04 September 1991
Supreme Court
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THE COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, MADRAS Vs M/S M.M. RUBBER & CO.

Bench: RAMASWAMI,V. (J) II
Case number: C.A. No.-006071-006071 / 1990
Diary number: 72786 / 1990
Advocates: P. PARMESWARAN Vs K. R. NAMBIAR


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PETITIONER: THE COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, MADRAS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: M/S. M.M. RUBBER & CO. TAMIL NADU.

DATE OF JUDGMENT04/09/1991

BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. (J) II BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. (J) II RANGNATHAN, S. OJHA, N.D. (J)

CITATION:  1991 AIR 2141            1991 SCR  (3) 862  1992 SCC  Supl.  (1) 471 JT 1991 (3)   587  1991 SCALE  (2)473

ACT:     Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944--Section  35E--Legisla- tive  intention, indicated--Power under Section  35E--Nature of--Authority  authorised  to exercise a  power--Failure  to exercise-Effect of.     Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944  Section 35E(3)--Calcu- lation  of the period of one year--Relevant date- "From  the date of decision or order"--Construction.     Central  Excises & Salt Act, 1944  Section  35E--Collec- tor’s  order  dated  28. 11.  1984   Communicated  on  21.2. 1984---Board’s  direction to Collector to move Tribunal  for correct  determination--Whether the  adjudicating  authority aggrieved of own order--Legality of action after the  period of limitation.

HEADNOTE:     The appellant, an adjudicating authority held the demand from the respondent towards excise duty on biaxially  orien- tal polypropylene films as set ant in the show cause  notice dated 25.10.1983 as barred by limitation and dropped further proceedings.  A copy of the order despatched  on  21.12.1984 was received by the respondent on 21.12.1984.     The Central Board of Excise and Customs after considera- tion  of the order, on 11.12.198S directed the appellant  to apply  under  Section 3SE(1) of the Central Excises  &  Salt Act, 1944, to the Customs, Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal for correct determination of the points arising out of  the order dated 21.12.1984 and the appellant  filed  the application under section 35E(4) of the Act.     Before the Tribunal the respondent urged that the  rele- vant  date  of the  Collector’s  (adjudicating  authority’s) order for the purposes of Section 35E(3) should he taken  as 28.11.1984  and not 21.12.1984 when it was received  by  the respondent  and on that basis the order of the  Board  under Section  35E(1)  of  the Act should he held  as  beyond  the period of one year from the date of the decision or order of the  adjudicating  authority and therefore  the  application before the Tribunal was incompetent. 863     The Tribunal dismissed the application holding that  the

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application was not maintainable.     In  this appeal tided under Section 35L of the Act,  the appellant  contended  that  mere writing an  order  in  file kept  in  the office was no order in the eye of law  in  the sense  of affecting the rights of the parties for  whom  the order was meant and that though the order of the  adjudicat- ing authority was made on 28.11.1984 a copy of the same  was sent  to the respondent only on 21.12.1984 and  received  by him on the very day and that therefore the limitation  would start  only at the earliest from 21.12.1984;  that  enabling the  giving  of the direction under Section 35E(1)  and  the application under Section 35E(4) in pursuance of that direc- tion should he treated as if a right of appeal given to  the department;  that the departmental authorities and the  pri- vate parties were to he treated equally as aggrieved persons for  the  purposes of calculating the time  for  making  the direction under Section 35E(3) of the Act.     On  the  question,  what is the relevant  date  for  the purpose  of calculation of the period of one  year  provided under  Section  35E(3) of the Central Excises  &  Salt  Act, 1944, dismissing the appeal, this Court,     HELD:  1.  If an authority is authorised to  exercise  a power or do an act affecting the rights of parties, he shall exercise  that  power within the period or  limitation  pre- scribed  therefore. The order or decision of such  authority comes into force or becomes operative or becomes an   effec- tive  order  or  decision on and from the date  when  it  is signed  by  him. The date of such order or decision  is  the date on which the order or decision was passed or made; that is  to say when he ceases to have any authority to  tear  it off  and draft a different order and when.he ceases to  have any locuspaetentiae. Normally that happens when the order or decision is made public or notified in some form or when  it can he said to have left his hand. The date of communication of  the order to the party whose rights are affected is  not the  relevant date for purposes of determining  whether  the power has been exercised within the prescribed time.  [869D- F]      2.  If the intention or design of the statutory  provi- sion  was  to protect the interest of the  person  adversely affected,  by providing a remedy against the order or  deri- sion  any period of limitation prescribed with reference  to invoking  such remedy shall he read as commencing  from  the date  of communication of the order. But if it is a  limita- tion for a competent authority to make an order the date  of exer- 864 cise of that power and in the case of exercise, of suo  moto power over the subordinate authorities’ orders, the date  on which  such power was exercised by making an order  are  the relevant date for determining the limitation. [871H-872B]     3.  Section  35E comes under the latter category  of  an authority exercising its own powers under the Act. It is not correct  to equate the Board to one of the two parties to  a quasi-judicial  proceeding  before  the  Collector  and  the Board’s right under Section 35E to the exercise of the right of  appeal by an aggrieved assessee from an order passed  to its prejudice. [872B-C]     4.  The power under Section 35E is a power  of  superin- tendence  conferred on a superior authority to  ensure  that the subordinate officers exercise their powers under the Act correctly  and  properly. Where a time is  limited  for  the purposes  by  the statute, such power  should  he  exercised within  the  specified  period from the date  of  the  order sought to he reconsidered. To hold to the contrary would  he

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inequitable  and will also introduce uncertainties into  the administration of the Act. [872C-E]     5.  The  direction  to file  an  appeal  under  Sections 35E(1)(2) of the Act by the Board and the Collector, as  the case may he, is to the very adjudicating authority who would otherwise  he bound by his own order and not expected to  he aggrieved  by  the  same. When an appeal is  filed  on  such direction, the appellant will be the adjudicating  authority himself  and  not  the authority  who  gave  the  direction. [867D-E]     6. The period of one year fixed under sub-section (3) of Section  35E of the Act should he given its literal  meaning and  so  construed the impugned direction of the  Board  was beyond  the  period  of limitation  prescribed  therein  and therefore invalid and ineffective. [872G]     Annamalai Chetti v. Col. J.G. Cloete, [1883] ILR 6  Mad. 189,  Seshamma v. Sankara, [1889] ILR 12 Mad. 1; The  Secre- tary of State for India in Council v. Gopisetti Narayanaswa- mi  Naidu Guru, ILR 34 Madras 151; Raja Harish  Chandra  Raj Singh v. The Deputy Land Acquisition Officer & Anr.,  [1962] 1  SCR 676; Asstt. Transport  Commissioner  (Administration) U.P.  &  Ors. v. Sri Nand Singh, [1981] 1  SCR  131;  Muthia Chettiar v. CIT, ILR 1951 Mad. 815 and Viswanathan  Chettiar v.  Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras, 25 ITR 79,  referred to. 865

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: CiVil Appeal No. 6071 (NM) of 1990.     From the Order dated 31.5.90 of the Customs, Excise  and Gold  (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi in Appeal  No. E/2586/86-C with E/Cross/478/86-C. (Order No. 541/90-C).     M. Gauri Shankarmurthy, K. Swamy and P. Parmeshwaran for the Appellant. Santosh Hegde and K.R. Nambiar for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     V.  RAMASWAMI, J. The short question of law that  arises for consideration in this appeal is as to what is the  rele- vant  date for the purpose of calculation of the  period  of one  year provided under section 35E(3) of The  Central  Ex- cises & Salt Act, 1944 (hereinafter called the Act). Briefly stated the question arises in the following circumstances.     By  order in Original No. 34 of 1984  dated  28.11.1984, the  Collector of Central Excise, Madras as an  adjudicating authority  within the meaning of the Act, held as barred  by limitation  the  demand from the respondent  towards  excise duty on biaxially oriental polypropylene films as set out in the  show cause notice dated 25.10.1983 and dropped  further proceedings against the respondent. A copy of this order was attested  by the Superintendent of the office on  21.12.1984 and  despatched  to the respondent. It was received  by  the respondent  on 21.12.1984. The Central Board of  Excise  and Customs (hereinafter called the. Board), after consideration of  the order, on 11.12.1985 directed the Collector of  Cen- tral  Excise, Madras under the provisions of Section  35E(1) to  apply to the Customs, Excise & Gold (Control)  Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi, for correct determination of the points arising  out  of  the aforesaid order  and  accordingly  the Collector  filed  the application before  the  Tribunal  ’as provided under Section 35E(4) of the Act.     Before the Tribunal the respondent urged that the  rele- vant date of the Collector’s (adjudicating authority)  order

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for  the  purposes  of Section 35E(3)  should  be  taken  as 28.11.1984  and not 21.12.1984 when it was received  by  the respondent  and on that basis the order of the  Board  under Section 35E(1) of the Act should be held as beyond the 866 period of one year from the date of the decision or order of the  adjudicating  authority and therefore  the  application before  the Tribunal was incompetent. The Tribunal  accepted this contention and held that the application was not  main- tainable.     In  this appeal filed under Section 35L of the  Act  the learned counsel for the appellant contended that mere  writ- ing  an order in file kept in the office is no order in  the eye  of  law  in the sense of affecting the  rights  of  the parties  for  whom the order is meant and  that  though  the order of the adjudicating authority was made on 28.11.1984 a copy  of  the  same  was sent  to  the  respondent  only  on 21.12.1984  and  received by him on the very  day  and  that therefore  the limitation would start only at  the  earliest from  21.12.1984. He stated that the order was  received  by the  Board also only subsequent to 21.12.1984.  His  further submission  was  that enabling the giving of  the  direction under  Section  35E(1)  and the  application  under  Section 35E(4) in pursuance of that direction shall be treated as if a right of appeal given to the department. On this basis his argument  was  that  the departmental  authorities  and  the private  parties  are  to be treated  equally  as  aggrieved persons for the purposes of calculating the time for  making the direction under Section 35E(3) of the Act.      Before we discuss the arguments of the learned counsel, it  is necessary to set out some relevant provisions in  the Act.  Section  35 of the Act, provides for an  appeal  to  a person  aggrieved by any decision or order passed under  the Act  by a Central Excise Officer lower than a  Collector  of Central  Excise’  and that such an appeal will  have  to  be filed  "within three months from the date of the  communica- tion to him of such decision or order". Clause 5 of  Section 35A requires that on the disposal of the appeal, the Collec- tor  (Appeals) shall communicate the order passed by him  to the Appellant, the adjudicating authority and the  Collector of  Central  Excise-  Section 35B provides for  a  right  of appeal  to any person aggrieved by, among other orders,  (1) an order passed by the Collector (Appeals) under Section 35A and  (2)  a  decision or order passed by  the  Collector  of Central Excise as an adjudicating authoritY. Such an  appeal will have to be filed "within three months from the date  on which the order sought to be appealed against is communicat- ed to the Collector of Central Excise or as the case may  be the other party preferring the appeal." The Appellate Tribu- nal  also is required to send a copy of the order passed  in the appeal to the Collector of Central Excise and the  other party to the appeal. Section 35E(1) authorises the Board "of its  own  motion,  call for and examine the  record  of  any proceeding in which a Collector of Central Excise as 867 an  adjudicating authority has passed any decision or  order under  this Act for the purpose of satisfying itself  as  to the legality or propriety of any such decision or order  and may, by order, direct such Collector to apply to the  Appel- late Tribunal. or as the case may be the Customs and  Excise Revenues  Appellate Tribunal established under Section 3  of the Customs and Excise Revenues Appellate Tribunal Act, 1986 for  the  determination of such points arising  out  of  the decision  or order as may be specified by the Board  in  its order."  As sub-section (2) is also relevant for  considera-

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tion that may also be set here and that reads:               "2.  The Collector of Central Excise  may,  of               his  own   motion, call for  and  examine  the               record  of any proceeding in which an  adjudi-               cating authority subordinate to him has passed               any  decision or order under this Act for  the               purpose of satisfying himself as to the legal-               ity or propriety of any such decision or order               and  may, by order, direct such  authority  to               apply  to  the  Collector  (Appeals)  for  the               determination  of such points arising  out  of               the  decision or order as may be  spcified  by               the Collector or Central Excise in his order.     It  may  be seen that the direction to  file  an  appeal under these two sub-sections by the Board and the Collector, as  the case may be, is to the very  adjudicating  authority who  would otherwise be bound by his own order and  not  ex- pected to be aggrieved by the same. When an appeal is  filed on  such direction, the appellant will be  the  adjudicating authority himself and not the authority who gave the  direc- tion.     Sub-Section  (3) of Section 35E of the Act  which  deals with  the limitation for exercise of the powers  under  sub- sections  (1) and (2) of the Act and which is  the  relevant provision for consideration in this appeal reads as follows:               "No order shall be made under sub-section  (1)               or subsection (2) after the expiry of one year               from the date of the decision or order of  the               adjudicating authority."      At this stage itself we may state that sub-section  (4) of  the Act provides that the adjudicating  authority  shall file the application before the Tribunal in pursuance of the order made under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2)"within a period  of. three months from the date of  communication  of the  order under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2)  to  the adjudicating authority." 868     The words "from the date of decision or order" used with reference to the limitation for filing an appeal or revision under certain statutory provisions had come up for consider- ation  in a number of cases. We may state that the ratio  of the  decisions  uniformly is that in the case  of  a  person aggrieved  filing the appeal or revision, it shall mean  the date  of  communication of the decision  or  order  appealed against.  However, we may note a few leading cases  on  this aspect.     Under  section 25 of the Madras Boundary Act,  1860  the starting  point of limitation for appeal byway of  suit  al- lowed  by that section was the passing of the  Survey  Offi- cer’s  decision  and in two of the earliest  cases,  namely, Annamalai Chetti v. Col. J.G. Cloete, [1883] ILR 6 Mad.  189 and Sesharnrna v. Sankara, [1889] ILR 12 Mad. 1, it was held that the decision was passed when it was communicated to the parties.  In The Secretary of State for India in Council  v. Gopisetti  Narayanaswami  Naidu  Guru, ILR  34  Madras  151, construing  a similar provision in the Survey  and  Boundary Act,  1897 the same High Court held that a  decision  cannot properly  be said to be passed until it is in some way  pro- nounced  or published under such circumstances  the  parties affected by it have a reasonable opporunity of knowing  what it contains. "Till then though it may be written out, signed and  dated, it is nothing but a decision which  the  officer intends to pass. It is not passed so long it is open to  him to  tear off what he has written and write something  else." In Raja Harish Chandra Raj Singh v. The Deputy Land Acquisi-

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tion Officer & Anr., [1962] 1 SCR 676 construing the proviso to  Section 18 of the Land Acquisition Act which  prescribed for  applications  seeking reference to the  Court,  a  time limit  of six weeks of the receipt the notice from the  Col- lector  under  Section 12(2) or within six months  from  the date of the Collector’s award whichever first expires,  this Court held that the six months period will have to be calcu- lated from the date of communication of the award. In Asstt. Transport  Commissioner (Administration) U.P. & Ors. v.  Sri Nand  Singh,  [1981] 1 SCR 131 construing the  provision  of Section  15 of the U.P. Motor Vehicle Taxation Act,  it  was held  that  for an aggrieved party the limitation  will  run from the date when the order was communicated to him.     The ratio of these judgments were applied in  interpret- ing  section  33A(2) of the Indian Income Tax Act,  1922  in Muthia Chettiar v. CIT, ILR 1951 Mad. 815 with reference  to a  right  of revision provided to  an  aggrieved  assessee., Section  33A(1) of the Act on the other hand authorised  the Commissioner  to suo moto call for the records of  any  pro- ceedings under the Act in which an order has been passed  by any 869 authority subordinate to him and pass such order thereon  as he thinks fit. The proviso, however, stated that the Commis- sioner shall not revise any order under that sub-section" if the order (sought to be revised) has been made more than one year  previously". Construing this provision the High  Court in  Muthia Chettiar’s case held that the power to  call  for the records and pass the order will cease with the lapse  of one  year  from  the date of the order  by  the  subordinate authority  and  the ratio of date of the  knowledge  of  the order applicable to an aggrieved party is not applicable for the  purpose  of  exercising suo moto  power.  Similarly  in another decision reported in Viswanathan Chettiar v. Commis- sioner of Income Tax, Madras, 25 ITR 79 construing the  time limit for completion of an assessment under section 34(2) of the  Income Tax Act, 1922, which provided that it  shall  be made  "within four years from the end of the year  in  which the income, profit and gains were first assessable," it  was held  that the time limit of four years for exercise of  the power  should  be calculated with reference to the  date  on which  the assessment or reassessment was made and  not  the date  on  which such assessment or reassessment  order  made under Section 34(2) was served on the assessee.     It  may  be  seen therefore, that, if  an  authority  is authorised  to exercise a power or do an act  affecting  the rights  of parties, he shall exercise that power within  the period  of  limitation prescribed there for.  The  order  or decision  of  such  authority comes into  force  or  becomes operative  or becomes an effective order or decision on  and from  the  date when it is signed by him. The date  of  such order or decision is the date on which the order or decision was  passed or made: that is to say when he ceases  to  have any authority to tear it off and draft a different order and when  he ceases to have any locuspaetentiae.  Normally  that happens  when  the  order  or decision  is  made  public  or notified  in some form or when it can be said to  have  left his  hand.  The date of communication of the  order  to  the party whose rights are affected is not the relevant date for purposes of determining whether the power has been exercised within the prescribed time.     So  far  as the party who is affected by  the  order  or decision  for  seeking  his remedies against  the  same,  he should  be  made aware of passing of such  order.  Therefore Courts  have uniformly laid down as a rule of law  that  for

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seeking  the remedy the limitation starts from the  date  on which the order was communicated to him on the date on which it was pronounced or published under such circumstances that the parties affected by it have a reasonable opportunity  of knowing  of passing of the order and what it  contains,  The knowledge of the party 870 affected  by Such a decision, either actual or  constructive is thus an essential element which must be satisfied  before the decision can be said to have been concluded and  binding on  him.  Otherwise the party affected by it  will  have  no means  of obeying the order or acting in conformity with  it or of appealing against it or otherwise having it set.  This is  based  upon,  as observed by Rajamanner,  CJ  in  Muthia Chettiar v. CIT, supra "a salutary and just principle".  The application’  of this rule so far as the aggrieved party  is concerned is not dependant on the provisions of the particu- lar statute, but it is so under the general law.     In  Muthia  Chettiar’s case (supra) both  these  aspects came  up for consideration. The relevant provisions  consid- ered  therein  were Section 33A(1) and (2)  of  the’  Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, which read as follows:               "33A.  (1)  The Commissioner may  of  his  own               motion  call for the record of any  proceeding               under  this  Act in which an  order  has  been               passed by any authority subordinate to him and               may  make such inquiry or cause such.  inquiry               to  be made and, subject to the provisions  of               this  Act,  may pass such order  thereon,  not               being an order prejudicial to the assessee  as               he thinks it:                        Provided that the Commissioner  shall               not  revise any order under  this  sub-section               if-               (a) x   x   x               (b) x   x   X   x               (c) the order has been made more than one year               previously."               "(2)  The Commissioner may, on application  by               an  assessee  for revision of an  order  under               this Act, passed by any authority  subordinate               to the Commissioner, made within one year from               the  date  of  the order,....   call  for  the               record  of the proceeding in which such  order               was  passed,  and.....  may  pass  such  order               thereon......  as he thinks fit: Interpreting these provision the Court observed:               "In  a case falling under sub-section (1)  the               Commissioner acts of his own motion. There  is               no question of the               871               aggrieved  party  invoking  his  jurisdiction,               there  can therefore be no occasion  to  apply               the rule enunciated in Secretary of State  for               India  in Council v.  Gopisetti  Narayanaswami               Naidu, [1910] ILR 34 Mad, 15 1. It may be said               that the Commissioner’s power to call for  the               record ceases with the lapes of one year  from               the  date  of  the order  by  the  subordinate               authority.  But  in a case failing  under  sub               section  (2)  the party aggrieved has  got  to               take the step of applying for revision and  he               is  allowed  one  year from the  date  of  the               order. The provision is, therefore,  certainly               in the nature of a time-limit for the applica-

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             tion for revision."     The  decision  in Viswanathan  Chettiar’s  case  (supra) related to the reassessment power under Section 34(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1922 which read as follows:               "No order of assessment under Section 23 or of               assessment  or reassesment  under  sub-section               (1)  of this section shall be made  after  the               expiry,  in  any case to which clause  (c)  of               sub-section  (1)  of section  28  applies,  of               eight  years  and in any other case,  of  four               years  from the end of the year in  which  the               income,  profits or gains were first  assessa-               ble."     After referring to some of the provisions in the Act and some  of  the  earlier decisions and  in  particular  Muthia Chettiar’s case (supra) the learned judges observed:                      "As  we have already pointed  out,  the               time limit of four years for which sub-section               (2)  of  Section 34 provided  was  the  period               within  which  the Income-tax Officer  had  to               complete  one stage of the  proceedings,  that               is,  the assessment        of the  income  and               determination   of   the  tax   payable,   and               that  stage could be completed by the  Income-               tax Officer        himself, even if the  terms               of  the order of assessment were not  communi-               cated within that period of four years to  the               assessee. The rights of the assessee aggrieved               by  such  an   order of assessment  have  been               specifically provided for by   other  sections               of the Act."       Thus  if  the  intention or design  of  the  statutory provision was to protect the interest of the person adverse- ly  affected,  by providing a remedy against  the  order  or decision any period of limitation prescribed with  reference to invoking such remedy shall be read as com- 872 mencing from the date of communication of the order. But  if it  is  a limitation for a competent authority  to  make  an order the date of exercise of that power and in the case  of exercise of suo moto power over the subordinate authorities’ orders, the date on which such power was exercised by making an  order  are  the  relevant  dates  for  determining   the limitation. The ratio of this distinction may also be found- ed  on  the principle that the Government is  bound  by  the proceedings  of  its officers but persons affected  are  not concluded by the decision.     Section  35E comes under the latter category of  an  au- thority  exercising its own powers under the Act. It is  not correct to equate the Board, as contended by Sri  Gaurishan- kar  Murthy, to one of the two parties to  a  quasi-judicial proceeding before the Collector and the Board’s right  under Section  35E  to the exercise of the right of appeal  by  an aggrieved  assessee from an order passed to  its  prejudice. The  power under Section 35E is a power  of  superintendence conferred on a superior authority to ensure that the  subor- dinate officers exercise their powers under the Act correct- ly and properly. Where a time is limited for the purposes by the  statute,  such power, as under Section  33A(2)  of  the Indian  Income-tax Act, 1922 referred to in Muthia  Chettiar (supra),  should  be exercised within the  specified  period from  the  date of the order sought to be  reconsidered.  To hold  to  the contrary would be inequitable  and  will  also introduce  uncertainties into the administration of the  Act for  the following reason. There appears to be no  provision

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in the Act requiring the endorsement, by a Collector, of all orders passed by him to the Board. If there is such a  prac- tice  in fact or requirement in law, the period of one  year from  the date of the order is more than adequate to  ensure action in appropriate cases particularly in comparison  with the  much  shorter period an assessee has  within  which  to exercise  his right of appeal. If, on the other hand,  there is  no  such requirement or practice and the  period  within which the Board can interfere is left to depend on the  off- chance  of  the Board coming to know of the existence  of  a particular  order at some point of time,  however,  distant, only administrative chaos can result. We are, therefore,  of the  opinion  that the period of one year fixed  under  sub- section  (3) of Section 35E of the Act should be  given  its literal  meaning and so construed the impugned direction  of the  Board  was beyond the period of  limitation  prescribed therein and therefore invalid and ineffective.     For  the foregoing. reasons we are of the view that  the Tribunal  was right in holding that the  application  before them was out of time. This appeal is accordingly  dismissed. There will be no order as to costs. V.P.R.                                          Appeal  dis- missed. 873