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[Cites 9, Cited by 132]

Supreme Court of India

Union Of India And Others vs Atic Industries Limited on 22 June, 1984

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 1495, 1984 SCR (3) 930, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 1495, 1984 TAX. L. R. 2559, 1984 UJ (SC) 824, (1984) 3 COMLJ 1, 1984 SCC (TAX) 217, (1984) 3 ECC 90, (1984) 17 ELT 323, (1984) ECR 1437, 1984 (3) SCC 575

Author: P.N. Bhagwati

Bench: P.N. Bhagwati, R.S. Pathak, Amarendra Nath Sen

           PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
ATIC INDUSTRIES LIMITED

DATE OF JUDGMENT22/06/1984

BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
PATHAK, R.S.
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)

CITATION:
 1984 AIR 1495		  1984 SCR  (3) 930
 1984 SCC  (3) 575	  1984 SCALE  (1)931
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1988 SC1154	 (8)
 D	    1989 SC1555	 (12)
 R	    1989 SC1733	 (3,5,7)


ACT:
     Central Excise  and Salt  Act, 1944-Clause	 (c) of sub-
section (4)  of section 4 as it stood after its amendment by
sec. 2	of  the	 Central  Act  22  of  1973-  Constitutional
validity of.
     Central Excise  and Salt  Act, 1944-The  words "related
person" occurring in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of sec. 4
as it  stood after its amendment by sec 2 of the Central Act
22 of 1973-Definition and applicability of.
     Bank Guarantee-Whether  the High  Court  was  right  in
directing the  costs of furnishing bank guarantee to be paid
by the Revenue to the assessee in cases where the demand for
duty is quashed as unjustified.



HEADNOTE:
     The respondent-assessee, a limited company, was engaged
in the business of manufacturing dyes. Its 50 per cent share
capital was  held by Atul Products Ltd. and the remaining 50
per cent  by Imperial  Chemical Industries Ltd. London which
also had  a subsidiary	company fully  owned by	 it,  called
Imperial Chemical  Industries (India) Pvt. Ltd. The Imperial
Chemical  Industries  (India)  Pvt.  Ltd.  ceased  to  be  a
subsidiary company  wholly owned  by the chemical Industries
Ltd. London  on 13th  March 1978,  since 60 per of the share
capital of  Imperial Chemical  Industries (India)  Pvt. Ltd,
was offered  to the public in pursuance of the policy of the
Government of  India requiring that not more than 40% of the
share capital  of an  Indian company  should be	 held  by  a
foreign shareholder. Consequent upon this dilution o foreign
shareholding,  the  name  of  Imperial	Chemical  Industries
(India) Pvt. Ltd, was changed to Crescent Dyes and Chemicals
Ltd.
     The assessee  at all material times sold the large bulk
of dyes	 manufactured by  it in	 wholesale to  Atul Products
Ltd. and  Imperial Chemical  Industries (India) Pvt. Limited
which subsequently  came to  be known  as Crescent  Dyes and
Chemicals Ltd.	at a  uniform price applicable alike to both
these wholesale buyers and these wholesale buyers sold these
dyes to	 dealers and consumers at a higher price which inter
alia included the expenses incurred by
931
them as	 also their  profit. The  transactions	between	 the
assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Ltd. and Crescent
Dyes and Chemicals Limited on the other were as principal to
principal and the wholesale price charged by the assessee to
Atul Products  Ltd and	Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Ltd. was
the sole  consideration for the sale and no extra-commercial
considerations entered in the determination of such price.
     The assessee  went on clearing the dyes manufactured by
it after  payment of  excise duty  as  per  the	 price	list
submitted by  it on the basis of the wholesale price charged
to Atul	 Products Ltd.	and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Ltd.
as the	same was  approved by  the Asst.  Collector on	29th
October,  1975.	  The  Superintendent	of  Central  Excise,
however, issued	 a notice  to the assessee on 31st July 1976
calling upon  the assessee  to show  cause why	the  earlier
decision approving the price list should not be reviewed and
the differential  duty worked  out on  the basis  of selling
price charged  by Atul	Products Ltd.  and Crescent  Dyes  &
Chemicals Ltd.	should not  be recovered w.e.f. 1st October,
1975 on	 the ground  that the  assessee on  the one hand and
Atul Products  Ltd. and	 Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Ltd. on
the other were "related persons" and the assessable value of
the dyes  manufactured by  the assessee was therefore liable
to be  calculated on  the basis	 of the	 price at which Atul
Products Ltd.  and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Ltd. sold the
Dyes to	 the dealers  and the consumers. The assessee in its
reply dated  31st August  1976 pointed out that the assessee
on the one hand and Atul Products Ltd. and Crescent Dyes and
Chemicals Ltd.	on the	other  were  not  "related  persons"
within the  meaning of the definition of that term contained
in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended
Central Excise	and Salt  Act 1944. The Asstt. Collector was
however not  satisfied with  the explanation  offered by the
assessee and  viewed his  earlier order	 of approval  of the
price list  and confirmed  the demand  of differential	duty
which came  to an aggregate amount of Rs 1,17,77,737.65 with
retrospective effect from 1st October, 1975 and directed the
assessee to  file a  fresh price  list on  the basis  of the
selling price  charged by  Atul Products  Ltd. and  Crescent
Dyes and Chemicals Ltd.
     The assessee  thereupon filed  a writ  petition in	 the
High Court of Gujarat challenging the validity of the demand
made by the Asstt. Collector on two grounds namely, (i) that
the concept  of "related  person" occuring  in clause (c) of
sub-section (4)	 of section  4 of the amended Central Excise
and Salt Act, 1944 was outside the legislative competence of
Parliament under  Art. 226  read with  Entry 84 in the Union
List and  was therefore	 unconstitutional and  void; &	(ii)
that the assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Ltd. and
Crescent Dyes  &  Chemicals  Ltd.  on  the  other  were	 not
"related persons"  and the  wholesale cash  price charged by
the assessee  to Atul  Products Ltd.  and Crescent  Dyes and
Chemicals Ltd.,	 and not  the price at which the latter sold
the dyes  to the  dealers or  the consumers  represented the
true measure  of the  value of	the dyes  for the purpose of
chargeability to  excise duty.	The High  Court allowed	 the
writ petition  on these	 two grounds and also gave direction
to the Revenue for paying the costs incurred by the assessee
in
932
connection with	 the bank  guarantee furnished	by it. Hence
the appeal  to this  Court by certificate granted under Art.
132 and 133 (1) of the Constitution
     Allowing the appeal in part, the Court.
^
     HELD: (1)	On a proper interpretation of the definition
of "related  person" in	 sub-section (4)  (c) of sec. 4, the
words "relative	 and a	distributor of	the assessee" do not
refer to  any distributor  but they  are limited  only to  a
distributor who	 is a  relative of  the assessee  within the
meaning of  the	 Companies  Act,  1956.	 The  definition  of
"related person" is not unduly wide and does not suffer from
any constitutional  infirmity. It  is within the legislative
competence of  Parliament. The	decision of  the High  Court
holding that  "the concept  of related	person occurring  in
amended section	 4 is ultra vires the legislative competence
of Parliament  under Article  256 read	with Entry 84 in the
Union List  and striking  down clause (c) of sub-section (4)
of sec. 4 as also the expression "the buyer is not a related
person and"  in clause	(a) of sub-section (1) of sec. 4 and
proviso (iii)  to that clause must consequently be set aside
and  it	  must	 be   held   that   these   provisions	 are
constitutionally valid. [937 E-H]
     Union of  India  v.  Bombay  Tyres	 International	Ltd.
[1984] 1 SCC 467 applied.
     High Court	 judgment in Special Civil Appln. No. 119 of
1976 decided on 20 21 February 1979 reversed.
     (2) The  first  part  of  the  definition	of  "related
person" in  clause (c)	of sub-section (4) of sec. 4 defines
'related person' to mean "a person who is so associated with
the assessee  that they have interest directly or indirectly
in the	business of  each other"  It is	 not enough that the
assessee has an interest, direct or indirect in the business
of the	person alleged	to be  a related  person nor  is  it
enough that the person alleged to be a related person has an
interest,  direct   or	indirect  in  the  business  of	 the
assessee. To  attract the applicability of the first part of
the definition,	 the assessee and the person alleged to be a
related person	must have interest direct or indirect in the
business of  each other.  Each of them must have a direct or
indirect interest  in the business of the other. The quality
and degree  of interest.  which each  has in the business of
the other  may be  different; the  interest of	one  in	 the
business of  the other	may be	direct while the interest of
the latter  in the  business of	 the former may be indirect.
That would  not make  any difference so long as each has got
some interest  direct of  indirect in  the business  of	 the
other. [938 G-H; 939 A-B]
     (3) (i)  In the  present case  Atul Products  Ltd.	 has
undoubtedly interest  in the  business of the assessee since
it holds  50% of  the share  capital of the assessee and has
interest as  shareholder in  the business  carried on by the
assessee. But,	it cannot  be said that the assessee, a Ltd.
company, has  any interest,  direct  or	 in  direct  in	 the
business carried on by one of its shareholders,
933
namely Atul  Products Ltd., even though the share-holding of
such shareholder may be 50 per cent. Secondly, Atul Products
Ltd. is	 a wholesale  buyer of	the dyes manufactured by the
assessee but  even then, since the transactions between them
are as principal to principal, it is difficult to appreciate
how  the   assessee  could   be	 said	by  virtue  of	that
circumstance to	 have any  interest, direct  or indirect, in
the business  of Atul  Products Ltd.  The  assessee  is	 not
concerned whether  Atul Products Ltd. sells or does not sell
the dyes  purchased by	it  from  the  assessee	 nor  is  it
concerned whether  Atul Products  Ltd. sells  such dyes at a
profit or at a loss. [939 C-F]
     (ii) Perhaps  the position	 in regard  to Crescent Dyes
and Chemicals  Ltd is  much stronger  than that in regard to
Atul Products  Ltd. Crescent  Dyes and Chemicals Ltd. is not
even a	shareholder of	the assessee and it has therefore no
interest direct or indirect in the business of the assessee.
Equally, the assessee has no interest, direct or indirect in
the business  of Crescent  Dyes and Chemicals Ltd., which is
just a wholesale dealer purchasing dyes from the assessee in
wholesale on principal to principal basis. [939 G-H]
     (iii) The	first part  of	the  definition	 of  related
persons in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the
amended Act  is therefore  clearly  not	 satisfied  both  in
relations to  Atul Products  Ltd. as  also  in	relation  to
Crescent Dyes  and Chemicals Ltd. and neither of them can be
said to be a "related person"  vis-a-vis the assessee within
the meaning  of the definition of that term in clause (c) of
sub-section (4) of sec. 4 of the amended Act. Therefore, the
assessable value  of the  dyes manufactured  by the assessee
cannot be  determined with  reference to  the selling  price
charged	 by   Atul  Products  Ltd.  and	 Crescent  Dyes	 and
Chemicals Ltd. to their purchasers but must be determined on
the basis  of  the  wholesale  cash  price  charged  by	 the
assessee  to  Atul  Products  Ltd.  and	 Crescent  Dyes	 and
Chemicals Ltd.	The demand  made by the Asstt. Collector for
differential duty  must therefore  be  held  to	 be  rightly
quashed by the High Court. [940 D-F]
     (4) The High Court was not right in giving direction to
the Revenue  to	 pay  costs  incurred  by  the	assessee  in
connection  with   the	bank   guarantee  furnished  by	 the
assessee. The bank guarantee was required to be furnished by
the assessee  as a  condition of  grant of  interim stay  of
enforcement of the demand for differential duty and if it is
ultimately found  that the  demand for differential duty was
not justified, the bank guarantee would certainly have to be
discharged. But,  it is	 difficult to  see how	the costs of
furnishing the	bank guarantee	could be directed to be paid
by the	Revenue to  the assessee. This direction of the High
Court which  directs the  revenue to pay to the assessee the
costs in  connection with the bank guarantee furnished by it
in pursuance  of the  interim order of the High Court is set
aside. [940 H; 941 A-B]
934



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION; Civil Appeal No. 3260 of 1979 From the Judgment and Order dated the 22/23rd day of February, 1972 of the Gujarat High Court in Spl. Civil Appln. No. 52/77.

R.N. Poddar for the Appellants.

N.A. Palkhivala, Atul Setalved, F.H.J. Talyar Khan, Ravindar Narain, Kamal Mehta, A. Manjra, T.M. Ansari and Miss Rainu Walia for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BHAGWATI, J. This appeal by certificate granted under Articles 132 and 133 (1) of the Constitution raises a short question relating to the applicability of the definition of "related person" contained in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944 as it stood after its amendment by section 2 of Central Act 22 of 1973 which came into force with effect from 1st October, 1975. The facts giving rise to this appeal are few and may be briefly stated as follows:

The assessee is a limited company engaged in the business of manufacturing dyes and it has its factory situate in Atul near Bulsar in the State of Gujarat. The share capital of the assessee is held by two limited companies: Atul products Limited holds 50 per cent of the share capital while the remaining 50 per cent of the share capital is held by Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, London. The assessee at all material times sold the large bulk of dyes manufactured by it in wholesale to Atul products Limited and Imperial Chemical Industries (India) Private Limited at a uniform price applicable alike to both these wholesale buyers and these wholesale buyers in their turn sold the dyes purchased by them from the assessee to dealers as well as consumers. Now, until 13th March 1978, Imperial Chemical Industries (India) Private Limited was a subsidiary company wholly owned by Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, London. But, in pursuance of the policy of the Government of India requiring that not more than 40 per cent of the share capital of an Indian company should be held by a foreign share-holder, 6 per cent of the share capital of Imperial Chemical Industries (India) Private Limited was offered to the public, with 935 the result that since 13th March, 1978 only 40 per cent of the share capital of Imperial Chemical Industries (India) Private Limited was held by Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, London and 60 per cent came to be held by Indian citizens and Imperial Chemical Industries (India) Private Limited ceased to be a subsidiary company wholly owned by the Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, London. Consequent upon this dilution of foreign share holding, the name of Imperial Chemical Industries (India) Private Limited was changed to Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited continued to be the wholesale dealers of the dyes manufactured by the assessee throughout the relevant period with which we are concerned in this appeal. It was common ground between the parties that the transactions between the assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited on the other were as principal to principal and the wholesale price charged by the assessee to Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited was the sole consideration for the sale and no extra-commercial considerations entered in the determination of such price. Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited, of course, sold the dyes purchased by them from the assessee at a higher price which inter alia included the expenses incurred by them as also their profit.
On 15th September, 1975 the assessee submitted a price list showing the assessable value of the dyes manufactured by it on the basis of the wholesale price charged by it to Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. The Superintendent of Central Excise demanded certain information from the assessee with a view to satisfying himself as regards the correctness of the price list submitted by the assessee and the requisite in formation was furnished by the assessee by its letter dated 23rd September, 1975. Thereafter correspondence ensued between the assessee on the one hand and the Superintendent of Central Excise on the other and ultimately on 29th October, 1975 the Assistant Collector of Central Excise approved the price list submitted by the assessee. The assessee thereafter went on clearing the dyes manufactured by it after payment of excise duty on the basis of the price list submitted by the assessee and approved by the Assistant Collector. Then again some further correspondence took place between the assessee and the Central Excise Authorities by which certain information demanded by the Central Excise Authorities 936 was supplied by the assessee. The Superintendent of Central Excise, however, issued a notice to the assessee an 31st July, 1976 calling upon the assessee to show cause why the earlier decision of the Assistant Collector approving the price list should not be reviewed on the ground that the assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited on the other were "related persons" and the assessable value of the dyes manufactured by the assessee was, therefore, liable to be calculated on the basis of the price at which Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited sold the dyes to the dealers and the consumers. The assessee was required to show cause why the differential duty worked out on the basis of the selling price charged by Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited should not be recovered from the assessee with effect from 1st October, 1975. The assessee in its reply dated 31st August 1976 raised several contentions in answer to the show cause notice and pointed out inter alia that the assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited on the other were not "related persons"
within the meaning of the definition of that term contained in sub-clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944. The Assistant Collector was, however, not satisfied with the explanation offered by the assessee and he ultimately by an order dated 10th December, 1976 reviewed his earlier order of approval of the price list and confirmed the demand differential duty with retrospective effect from 1st October, 1975 and directed the assessee to file a fresh price list on the basis of the selling price charged by Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. The demand for differential duty computed by the Superintendent of Central Excise for the period from 1st October, 1975 to 31st December, 1976 came to an aggregate amount of Rs. 1,17,77,737,65. The assessee thereupon filed a writ petition in the High Court of Gujarat challenging the validity of the demand made by the Assistant Collector and in the meanwhile also preferred an appeal before the Appellate Collector. The Appellate Collector rejected the appeal of the assessee without examining the merits of the grounds raised by the assessee since he took the view that all these grounds would be decided in the writ petition pending before the High Court and no useful purpose would be served by his considering the self-same grounds.
937
The assessee urged several grounds in support of the writ petition before the High Court but it is not necessary to refer to them in detail, because the High Court ultimately decided the writ petition in favour of the assessee only on two grounds and it will, therefore, be enough if we refer to those two grounds alone and consider whether the decision of the High Court is correct in so for as it decided those two grounds in favour of the assessee. The first ground was that the concept of "related person"

occurring in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944 was outside the legislative competence of Parliament under Article 246 read with Entry 84 in the Union List and was, therefore, unconstitutional and void. This ground found favour with the High Court in view of the earlier decision given by the same Bench on 20/21 February, 1979 in Special Civil Application No. 119 of 1976. But, this decision of the High Court striking down clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended Act cannot stand in view of the decision of the Court in Union of India v. Bombay Tyres International Limited where an identical challenge to the constitutional validity of the definition of the term "related person" was negatived by this Court. The definition of the term "related person" was read down and it was held by this Court that "On a proper interpretation of the definition of "related person" in sub-section (4) (c) of section 4 the words "relative and a distributor of the asssesee" do not refer to any distributor but they are limited only to a distributor who is a relative of the assessee within the meaning of the Companies Act, 1956. So read, the definition of "related person" is not unduly wide and does not suffer from any constitutional infirmity. It is within the legislative competence of Parliament. The decision of the High Court holding that "the concept of related person occurring in amended section 4 is ultra vires the legislative competence of Parliament under Article 246 read with Entry 84 in the Union List" and striking down clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 as also the expression "the buyer is not a related person and" in clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 4 and proviso (iii) to that clause must consequently be set aside and it must be held that these provisions are constitutionally valid.

The second ground on which the assessee assailed the validity of the demand made by the Assistant Collector for differential duty 938 related to applicability of the definition of "related person" in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended Act. The Assistant Collector took the view that the assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited on the other were related persons within the meaning of the first part of the definition of the term "related person" and the assessable value of the dyes manufactured by the assessee for the purpose of excise duty was, therefore, liable to be determined with reference to the price at which the dyes were ordinarily sold by Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. This view taken by the Assistant Collector was set aside by the High Court on the ground that the assessee on the one hand and Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited on the other were not "related persons" and the wholesale cash price charged by the assessee to Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited and not the price at which the latter sold the dyes to the dealers or the consumers, represented the true measure of the value of the dyes for the purpose of chargeability to excise duty. This conclusion reached by the High Court was assailed before us by the learned Attorney General appearing on behalf of the Revenue. He fairly conceded that the only part of the definition of "related person" in clause (c) of sub-section (4) section 4 on which he could rely was the first part which defines "related person" to mean "a person who is so associated with the assessee that they have interest directly or indirectly in the business of each other." The second part of the definition which adds an inclusive clause was admittedly not applicable, because neither Atul Products Limited nor Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited was a holding company or a subsidiary company nor was either of them a relative of the assessee, so as to fall within the second part of the definition. But we do not think that even the limited contention urged by the learned Attorney General on behalf of the Revenue based on the first part of the definition can succeed. What the first part of the definition requires is that the person who is sought to be branded as a "related person" must be a person who is so associated with the assessee that they have interest, directly or indirectly, in the business of each other. It is not enough that the assessee has an interest, direct, or indirect in the business of the person allotted to be a related person nor is it enough that the person alleged to be a related person has an interest, direct or indirect, in the business of the assessee. It is essential to attract the applicability of the first part of the definition that the assessee and the person alleged to be a related person must have interest, 939 direct or indirect, in the business of each other. Each of them must have a direct or indirect interest in the business of the other. The equality and degree of interest which each has in the business of the other may be different; the interest of one in the business of the other may be direct, while the interest of the latter in the business of the former may be indirect. That would not make any difference, so long as each has got some interest, direct or indirect, in the business of the other. Now, in the present case, Atul Products Limited has undoubtedly interest in the business of the assessee, since Atul Products Limited holds 50 per cent of the share capital of the assessee and has interest as shareholder in the business carried on by the assessee. But it is not possible to say that the assessee has any interest in the business of Atul Products Limited. There are two points of view from which the relationship between the assessee and Atul Products Limited may be considered. First, it may be noted that Atul Products Limited is a shareholder of the assessee to the extent of 50 per cent of the share capital. But we fail to see how it can be said that a limited company has any interest, direct or indirect, in the business carried on by one of its shareholders, even though the shareholding of such shareholder may be 50 per cent. Secondly, Atul Products Limited is a wholesale buyer of the dyes manufactured by the assessee but even then, since the transactions between them are principal to principal, it is difficult to appreciate how the assessee could be said by virtue of that circumstance to have any interest, direct or indirect, in the business of Atul Products Limited. Atul Products Limited buys dyes from the assessee in wholesale on principal to principal basis and then sells such dyes in the market. The assessee is not concerned whether Atul Products Limited sells or does not sell the dyes purchased by it from the assessee nor is it concerned whether Atul Products Limited sells such dyes at a loss. It is impossible to contend that the assessee has any direct or indirect interest in the business of a wholesale dealer who purchases dyes from it on principal to principal basis. The same position obtains in regard to Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. Perhaps the position in regard to Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited is much stronger then that in regard to Atul Products Limited. Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited is not even a shareholder of the assessee and it has, therefore, no interest direct or indirect in the business of the assessee. It is Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, London which holds 50 per cent of the share capital of the assessee and this foreign company also holds 40 per cent of the share capital of 940 Crescent Chemicals and Dyes Limited. Imperial Chemicals Industries Limited, London would admittedly have an interest in the business of the assessee in its capacity as a shareholder, but how can Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited of which 40 per cent of the shares are held by Imperial Chemical Industries Limited, London which in its turn is a share holder of the assessee, can not be said to have any interest, direct or indirect, in, the business of the assessee. Equally the assessee has no interest direct or indirect in the business of Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited, which is just a wholesale dealer purchasing dyes from the assessee in whole sale on principal to principal basis. It is obvious that for the same reasons which have prevailed with us while discussing the case of Atul Products Limited, the assessee has no direct or indirect interest in the business of Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. The first part of the definition of related person in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended Act is, therefore, clearly not satisfied both in relation to Atul Products Limited as also in relation to Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited and neither of them can be said to be a "related person" vis-a-vis the assessee within the meaning of the definition of that term in clause (c) of sub-section (4) of section 4 of the amended Act. We, therefore, affirm the view taken by the High Court and hold that the assessable value of the dyes manufactured by the assessee cannot be determined with reference to the selling price charged by Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited to their purchasers but must be determined on the basis of the wholesale cash price charged by the assessee to Atul Products Limited and Crescent Dyes and Chemicals Limited. The demand made by the Assistant Collector for differential duty must, therefore, be held to be rightly quashed by the High Court.

But there is one small matter on which the High Court has, in our view, erred in giving direction and it is in regard to payment of the costs incurred by the assessee in connection with the bank guarantee furnished by it in pursuance of the interim order made by the High Court. We do not think the High Court was right in giving this direction. The bank guarantee was required to be furnished by the assessee as a condition of grant of interim stay of enforcement of the demand for differential duty and if it is ultimately found that the demand for differential duty was not 941 justified, the bank guarantee would certainly have to be discharged, but it is difficulty to see how the costs of furnishing the bank guarantee could be directed to be paid by the Revenue to the assessee. We would, therefore, set aside that part of the order made by the High Court which directs the Revenue to pay to the assessee the costs incurred in connection with the bank guarantee furnished by it in pursuance of the interim order of the High Court.

The appeal, therefore, fails except in regard to the direction for payment of costs of the bank guarantee. The Revenue will pay the costs of the appeal to the assessee.

S.R.					   Appeal dismissed.
942