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[Cites 10, Cited by 13]

Supreme Court of India

Orient Paper Mills Ltd vs Union Of India on 3 May, 1968

Equivalent citations: 1969 AIR 48, 1969 SCR (1) 245, AIR 1969 SUPREME COURT 48

Author: K.S. Hegde

Bench: K.S. Hegde, J.M. Shelat

           PETITIONER:
ORIENT PAPER MILLS LTD.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/05/1968

BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SHELAT, J.M.

CITATION:
 1969 AIR   48		  1969 SCR  (1) 245
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1970 SC1498	 (4)
 F	    1988 SC2223	 (14)


ACT:
Quasi-Judicial	Power-exercise	of-necessity  for   deciding
matters	  independently	 of  directions	 given	by   others.
Appeals	 and Revisions manner in which quasi-judicial  power
to be exercised.



HEADNOTE:
Upto February, 1961 certain "printing and writing paper" and
"packing  and  wrapping	 paper" produced  by  the  appellant
Company were subject to exercise duty at the rate of 22	 nP.
per  kilogram  though the former was  chargeable,under	Item
17(3) and the latter under Item 17(4) of the First  Schedule
to the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944.  The Finance	 Act
of 1961 raised the, excise duty payable under Item 17(4)  to
35  nP.	 per  kilogram with effect from March  11  1968	 and
though for some months the Excise Officer continued to	levy
duty  on certain "machine glazed paper" popularly  known  as
"M.G. Poster paper" under Item 17(3) i.e. by regarding it as
"printing and writing paper", subsequently the excise autho-
rities	began to treat this paper as "packing  and  wrapping
paper"	and  insisted on the appellant paying  duty  thereon
under  Item 17(4).  The appellant paid the duty at the	rate
claimed	 under protest and thereafter applied for refund  of
the excess on the ground that the duty on that paper  should
have been levied under Item 17(3).  The Assistant  Collector
rejected  the  claim.	An appeal to  the  Collector  and  a
revision  to the Central Government were also rejected.	  It
was  clear from the order of the Collector as well  as	from
the counter affidavit filed on behalf of the Government that
the appeal and the revision were rejected on the ground that
the  question  was  covered by a  direction  issued  by	 the
Central	 Board	of Revenue to the effect that the  paper  in
question was to be treated as packing and wrapping paper".
On appeal, to this Court
HELD  :The direction given by the Board was invalid and	 had
vitiated the proceedings before the Collector as well as the
Government.   The appeals must therefore be allowed and	 the
orders	of the Central Government as well as  the  Collector
set aside, and the proceedings remitted to the Collector for
deciding the question whether "M.G. Poster paper" should  be
assessed  as  "printing and writing paper"  or	"packing  or
wrapping paper" afresh. [253 A-C]
The  question whether "M.G. Poster paper" is  "printing	 and
writing	  paper"   or  "packing	 and  wrapping	 paper"	  is
essentially  a question of fact.  That had to be decided  by
the  authorities under the Act.	 The power exercised by	 the
Collector  and the Central Government was  a  quasi-judicial
power that could not be controlled by the directions  issued
by the Board.  No authority however high placed can  control
the  decision of a judicial or a  quasi-judicial  authority.
There  is  no provision in the Act empowering the  Board  to
issue  directions  to  the  assessing  authorities  or	 the
appellate  authorities	in the matter of  deciding  disputes
between the persons who are called upon to pay duty and	 the
department.   Although the assessing authorities as well  as
the  appellate	authorities are judges in their	 own  cause,
when  they are called upon to decide disputes arising  under
the  Act they must act independently and impartially.	They
cannot
246
be said to act independently if their judgment is controlled
by the directions given by others. [249 B-C, F-H]
Aluminium Corporation of India Ltd. v. Union of India,	C.A.
635  of	 1964  decided	on  September  22,  1965;  Mahadayal
Premchandra  v.	 Commercial Tax	 Officer,  Calcutta,  [1959]
S.C.R. 551 and B. Rajagopal Naidu
V.   State  Transport Appellate Tribunal, [1964]  S.C.R.  1;
referred to.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos, 659 to 664 of 1965.

Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated ,October 5, 1963 of the Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue, New Delhi in Central Excise Revisions Applications Nos. 720 to 725 of 1963. S.Ray, R. K. Chaudhury, A. N. Parikh and B, P. Maheshwari, for the appellant.

Seiyed Mohammad and S. P. Nayyar, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court-was delivered by Hegde, J. These appeals by special leave arise from the orders made by the Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue, New Delhi on October 5, 1963, in Central Excise Revision Applications Nos. 720 to 725 of 1963. Herein a common question of law arises for decision and that is whether "M.G. Poster paper" manufactured by the appellant company is a printing and writing paper"

chargeable under item 17(3) of the First Schedule to the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (No. 1 of 1944), hereinafter referred to as the Act or whether it is "packing and wrapping paper" chargeable under item 17(4) of the aforementioned Schedule.
The appellant is a public limited company incorporated under the Indian Companies Act, 1913, and an "existing company"

within the meaning of the Indian Companies Act, 1956. It is carrying on business, inter alia, of manufacturing and sale of various kinds of paper at its factory at Birjrajnagar in the district of Sambalpur in the State of Orissa. In particular, it manufactures "packing and wrapping paper", "printing and writing paper" and "machine glazed paper", popularly known as "M.G. Poster paper". Upto February 28, 1961,the date on which the Finance Bill of that year was introduced in Parliament, printing and writing paper" and "packing and wrapping paper" were subject to excise duty at the rate of 22 nP per kilogram, though the former was chargeable under item 17 (3) and the latter under item 17 (4) ,of the First Schedule to the Act. The Finance Act of 1961 raised the excise duty payable under item 17(4) to 35 nP per kilogram with effect from March 1, 1961. From March 1, 1961, 247 to August 1, 1961, the excise officers levied duty on "M.G. Poster paper" under item 17(3) i.e. at the rate of 22 nP per kilogram. In other words, during that period the excise authorities treated "M.G. Poster paper" as "printing and writing paper". Subsequently, the excise authorities began to treat this paper as "packing and wrapping paper" and insisted on the appellant paying duty thereon under item 17(4). The appellant paid duty at that rate under protest and thereafter applied to the Assistant Collector for refund on the ground that the duty on that paper should have been levied under item 17(3) and consequently the duty collected was in excess of that leviable under law. The Assistant Collector rejected that claim. Consequently, the appellant went up in appeal to the Collector of Central Excise, who rejected its appeal. Then the matter was taken-up in revision to the Government of India. The Government declined to interfere with the orders of the Collector. The orders made by the Collector in the various appeals and those made by the Government in the revisional applications are similar in all the cases. Therefore it would be sufficient if we refer only to those made in one of the cases, viz., in C.A. 659 of 1965.

The contention of the appellant before the Assistant Collector, the Collector as well as the Central Government was that "M.G. Poster paper" is a, "printing and writing paper" and it was considered as such, by the Indian Tariff Board, in the Tariff Commission Report published in 1959 and in the specifications published by the Indian Standards Institution. Further it was dealt as "printing and writing paper" in the annual rate contracts entered into between the appellant and the Government of India for supply of papers and paper-boards to the Government. This contention does not appear to have been examined either by the Collector or by the Central Government. The Collector rejected the appeals of the appellant with these observations -.-

"The crucial point in appeal is whether the paper declared as 'M.G. Poster paper' should be assessed as packing and wrapping paper, other sorts' under tariff item No. 17(4) or as 'printing and writing paper, other sorts' under tariff item 17(3).
The Central Board of Revenue have already made it clear that all types of poster paper of whatever colour including white should not be treated as 'printing and writing paper' but as 'packing and wrapping paper'. As such, the Poster paper has not been wrongly assessed.
248
I have carefully gone through the available records of the case. Considering all the facts and circumstances, I do not find any reason to interfere with the order passed by the A.C. appealed against Ms order is therefore confirmed."

It is seen from his order that the only ground on which the Collector rejected the appeals of the appellant was that the question was covered by the direction issued by the Central Board of Revenue-hereinafter referred to as the Board. During the pendency of the revision applications filed before the Central Government, the Collector, in response to the notice served on him, filed his objections in writing. In those objections he pleaded primarily two grounds in opposition to the appellant's claim. They are : (i) that on chemical examination it was found that "M.G. Poster paper"

was "packing and wrapping paper" and (ii) the direction issued by the Board was binding on him. As per its order of October 5, 1963, the Government rejected the revision applications in question with these observations :-
"The Government of India have carefully considered all the points raised by the petitioners, but they regret that they do not find any _justification for interfering with the order in appeal. The Revision Application is accordingly rejected."

The order in question is by no means a speaking order; it is not possible to spell out from that order the reasons that persuaded the Government to reject the revision applications. The best that can be said in favour of the Government is that it thought that the direction issued by the Board referred to earlier was decisive of the matter. That was what was stated in the counter affidavit filed on behalf of the Government of India in these appeals. The only other reason that could have influenced the decision of the Government was the statement of the Collector that on chemical examination it was found that "M.G. Poster paper"

was "packing and wrapping paper". If the Government had taken into consideration any other facts in deciding the revision applications they had clearly contravened the principles of natural justice as the appellant had not been given any opportunity to rebut those facts. Now it is conceded that "M.G. Poster paper" was never che- mically examined and the Collector's statement to the contrary was incorrect. It is not possible to determine whether the incorrect statement made by the Collector had or had not influenced the Government. It may be mentioned at this stage that the appellant had specifically complained to the Government that it had not been supplied with the copy of any report relating to 249 chemical examination of "M.G. Poster paper", nor was it given any opportunity to contest the correctness of the facts mentioned in that report. Undoubtedly during the hearing of the revision applications the appellant was not informed that the statement made by the Collector regarding the alleged chemical examination was incorrect, and that statement would not be taken into consideration in deciding the revision-applications.
This leaves us with the question of the directions issued by the Board. The question whether "M.G. Poster paper" is "printing and writing paper" or "packing and wrapping paper"

is essentially a question of fact. That had to be decided by the authorities under the Act. It was not denied before us that the Collector and the Central Government while deciding the appeals and the revision applications respectively functioned as quasi judicial authorities. So far as the nature of power exercised by the Central Government under S. 36 of the Act (revisional powers) is concerned, the matter is concluded by the decision of this Court in Aluminium Corporation of India Ltd. v. Union of India(1). Therein this Court held that the said power is a quasi judicial power. There is hardly any doubt that the power exercised by the appellate authority, i.e. the Collector,, under s' 35 is also a quasi judicial power. He is designated as an appellate authority; before him there was a lis between the appellant which had paid the duty and the Revenue; and his order is subject to revision by the Central- Government. Therefore, it is obvious that the power exercised by him is a quasi judicial power. Dr. Syed Mohammed, appearing for the respondent, did not contend-and we think rightly-that the power exercised by the Collector was not a quasi judicial power.

If the, power exercised by the Collector was a quasi judicial power-as we hold it to be-that power cannot be controlled by the directions issued by the Board. No authority however high placed can control the decision of a judicial or a quasi judicial authority. That is the essence of our judicial system. There is no provision in the Act empowering the Board to issue directions to the assessing authorities or the appellate authorities in the matter of deciding disputes between the persons who are called upon to pay duty and the department. It is true that the assessing authorities as well as the appellate authorities are judges in their own cause; yet when they are called upon to decide disputes arising under the Act they must act independently and impartially. They cannot be said to act independently if their judgment is controlled by the directions given by others. Then it is a misnomer to call their orders as their judgments; they would essentially be the judgments of the authority that gave the directions and which authority had given those judgments without hearing the aggrieved (1) C.A. 635 of 1964, decided on September 22, 1965.

250

party. The only provision under which the Board can issue directions is r. 233 of the Rules framed under the Act. That rule says that the Board and the Collectors may issue written instructions providing for any supplemental matters arising out of these Rules. Under this rule the only instruction that the Board can issue is that relating to administrative matters; otherwise that rule will have to be considered as ultra vires s. 35 of the Act.

In Mahadayal Premchandra v. Commercial Tax Officer, Calcutta(1), this Court held that the Commercial Officer while assessing certain transactions should not have solicited instructions from the Assistant Commissioner, nor should he have acted on the basis of those instructions. It was further held that the instructions given by the Assistant Commissioner had vitiated the entire proceedings as "the procedure adopted was, to say the least, unfair and was calculated to undermine the confidence of the public in the impartial and fair administration of the sales tax department."

In B. Rajagopal Naidu v. State Transport Appellate Tribu- nal(1), this Court was called upon to consider the validity of Madras Government Order No. 1298 dated April 28, 1956 issued under s. 43-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, whereunder certain directions were given to the Transport Authorities in the discharge of their quasi judicial functions. The G.O. in question was struck down by this Court. In the course of the judgment, Gajendragadkar C.J., speaking for the Court, observed thus:-

"In reaching this conclusion, we have been influenced by certain other considerations which are both relevant and material. In interpreting s. 43-A, we think, it would be legitimate to assume that the legislature intended to respect the basic and elementary postulate of the rule of law, that in exercising their authority and in discharging their quasi judicial function, the tribunals constituted under the Act must be left absolutely free to deal with the matter according to their best judgment. It is of the essence of fair and objective administration of law that the decision of the Judge or the Tribunal must be absolutely unfettered by any extraneous guidance by the executive or administrative wing of the State. If the exercise of discretion conferred on a quasi judicial tribunal is controlled by any such direction, that forges fetters on the exercise of quasi judicial authority and the presence of such fetters would make the exercise of such authority completely inconsistent with the well-accepted notion of judicial process. It is true that law can regulate the exercise (1) [1959] S.C.R. 551.
(2) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 251 of judicial powers. It may indicate by specific provision on what matters the tribunals constituted by it should adjudicate.

It may by specific provisions lay down the principles which have to be followed by the tribunals in dealing with the said matters. The scope of the jurisdiction of the tribunals constituted by statute can well be regulated by the statute and principles for guidance of the said tribunals may also be prescribed subject of course to the inevitable requirement that these provisions do not contravene the fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution. But what law and the provisions of law may legitimately do cannot be permitted to be done by administrative or executive orders. This position is so well established -that we are reluctant to hold that in enacting s. 43-A the Madras Legis-

lature intended to confer power on the State Government to invade the domain of the exercise of judicial power. In fact, if such had been the intention of the Madras Legislature and had been the true effect of the provisions of s. 43-A, s. 43-A itself would amount to an unreasonable contravention of fundamental rights of citizens and may have to be struck down as unconstitutional. That is why the Madras High Court in' dealing with the validity of s. 43-A had expressly observed that what S. 43-A purported to do was to clothe the Government with authority to issue directions of an administrative character and nothing more. It is somewhat unfortunate that though judicial decisions have always emphasised this aspect of the matter, occasion did not arise so long to consider the Palidity of the Government order which on the construction suggested by the respondent would clearly invade the domain of quasi judicial administrations.

The rule laid down in the above decisions is fully applicable to the facts of this case. It is obvious as well as admitted that both the Collector and the Central Government proceded on the basis that the direction given by the Board was decisive of the matter. The revision applications filed before the Government were heard and decided by one of the members of the Board. He appears to have proceeded on the basis that in view of the directions given by the Board nothing more need be said as to the point in dispute. It is regrettable that when administrative officers are entrusted with quasi judicial functions, often times they are unable to keep aside administrative considerations while discharging quasi-judicial functions.- This Court as well as the High Courts have repeatedly tried to impress upon them that their two functions are separate; while functioning as quasi judicial officers they should not allow their judgment to be influenced by admi-

252

nistrative considerations or by the instructions or directions given by their superiors. -In this case both the Collector as well as the Central Government have ignored the line that demarcates their administrative duties and their judicial functions.

Dr. Syed Mohammed did not try to justify the direction given by the Board nor did he contend that direction has any force of law. On the other hand, his main contention was that the grounds urged before this Court were riot at all taken before the Collector and the Central Government and therefore the appellant should not be permitted to take those grounds in this Court. We do not think that Dr. Syed Mohammed is right in his contention. Before the Central Government the appellant had definitely contended that no copy of the report relating to chemical examination of "M.G. Poster paper" had been given to the appellant and therefore the same could not have been taken into consideration. At that stage the appellant could not have known that the statement of the Collector relating to chemical examination of "M. G. Poster paper" was incorrect. As regards the validity of the direction given by the Board, it is clear from the notes of argument maintained by the member of the Board who heard the revision applications that contention had been taken before him, though not in the form in which it was presented before this Court. This what we get from the notes maintained by him:-

"The matter (as to whether 'M.G. Poster paper' is 'printing and writing paper' or 'packing and wrapping paper') was reexamined in detail, in consultation with all the concerned authorities, viz., the Ministry of Commerce and Industries, -the Indian Standards Institution and the Chief Chemist The views of Collectors of Central Excise as well as those of Collectors were also invited. Ultimately it was reaffirmed vide the Board's letter No. F. No. 21/36/61/CXIV dated November 6, 1961, that paper was correctly assessable as packing and wrapping paper and should continue to be assessed as such. F.M.'s approval was also secured before confirming this position. This therefore should settle the main issue regarding the classification of the poster paper."

From these notes it is clear that at any rate the correctness of the direction issued by the Board was put in issue during the hearing of the revision applications. That apart, we are clearly of the opinion that even if the question of the legality of the direction issued by the Board had not been taken before the authorities under the Act, as that direction completely vitiates the proceedings and makes a mockery of the judicial process, we think we ought to consider the legality of that direction. For the reasons 253 already mentioned, we hold that direction was invalid and the same has vitiated the proceedings before the Collector as well as the Government.

Both the appellant as well as the Revenue invited us to decide the case on the basis of the material on record. Ordinarily this Court does not go into questions of fact. That is the duty of the authorities under the Act. We see no exceptional circumstances in this case requiring us to deviate from the ordinary rule.

For the reasons mentioned above, these appeals are allowed and the orders of the Central Government as well as that of the Collector are set aside, and the proceedings remitted to the Collector for deciding the question whether "M.G. Poster paper" should be -assessed as "printing- and writing paper"

or as "packing and wrapping paper" afresh. The respondents shall pay the costs of the appellant in all these appeals; hearing fee one set.
R. K. P. S.		     Appeals allowed.
2Sup.  C. /.68-
254