14 March 1984
Supreme Court
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SHRI VALLABH GLASS WORKS LTD. & OTHERS Vs UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS

Bench: VENKATARAMIAH,E.S. (J)
Case number: Transfer Petition (Civil) 4 of 1987


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PETITIONER: SHRI VALLABH GLASS WORKS LTD. & OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT14/03/1984

BENCH: VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) BENCH: VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) MISRA, R.B. (J)

CITATION:  1984 AIR  971            1984 SCR  (3) 180  1984 SCC  (3) 362        1984 SCALE  (1)480  CITATOR INFO :  R          1990 SC 313  (22)  RF         1990 SC 772  (31)  RF         1991 SC1676  (72)

ACT:      Constitution of India 1950, Article 226 Indian Contract Act 1872, Section 72 Limitation Act 1963, Section 17(1)(c) & Article 113.      Central Excise  & Salt  Act 1944,  First Schedule, Item 23A(1) and Item 68.      Excise duty-Claim  for  refund  of  excess  duty  paid- Jurisdiction of the High Court to order refund in a petition under Article 226.

HEADNOTE:      Appellant No.  1 was  a company engaged in the business of manufacturing  different types  of glass,  viz.,  figured glass, wired glass, coloured figured glass, rolled glass and coolex wired glass. The Central Excise Department had levied and collected  excise duty  on the  said goods  on the basis that they belonged to the category of ’sheet glass’ and were therefore subject  to payment  of  excise  duty  under  Item 23A(1) of  the First Schedule to the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944.  On February 20, 1976, the appellants applied for the refund  of excess duty paid by them from October 1, 1963 upto the  date of  the application  on the  ground that  the items of  glass in question could not be described as ’sheet glass’ mentioned  in Item  23A and  that since  they did not fall under any of the Items ] to 67 in the First Schedule of the Act  they could only be subjected to levy of excise duty under  the  residuary  provision,  Item  68.  The  Assistant Collector of  Central Excise  rejected the  claim for refund and the  appellants there-upon  filed a Writ petition in the High Court on September 28, 1976, but the same was withdrawn as a Departmental Appeal filed by the appellants was pending with the Collector. The said Departmental Appeal was however later  dismissed   and  this  order  was  confirmed  in  the appellants’ revision petition to the Government.      The appellants  thereupon filed  a Writ Petition in the High Court  and assailed  the order. The High Court reversed the decision  of the  departmental authorities and held that the items  of glass  manufactured by  the appellants did not

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fall within  the scope  of tariff  Item 23A(I)  of the First Schedule but  that they  came within tariff Item 68 thereof, liable to  duty accordingly,  and directed  refund of excess duty paid after February 20, 1976, on which date the dispute was raised. The claim for refund of excess ’duty paid during the  period   prior  to  February  20,  1976  was,  however, rejected.      In the  appeal to  this  Court  on  the  question:  (I) whether the  appellants are  resettled to  claim  refund  of excess excise duty paid prior to February 20, 181 1976 and  whether they  are entitled to claim refund of such duty paid between A October 1, 1963 and February 20, 1976 or during any  shorter period,  and (2)  whether the appellants are entitled  to claim  such refund  in respect  of all  the goods.      Allowing the appeal in part. ^      HELD: 1.  (i) The  excess amount paid by the appellants would have  become refundable by virtue of section 72 of the Indian Contract  Act if  the appellants  had  filed  a  Suit within the  period of  limitation. Section  1 1(1)(c) of the Limitation Act,  1963 provides that where in the case of any suit or  application for  which a  period of  limitation  is prescribed under  that Act,  the suit  or application is for relief from  the consequences  of a  mistake, the  period of limitation shall  not begin  to run  until the  plaintiff or applicant had  discovered it  or could  have with reasonable diligence discovered it. [186F-G]      (ii) Under  Article 113  of the  Limitation Act. 1963 a suit for  recovery of  excess duty  had to  be filed  within three years  from the  date of  payment to  the  Department. [187B]      (iii) The  High Courts  have power,  for the purpose of enforcement of  fundamental rights  and statutory  rights to make consequential orders for repayment of money realised by Government without the authority of law under Article 226 of the Constitution.  This is an alternative remedy provided by the Constitution  in addition to, but not in supersession of the ordinary  remedy by  way of  suit in  the absence of any provision which  would bar  such  a  suit  expressly  or  by necessary implication.  While there are different periods of limitation prescribed for the institution of different kinds of suits  by the  Limitation Act.  1963, there  is  no  such period prescribed by law in respect of petitions filed under Article 226  of the  Constitution. Whether  relief should be granted to a petitioner under Article 226 where the cause of action had  arisen in  the remote  past is a matter of sound judicial discretion  governed by  the  doctrine  of  laches. Where a petitioner who could have availed of the alternative remedy by  way of  suit  approaches  the  High  Court  under Article 226,  it is  appropriate ordinarily to construe that any unexplained  delay in  filing of the writ petition after the expiry of the period of limitation prescribed for filing a suit  as unreasonable.  This rule.  however, cannot  be  a rigid formula.  Each case  has to be judged on its own facts and circumstances  touching the  conduct of the parties, the change in  situation, the  prejudice which  is likely  to be caused to  the opposite  party or  to  the  general  public. [187D-H]      In the  instant case,  the appellant  had  made  excess payment on being assessed by the Department and such payment cannot be  treated as voluntary payment precluding them from recovering the  amounts. The  appellants should in the facts and circumstances  of this case be deemed to have discovered

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the mistake  on the  date of  making each  payment of excise duty in  excess of  the proper  duty payable  under law. All such excess  payments made  on or  after September  28, 1973 which would  fall within  the period of three years prior to the date  on which  the first writ petition was filed should have been  ordered to  be refunded under Article 226 But the High Court declined to do so. Though 182 the appellant should not be granted any relief in respect of payment made  between October 1, 1963 and September 27, 1973 which would fall beyond the three years from the date of the first writ  petition, it  is not proper and just to negative the claim in respect of excess payments made after September 28, 1973.      Sales Tax  officer, Banaras  &  Ors.  v.  Kanhaiya  Lal Mukundlal Saraf, [1959] S.C.R. 1350, referred to.      2. In  respect of  wired glass,  a dispute  has  arisen between the  Department and  the appellants  earlier and  in that case  while the Department claimed that wired glass was subject to  payment of  duty under  tariff Item  23A(4)  the appellants pleaded that wired glass was liable to duty under tariff Item  23A(1).  The  Government  of  India  ultimately accepted the  case of the appellants, . and duty was paid on that basis  till February  20, 1976. While the earlier order may not  be a  legal bar  to the  contention raised  by  the appellants on  February 20,  1976 that  wired glass  was not taxable under  tariff Item  23A(l) but  under tariff Item 68 after that  date,  it  is  certainly  a  circumstance  which disentitles the  appellants to  claim refund  of excess duty paid by  them in a petition under Article 226. The claim for refund of  excess duty paid on wired glass during the period prior to  February 20, 1976 is therefore liable to rejected. [185G-186C]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3338 of 1979      From the  Judgment and order dated 22 and 23-11-78 of - Gujarat High  Court in  Spl. Civil  Application No.  577  of 1978.      Anil B.  Divan, Ravinder Narain and Ms. Rainu Walia for the appellants.      M. M. Abdul Khader, G. S. Narayan and A. Subhashini for the respondents.      The Judgment of the Court Was delivered by      VENKATARAMIAH, J. This appeal by special leave is filed against the judgment and order dated November 22/23, 1978 of the High Court of Gujarat in Special Civil Application No. - 577 of 1978 filed under Article 226 of the Constitution.      Appellant No.  I is  a company  which is engaged in the business of  manufacturing different  types  of  glass  viz. figured glass  wired glass,  coloured figured  glass, rolled glass and  coolex wired  glass at  Vallabh Vidyanagar in the State of  Gujarat from the year 1963. Appellant No. 2 is the Managing Director  of appellant  No. t.  The Central  Excise Department had levied and collected excise duty 183 On the  said goods  on the  basis that  they belonged to the category of   sheet  glass and  were  therefore  subject  to payment of  excise duty  under Item  23A (1)  of  the  First Schedule  to   the  Central   Excises  and  Salt  Act,  1944 (hereinafter referred  to as  ’the Act’).  On  February  20, 1976, the  appellants applied  for the refund of excess duty

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paid by  them from  October 1,  1963 upto  the date  of  the application on the ground that the item of glass in question were distinct  commercial  goods  known  in  the  market  as figured glass,  wired glass,  coloured figured glass, rolled glass, coolex figured glass and coolex wired glass and could not  be  described  in  common  parlance  as  ’sheet  glass’ mentioned in Item 23A and that since they did not fall under any of  the Items  1 to  67 in the First Schedule to the Act they could  only be  subjected to  levy of excise duty under the residuary  provision Item  68 in  that Schedule after it was inserted in it.      Item 23A  of the  First Schedule  to  the  Act  at  all material times read as.-      "23A. Glass and glassware-      (1)  Sheet glass and plate        Thirty per cent ad           glass                        valorem      (2)  Laboratory glassware         Ten per cent ad                                        valorem      (3)  Glass shells, glass          Fifteen per cent ad           globes and chimneys          valorem           for lamps and lanterns      (4)  other glassware inclu-       Thirty per cent ad           ding tableware               valorem."      The  relevant   part  of   tariff  Item  68  which  was introduced from March 1, 1975 read as: .      "68. All other goods not          one per cent ad           elsewhere specified,         valorem           manufactured in a factory           but excluding      (a)  alcohol, all sorts,           including alcoholic           liquors for human           consumption. 184      (b)  opium, Indian hemp           and other narcotic           drugs and narcotics;           and      (c)  dutiable goods as           defined in sections           2(c) of the Medici-           nal and Toilet           Preparations (Excise           Duties) Act, 1955."      After holding  an enquiry  and hearing  the appellants, the Assistant  Collector of  Central Excise,  Anand rejected the claim  for refund  by his order dated September 20, 1976 because he  was of  the view  that the  items  of  goods  in respect of  which dispute  had been  raised fell  within the purview of  tariff Item  23A (1).  Against the said order of the Assistant Collector the appellants filed a writ petition in Special  Civil Application  No. 1365 of 1976. On the file of the  High Court  on September 28, 1976. The said petition was admitted  but when  it was taken up for Final hearing it was contended  on behalf  of the  Department that  since the appellants had  also filed  an appeal  against the very same order before  the Collector of Central Excise they could not pursue the  remedy under  Article 226 of the Constitution as it stood  then. In  view of  the above  contention the  writ petition was  withdrawn without  prejudice to  the remedy by way of  appeal. The appeal was thereafter disposed of by the Collector on  July 27,  1977 affirming  the  order  of.  the Assistant  Collector.  A  revision  petition  filed  by  the appellants against  the order of the Collector was dismissed by the  Government of  India by  its order dated February 2,

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1978. The  said order in revision was challenged before tile High Court  by the  appellants  under  Article  226  of  the Constitution. The  High Court  by its  judgment under appeal reversed the  decision of the departmental authorities which had, been  affirmed by  the Central Government and held that the items  of glass  manufactured by  the appellants namely, figured glass,  wired glass,  coloured figured glass, rolled glass and coolex wired glass did not . fall within the scope of tariff Item 23A(1) of the First Schedule to the Act as it stood at  the material time but they came within tariff Item 68 and  were liable to bear duty accordingly. The High Court was, however,  of the  view that  the appellants  were  only entitled to  refund  of  excess  duty  paid  by  them  after February 20, 185 1976 on  which date they raised the dispute. Accordingly the High A  Court issued  a writ  quashing the  decision of  the Department in  so far as the classification of the goods was concerned and declaring that they were subject to payment of duty under  tariff Item  68 of the First Schedule to the Act aud not under tariff Item 23A(1) thereof. The Department was further  directed   to  review   the  relevant   assessments accordingly for  the period  subsequent to February 20, 1976 and to  refund any  excess duty that might after such review be found  to be  refundable to  the appellants. The claim of the appellants  for refund  of excess  duty paid  during the period prior  to February  20, 1976  was, however, rejected. The appellants  have filed this appeal by-special leave only as regards  the rejection  by the High Court of their prayer for refund  of excess-  duty paid  by them prior to February 20, 1976.      The Department  has not  filed any  appeal against  the judgment of  the High  Court. Hence  the decision  that  the goods were taxable under tariff Item 68 and not under tariff Item 23A(1)  of the  First Schedule  to the  Act has  become final. Item 23A(1) is also stated to have been since amended suitably so as to bring the items of glass in dispute within its scope.      The question  which arise  for  consideration  in  this appeal are therefore (I) whether the appellants are entitled to claim  refund of - excess excise duty which had-been paid by them  prior of  February 20, 1976 and if so, whether they are entitled  to claim  refund of  such  duty  paid  between October l,  ;963 and  February 20,1976 or during any shorter period and  (2) whether the appellants are entitled to claim such refund in respect of all the goods in question. F      Since  it  is  convenient  to  dispose  of  the  second question at  this stage,  we shall  take it  up first. A few more facts  which are  relevant to  this issue  have  to  be stated here.  As mentioned  earlier the  goods in respect of which dispute  had been  raised by  the appellants  in their application dated  February 20,  1976  were  figured  glass, wired glass, coloured figured glass, rolled glass and coolex wired glass.  But it is seen that in respect of wired glass, a  dispute   had  arisen  between  the  Department  and  the appellants earlier  and in  that case  while the  Department claimed that  wired glass  was subject  to payment  of  duty under tariff  Item 23A(4)  the appellants pleaded that wired glass was  liable to  duty under  tariff  Item  23A(1).  The Government of India ultimately by its order dated August 24, 1971 (in order No. 261 of 1971 of the Government of India on 186 Central Excise Revision Application accepted the case of the appellants that wired glass was subject to duty wader tariff Item 23A  - (1)  and the  appellants paid duty on that basis

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till February  20, 1976. These facts distinguish the case in respect of wired glass from the case in respect of the other goods While the said earlier order may not be a legal bar to the contention raised by the appellants on February 20, 1976 that wired  glass was  not taxable  under tariff Item 23A(1) but under  tariff Item 68 after that date, it is certainly a circumstance  which  disentitles  the  appellants  to  claim refund of  excess duty  paid by  them in  a  petition  under Article 226  of the  Constitution on  a ground  contrary  to their earlier  stand. The  claim for  refund of  excess duty paid on  wired glass during the period prior to February 20, 1976 is  liable to be rejected. The appeal of the appellants to that extent should, therefore, fall.      In regard  to the  relief of refund of excess duty paid in respect  of the  other  goods,  the  case  stands  on  an entirely  different  footing.  This  is  a  case  where  the Department had  assessed the  duty payable by the appellants under a  wrong provision. The appellants were obliged to pay the duty  so assessed.  They did not, no doubt, question the assessments by  taking a  specific stand  as they  had  done earlier in the case of wired glass. The appellants, however, questioned the  validity of  the levy  only on  February 20, 1976 on  the ground  that tariff  Item 23A  (1) of the First Schedule to the Act under which the duty has been levied was not applicable  to tile  goods. While the Department refused to accept  the said  plea, the  High Court has upheld it. In view of  the decision  of the  High Court, the fact that the appellant had paid duty in excess of what they were bound in P law to pay should be now taken as having been established. It is.  not disputed that if the appellants had filed a suit within the period of limitation the excess amount would have become refundable  by virtue  of section  72 of  the  Indian Contract Act. Section 17(1)(c) of - the Limitation Act, 1963 provides that  where in  the case of any suit or application for which  a period  of limitation  is prescribed under that Act,  the  suit  or  application  is  for  relief  from  the consequence of a mistake, the period of limitation shall not begin to run until the plaintiff or applicant had discovered it or could have with reasonable diligence discovered it. In the  instant   case  the  date  on  which  the  mistake  was discovered by  the appellants  or  the  date  on  which  the appellants could  with reasonable  diligence have discovered it is  not clear  from the record before us. No efforts also was made  in the  course of the arguments urged on behalf of the appellants  to establish  it.  We  have,  therefore,  to assume that on the date 187 each payment of excise duty made by the appellants in excess of the  proper duty  payable by  them, the  appellants could have discovered  with due  diligence that  the duty  claimed from them was excessive. Under Article 113 of the Limitation Act, 1963  which is  applicable to  this case,  a  suit  for recovery of  such excess  duty had  to be filed within three years from  the date  of payment  to the Department. But the appellants instead  of filing  a suit,  first filed  a  writ petition in  Special Civil  Application No.  1365 of 1976 on September 28,  1976 and that petition had to be withdrawn in view of  clause (3) of Article 226 of the Constitution as it stood then  because the  alternative remedy  by  way  of  an appeal was  available. The appellants could, therefore, file the writ  petition out of which the appeal arises only after the disposal  of the  revision petition by the Government of India as mentioned earlier. lt is not disputed that the High Courts  have  power,  for  the  purpose  of  enforcement  of fundamental   rights   and   statutory   rights,   to   make

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consequential orders  for repayment of money realised by the Government without the authority of law under Article 226 of the Constitution.  This is an alternative remedy provided by the Constitution in additional to but not in supersession of the ordinary  remedy by  way of  suit in  the absence of any provision which would bar such a suit either expressly or by necessary implication.  While there are different periods of limitation prescribed for the institution of different kinds of suits  by the  limitation Act,  1963, there  is  no  such period prescribed by law in respect of petitions filed under Article 226  of the  Constitution. Whether  relief should be granted  to   a  .  petitioner  under  Article  226  of  the Constitution where  the cause  of action  had arisen  in the remote  past  is  a  matter  of  sound  judicial  discretion governed by  the doctrine  of laches. Where a petitioner who could have  availed of the alternative remedy by way of suit approaches  the   High  Court   under  Article  226  of  the Constitution, i.  is appropriate ordinarily to construe that any unexplained  delay in  the filing  of the  writ petition after the expiry of  the period of limitation prescribed for filing a suit as unreasonable. This rule, however, cannot be a rigid  formula. There may be cases where even a delay of a shorter period  may be considered to be sufficient to refuse relief in  a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution. There may  also be  cases where  there may  be circumstances which may persuade the court to grant relief even though the petition may have been filed beyond the period of limitation prescribed for  a suit.  Each case  has to judged on its own facts and  circumstance touching the conduct of the parties, the change in situation, the prejudice which is likely to be caused to  the opposite  party or to the general public etc. In the instant case, the appellants 188 had in  fact approached the High Court on September 28, 1976 itself by  filing Special Civil Application No. 1365 of 1976 for directing repayment of the excess duty paid by them. But no relief  could be  granted in that petition in view of the provisions of  Article 226  of the  Constitution as it stood then and  the petition  had  to  be  withdrawn.  Hence  even granting that  on the  date of making each payment of excise duty in  excess of  the proper  duty payable  under law, the appellants should  be deemed to have discovered the mistake, all such  excess payments  made on  and after  September 28, 1973 which would fall within the period of three years prior to the  date on  which Special Civil Application No. 1365 of 1976 was filed should have been ordered to be refunded under Article 226 of the Constitution. But the High Court declined to do  so on  grounds of estoppel and acquiescence. While we do agree  that the  appellants should  not  be  granted  any relief in  respect of  payment made  between October 1, 1963 and September  27, 1973  which would fall beyond three years from the  date of the first writ petition filed in this case we do  not find  it proper and just to negative the claim of the appellants  in respect  of excess  payments  made  after September 28,  1973. In  the instant case the appellants had made excess payments on being assessed by the Department and such  payments  cannot  be  treated  as  voluntary  payments precluding  them   from  recovering  them.  (See  Sales  Tax officer, Banaras  & Ors. v. Kanhaiya Lal Mukundlal Saraf. We do not  also find  that the  conduct of the appellants is of such a  nature as  would disentitle  them to claim refund of excess payments  made in  respect of  goods other than wired glass.      We, therefore,  modify the judgment and order passed by the High  Court by  quashing the  assessments of excise duty

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made in  respect of  the goods  in question other than wired glass viz.  figured glass,  coloured figured  glass,  rolled glass  and   coolex  wired  glass  for  the  period  between September 28,  1973 and February 20, 1976 also and directing the assessing  authority  to  make  a  fresh  assessment  in accordance with law in the light of the decision of the High Court. a  The respondents  are further  directed  to  refund after such  fresh determination  any excess duty that may be found to  have  been  paid  by  the  appellants.  The  fresh assessments shall be completed 189 within four  months from  today.  The  appeal  is,  however, dismissed in  A so far it relates to the claim for refund of excess duty  paid in  respect of  wired  glass  during  that period.      The appeal is accordingly allowed in part. No costs. N.V.K.                                Appeal partly allowed. 190