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[Cites 14, Cited by 12]

Supreme Court of India

South India Coir Mills Poochakkal vs The Additional Collector Of Customs And ... on 25 March, 1976

Equivalent citations: 1976 AIR 1527, 1976 SCR (3) 905, AIR 1976 SUPREME COURT 1527, 1976 3 SCC 354, 1976 SCC(CRI) 407, 1976 3 SCR 905, 47 COM CAS 681, 1976 UJ (SC) 475

Author: N.L. Untwalia

Bench: N.L. Untwalia, Y.V. Chandrachud, V.R. Krishnaiyer

           PETITIONER:
SOUTH INDIA COIR MILLS POOCHAKKAL

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE ADDITIONAL COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS AND CENTRAL EXCISE ANDAN

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/03/1976

BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.

CITATION:
 1976 AIR 1527		  1976 SCR  (3) 905
 1976 SCC  (3) 354


ACT:
     Foreign Exchange  Regulation Act  (7 of 1947), s. 12(1)
as amended by Act 40 of 1969-Scope of.



HEADNOTE:
     The appellant is a dealer and exporter in coir yarn. On
its behalf  a shipp ing bill for export of 150 bales of coir
yarn to	 a port	 in Italy  was filed,  but the consignee was
shown to  be a	firm of Yugoslavia. The invoice and the form
of  declaration	  prescribed  under   the  Foreign  Exchange
Regulation Act.	 1947, were  drawn up  by the  appellant  on
rupee terms  in accordance  with  the	 contract  with	 the
Yugoslav firm.	The Collector  of Customs,  after issuing  a
show cause  notice to  the  appellant  and  considering	 the
explanation of	the appellant,	held that  the appellant had
misdeclared   the   material   particulars   regarding	 the
prescribed  manner   of	 payment,   and	 that  there  was  a
contravention of  s. 12(1),  Foreign Exchange Regulation Act
read with s. 11 Customs Act, and ordered the confiscation of
the goods under s. 113 and imposed a penalty of Rs. 25.000/-
under s. 114, Customs Act. The High Court upheld the  order.
     Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
^
     HELD: In  the circumstances of the case, the quantum of
penalty is reduced to Rs. 15,000/-.[912 F]
     (1) By  virtue of	s. 23A,	 Foreign Exchange Regulation
Act the	 prohibition imposed  under  s.	 12(1)	of  the	 Act
becomes a  prohibition imposed	under s.  11,  Customs	Act.
Section 11,  Customs Act, empowers the Central Government to
prohibit the export of goods absolutely or conditionally and
s. 113,	 Customs Act,  provides for  confiscation  of  goods
exported contrary to any prohibition imposed, and the person
attempting to export is liable to penalty under s. 114. [908
D, F-G]
     (2) Section  12(1), Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, as
amended by Act 40 of 1969, consists of 3 parts: (a) Issuance
of a  notification by the Central Government prohibiting the
export of  certain goods  to  any  place  specified  in	 the
notification. (b)  The prohibition  is relaxed and export is
permitted when	the exporter  furnishes a declaration in the
prescribed  form   which  must	 be  true  in  all  material
particulars  including	the  amount  representing  the	full
export value  of the goods or the expected exported value of
the  goods.   (c)  Apart  from	furnishing  the	 declaration
containing the	true statements in all material particulars,
the  exporter  is  also	 required  to  affirm  in  the	said
declaration, that  is, in  the document	 or paper containing
the declaration,  that the  full export	 value of  the goods
will, within the prescribed period be paid in the prescribed
manner. This  affirmation is  not  required  to	 be  in	 any
prescribed form.  Until and  unless the exporter so affirms,
he cannot,  in	the  interests	of  conserving	the  foreign
exchange, be allowed to export the goods. [910 B-D]
     (3) In  the present  case there was no affirmation that
the full  export value of the goods has been or will, within
the prescribed	period, be  paid in  the prescribed  manner,
and, the absence of the affirmation is tantamount to failure
on the part of the appellant to comply with the requirements
of law	engrafted in  s. 12(1),	 Foreign Exchange Regulation
Act. [912 D]
     (a) The declaration of the buyer's name as the Yugoslav
firm was  found to  be wrong,  but that	 did not attract the
provisions of s. 12(1), because, in the prescribed form, the
buyer's name was not to be inserted. [910 G-H]
906
     (b) The  High Court  was wrong  in holding that because
the mode of payment mentioned in the declaration is contrary
to r.  7 of  the Foreign  Exchange Rules,  1952. there was a
misdeclaration of  material particulars.  The appellant	 has
managed to  get the  payment in	 Indian rupees	through	 the
Yugoslav firm.	Therefore, even after the statement that the
country of  destination was  Italy, the	 statement that	 the
payment was to be received in India in Indian rupees was not
unture, although  it was  contrary to the mode prescribed in
r. 7.  But the	absence of  the affirmation  is significant.
[911 E-G; 912 B]
     (c) Rule  7 provides  that the  amount representing the
full value  of the goods exported to the countries specified
in the	2nd schedule  shall be	paid through  an  authorised
dealer and  unless authorised  by the Reserve Bank, shall be
paid in	 the manner  specified in the schedule. The approved
methods of payment in the case of Italy, which is in Group A
of the	schedule, are  : (i)  currency of any country in the
sub-group; (ii)	 sterling  from	 an  'External	Account'  as
defined under  the U.K.	 Exchange Control  Regulations;	 and
(iii) Rupees  from the	accounts of a bank in any country in
the Convertible Account group. [911 G-912 A]
     (d) The appellant could not have affirmed that the full
export value  of the  goods would  be paid  in	one  of	 the
prescribed modes. If such affirmation was made it would have
been false  because of the statement in the declaration that
the value of the goods was to be received in India in Indian
rupees. If  in the affirmation the appellant had stated that
for the	 value of  the goods  exported to  Italy it  was  to
receive payment in Indian rupees, then the affirmation would
have violated  s.  12(1)  as  it  would	 not  have  been  an
affirmation stating  that the  export value would be paid in
the prescribed manner. Hence, the decision of the High Court
that  the   appellant  had  attempted  to  export  goods  in
violation of  s. 12(1)	is correct, though it is upheld on a
different basis. [912 B-E]
     (4) Though it is an economic offence and relates to the
law of	foreign exchange  since the law was not clear either
to the	Customs	 authorities  or  the  High  Court  and	 has
resulted in  the recording  of finding against the appellant
on a  wrong basis,  although not  affecting the substance of
the view  that the  appellant violated s. 12(1), the quantum
of penalty is reduced.[912 F-G]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 244 of 1976.

Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated 9-10-74 of the Kerala High Court in W. A. No. 142 of 1972.

M. N. Phadke, S. K. Mehta, K. R. Nagaraja and P. N. Puri, for the Appellant.

G. L. Sanghi and Girish Chandra, for Respondent No. 1. D. N. Misra, for Respondent No. 2.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by UNTWALIA, J.-In this appeal by special leave an important question of law falls for our determination. It concerns the interpretation of section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947, Central Act 7 of 1947 as it stood amended at the relevant time by Act 40 of 1969.

The appellant is a firm, one of the partners or proprietors of which is Shri T. K. Seethy. It is a dealer in Coir Yarn and exports the said commodity to foreign buyers also. On March 24, 1971 a shipping bill was filed on behalf of the appellant for the export of 150 bales of Coir Yarn to Trieste a port in Italay. The consignee's name in the shipping bill was shown as M/s Ferolektro, Sarajavo, Yugoslavia. Indisputably the Central Government had published a notification in 907 the official gazette under section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act prohibiting the export of coir yarn from India to certain places specified in the notification including Italy unless certain conditions were fulfilled. The exporter was, therefore, required to comply with the requirement of the said provision of law and file a declaration in the prescribed form. The relevant prescribed from in the Foreign Exchange Regulation Rules, 1952- hereinafter referred to as the Rules-framed under section 27 of the Act of 1947 was Form G.R.I. The Invoice and G. R. I. Form were drawn up by the appellant on rupee terms in accordance with the contract dated 1.3.1971 which it claimed to have had with M/s Ferolektro, Sarajavo, Yugoslavia. The Customs Authority found that the goods were attempted to be exported to Italy while payment, according to the form, was to be received in rupees. So the appellant was asked to explain the discrepancy in the declaration. A request was made on behalf of the appellant to amend the Invoice and G.R.I. showing payment in Sterling. It was not allowed to do so. On April 20, 1971 the premises of the appellant firm and the house of its owner were simultaneously searched and certain documents including some letters exchanged between the appellant and some foreign firms of Italy were seized. It appeared to the Assistant Collector of Customs, Customs House, Cochin that the goods in question were being bought by M/s Tobia Giacomini, Italy while the buyer shown in the shipping document was M/s Ferolektro, Sarajavo, Yugoslavia. Such a discrepancy in the bill was against the provisions of section 50 of the Customs Act, 1962-Central Act 52 of 1962. The Assistant Collector further found that in the declaration furnished by the appellant in accordance with section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act the manner of payment for the goods sought to be exported was contrary to Rule 7 of the Rules. The misdeclaration or untrue declaration made by the appellant in the shipping bill and G.R.I. Form was prima facie not true in material particulars and violated section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. In view of the 11th section in the Customs Act, the violation attracted the confiscation of the goods under section 113 (d) and imposition of penalty under section 114 of the said Act. A showcause notice dated May 19, 1971 was issued by the Assistant Collector to the appellant. The appellant filed a long reply to the show cause notice. The Additional Collector of Customs by his order dated July 6, 1971 held:

"By declaring the buyer's name as FEROELETRO YUGOSLAVIA and the port of discharge and country of final destination as 'Trieste' and Italy respectively in the shipping bill and the mode of payment as in rupees in the shipping bill as well as in the G. R. I. form, the exporters have misdeclared the material particulars regarding the prescribed manner of payment and have thus clearly contavened the provisions of Section 12(1) of the F.E.R.A. read with section 11 of the Customs Act. The goods are, therefore, liable for confiscation under section 113(d) and 113(i) of the Customs Act and the exporters are liable for penalty under section 114 of the Customs Act."
908

He accordingly confiscated the goods, giving an option to the appellant to redeem them on payment of Rs. 5,000/- in lieu thereof. A penalty of Rs. 25,000/- was imposed under section 114 of the Customs Act.

The appellant filed a writ petition in the Kerala High Court to challenge the order of the Additional Collector. It had exercised its option of getting the goods released on payment of Rs. 5,000/-. The fine of Rs. 25,000/- was also paid. A learned single Judge of the High Court took the view that there was no violation of section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act and quashed the order of the Additional Collector.

The Customs Authority took the matter in appeal before a Bench of the High Court. The Bench has allowed the appeal and up held the order of the Additional Collector. Hence this appeal was filed after obtaining special leave of this Court.

Section 23A of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act provides, inter atia, that the restrictions imposed by or under sub-section (1) of section 12 shall be deemed to have been imposed under section 11 of the Customs Act and all the provisions of that Act shall have the effect accordingly. Section 11 of the Customs Act empowers the Central Government to prohibit either absolutely or subject to such conditions as may be specified in a notification the import or export of goods of any specified description. Section 113 says:

"The following export goods shall be liable to confiscation.-
....................
(d) any goods attempted to be exported or brought with in the limits of any customs area for the purpose of being exported, contrary to any prohibition imposed by or under this Act or any other law for the time being in force;"

By virtue of Section 23A of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act the prohibition imposed under section 12(1) of that Act becomes a prohibition imposed under section 11 of the Customs Act. And if the goods were attempted to be exported contrary to the said prohibition the goods became liable to confiscation under section 113(d) of the Customs Act. Consequently the person attempting to export the goods also became liable to pay penalty under section 114. There has been no difficulty in correct appreciation of the law so far either by the Customs Authority or the High Court. A good deal of difficulty and confusion however cropped up in the interpretation of section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. Sub-section (1) of section 12 as it stood prior to the amendment brought about by Act 40 of 1969 read as follows:

"The Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, prohibit the taking or sending out by land, sea or air (hereinafter in this section referred to as export) 909 of any goods or class of goods specified in the notification from India directly or indirectly to any place so specified unless a declaration supported by such evidence as may be prescribed or so specified, is furnished by the exporter to the prescribed authority that the amount representing the full export value of the goods has been, or will within the prescribed period be paid in the prescribed manner."

In Union of India & Ors. v. M/s Raj Bahadur Shree Ram Durga Prasad (P) Ltd. & Ors.(1)., Hegde, J. speaking for himself and Bachawat, J gave a narrow interpretation to section 12(1) as it stood then. Sikri, J, as he then was, in his dissenting judgment said:

"I have to construe an Act which was enacted in the interest of the national economy. A deliberate large-scale contravention of its provisions would affect the interests of every man, woman and child in the country. Such an Act, I apprehend, should be construed so as to make it workable; it should, however, receive a fair construction, doing no violence to the language employed by the Legislature. It was said that if two constructions are possible the one that is in favour of the subject should be accepted. It is not necessary to pronounce on this proposition for I have come to the conclusion that there is one true construction of s. 12(1). But I should not be taken to be assenting to this proposition in so far as it is applicable to an enactment like the Exchange Act, for no subject has a right to sabotage the national economy."

Section 12(1) was, thereafter, amended by Act 40 of 1969. It then read as followins:

"The Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, prohibit the taking or sending out by land, sea or air (hereinafter in this section referred to as export) of all goods or of any goods or class of goods specified in the notification from India directly or indirectly to any place so specified unless the exporter furnishes to the prescribed authority a declaration in the prescribed form supported by such evidence as may be prescribed or so specified and true in all material particulars which, among others, shall include the amount representing-
(i) the full export value of the goods; or
(ii) if the full export value of the goods is not ascertainable at the time of export, the value which the exporter, haveing regard to the prevailing market conditions, expects to receive on the sale of the goods in the course of international trade, and affirms in the said declaration that the full export value of the goods (whether ascertainable at the time of 910 export or not) has been, or will within the prescribed period be, paid in the prescribed manner."

Under the changed law the Exporter was required to furnish a declaration in the prescribed form which must be true in all material particulars including the amount representing the full export value of the goods or the expected export value of the goods. Apart from the furnishing of the declaration containing the true statements in all material particulars the exporter under the amended section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act was also required to affirm in the said declaration, i.e. in the document or the paper containing the declaration, that the full export value of the goods will within the prescribed period be paid in the prescribed manner. The affirmation under the last part of section 12(1) is not required to be in any prescribed form. Therefore, in the form prescribed for the declaration no form of affirmation has been specified.

Broadly speaking section 12(1) consists of 3 parts (1) issuance of a notification by the Central Government prohibiting the export of certain goods to any place specified in the notification; (2) the prohibition is relaxed and export is permitted when the exporter furnishes a declaration and (3) when he affirms in the said declaration that the payment will be in the prescribed manner. Until and unless the exporter affirms that the payment would be in the prescribed manner, he cannot be allowed to export the goods. This is for the purpose of conserving and preserving the foreign exchange so that by a subterfuge no person may be able to harm the national economy by exporting the goods without such affirmation.

In the instant case on the findings of fact recorded by the Additional Collector which were accepted to be correct by the High Court, both by the single Judge and the Division Bench, the stress seems to have been laid on the alleged violation of the requirement of giving true material particulars in the declaration. And that enabled Mr. M. N. Phadke to strenously attack the decision of the High Court in appeal. Counsel submitted that whatever the appellant had stated in the declaration was all true and nothing but true. It may well be, he submitted, that it violated certain provisions of the Customs Act or the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. But surely the material particulars furnished by the appellant in its declaration not being untrue in any respect, there was no infraction of section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. The argument as presented had substance and force but did not merit acceptance on close scrutiny.

The declaration of the buyer's name even if wrong in the shipping bill and invoice did not attract the provisions of section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. In the form prescribed under Rule 3 of the Rules (G.I.R. being one such form) the buyer's name was not to be inserted. It was not given in the declaration furnished by the appellant in that form. But the finding of the Additional Collector is that the destination of the goods was Trieste in Italy andin the declaration furnished in form G.I.R. the appellant had stated that the payment was to be received in India in Indian rupees and this statement was untrue as being against the prescribed manner.

911

It is to be noticed that under section 12(1) as it stood prior to the amendment by Act 40 of 1969 the declaration had to contain a statement that the amount representing the full export value of the goods will be paid in the prescribed manner. But now this is not to be a part of the declaration but has to be separately affirmed although in the declaration itself. The learned single Judge noticed in his judgment that section 12(1)(ii) will not apply and the obligation of the exporter was:

"(a) to furnish to the prescribed authority a declaration in the prescribed form supported by such evidence as may be prescribed:
(b) which declaration must be true in all material particulars and that among others shall include 'the amount representing the full export value of the goods' and
(c) he must affirm in the said declaration that the full export value of the goods will, within the prescribed period, be paid in the prescribed manner."

Stating that "There is no case that there is no affirmation in the declaration" the single Judge held that section 12(1) was not violated. The Division Bench, however, noted the fact that the declaration furnished by the appellant "did not contain an affirmation as required by the last portion of the said sub-section". Yet because of the mode of payment mentioned in the declaration being contrary to Rule 7 of the Rules the Division Bench upheld the view of the Additional Collector that the appellant "had misdeclared the material particulars and attempted to export the goods in question in contravention of the prohibition contained in section 12(1) of the Act." On the facts and in the circumstances of this case we are constrained to hold that even after the statement in column 2 of Form G.R. I that the country of destination of goods was Italy the statement in column 5 that the payment was to be received in India in Indian Rupees was not untrue. The appellant had managed or manouvered to get the payment through the firm of Yugoslavia in Indian Rupees. The statement therefore, was not untrue although it was against the mode prescribed under Rule 7 of the Rules. But here comes in the importance of the affirmation in the declaration.

Rule 7 of the Rules says:

"The amount representing the full value of goods exported to the countries specified in the Second Schedule shall be paid through an authorised dealer and unless otherwise authorised by the Reserve Bank, shall be paid in the manner specified in the said Schedule."

In the Second Schedule Italy occurs in Group A-"Convertible Account Countries". In that case the approved methods of payment are:

"(a) Currency of any country in this sub-group.
(b) Sterling from an 'External Account', as defined under the U. K. Exchange Control Regulations.
912
(c) Rupees from the account of a bank in any country in the Convertible Account group."

Yugoslavia in the Second Schedule finds place in Group B "Bilateral Account countries" where the approved method of payment is "Rupees from the account of a bank in the country of import."

In the present case the absence of affirmation had its own signficance. It was difficult, almost impossible, for the appellant to affirm that the full export value of the goods was to be paid in one of the three modes prescribed in the Second Schedule to the Rules for the export of the goods to Italy. We are, therefore, of the opinion that although the statement in the declaration that the value of the goods mentioned in column 4 at Rs. 63,301.50 was to be received in India in Indian rupees for the export of goods to Italy was not untrue, the affirmation, if made, would have been either false or contrary to the requirement of the law. If in the affirmation the appellant had stated that for the value of the goods exported to Italy it was to receive the payment in Indian rupees through the Chartered Bank Ltd. Cochin as per the declaration, then the affirmation would have violated section 12(1) as it would not have been an affirmation stating that the export value would be paid in the prescribed manner. Absence of affirmation in the declaration furnished by the appellant is tant amount to failure on the part of the appellant to comply with the requirement of the law engrafted in section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act. That being so, the decision of the Division Bench of the High Court that the appellant had attempted to export goods in violation of the restrictions imposed under section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act is fit to be upheld, but on a different basis.

In cases of economic offences and specially in relation to the law of Foreign Exchange no leniency in the quantum of punishment is warranted. But on the facts and in the circumstances of this case we feel persuaded to reduce the amount of penalty imposed upon the appellant from Rs. 25,000/- to Rs. 15,000/-. The direction as to the payment of Rs. 5,000/- in lieu of confiscation of the goods is upheld. Since the law engrafted in the amended Section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act was not very clear either to the Custom Authorities or to the High Court resulting in the recording of the findings against the petitioner on a wrong basis, although not affecting the substance of the view that the appellant had violated Section 12(1) of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, we have thought it fit to reduce the quantum of penalty by Rs. 10,000/-

Before we part with this case we may just mention that now the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act in force is an Act of 1973-Central Act 46 of 1973. Section 18(1)(a) is almost the same as Section 12(1) of the Act of 1947.

In the result the appeal is dismissed but subject to the modification in the quantum of penalty imposed under Section 114 of the Customs Act 1962. In the circumstances we shall make no order as to costs in this Court.

V.P.S.					   Appeal dismissed.
913