal, amend or supersede an exemption notification is  unquestionable.  The power to do so retrospectively cannot be  and is also not doubted.  The limitation on this power is that the  legislation must not conflict with other provisions of the  Constitution.  As far as fiscal legislation is concerned, the  limitation is implicit in Article 265 of the Constitution which  provides that no tax shall be levied or collected except by  authority of law.  As was held by this Court in Chhotabhai  Jethabhai Patel and Co. V. The Union of India and Anr  :  "If by reason of Art. 265 every tax has to  be imposed by "law" it would appear to  follow that it could only be imposed by a  law which is valid by conformity to the  criteria laid down in the relevant Articles  of the Constitution.   These are that the  law should be (1) within the legislative  competence of the legislature being  covered by the legislative entries in  Schedule VII of the Constitution; (2) the  law should not be prohibited  by any  particular provision of the Constitution  such as for example  Arts. 276(2), 286  etc. and (3) the law or the relevant  portion thereof should not be invalid  under Article 13 for repugnancy to those  freedoms which are guaranteed by Part  III of the Constitution which are relevant  to the subject matter of the law. (pg.30)

A law cannot be held to be unreasonable merely because  it operates retrospectively.  Indeed even judicial decisions are  in a sense retrospective.  When a statute is interpreted by a  court, the interpretation is, by fiction of law, deemed  to be part  of the statute from the date of its enactment. The unreason  ability must lie in some other additional factors. The  retrospective operation of a fiscal statute would have to be

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found to be unduly oppressive and confiscatory before it can be  held to be so unreasonable as to violate constitutional norms.  "Where for instance it appears that the taxing statute is plainly  discriminatory or provides no procedural machinery for  assessment and levy of the tax, or that it is confiscatory, courts  would be justified in striking down the impugned statute as  unconstitutional.  In such cases, the character of the material  provisions of the impugned statute is such that the court would  feel justified  in taking the view that, in substance, the taxing  statute is a cloak adopted by the legislature for achieving its  confiscatory purposes". ( Rai Ramkrishna vs. State of Bihar:   AIR 1963 SC 1667) The question to be answered therefore is  whether Section 154, which is in terms retrospective, is ex facie  discriminatory, or so unreasonable or confiscatory that it  violates Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution.   The factors which are generally considered  relevant in  answering this question are (i) the context in which  retrospectivity was contemplated, (ii) the period of such  retrospectivity, and (iii) the degree of any unforeseen or  unforeseeable financial burden imposed for the past period.    The context in which legislation is enacted is to be  distinguished from the motives which impelled it to act. The  latter are irrelevant (See K.C. Gajapati Narayan Deo & Ors. v.  The State of Orissa (1954) 1 SCR 1,11; RS Joshi v. Ajit Mills  Ltd. (1977) 4 SCC  98,108). The justification put forward by the  respondent for enacting Section 154 was therefore really  unnecessary. Nevertheless, while we cannot for that reason  analyse the justification, we may at least consider the plea as  setting out the background in which the Section was passed. The particular context of the section impugned in this  case was the industrial policy formulated by the Central and the  State Government of Assam for the development of that State.  The obvious intention behind the grant of the package of  incentives including an exemption from payment of excise  duties was to stimulate further industrial growth in the area with  enduring  benefits not only to the local populace by way of  employment opportunities but also to the economic welfare of  the State. The State Government’s insistence from the very  outset on the need to regulate the industries which were  claiming the benefit of the exemption was to ensure that these  objects were attained.    According to the Union of India the  exemption notification, at least as interpreted by the High Court,  did not effectuate that intent. As it transpired none of the  industrial units manufacturing cigarettes were prepared to  contribute to this object and their investment in the manufacture  of cigarettes was co-extensive with the period of the exemption.  The loss of revenue suffered by the Union and the State by the  various subsidies and exemptions granted was the quid in  return for which the petitioners were not prepared to suffer any  quo.  With the withdrawal of the exemption, all of them  without  exception immediately closed down their cigarette  manufacturing units and a large majority have shifted out of the  State.  Clearly if the grant of the exemption had operated as it  was intended to, it would have been unnecessary to enact  Section 154.   The High Court may have been right in construing  the  exemption notification as it stood. Yet the respondent can  contend that that the words should have been used in the  exemption so as to provide for sufficient safeguards to ensure  that the benefit of exemption was granted only to those  industries which would in turn permanently invest in the State.  By the retrospective enactment this defective expression of the  object of the policy, was rectified.  The Exemption Notifications were issued under Section  5A of the Central Excise Act, 1944 as a delegate of Parliament.  

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In a Cabinet form of Government, the Executive is expected to  reflect the views of the legislature.  It would be impossible for  Legislatures to deal in detail and cater to the innumerable  problems which may arise in implementing a statute. When the  power of subordinate legislation is conferred  by Parliament in  certain matters it can only lay down the policy and guidelines  and expect that  what is done by the Executive is in keeping  with such policy. It does of course retain  control over its  delegate and can exercise that control by repealing the action  of the delegate . Consequently if the Executive has failed to  carry out the object of Parliament, such control may be  exercised by retrospectively enacting what the Executive ought  to have achieved.  A somewhat similar situation arose in the case of Epari  Chinna Krishna Moorthy vs. State of Orissa and Ors. AIR  1964 SC 1581. In that case the State Government had issued  an exemption notification under Section 6 of the Orissa Sales  Tax Act, 1947 for which gold ornaments were ordered to be  exempted from sales tax "when the manufacturer selling them  charges separately for the value of gold and the cost of  manufacture". The Notification was issued on 1st July, 1949.   The petitioners, who were registered dealers under the Orissa  Sales Tax Act  filed returns claiming exemption from sales tax.   Up to June, 1952 the claims for exemption were allowed by the  Department. Subsequently, the assessments were reopened on  the ground that the exemption had been wrongly granted.  The  matter ultimately came up before the High Court.  The High  Court allowed the petitioners’ claim for exemption under the  notification in question holding that the expression  "manufacturer" meant the first owner of the finished products for  whom the ornaments were made either by his pre-paid  employee or even by  independent artisans  on receipt of the  raw materials and labour charges from him.  On 1st August,  1961 the Orissa Sales Tax Validation Act, 1961 was passed.  It  provided that notwithstanding anything contained in any  judgment, decree or order of any Court, the word  "manufacturer"  meant and was always to be deemed to have  meant a person who by his own labour produces the ornaments  or a person, who owns or runs manufactories for that purpose.   The petitioners did not fall within this definition of manufacturer.   They accordingly challenged the 1961 Act on three grounds; 1)  that  since the exemption had been granted by the State  Government, it was not open to the legislature to take away the  exemption notification; 2) that the provisions of 1961 Act  contravened Article 14; and 3) that the retrospective operation  of the impugned Section was unconstitutional because it  imposed an unreasonable restriction on the petitioners  fundamental rights under Article 19(1)(g).  In negativing these  arguments a Constitution Bench of this Court said:- "What the legislature has purported to  do by S. 2 of the impugned Act is to  make the intention of the notification  clear.  Section 2 in substance declares  that the intention of the delegate in  issuing the notification granting  exemption was to confine the benefit of  the said exemption only to persons who  actually produce gold ornaments or  employ artisans for that purpose.  We  do not see how any question of  legislative incompetence can come in  the present discussion.  And, if the State  Government was given the power either  to grant or withdraw the exemption, that  cannot possibly affect the legislature’s

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competence to make any provision in  that behalf either prospectively or  retrospectively."

            Although the length of time is not by itself  decisive      the     effect  of   the retrospectivity  of the  legislation   in this case    is  less than two years. The tussle  between the excise authorities and the petitioners started  almost immediately upon  the latter claiming and obtaining  refunds of the excise duty paid by them on the manufacture of  cigarettes.  The refusal of the excise authorities to refund, on  their interpretation of the notification, led to the filing of the writ  petitions. The writ petitions were allowed on 17th May, 2002.  In  the meanwhile the exemption was already withdrawn in  January 2001. The decision was then challenged in  appeals by  the Union of India which were finally dismissed by the Division  Bench on 4th April, 2003. Therefore between 2000 to 2003 the  dispute as to the purport of the exemption notification during the  period of their operation from July 1999 to January 2001 was  pending in Court. The matters were then carried to this Court by  the Union of India. While the proceedings were pending and the  issue was still at large, Section 154 was enacted. In these  circumstances, the Parliament cannot be blamed for having at  least awaited the decision of the High Court, nor can the  statutory provision be questioned as being unreasonably  retrospective.( See in this connection Rai Ram Krishna vs.  State of Bihar AIR 1963 SC 1667, 1675 para 18). The pendency of the proceedings before the Courts  meant that there was a possibility of an outcome adverse to the  petitioners however strong the petitioners may have considered  their case to be.  If this Court had reversed the view of the High  Court, the petitioners would have had to bear the burden of the  excise duty for the period they had manufactured the cigarettes.   It could not have been predicted with any certainty that the  appeals of the Union of India would fail. By enacting Section  154, Parliament has forestalled a decision by this Court and in  effect taken away the basis for the decisions of the High Court.   In the circumstances, it could not be said that the financial  burden was unforeseen or unforeseeable.                    In Chairman Railway Board vs. C.R.  Rangadhamaiah (supra) the impugned notifications had  sought to curtail pensionary rights with retrospective effect.   The notifications were held to be unconstitutional on the  grounds that when the pension had been granted to the  employees, Articles 31(1) and 19(1)(f) were available, both of  which were violated by such retrospective operation.  It was  also held that it was violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the  Constitution because it had the effect of reducing the amount of  pension that  had become payable to employees who had  already retired from service on the date of issuance of the  impugned notifications according to the rules in force at the  time of their retirement. However the right of the petitioners to  the exemption in the present case can at best be described as  a precarious one.  It is established law that benefits granted by  exemptions may be modified or withdrawn.  By the notification  the accrued liability to pay excise duty is merely suspended.  Such an exemption by its very nature is susceptible to being  revoked or modified or subjected to other conditions.   The  Government and a fortiori the Parliament is free to determine  the priorities in the matter of utilization of finances and the  courts cannot place an embargo on the Government or on the  plenary power of Parliament to withdraw the benefit on the  basis of any principle of promissory estoppel. It has been said:  "It is necessary that the Legislature  should be able to cure inadvertent

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defects in statutes or their administration  by making what has been aptly called  ’small repairs’. Moreover, the individual  who claims that a vested right has  arisen from the defect is seeking a  windfall since had the legislature’s or  administrator’s action had the effect it  was intended to and could have had, no  such right would have arisen.  Thus, the  interest in the retroactive curing of such  a defect in the administration of   government outweighs the individual’s  interest in benefiting from the defect\005.  The Court has been extremely reluctant  to override the legislative judgment as to  the necessity for retrospective taxation,  not only because of the paramount  governmental interest in obtaining  adequate revenues, but also because  taxes are not in the nature of a penalty  or a contractual obligation but rather a  means of apportioning the costs of  government among those who benefit  from it ."

As we have said, Mr. Salve relied on Tata Motors Ltd.  vs. State of  Maharashtra & Ors., (2004) 5 SCC 783 to  contend that despite the enormous powers of Parliament to  legislate prospectively or retrospectively, unless the material is  disclosed why there was an ’on again and off again’ exemption,  Section 154 must be held to be arbitrary and therefore  unconstitutional.  In that case Rule 41E of the Bombay Sales  Tax Rules 1959 allowed benefit of set-off in respect of all waste  goods or scrap goods or bye- products.  This benefit was  sought to be taken away by Section 26 of the Maharashtra Tax  Laws (Levy Amendment and Repeal) Act, 1989 which amended  Rule 41E.  The validity of such retrospective amendment to  Rule 41E was challenged. It was contended  that as a result of  the amendment the assessee was deprived of the benefit for a  period 8 years after which the benefit was reintroduced  by  another amendment of Rule 41E in 1992.  This Court held that  in absence of any material as to why the benefit under Rule  41E had been denied for a particular period, Section 26 of the  1989 Amendment Act deserved to be quashed.  The Court  found in favour of the assessee because there was no reason  whatsoever forthcoming for the withdrawal of the benefit  retrospectively for a limited period. The decision is distinguishable.  In this case, the reasons  for the retrospective enactment of Section 154 have been given  and as we have also said, those reasons are at least factually  plausible. The next challenge of the petitioners is based on Section  11A  of the Act, the relevant extracts of which reads: "11-A RECOVERY OF DUTIES NOT  LEVIED OR NOT PAID OR SHORT \026 LEVIED  OR SHORT-PAID OR ERRONEOUSLY  REFUNDED- (1) When any duty of excise has  not been levied or paid or has been short  levied or short paid or erroneously refunded, a  Central Excise Officer may, within six months  from the relevant date, serve notice on the  person chargeable with the duty which has not  been levied or paid or which has been short  levied or short-paid or to whom the refund has  erroneously been made, requiring him to show

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cause why he should not pay the amount  specified in the notice:

Provided that where any duty of excise  has not been levied or paid or has been short- levied or short-paid or erroneously refunded  by reason of fraud, collusion or any willful mis- statement or suppression of facts, or  contravention of any of the provisions of this  Act or of the rules made thereunder with intent  to evade payment of duty, by such person or  his agent, the provisions of this sub-section  shall have effect, for the words "six months",  the words "five years" were substituted.

2)    xxx       xxx     xxx     xxxx

3) For the purposes of this section,

       i)  xxx xxx     xxx     xxx

       ii) "relevant date" means:          (a)  in the case of excisable goods  on which duty of excise has not been  levied or paid or has been short-levied  or short-paid-

(A) where under the rules made  under this Act a periodical return,  showing particulars of the duty paid on  the excisable goods removed during the  period to which the said return relates, is  to be filed by a manufacturer or a  producer or a licensee of a warehouse,  as the case may be, the date on which  such return is so filed;

(B) where no periodical return as  aforesaid is filed, the last date on which  such return is to be filed under the said  rules;

(C) in any other case, the date on  which the duty is to be paid under this Act  or the rules made thereunder.

(b) in a case where duty or excise is  provisionally assessed under this Act or  the rules made thereunder, the date of  adjustment of duty after the final  assessment thereof;

(c) in the case of excisable goods on  which duty of excise has been  erroneously refunded, the date of such  refund.   

The contention is that Section 154 violates Section 11A in  that it does not envisage the service of any notice and it seeks  to allow recoveries to be made after the periods of limitation  provided. According to the respondents the refunds granted under  the notifications dated 8th July, 1999 were not the "normal"  refunds made under the Act but were of a special kind for which

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the complete machinery was provided under the Notifications.   The submission is that since the exemption notifications  themselves had been withdrawn by Section 154, the amounts  refunded thereunder were recoverable independently of Section  11A under Section 154(4). There are two aspects to this dispute.  The first is the  question of limitation and the second the question of notice.  As  far as the first aspect is concerned refund of duty under the Act  has been provided for by Section 11B.  The Section specifies  the manner and circumstances under which refunds of duty  may be made.  It is neither of the parties’ case that the refund  made to the petitioners of the excise duty paid by them was  under this Section.  In the present case Paragraph 2 of the Notification 32/99  prescribed for the method for giving effect to the exemption.  It  provided:  (a)     The manufacturer shall submit a  statement of the duty paid from the  said account current to the Assistant  Commissioner of Central Excise or  Deputy Commissioner of Central  Excise, as the case may be, by the  7th of the next month in which the  duty has been paid from the account  current.

(b)     The Assistant Commissioner or  Deputy Commissioner of Central  Excise, as the case may be, after  such verification, as may be deemed  necessary, shall refund the amount  of duty paid from the account current  during the month under  consideration to the manufacturer by  the 15th of the next month.

(c)     If there is likely to be any delay in  the verification, the Assistant  Commissioner or Deputy  Commissioner of Central Excise, as  the case may be, shall refund the  amount on provisional basis by the  15th of the next month to the month  under consideration, and thereafter  may adjust the amount of refund by  such amount as may be necessary  in the subsequent refunds  admissible to the manufacturer.

The claim for refund is subject to verification but the  refund must be granted even before such verification on a  provisional basis.  It was for that reason that the learned single  Judge had directed the refund by an interim order but allowed  the Assistant Commissioner to independently verify the claims.         Although Section 11A does not refer to Section 11B, it  speaks of duties "erroneously refunded". It cannot therefore  refer to the refunds made to the petitioners under the  notifications as  there was no error in the provisional refunds  made under the notifications to the appellants.  What was  sought to be recovered under Section 154 was not an  erroneous refund but  a benefit provisionally granted.         In J.K. Cotton Spinning & Weaving Mills Ltd.  vs.   Union of India  (1987) Supp. SCC 350 relied upon by the

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petitioners, by virtue of the retrospective amendment of Rules 9  and 49 of the Central Excise Rules in 1982, commodities  obtained at an intermediate stage of manufacture in a  continuous process were deemed to have been ’removed’  within the meaning of Rule 9(1) thereby making such  intermediate products dutiable under the Act with effect from  the commencement of the Act i.e. 1944.  In this context the  Court held that the amended Rules 9 and 49 would take effect  subject to Section 11A.  The decision is distinguishable.  The  circumstances in which the Court held that the demands for  duty could only be limited to six months prior to the amendment  was unquestionably different from those present in the case  before us.  What we have to consider here is whether the  benefit granted in 1999 could be withdrawn in 2003.  Besides  the Court in J.K. Cotton Spinning & Weaving Mills Ltd’s case  rejected the contention of the Union of India that Section 51 of  1982 Finance Act by which the amendments were made to  Rules 9 and 49 overrode the provisions of Section 11A saying  ’if the intention of the legislature was to nullify the effect of   Section 11A,\005.., the legislature would have specifically  provided for the same’. Similarly our decision in National  Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India Ltd.   vs. Union of India  (2003) 5 SCC 23 which dealt with an  amendment to Section 80P(2)(a)(iii) of the Income Tax Act,  1961  noted that ’the amendment does not seek to touch on the  periods of limitation provided in the Act, and in the absence of  such express provision or clear implication, the legislature  clearly could not be taken to intend that the amending  provisions authorizes the Income Tax Officer to commence  proceedings which before the new Act came into force, had, by  the expiry of the period provided become barred". In the  present case  Section 154(4) specifically and expressly allows  amounts to be recovered within a period of thirty days from the  day the Finance Bill, 2003 received the assent of the President.   It cannot but be held therefore that the period of six months  provided under Section 11A would not apply.           On the question of notice prior to the recovery irrespective  of Section 11A, it is contended by the petitioners relying on the  decision of this Court in East India Commercial Co. Ltd.  vs.   The Collector of Customs  (1963) 3 SCR 338, 361 that  whether a statute provides for notice or not, it was incumbent  upon the respondents to issue notice to the petitioners  disclosing the circumstance under which proceedings are  sought to be initiated against them and that any proceedings  taken without such notice would be against the principles of  natural justice.  Assuming that the principle were applicable to  the case before us, in fact notices of personal hearing were  served on the petitioners by the Assistant Collector for a  personal hearing before the Assistant Collector passed the  orders by which the petitioners were held liable to repay the  refunds made and to pay the excise on the goods cleared for  the subsequent periods.  The High Court’s decision setting  aside the orders as being contrary to the Exemption Notification  was sought to be overcome by Section 154(1).  In other words,   by virtue of Section 154(1), notwithstanding the decision of the  High Court, the orders of the Assistant Collector, which were  purported to have been taken under the notifications, were  validated as if the notifications as amended had been in force  when the orders were passed.          A grievance has been raised by the petitioners that  cigarette manufacturers have been unfairly discriminated  against.  We are unable to accept the submission for several  reasons.  First, there is a presumption in favour of constitutionality  of a statute, a presumption which only the clearest and

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weightiest evidence can displace.  Second, we can take judicial notice of the fact that  cigarettes have been treated as a class apart for the purposes  of levy of excise duty with the manufacture of cigarettes  probably yielding the highest revenue to the exchequer.  As was said in  R.K. Garg  vs. Union of India  (1981) 4  SCC 675 by the following words: "The presumption of constitutionality is  indeed so strong that in order to sustain  it, the Court may take into consideration  matters of common knowledge, matters  of common report, the history of the  times and may assume every state of  facts which can be conceived existing at  the time of legislation."

Third "another rule of equal importance is that laws  relating to economic activities should be viewed with greater  latitude than laws touching civil rights such as freedom of  speech, religion etc." (ibid).         The final question is that of the relief to be granted.  The petitioners can be broadly classified into three  groups: A.      Job workers for large cigarette  companies which have closed down  the units with the withdrawal of the  exemption and left the State of  Assam.

B.      Job workers for large cigarette  companies which have closed down  their cigarette manufacturing units  but started new business in other  products.

C.      Industrial units which have set up  their own units and have reinvested  their earnings in their businesses in  the State after closing down the  manufacture of cigarettes.  

Some units have admittedly not passed on the excise  duty benefits to their customers.  On the other hand the large  cigarette companies have recovered the excise duty from the  customers.  Other units claim to have passed on the benefit of  the entire exemption to their customers.          All the petitioners however claim that they would be  financially crippled if they were called upon to repay the refund  of the excise duties or pay the excise duty on the cigarettes  manufactured by them.  According to them the quantum of  excise duties would far exceed their profits from the  manufacture of cigarettes.         The respondents on the other hand have urged that the  petitioners were merely fronts for the large cigarette companies  which had misused the notification to avoid the excise duty  otherwise payable by them.  This was clear from the  agreements entered into between them and the various  industrial units through which they claimed the benefits.  The  agreements showed inter alia that the entire set up was  financed by the large companies. The arrangement was back to  back so that with the withdrawal of the exemption, the units  would be closed down. The promptness with which a unit went

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into commercial production after it was set up in a few days  showed that there was no real investment by the petitioners.  Many of the units had not even got permanent registration  before they went into production and claimed refund of large  amounts of excise duty.  Admittedly the large cigarette  companies had not only not passed on the benefit of exemption  but had levied and retained the excise duty on the cigarettes  manufactured by the petitioners for the customers of the large  companies.   The petitioners who were admittedly in group A have  refuted this and contend that their relationship with the large  cigarette companies was on a principal to principal basis and  that under their agreements they alone would be liable to pay  the excise duty now demanded by the respondents under  Section 154.  We are not in a position to determine the disputes raised.   However we cannot lose sight of the fact that although excise  duty like other indirect taxes may be passed on to the customer  of the goods under the law as it now stands, it is the  manufacturer of the excisable goods to whom the excise  authorities will look for payment.  How the manufacturer will  adjust its liability with its customers does not concern the  respondents nor can they be asked to recover their dues from  persons who may have ultimately taken on the responsibility to  pay the excise duty as a result of an agreement with the  manufacturer. (See in this connection  State of Rajasthan  vs.  J.K. Udaipur Udyog Ltd.  (2004) 7 SCC 673, 692).  Furthermore having upheld the constitutional validity of  Section 154 it would be a pyrrhic victory for the Union of India if  they could not in fact recover the tax.  It is not a case where the  legislation has merely withdrawn the exemptions. The  consequences of the withdrawal have been statutorily provided  for including the recovery of the excise duties refunded or not  paid.  The effective period of such imposition is about eight  months.  The State has been deprived of revenue without any  corresponding benefit. It may be that the retrospective  operation may operate harshly in some cases, but that would  not by itself invalidate the demand. [See: Epari Chinna  Krishna Moorthy vs. State of Orissa (supra)] It needs to be  emphasized that in effect the retrospective operation extended  over a very short period and principles of equity must give way  to express statutory provision. As was said in Story on Equity  (3rd Eng.Ed.1920)p.34:- " Where a rule, either of the common or  the statute law, is direct, and governs  the case with all its circumstances, or  the particular point, a court of equity is  as much bound by it as a court of law,  and can as little justify a departure from  it" .

         No doubt in British  Physical  Lab India Ltd vs. State of  Karnataka & Ors. (1999) 1 SCC 170 relied upon by the  petitioners  the Sales Tax Authorities proposed to recover the  difference  in duty from manufacturers within the State having  regard to the fact that the notifications giving them the benefit of  a lower rate of tax had been struck down. This court held that  they should not do so. The rationale behind the decision has  been explicitly stated in Texmaco Ltd vs. State of Andhra  Pradesh (2000) 1 SCC 763.  In directing that the State shall not  collect the amount of sales tax that had become payable by  reason of the quashing of the notifications, this  Court noted  that the notifications had been intended to protect the local  cement industries.  The quashing of the notifications should  have the effect of putting the local cement industry and the

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same industry outside the State on par. It could not place the  former in a disadvantageous position qua the later.  Apart from  this, the respondent-State had also not contested the factual  position.  The circumstances in which this Court directed the  State not to collect amount of sales tax which had become  payable only by reason of the Order quashing the notifications  issued under the State Sales Tax Act do not exist here. What  we are considering in this case is a positive statutory mandate  directing the consequences of the withdrawal of the exemption  notifications. For the reasons stated we dismiss the transferred writ  petitions without any order as to costs.