20 February 1997
Supreme Court
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STEEL AUTHORITY OF INDIA LTD. Vs COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, BOLPUR.

Bench: S.B. MAJMUDAR
Case number: Appeal Civil 2766 of 1991


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PETITIONER: STEEL AUTHORITY OF INDIA LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, BOLPUR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       20/02/1997

BENCH: S.B. MAJMUDAR

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T S.B. Mujmudar. J.      This appeal under Section 35(L) of the Central Excise & Salt Act,  1994 (hereinafter  referred to  as ‘the  Act’) is brought by  the appellant-assessee on being aggrieved by the decision rendered  by the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate  Tribunal   (CEGAT  for   short)  dismissing   the assessee’s appeal  against the  order in  original passed by the Collector of Central Excise, Bolpur.      A few  relevant facts leading to this appeal deserve to be noted  at the  outset. The  appellant, Steel Authority of India Ltd.  is a  wholly owned  Government of India Company. The appellant-company  has several steel plants and Durgapur Steel Plant  (DSP), situated  at Durgapur in West Bengal, is one of the integrated steel plants of the appellant-company. DSP manufactures  pig iron,  steel ingots and several  steel products.  These   products  of   DSP  prior  to  1983  were classified under the erstwhile Tariff Items 25, 26 and 26AA. The appellant-company  has been  paying excise duty on these items under reference following the principles of "later the better". The  appropriate central excise duty was determined and paid  on iron  and steel  products,  when  cleared.  The evidence led  by the  appellant   explained the  process  of production. That  in  the  integrated  steel  plant  of  the appellant-company at  Durgapur the  process of production is as under|-      Iron ore      Sinter      Limestone                               put into Blast      Manganese Ore                           Furnace      Dolamite      BHQ      Molten iron  is produced  in the  blast furnace. Molten iron goes  to steel  furnaces of  steel melting  shop  (SMS) directly and  other ingredients  are mixed. The product from SMS is  steel. In  other words, iron is converted into steel in SMS.  Raw materials like iron ore, sinter, coke limestone etc. are  fed into blast furnace which produces pig iron. At this stage,  the molten  metal is called pig iron. Once this molten metal is fed into steel making furnace which produces

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steel, the produce which comes out, out of the steel melting shop (SMS) is known as steel and not iron and will fall into Tariff Item  26. It  is  only  when  the  steel  ingots  are further processed and the various products like structurals, rails, wire-rods,  etc. are  produced, they would come under Tariff Item  26AA. According  to the  appellant,  the  steel melting scrap  is specifically  covered under Tariff Item 26 and once  a produce  comes out  of SMS, it is known as steel and not  iron. In the process of production of steel at SMS, some scrap  arises which  is known in the industry as ‘steel melting scrap’.  While most  of this  steel melting scrap is captively consumed  by DSP  itself, a  small portion is also sold   to other  steel plants  manufacturing  steel  ingots, steel casting  and  semi-finished  steel  with  the  aid  of electric furnace.  The procedure set out in Chapter X of the Central Excise  Rules, 1994  is followed  while selling  the steel melting scrap which is cleared at nil rate of duty.      It is  the  case  of  the  appellant-company  that  the clearance  of  steel  melting  scrap  was    being  done  in accordance with  Chapter X  of the  Central Excise Rules and the said Clearance was governed by the terms of Notification No.150/77  dated   18.6.1977  as   amended  by  Notification No.209/77 dated  2.7.1977. This practice of removal of steel melting  scrap  as  per  the  procedure  laid  down  by  the aforesaid notification  was being followed by the appellant- company  since  the  date  of  the  said  notification  i.e. 18.6.1977.      The facts  leading to  the present proceedings stem out of the show cause notices issued to the appellant-company by the Superintendent  of Central  Excise, Durgapur.  The first show  cause   notice  dated   21.11.1980  alleged  that  the appellant-company had not paid duty on the iron contained in crude form  in ‘steel  melting scrap’. It was alleged in the said show  cause notice  that as  per Tariff Item 25 iron in crude form  attracted central  excise  duty  @  Rs.70/-  per metric ton  and there was no clear exemption from payment of duty on  iron used  for manufacturing  of steel  ingots  and steel melting  scrap. That  Notification No.  18/71-CE dated 27..3.1971 provided  a set off of duty paid on iron in crude form against  the duty  payable on  steel ingots  and  steel melting scrap.  It was  further alleged  in  the  show  case notice that  since specified  steel melting scrap chargeable to nil  rate of  duty, the  question of  set off  of duty on steel melting  scrap cleared  without payment  of duty,  was chargeable. The  aforesaid notice  was  in  respect  of  the period  from  12.12.1977  to  30.9.1980.  On  similar  terms another demand  notice  was issued for the period from April 1981 to   October 1981. The total duty so demanded was about Rs.25.50 lakhs.  The appellant-company  submitted replies to the said show cause notices and pointed out that the notices were  misconceived   and  the   demands  raised   were   not sustainable. The Collector of Central Excise by his order in original   dated    9.6.1987   confirmed   the   demand   of Rs.25,50,593.87 on iron in crude form used by the appellant- company in  manufacture of  34,346.327 metric  tons of steel melting scrap  which had  been cleared  without  payment  of duty.      The appellant-company  being aggrieved by the aforesaid order of  Collector of  Central Excise,  Bolpur, carried the matter in  appeal before  the CEGAT,  New  Delhi.  The  said appeal was  partly allowed  by the  CEGAT by its order dated 21.12.1990 whereby  the CEGAT quashed the demands in respect of the  period prior  to  6  months  of  the  issue  of  the respective  show   cause  notices   dated   21.11.1980   and 23.11.1981 on  the ground  that for  earlier period  notices

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were time  barred. However,  the CEGAT  upheld the demand of the department  for duty for the period of 6 months computed backward  from  the  dates  of  the  respective  show  cause notices. As  per the  aforesaid order  of the  CEGAT,  total demands covered by both the notices worded out to about Rs.6 lakhs. It  is the aforesaid order of the CEGAT that has been brought on  the anvil  of scrutiny  of  this  Court  in  the present appeal. RIVAL CONTENTIONS :      Learned counsel  for the  appellant in  support of  the appeal submitted  that  the  CEGAT  had  patently  erred  in upholding the demands for duty payable on iron in crude form which had  already resulted  into  duty  paid  steel  ingots manufactured by  the appellant  out of  the said crude iron. That steel  melting scrap  which resulted  in the process of manufacture of steel ingots from crude iron was purely a by- product which  was already  exempted and  bore nil  duty  on account of  Notification dated  18.6.1977 being Notification No.150/77. That integrated steel plant like DSP was meant to produce pig  iron and  various steel products but not scrap. Scrap was not a conscious production. That the iron in crude form which  had not borne duty at the time of its production had already  resulted in  the manufacture of duty paid steel ingots. Even  in the light of Notification No.18/71-CE dated 23.3.1971 full excise duty was paid by the appellant-company on  the   steel  ingots  which  were  the  ultimate  product manufactured by  the appellant by utilising the entire input of iron  in crude  form. Hence,  even if  set off of duty on utilised iron  crude form  was not available as duty was not paid at  the relevant  time when  iron  in  crude  form  was manufactured,  save   and  except  demanding  full  duty  on manufactured steel  ingots, there  would remain  no occasion for the  revenue to bring to tax the very same utilised iron in crude form which during the process of manufacture of the final product  of steel  ingots might have resulted in a by- product like steel melting scrap which in its turn was fully exempted from  the excise  duty because  of Notification No. 150/77. According  to the learned counsel for the appellant, the impugned  notices of  demand  and  the  final  order  of adjudication even  for a  period of  six months  immediately preceding the  impugned show  cause notices  were  ex  facie unauthorised and not sustainable in law.      Learned counsel  for the  revenue, on  the other  hand, submitted that at the time when the input of crude iron i.e. pig iron  was produced,  no duty  was paid by the appellant. The     said  input   was  utilised  by  the  appellant  for manufacturing two  excisable items, namely, (i) steel ingots and (ii)  steel melting  scrap though an excisable item, did not bear  any duty  in view  of the  exemption  Notification No.150/77. Consequently,  the  input  of  pig  iron  to  the extent to  which it resulted into the final product of steel melting scrap remained liable to pay excise duty as no final duty   on    steel   melting   scrap   was   available   for proportionately setting off duty payable on the input to the extent of  which it had resulted in the manufacture of steel melting scrap. It was submitted that steel melting scrap was itself an  excisable item  which had a market of its own and was not  like a by-product which had no value whatsoever and was not  exigible to  central excise. Consequently, when the final product  of steel  melting scrap  had not borne excise duty because  of the  exemption notification,  as aforesaid, the non-duty  paid input  which was embedded in it, which in its turn  was exigible to tax had to be brought tax when the final product  steel melting  scrap got  cleared and that is precisely what the demand notices sought to do and hence the

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adjudication order was correctly passed by the CEGAT.      Having given  our anxious  consideration to  the  rival contentions, we  find that  the CEGAT  has patently erred in sustaining the  impugned demands of excise duty even for the period of  six months  prior to the dates of respective show cause notices.  At the outset, we may note that it is not in dispute between  the parties  that the  appellant which is a wholly owned  Government of India company, in the process of manufacturing the  final product at its Durgapur Steel Plant produces as  an input  for captive  consumption molten metal called pig  iron. This  pig iron  as  an  input  results  in manufacture of  two  excisable  commodities,  namely,  steel ingot as  well as melting  scrap. We may, for the purpose of the present  proceedings, proceed  on the  basis that  steel melting  scrap  which  gets  manufactured  is  an  excisable commodity and  has its own market if not captively consumed. However, the  moot question  remains as to whether the input of pig  iron ultimately  bears full burden of excise duty as leviable on  the   said pig  iron at  a stage  when the said input results  into the  final product.  We may note at this stage that  at the relevant time, the tariff, item concerned which made the input of pig iron exigible to excise duty was Tariff Item  25 and rate of duty was Rs.70/- per metric ton. The final  products which resulted by utilising  this input, as noted  above, were  steel ingots as well as steel melting scrap. Both  of them were covered by Tariff Item 26 and were liable to  tax @  Rs.350/- per  metric ton. There was Tariff Item 26AA which dealt with iron or steel products which were manufactured by utilising steel melting scrap as an input by the appellant-company and those steel products enumerated in the said Entry 26AA were of various types and were liable to bear excise  duty as  mentioned in the said tariff item. The short question  for our consideration is whether pig iron in crude form  which was utilised as an input by the appellant- company in  manufacturing the final products of steel ingots and steel  melting scrap  had been subjected to full payment of excise  duty under  Tariff Item  25, if not at an earlier stage when  it was  manufactured, it least at a latter stage when it  got embedded  in steel  melting  ingots  and  steel melting scrap.  It has  to be appreciated that it is not the case of  the department  not is there anything on record  to indicate that  out of the input of crude iron or pig iron, a particular portion  thereof was  separately utilised  by the appellant as  an input for manufacturing steel ingots was in uniform, composite  and a  combined process  and in the said process of  manufacturing steel  melting scrap.  In fact the entire process  of manufacturing steel ingots was a uniform, composite and  a combined process and in the said process of manufacturing of steel ingots the entire input of crude iron got exhausted  and utilised but in the very same process two commodities emerged,  namely, steel  ingot and steel melting scrap. There is a substance in the contention of the learned counsel for  the appellant  that the  integrated steel plant like DSP  owned by  the appellant  was meant  to produce pig iron and  various steel  products. However,  the process was such  that   certain  amount   of  scrap   arises   due   to technological  necessity   and  it   was  not   a  conscious production and,  still it  might be  excise duty  under  the concerned   Tariff Item  26. We  are not  concerned  in  the present  proceedings   with  the  taxability  of  the  final product, the  steel melting  scrap, as  admittedly the  said steel melting  scrap as a final product is not liable to pay any liable  duty and  is exigible  to nil duty on account of exemption Notification  no.150/77 dated  1.6.1977. It is not in dispute  between the  parties that  steel  melting  scrap

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which is  the final by-product in the process of manufacture of steel ingots undertaken by the appellant by utilising the input of  pig iron has earned full exemption from payment of excise duty  under the aforesaid notification. In fact, that is the  very basis of the show cause notices. The department accepts that  steel melting  scrap is  not liable to pay any excise duty  but its  contention is  that the  proportionate input of pig iron which was embedded in the said field final product and  which by  itself did  not bear any duty earlier though it  was liable  to pay  duty under Tariff Item 25 had escaped excise  duty thereon.  If that  is so,  the question remains whether  the remaining  and the  main final product, namely, steel ingot, which was exigible to central excise as per Tariff  Item 26  @ Rs.350/- per metric ton and which had utilised the  same input  of crude  iron, namely,  pig  iron could be  said to  have accounted for payment of excise duty on input  of crude  iron which was fully utilised by it when it got manufactured in the steel melting furnace as a result of the  same and uniform manufacturing process. The basis of the impugned  show cause  notices which  in their   turn got upheld by  the CEGAT  to the  extent of  six months  demands prior  to  the  dates  of  issue  of  these  notices,  being Notification  No.18/71   dated  27.3.1971   is,   therefore, required to  be reproduced.  The said  notification reads as under|- "18/71-CE  dt. 27.3.71:   In exercise as of the powers                          conferred  by Rule. 8(1) of the                          Central Excise Rules, 1994, and in                          supersesion of the notification  of                          the Government of India in the                          M.F.(D.R.& I) No.67/78-CE dt.                          30.3.68, the Central Government                          hereby exempts :      (a)  steel ingots falling under Item No.25 of the First           Schedule to  the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944           (1 of 1944), and      (b)  iron and steel products falling under Item No.26AA           of the First Schedule           in  which  duty  paid  iron  in  any  crude  form,           including pig  iron, scrap  iron, molten  iron  or           iron cast  in any  other shape  or size,  is used,           from so much of the duty as is proved to have been           paid on the said iron in any crude form;           (Provided that  in relation to the exemption under           this notification  the procedure  set out the Rule           56A of the aforesaid rules is followed)."      Now a  mere look  at the  aforesaid notification  shows that it  seeks to permit a set off of excise duty payable on the final product manufactured by the appellant by utilising the input  of pig iron to the extent of the amount of excise duty which  might have  been paid  by the  assessee  on  the utilised input  of pig  which ultimately  resulted  resulted into the  final products.  Those final  products are  either steel ingots covered by Tariff Item 26AA. It is pertinent to observe that  the said  exemption/set off  notification does not cover  final product of steel melting scrap mentioned in Tariff Item  26 which  obviously results as an unplanned by- product. Learned counsel for the respondent is right when he contends that  on the facts of the present case, the benefit of the  set off of excise duty payable on pig iron would not be available to the appellant so far as its liability to pay excise duty  on the  finished products  was concerned as the input of pig iron which emerging by-product of steel melting scrap. In  the absence  of such  bifurcation,  the  impugned notices would  obviously result  in double  taxation on  the

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input of pig iron which embedded in steel ingots that became liable to  bear full  excise duty  and for which there is no dispute  between   the  parties.   As  the   process     for manufacturing steel  ingots by  utilising the input of crude iron was  a single  uniform process,  such birfurcation even otherwise was  not possible  even if  it was so attempted by the respondent-department.  The impugned  show cause notices make clear,   in  this connection,  that they  seek to  levy basic excise  duty for  the relevant  period on  the  entire input of pig iron by seeking to bring it to tax on the basis of the  entire output of steel melting scrap. In other words notices seek to equate total quantity of steel melting scrap with the  embedded proportionate  input of pig iron. This is clearly impermissible.  It is  obvious  that  steel  melting scrap, as  a final product, is exigible  to nil rate of duty as there  is no dispute between the parties that it is fully covered  by   exemption  Notification   No.   150/77   dated 18.6.1997. In  fact, that is the very basis for the impugned notices, as  seen earlier.  If  that  is  so,  the  impugned notices indirectly seek to bring to tax the  entire quantity of steel  melting scrap  resulted into  steel ingots had not already borne  the excise  duty under  Tariff Item 25 at the time when  it was  manufactured. But  the said fact does not improve the  case of  the respondent-department any further. The reason  is obvious.  Even though  such set off from duty payable on  steel ingots  as finished product @ Rs.350/- per metric ton  as per Tariff Item 26 might not  be available to the appellant-company,  still the  entire input  of pig iron which got  utilised by  the appellant in manufacturing steel ingots got  reflected in  the full and final duty payable by the appellant  on the  final product,  which  namely,  steel ingots. All that resulted was the deferred payment of excise duty @ Rs.350/- per metric ton without any set off. That was the only  logical effect  of  the  non-availability  of  the benefits of  Notification No.18/71  dated 27.3.1971.  In the absence of relevant data being available or even tried to be produced by  the respondent-department on the record of this case,   it is impossible to bifurcate and try to find out as to what  part of  the input  of pig  iron resulted  into the manufacturing of steel ingots and what part of the very same input of  pig iron  got embedded in the by treating it to be resulting from  the total  input of pig iron, which directly could not  have been brought to tax. Once entire quantity of steel melting  scarp is  exempted from  excise duty  as  per Notification of 18.6.1977, it is difficult to appreciate how the very same quantity of scarp can be taken as a  basis for levying tax  on input  of pig  iron  embedded  therein  when admittedly a  substantial part  of the  very same  input had resulted in  a different  duty paid  product,  namely  steel ingots and  for manufacturing  the same substantial quantity of pig iron had stood utilised.      The moot  question that  survives for our consideration is as  to whether  the input of pig iron which itself was an exigible commodity  as per Tariff Item 25 had been subjected to the  requisite excise  duty by way of deferred payment of duty not at the time of manufacture of crude iron but at the time when  it   got embedded  in the  final product of steel ingots. In  order to  answer this  question, we  may take  a single illustration.  Let us  assume that 100 metric tons of iron in  crude  form  i.e.  pig  iron  manufactured  by  the appellant at  a given point of time which was being utilised by it  in the  uniform manufacturing  process for ultimately producing the  steel ingots out of it. As per Tariff Item 25 the rate  of excise  duty was  Rs.70/- per metric ton on pig iron.  Therefore,   100  metric   ton  of   pig  iron   when

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manufactured would  have been  liable to  pay excise duty of Rs.7,000/-. would have been available to the appellant to be adjusted against  the final product, namely, the steel ingot was cleared by it. For the purpose of this illustration, let us assume  that by utilising 100 metric tons of pig iron, 90 metric tons  of steel  ingot and  10 metric  tons  of  steel melting scarp emerged. So far as 10 metric tons of scarp was concerned, it  was  not  exigible  to  excise  duty  payable thereon as  per Tariff Item 26 was Rs. 350/- per metric ton. Therefore, accordingly  90 metric tons of steel ingots would have been  required to bear total excise duty of Rs.31,500/- (90 metric tons x Rs.350/-). Towards this total liability of Rs. 31,500/-  of excise  duty on  the final  product of  the steel ingots,  the appellant  would have  been entitled to a set off Rs.7,000/- in all as it had utilised 100 metric tons of pig  iron as  input for manufacturing this 90 metric tons of steel ingots especially in the absence of there being any bifurcation of  the input  of pig  iron   between the  final emerging products, namely, 90 metric tons of steel ingots on the one hand and 10 metric tons of steel scarp on the other. But that would have been possible if the input of 100 metric tons of  pig iron  had already  been subjected to payment of excise  duty   at  the   time  of   clearance  for   captive consumption. Then  in that case the net duty liability on 90 metric tons of steel ingots would have been Rs.24,500/- only (Rs.31,500- Rs.7,000/-). However, the set off of Rs. 7,000/- in all is not available to the appellant on the excise  duty payable on 90 metric tons of steel ingots as at the relevant time when  the input  of pig iron was manufactured, the same had admittedly  not borne  any duty  and the payment of duty was deferred.  Therefore  the  notification  No.18/71  dated 23.3.1971   could not  be of any avail to the appellant. The net result  was that  the appellant had to pay the full duty of Rs.31,500/-  on the  90 metric tons of steel ingots which had utilised  non-duty paid  100 metric tons of pig iron. In the process the appellant accounted for full duty payable on steel ingots  of 90  metric tons  i.e. Rs.24,500/-  and also accounted for  full duty  on the input of 100 metric tons of pig  iron   i.e.  Rs.7,000/-.   A  conjoint   operation   of Notification No.18/71  dated   23.7.1971 and Tariff item 26, therefore,  projects  the  following  picture.  Excise  duty payable on  final output  of steel  ingots would work out to Rs.350/- per  metric ton  consisting of  Rs. 70/- per metric ton being  the duty  on the  embedded input  of pig iron had suffered the  octroi duty   at the time of its clearance for captive consumption,  the appellant would have been required to pay  only Rs.280/-  per metric  ton as excise duty on the final product  of steel  ingots. On the other hand, if input of pig  iron had  not borne  such duty  on its clearance for captive consumption,  and the duty thereon was deferred, the steel ingots on clearance would bear full bear duty Rs.350/- per metric  ton which  in its  turn would result in deferred payment of  excise duty on input of pig iron on Rs. 70/- per metric  ton.     Thus   as  per   the   illustration   under consideration,  if   the     Notification   No.18/71   dated 23.3.1971 operated  in the  field, the department would have got Rs.  7000/- by  way of excise duty on the manufacture of input of pig iron of 100 metric tons when it was cleared for captive consumption  and it  would have  got excise  duty of Rs.24,500/- on  90 metric  tons of steel ingots in the light of the  set off permissible under the said Notification i.e. in all  Rs.31,500/-. If the benefit of the said notification was not  available . As a matter of fact it is not available as the  input of  100 metric tons pig iron had not borne any duty at  the relevant  time and the department had permitted

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the appellant  to adjust  it  ultimately  at  the  stage  of manufacture of  final product of 90 metric tons steel ingots which utilised  the entire  100 metric  tons of pig iron for its production,  in the absence of separate bifurcation, the net result would  still remain the same. Full excise duty of Rs.31,500/- on 90 metric tons of steel ingots @ Rs.350/- per metric ton  without giving  any benefit  of adjustment would become available  to the  department. In  either  case,  the appellant would  be out of pocket to the requisite amount of Rs. 31,500/-  by way  of excise  duty which would fully meet the department’s  demand of  the full  excise  duty  of  Rs. 7000/- payable  on the total input of 100 metric tons of pig iron. When  the amount  of excise  duty so  recovered on  90 metric tons  of steel  ingots which had exhausted the entire pig iron, accounted for fully duty on the entire quantity of input of  pig iron,  it is difficult to appreciate as to how the very  same quantity  of 100  metric tons  of pig iron as input can  again be  subjected  to  excise  duty  because  a further unintended  product of 10 metric tons of steel scarp also resulted  from the  very same  process  of  manufacture undertaken by  the appellant  in its  steel making  furnace. Consequently, it  must be  held that the impugned demands of excise duty  twice on  the input of pig iron utilised by the appellant in manufacturing the final product of steel ingots and which  in the  same process  as a  by-product  of  steel ingots and  which was  fully exempted  from excise  duty  on account of the concerned exemption notification.      In this  connection, we  may note that the reasoning of the CEGAT  as noted  in paragraph 7 of the impugned judgment is clearly  unsustainable. The  CEGAT has  observed that  in this case  steel melting  scarp falling under Tariff Item 26 has been  cleared without  paying the  duty or following the procedure of  Chapter X  as stipulated  in Notification  No. 150/77 dated  18.6.1977. It  has been  further observed that the department was justified in recovering duty at the stage prior to  the last  stage as  in the last stage the produce, i.e. steel  melting scarp  is subject  to nil  rate of duty. With respect,  the error  committed by  the CEGAT  is to the effect that  it had failed to appreciate that though duty on the input  of pig iron at prior stage was not paid, whole of that duty  got paid  on clearance of steel ingots which were the main  final product  and the  emergence of  a minor  by- product like  steel melting  scarp  which  might  have  been cleared on  payment of nil duty had no impact whatsoever for enabling the  department to once again bring to tax the same input of pig iron.      We may  also note  that  the  reliance  placed  by  the learned counsel  for the  appellant on two decisions of this Court in  M/S Swadeshi Polytex Ltd. vs. Collector of Central Excise[(1990) 2  SCC 358]  and in Union of India & Ors. etc. vs. Indian  Aluminium Co.  Ltd. etc.  [(1995) Supp.  (2) SCC 465] may  not be  strictly apposite  on  the  facts  of  the present case  as the  by-products which  were dealt  with in these cases  were not  excisable goods  at all  and  had  no independent market.  In the  present case  even according to the appellant steel melting scarp had a market value and was capable of  being sold  outside if not captively consumed by the appellant. In ground no.(v) B in the memo. of appeal the appellant in this connection, has averred as under|-      " Because  Steel Melting  scarp was      exempted in  terms of  Notification      No.150/77  dated   18.6.1977   upon      conditions mentioned  therein.  The      conditions having  been  fulfilled,      no  central   excise  duty  can  be

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    determined or demanded, on the said      ‘steel melting  scarp’ when sold to      the  steel   plants  following  the      Chapter X  procedure."      It, therefore,  cannot be  urged by the learned counsel for the  appellant that  steel  melting  scalp  was  not  an excisable commodity  or that  it could  not be   sold in the market. Consequently,  the  aforesaid  decisions  cannot  be pressed in  service by  the appellant  in the  present case. However as  discussed earlier the impugned demand of duty on the supposed  embedded input of pig iron which resulted into the steel   melting  scarp  were  clearly  unauthorised  and incompetent. The  appellant is  entitled to  succeed on this ground alone.  In the  result, the  appeal is  allowed,  the judgment and  order of  the CEGAT is set aside, the impugned demands pursuant  to both  the notices  dated 21.11.1980 and 23.11.1981 and  the consequential  adjudication  thereon  as confirmed by  the   CEGAT are  quashed and  set  aside.  The question of  refund  of  Rs.  six  lakhs  deposited  by  the appellant pursuant  to the  order of the CEGAT  will have to be processed  by the  Collector of Central Excise, Bolpur in accordance with law and in the light of the decision of this Court in  Mafatlal Industries  Ltd. vs. Union of India (1977 ELT 247).    The  proceedings  for  this  aforesaid  limited purpose will  stand restored  to the  file of the Collector, Central Excise,  Bolpur. Ordered  accordingly. In  the facts and circumstances  of the case, there will be no order as to costs.