28 October 1968
Supreme Court
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HIND TRADING COMPANY Vs UNION OF INDIA & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1332 of 1966


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PETITIONER: HIND TRADING COMPANY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA  &  ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/10/1968

BENCH: BACHAWAT, R.S. BENCH: BACHAWAT, R.S. SIKRI, S.M. HEGDE, K.S.

CITATION:  1970 AIR 1858            1969 SCR  (2) 533  CITATOR INFO :  D          1989 SC1654  (15)

ACT: Lands  Customs  Act, 1924, ss. 5(3)  and  7(1)--Sea  Customs Act,1878,  s.  167(8)--Foreign  Exchange   Regulation   Act, 1947,  s.  23A--Import  of Chinese Dollars  from  Tibet  via Sikkim--Dollars  in  two lots covered by two  licences  from Reserve Bank of India--Licences shown and duty paid at  Land Customs  station--Applications  made for  permits  to  allow goods  to  cross frontier--Subsequently one lot  found  with wrong  application--Effect--Whether any offence under  above provisions  committed--S. 5(3) of Land Customs  Act  whether requires    permit    to   accompany   goods   to   ultimate destination--Certiorari to Tribunal when lies.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant   imported  1,65,000  pieces  Chinese  silver dollars  from Tibet through Sikkim State under  two  Reserve Bank  import  licences.   As there  were  two  licences  the dollars  were divided into two lots.  One lot bore the  mark ’H.D.’   and  the  other  ’H.N.’  The  appellant  made   two applications  hearing  Nos.  32 and 34  to  the  Officer-in- charge,  Land Customs Station, for the grant of permits  for passing  the goods across the frontier. Application  No.  32 related to the lot marked ’H.N.’ and the application No.  34 related  to  the lot marked ’H.D.’ On May 16, 1957  the  two consignments arrived at the land customs station,  Kalimpong and were examined and appraised by the land customs officer- in-charge  of  the  station.  On the duty  being  paid,  the officer  endorsed the applications certifying that the  duty was  paid  and  permitting  the  import  of  the  goods.’The consignments  there were then delivered at Siliguri  to  the carriers  for carriage by air to Dum Dum.  On May 17,   1957 one  consignment  together with application No. 34 was  sent by  plane  from the Sonapur airstrip and on  the  same  date reached  Dum  Dum  and was delivered  to  the  appellant  at Calcutta.   On May 18,  1957 the Range   Officer,   Matidhar seized  the  second  consignment bearing  the  marks  ’H.D.’ together with application No. 32 when they were about to  be despatched from the Sonapur airstrip.  The seizure was  made under  s. 5(3) of the  Land Customs Act on the  ground  that

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the   mark   on  the  consignment  was   ’H.D.’whereas   the accompanying  import  application  No.  32  related  to  the consignment  marked ’H.N.’  The Collector of  Land  Customs, Calcutta   after  hearing the appellant held  that  offences under s. 5(3) and s. 7(1) of the Land Customs Act, 1924, and s.  167(8) read with of the Sea Customs Act, 1878  had  been committed by the appellant.. He directed confiscation of the goods  under those sections read with s. 23A of the  Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947.  Departmental remedies having failed  the  appellant  filed a writ petition  in  the  High Court.  Appeal in this Court was filed by the appellant with certificate.   The questions that came up for  consideration were  inter alia: (i) whether the seizure and  confiscation. of  the goods was authorised by s. 5(3) of the Land  Customs Act,  1924, and (ii) whether the finding that the  appellant had   committed  offences  under  that  section  and   other provisions of law was perverse and liable to be quashed. HELD:  (i) Section 5(3) of the Land Customs Act.  by  itself does not require that all imported goods must always at  all times, and at all places be accompanied by a permit.   After the  permit the  goods become a part and parcel of the  mass of other like goods in India. There is no duty 534 to keep the permit with the consignment for aH times and  at all  places.  Nor is the importer under a duty to  keep  the consignment  in  his hands. He can sell portions  of  it  to different buyers and obviously he could not give the  permit to every consumer. [540 G--H]     Before March 29, 1968 when the Central Board of  Revenue framed the Chinese Silver Dollars (Import) Rules, there  was no provision in the Act or Rules in force which required the appellants to keep the permits at Sonapur airstrip with  the dollars   seized  on  that  date.   Section  5(3)  was   not infrinrged  when  the carriers did not  produce  the  permit concerning  the  goods at the Sonapur airstrip  on  May  18, 1957, and the goods could not be confiscated under s.  5(3). [541 C]     (ii) Nor were the goods liable to confiscation under  s. 7(1)  of  the Land Customs Act.  There was no   evidence  to show  that the seized dollars were not covered by  licences. On  the materials on record the conclusion was  irresistible that  due to the inadvertence  of the  carriers the  permits were inter changed and that application No. 34 was sent with ’H.N.’  consignment  and application No. 32  was  kept  with ’H.D.’  consignment.   No inference of  smuggling  could  be drawn from the fact  that ’H.D.’ consignment was found  with application No. 32.  In the  circumstances the finding  that the  appellant had smuggled the goods and was guilty  of  an offence  under  s.  7(1) of the Land  Customs  Act  must  be characterised as perverse. [541 D--E; 542 B--C]     (iii)  It  was  also  not  proved  that  the   appellant committed any offence’ under ss. 8(1) and 23A of the Foreign Exchange Regulations Act read with ss. 19 and 167(8) of  the Sea  Customs Act. Although the offence under these  sections may  be  proved by circumstantial evidence in   the  present case there was no evidence direct or circumstantial to prove the offence. [542 D]     Issardas  Daulat Ram  v. Union of India,  [1962]  Supp.1 S.C.R. 358, referred to.     (iv)  Having  regard  to  the facts  on  the  record  no tribunal   could reasonably come to the conclusion that  the dollars  were   liable  to  confiscation  if  they  properly understood  the relevant enactments.  In  the  circumstances the order of the Collector confiscating the goods was liable to be quashed by a writ of certiorari. [542 F]

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   Regina  v. Medical Appeal Tribunal, [1957] 1  Q.B.  574, 582, applied.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1332 of 1966.     Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 25, 1964 of the Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench at Delhi in  Letters Patent Appeal No. 37-D of 1964.     B. Sen, D.K. Kapur, B.P. Maheshwari and R.K. Maheshwari, for the appellant.     R.M. Mehta and S.P. Nayar, for the respondents.     The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     Bachawat,  J. The appellant, M/s. Hind Trading  Company, imported  1,65,000  pieces of Chinese  Silver  Dollars  from Yatung  in Tibet to Kalmnpong, via Nathula pass  and  Rangpo through 535 Sikkim  State under two Reserve Bank import  licences  dated April  22, 1957.  As there were two Reserve  Bank  licences, the dollars were divided into two lots at Yatung.  Each  lot consisted of 66 bags containing 82,500 dollars.  One lot  of bags  bore the mark "H.D." and serial numbers 1 to  66,  and the  other lot bore the mark "H.N." and srl. nos. 1  to  66. On May 15, 1957 the appellant made two applications  bearing Nos.  32  and  34 to  the  officer-in-charge,  Land  Customs Station, Kalimpong, for the grant of permits for passing the goods across the frontier. Application No. 32 related to the bags marked "H.N."  Application No.  34 related to the  bags marked "H.D."  On May 16, the two consignments  arrived   at the   land  customs  station,  Kalimpong and  were  examined and appraised  by the land  customs officer-in-charge of the station.  On the duty being paid, the officer  endorsed  the two  applications,  certifying that the duty  was  paid  and permitting the import of the goods.  The consignments loaded in  trucks then passed out of the customs house and  on  the way to Siliguri were checked at the Teesta Bazar check  post at.  8.45  p.m. on May 16.  On the night of  May  16,   they reached  Siliguri  and were delivered  to  M/s.  Amalgamated Transport  Co.,  for  carriage by air to Dum  Dum.   On  the morning of May 17, one consignment of 82,500 dollars  packed in  66 bags together with the import application no. 34  was sent  by plane from the Sonapur airstrip to Dum Dum  airport and on the same date the consignment reached Dum Dum and was delivered  to the appellant at Calcutta.  On May  18,  1957, the Range Officer, Matidhar seized the second consignment of 82,500  dollars  packed in 66 bags bearing the  mark  "H.D." together  with the application No. 32, when they were  about to  be  despatched by air from the  sonapur  airstrip.   The seizure was made under s. 5 (3)  of the Land Customs Act  on the  Found that the mark on the bags was "H.D." whereas  the accompanying  import  application No. 32 related  to  "H.N." bags.     On  July  7,  1957,  the  Collector  of  Land   Customs, Calcutta, issued a notice to the appellant to show cause why the dollars seized on May 18, 1957 should not be confiscated and why  a penalty should not be imposed upon the  appellant under ss. 5(3) and 7(1)  of the Land Customs Act, 1924,  and section 167(8) read with s. 19  of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 as  made  applicable  by  s. 23A  of  the  Foreign  Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 as there was reason to believe that the goods had been imported by the appellant by land from  Tibet into  India on May 16, 1957 through Indo-Tibet  border,  (i) without  a valid permit under s. 5 of the Land Customs  Act,

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and  (ii)  without valid permission granted by  the  Reserve Bank  of India under notification No. F. 3(84)  E.F.  VII/56 dated  May  4, 1956 issued under sec. 8(1)  of  the  Foreign Exchange  Regulation Act.  That   notification   prohibited’ the 536 import  into  India  of silver coins current  in  the  Tibet region  of China without the permission of the Reserve  Bank of  India.   On  July 30, 1957 the  appellant  showed  cause against  the  proposed action by a letter stating  that  the first  consignment  of  82,500 dollars was  packed  in  bags marked  "H.N."  that  by   inadvertence  the  carriers  M/s. Amalgamated Transport Co., had sent  import application  no. 34  with the first consignment and had kept application  no. 32  with the bags marked "H.D.", that the  two  consignments were  covered  by valid Reserve Bank  licences  and   import passes, that the seizure of the dollars kept in "H.D."  bags under s. 5 (3) of the Land Customs Act was not justified and that  there  was  no ground for confiscating  the  goods  or imposing  any  penalty.  The  appellant  was  heard  by  the Collector  an   August   26,  and  December  11,  1957.   On January  10, 1958, the Collector passed an  order  adjudging that  offences under ss. 5(3) and 7(1) of the  Land  Customs Act  and  S. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act,  1878  had  been committed  and  directing confiscation of  the  goods  under those  sections  read with s. 23A of  the  Foreign  Exchange Regulation Act.  The Collector held that (i) the goods  were liable  to confiscation under s. 5 (3)  of the Land  Customs Act  as  they were not covered by  the  accompanying  import application no. 32; (ii) the appellant failed to prove  that the  first  consignment of 66 bags bore the mark  "H.N."  or that  by inadvertence of the  carriers, application  no.  34 had been sent with it and (iii) had the first consignment of 66  bags borne the mark "H.N." the Range  Officer.  Matidhar and  the officers at Dum Dum would have detected and  rioted this  fact and the appellant could have produced before  the customs  officials  at Calcutta bags with  the  mark  "H.N." immediately  after  May 18, 1957.  An  appeal  against  this order was dismissed by the Member, Central Board of Revenue, on May 17, 1958.  A revision petition against the last order was  dismissed by the Secretary to the Government of  India, Ministry  of Finance, Department of Revenue on  January  16, 1961.     On  November  16,  1962,  the  appellant  filed  a  writ petition in the Punjab High Court for quashing the aforesaid decisions and for setting aside the order of confiscation of the  silver dollars. On May 14, 1964, Shamsher  Bahadur,  J. dismissed  the petition. He held that there was no error  of law apparent on the face of the record.  The appellant filed a  Letters Patent appeal against the order.   On August  25, 1964  the  Divisional Bench dismissed the appeal.   It  held that  (1) s. 5 (3) of the Land Customs Act, 1924 applied  to the case; (2) the fact that the 66 bags bore the mark "H.D." and  the accompanying application no. 32 related  to  "H.N." bags.  showed  conclusively that the  dollars  contained  in those  bags were imported without proper licence and  import permit  and without payment of duty and (3) the  finding  of fact  that there was no mistake on the part of the  carriers with regard to the despatch 537 of the consignments and accompanying documents could not  be set  aside in a writ application.  If he present appeal  has been  filed by the appellant after obtaining  a  certificate from the High Court.       .     Mr. B. Sen for the appellant contended that the  seizure

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and confiscation of the goods was not authorized by s. 5 (3) of  the  Land Customs Act, 1924, (2) the  finding  that  the appellant  had  committed offences under  that  section  and other  provisions  of  law was perverse  and  liable  to  be quashed;  and  (3)   the  impugned  orders  were  passed  in contravention  of the principles of natural justice.   These contentions were disputed by Mr. R.M. Mehta.     The  Land  Customs Act, 1924 provided for  the  levy  of duties  of customs on articles imported or exported by  land from or to territory outside India.  The Act extended to the whole  of  India,  (s. 1 ). Section  2  was  the  definition section.   Section  3  authorised the  appointment  of  land customs   collectors  and  officers.   The  Range   Officer, Matidhar,  was  a  land customs officer  working  under  the Collector  of  Land Customs, Calcutta,  having  jurisdiction over  Sonapur  where  the dollars were  seized.   Section  4 authorised  the establishment of land customs  stations  and the determination of routes by which alone goods imported or exported  by land could pass.  The Central Board of  Revenue established  Kalimpong  as  the  land  customs  station  and prescribed  the  following  routes by which  alone  dutiable goods  could pass out of Tibet into India: (a) road  leading from  Yatung (in Tibet) to Kalimpong via Jelapala  pass  and pedong  through Sikkim State, (b) road leading  from  Yatung (in Tibet) to Kalimpong via Nathula pass and Rangpo  through the  Sikkim State.  Section 5 provided   for   permits.goods passing  across frontier.  Section 6  dealt  with   personal baggage.    Section  7  prescribed  penalties.   Section   8 prescribed  certain dates and times when the goods were  not to be passed. Section 9 made applicable for the purposes  of levy of land customs under the Act certain provisions of the Sea  Customs  Act, 1878 including s. 167 (8) with  necessary modifications  and adaptations.  Sections 18, 19 and 19A  of the  Sea  Customs  Act, 1878 and the whole  of  the  Foreign Exchange Regulation Act though not expressly incorporated in the  Land  Customs  Act applied their  own  force  to  goods imported or exported by land. Duty on imports and exports by land  was  imposed by s. 5 of the Indian Tariff  Act,  1934. The Land Customs Act, 1924 had now been repealed by the  Sea Customs Act, 1962.     It  is necessary to read sections 4, 5 and 7(1)  of  the Land Customs Act, 1924 :--               "Section   4.Establishment  of  Land   Customs               Stations  and determination   of   routes--The               Chief      Customs    Authority    may,     by               notification,  in   the Official  Gazette, 538                     (a) establish land customs stations  for               the  levy of land customs in any land  customs               area, and                     (b) prescribe the routes by which  alone               goods, or any class of goods specified in  the               notification  may pass by land out of or  into               any foreign territory, or to or from any  land               customs   station  from  or  to  any   foreign               frontier.                     Section  5.  Permit  for  goods  passing               across frontier  (1) Every person desiring  to               pass any goods, whether dutiable goods or not,               by  land out of or into any foreign  territory               shall  apply in writing, in such form  as  the               Chief Customs Authority may by notification in               the  Official Gazette prescribe, for a  permit               for  the passage thereof, to the Land  Customs               Officer  in-charge of a Land  Customs  Station

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             established in land customs area adjoining the               foreign frontier across which the goods are to               pass.                     (2) When the duty on such goods has been               paid or the goods have been found by the  Land               Customs Officer to be free of duty, the  ’Land               Customs   Officer   shall   grant   a   permit               certifying  that  duty has been paid  on  such               goods  or that the goods are free of duty,  as               the case may be:                     (3)  Any  Land  Customs  Officer,   duly               empowered  by the Chief Customs  Authority  in               this behalf, may require any person in  charge               of any goods which such officer has reason  to               believe  to have been imported or to be  about               to  be  imported,  by land  from,  or  to  any               foreign   territory  to  produce  the   permit               granted  for  such goods; and any  such  goods               which are dutiable and which are unaccompanied               by  a  permit or do not  correspond  with  the               specification   contained   in   the    permit               produced,  shall  be  detained  and  shall  be               liable to confiscation;                     Provided  that  nothing  in  this   sub-               section  shall  apply to  any  imported  goods               passing  from  a foreign frontier  to  a  Land               Customs Station by a route prescribed in  that               behalf.                     (4) The Chief Customs Authority may,  by               notification  in the Official Gazette,  direct               that  the provisions of this section,  or  any               specified  provisions thereof, shall  not,  in               any  land  customs  areas  specified  in   the               notification apply in respect of goods of  any               class or value or specified.               Section 7. Penalties--(1) Any person who--               (a)  in any case in which the permit  referred               to  in  section  5  is  required,  passes   or               attempts to pass  any 539               goods  by  land  out of or  into  any  foreign               territory  through  any land  customs  station               without such permit, or                   (b)  conveys or attempts to convey  to  or               from any foreign territory or to or  from  any               Land   Customs  Station any goods by  a  route               other  than the route, if any, prescribed  for               such passage under this Act, or                   (c)  aids in so passing or  conveying  any               goods, or knowing that any goods have been  so               passed  or  conveyed, keeps or  conceals  such               goods  or permits or procures them to be  kept               or  concealed  shah be liable to  penalty  not               exceeding,  where the goods are not  dutiable,               fifty  or, where the goods or any of them  are               dutiable,   one  thousand  rupees,   and   any               dutiable goods in respect of which the offence               has   been  committed  shall  be   liable   to               confiscation."      The  scheme of ss. 4, 5 and 7 (1)  of the Land  Customs Act  with  regard to imports by land was as  follows:  Goods could  pass  by  land out of foreign  territory  or  from  a foreign  frontier to a land customs station by a  prescribed route  only, [s. 4(b)].  To import goods by an  unauthorised route  or an attempt to do so was an offence, [s.  7(1)(b)].

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No  permit  could  be obtained for  importing  goods  by  an unauthorised  route.   The  goods could be  brought  by  the prescribed  route  from  the foreign frontier  to  the  land customs  station,  without a permit [proviso  to  s.  5(3)]. Subject  to exemptions, if any under s. 5(4), a  permit  was required  for  the  passage  of  goods  through   the   land customs  station. Passing of goods through the land  customs station without a permit or an attempt to so pass the  goods was  an  offence, Is. 7 (1) (a)].  The importer was required to apply for the permit to the officer-in-charge of the land customs  station, Is. 5(1)]. The goods were brought  to  the station  for examination and appraisement of duty.   On  the duty  being paid or on its being found that the  goods  were free  of  duty, the officer issued the permit  allowing  the passage  of the goods and certifying that the duty had  been paid  or the goods. were free of duty as the case might  be, Is. 5 (1) and (2)].  Dutiable goods. in respect of which  an offence  was committed was liable to confiscation.  What  is stated above applied mutatis mutandis to exports by land.     In  this  setting let us examine the  provisions  of  s. 5(3).  That sub-section required that all goods imported  or about to be exported must be accompanied by a permit for the passage  there,of issued by the officer in charge of a  land customs  station.   It  was an offence  to  take  the  goods through  the  land customs station 1. without a  permit.   A duly  authorised  land customs officer  could  enforce  this requirement  by asking any person in charge of the goods  to produce the permit.  Dutiable goods unaccompanied by 540 a   permit  or  not  corresponding  to  the   specifications contained in the permit produced had to be detained and  was liable  to confiscation.  It is to be noticed that the  sub- section referred to goods "unaccompanied by a permit" and to "any   person  in  charge  of  any  goods."   It   obviously contemplated cases where the goods should be accompanied  by the permit and the person in charge of the goods was under a duty  to produce the permit. In view of ss. 5 and 7  (1)  it was  necessary  that the goods should be  accompanied  by  a permit  when they passed through the land  customs  station. Rules under the Act could also prescribe that the goods must be  accompanied  by a permit for some time even  after  such passage.  In such cases s. 5 (3) was infringed if the  goods were not accompanied by the permit.      The  Central  Board  of  Revenue  framed  the   Chinese Silver Dollars (import) Rules on March 29, 1958 in  exercise of the powers conferred by s. 9(1)  of the Land Customs Act, 1924.  Rule  6(2)  provided that on  its  journey  from  the Kalimpong laud customs station to its ultimate  destination, any  consignment  of Chinese silver  dollars  imported  from Tibet  into India  must  be accompanied by a  permit,  i.e., the  importer’s  copy  of the  relative  import  application bearing  the endorsement of  the  officer  in charge of  the Kalimpong  land customs  station  permitting  the  clearance of the consignment.  The permit must be produced at the land customs   check  post  at  Teesta  Bazar,  along  with   the consignment  if the destination was Teesta Bazar  or  beyond also  be produced on demand by any land customs  officer  at any  time  during the journey of the  consignment  upto  its ultimate  destination.   These  Rules  were  framed  on  the assumption that independently of the Rules, the importer was not  obliged to keep the permit with the dollars after  they passed out of the Kalimpong land customs station.  The Rules were  not  in force on May 18, 1957 when  the  dollars  were seized  by  the  Range  Officer,  Matidhar.  There  was   no provision  in the Act or the Rules in force on May 18,  1957

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which required the appellant to keep. the permit at  Sonapur airstrip with the dollars seized on that date.     The contention of the Revenue is that s. 5 (3)  required that  all imported goods .must always, at all times  and  at all  places  be accompanied by a permit.  We are  unable  to accept this contention.’ After the import, the goods  became a part and parcel of the mass of other like goods in ’India. There  was no. duty to keep the permit with the  consignment of imported goods for all times and at all places.  Nor  was the importer under a duty to keep the consignment intact  in his hands.  He could sell portions of it to different buyers and  obviously  he  could  not  give  the  permit  to  every consumer.  He could import rubies from Burma by land .  :and by  sea.  It was not necessary to keep any permit  with  the rubies  imported  by sea after their  clearance   from.  the customs 541 house.   Nor  was the position different in case  of  rubies imported  by  land.  A consumer wearing a necklace  made  of rubies  was not expected to carry the permit for the  rubies in her bag.  Under the Land Customs Act a customs  clearance permit  was necessary for the passage of goods  imported  or about to be .exported through the land customs station.  For this  reason s. 5(3) read with s. (1)(a) required  that  the goods  so passing through the land customs station  must  be accompanied by the permit.  The Rules could provide that the imported  goods  should be accompanied by  the  permit  even after  such passage.  As already stated. the Rules  required that  imported Chinese silver dollars should be  accompanied by the permit during the entire journey up to their ultimate destination.   In such cases. s. 5(3) was infringed  if  the permit covering the goods was not produced on demand by  any land customs officer.  Except in such cases, s. 5(3) did not apply, and it was not necessary to keep the permit with  the goods.   We  hold that s. 5(3) was not  infringed  when  the carriers  did not produce the permit covering the  goods  at the Sonapur airstrip on May 18. 1957 and the goods could not be confiscated under s. 5 (3).     Nor were the goods liable to confiscation under s.  7(1) of  the Land Customs Act.  The appellant  imported  1,65,000 dollars  from Tibet under two Reserve Bank licences and  two import  permits.   There was no distinguishing mark  on  any dollar.   The appellant was found in possession of  1,65,000 dollars  only.   No  attempt  was made  to  prove  that  the appellant was in possession of another consignment of 82,500 dollars.  At’ the time of import the dollars were packed  in 66  bags marked "H.N." and 66 bags marked "H.D."  The  Range Officer  seized  82.500  dollars packed in  66  bags  marked "H.D."   There  is  no evidence to.  show  that  the  seized dollars were not covered by the permits and licences held by the  appellant.   The onus was on the respondents  to  prove that  the first consignment of 66 bags bore the mark  "H.D." Application no. 34 accompanied the first consignment.  There was  no noting on application no. 34 by the customs  officer at  Sonapur or at Dum Dum indicating that they had  examined the bags or that the bags were found to bear the mark "H.D." The  summary of the diary of the Range Officer Matidhar  set out  in  the order of confiscation does not  show  that  the officer  examined the bags. The note in the diary  that  the mark checked was "H.D." could have been made on the basis of the  mark "H.D." shown in the accompanying  application  no. 34.   Before the issue of the show cause notice on July  17. 1957  the  appellant had no occasion to produce  before  the constoms authorities any of the 66 bags marked "H.N."  which had  reached  Calcutta.   No  inference   has   been   drawn

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against  the appellant from their inability to produce   any bags  marked "H.N." after July 17, 1957.  On the   materials on.  the  record it is impossible to hold that  the  dollars seized ,on May 18. 4Sup.C. 1./69-  2 542 1957  were  smuggled  goods.  There was  no  noting  by  the customs  officers at Sonapur and Dum Dum on application  no. 34.   If the appellant desired to send smuggled "H.D."  bags from   Sonapur  to  Dum  Dum,  they  could   easily   obtain application   no.  34  from Calcutta and send  it  with  the consignment   seized  at  Sonapur.  Moreover,  the   customs officers  had not put any mark or initials on the bags,  and there was nothing to prevent the appellant from putting  the mark "H.N." on other bags and using them for the carriage of the dollars.  The conclusion is irresistible that due to the inadvertence of the carriers the permits were  inter-changed and  that application no. 34 was sent with "H.N."  bags  and application no. 32 was kept with "H.D." bags.  No  inference of  smuggling could be drawn from the fact that "H.D."  bags were  found with application no. 32.  In the  circumstances. the  finding that the appellant had smuggled the  goods  and was guilty of an offence under s. 7 (1)  of the Land Customs Act must be characterized as perverse.     Nor  was  it  proved that the  appellant  committed  any offence  under ss. 8 (1) and s. 23A of the Foreign  Exchange Regulations  Act  read  with ss. 19 and 167(8)  of  the  Sea Customs  Act.  An offence under those sections can be proved by  circumstantial  evidence, see Issardas  Daulat  Ram   v. Union  of  India(1).   In  the present  case  there  was  no evidence  either  direct  or  circumstantial  to  prove  the offence.   The appellant had valid  Reserve   Bank  licences for the import of 1,65,000 dollars.  Those licences were not examined nor seized by the customs officials and no  attempt was  made  to  prove. the licences did  not  relate  to  the dollars  seized  on  May 1.8, 1957.   It  follows  that  the dollars were not liable to confiscation under any  provision of law.     Having  regard  to the facts on the record  no  tribunal could  reasonably  come to the conclusion that  the  dollars were liable to confiscation if they properly understood  the relevant  enactments. In the circumstances the order of  the Collector confiscating the goods is liable to be quashed  by a  writ of certiorari, see Halsbury’s Laws of  England,  3rd ed. vol.II, art. 19, pp. 62-63. In Regina  v. Medical Appeal Tribunal(2)  the  Court  held  that  an  assessment  of  20% disablement  must, having regard to. the facts appearing  on the  record,  be held to be erroneous in point  of  law  and based  upon  a misconstruction of Regulation 2(5)   of   the National]   Insurance   (Industrial   Injuries) (Benefits) Regulation 1948 and the award of the Medical Appeal Tribunal was therefore liable to be quashed by a writ of  certiorari. Denning, L. 1. observed :-                     "No  reasonable person. who  had  proper               regard to regulation 2(5), could have come  to               such a conclusion. [1962] supp. 1 S.C.R. 358.    (2) [1957] I Q.B. 574, 582. 543               It is now settled that when a tribunal come to               a  conclusion  which could not  reasonably  be               entertained   by   them   if   they   properly               understood  the relevant enactment, then  they               fall  into error in point of law: see  Edwards               (Inspector of Taxes)  v. Bairstow, [1956] A.C.               14:  When  the  primary facts  appear  on  the

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             record, an error of this kind is  sufficiently               apparent for it to be regarded as an or on the               face  of  the record such as  to  warrant  the               intervention of this Court by certiorari."     This conclusion is sufficient to dispose of the  appeal. It  is therefore unnecessary to examine the contention  that the  impugned  orders were passed in  contravention  of  the principles of natural justice.     In  the result, the appeal is allowed with  costs.   The order  passed  by the High Court is set aside and  the  writ petition  filed by the appellant is allowed.  The  order  of confiscation  of the Chinese silver dollars is  quashed  and the   respondents  are  directed  to  return  them  to   the appellant. G.C.                                        Appeal allowed. 544