Supreme Court - Daily Orders
Trishakti Electron.& Industries ... vs Til Ltd. . on 7 April, 2015
Bench: A.K. Sikri, Rohinton Fali Nariman
ITEM NO.101 COURT NO.14 SECTION III
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
Civil Appeal No(s). 1961-1962/2004
TRISHAKTI ELECTRON.& INDUSTRIES LTD.&ANR Appellant(s)
VERSUS
TIL LTD. & ORS. Respondent(s)
(with appln. (s) for permission to place addl. documents on record
and interim relief and office report)
Date : 07/04/2015 These appeals were called on for hearing today.
CORAM :
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A.K. SIKRI
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE ROHINTON FALI NARIMAN
For Appellant(s)
Ms. Rohini Musa,Adv.
For Respondent(s) Mr. B.P.S.Patil,Sr.Adv.
Mr. Rajendra Singhvi,Adv.
Mr. K.K.H.Gautam,Adv.
Mr. Ashok Kumar Singh,Adv.
Mr. Ashok K. Panda,Sr.Adv.
Mr. Rajiv Nanda,Adv.
Mr. T.M.Singh,Adv.
Ms. Aruna Gupta,Adv.
Mr. B. Krishna Prasad,Adv.
UPON hearing the counsel the Court made the following
O R D E R
The appeals are dismissed in terms of the signed order.
(SUMAN WADHWA) (SUMAN JAIN)
AR-cum-PS COURT MASTER
Signed order is placed on the file.
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Suman Wadhwa
Date: 2015.05.05
11:19:51 IST
Reason:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 1961-1962 OF 2004
Trishakti Electron & Industries Ltd. & Anr. Appellant(s)
VERSUS
TIL Ltd. & Ors. Respondent(s)
O R D E R
We have gone through the judgment rendered by the Division bench of the Calcutta High Court and find ourselves in agreement with a view taken by the High Court in the said judgment. Suffice it to say that the appellant herein had supplied certain cranes on hiring basis to the ONGC for a project in Bangladesh. Those cranes were purchased by the appellant for respondent no.1. Respondent no.1 did not pay the excise duty and had executed a bond. On the other hand, custom duty was payable on re-import of the cranes after the project in Bangladesh was completed. This import duty the appellant has paid. The appellant claimed that it was forced to pay this import duty because of the reason that respondent no.1 did not pay the excise duty and had that excise duty been paid then they would not have any obligation to pay the import duty. Since the Excise Department had discharged the bond executed by respondent no.1, the appellant filed the writ petition in the High Court of Calcutta impleading Excise Department as well as -2- respondent no.1 as parties. The High Court in the impugned judgment has concluded that insofar as the Excise Department is concerned it has rightly discharged the bond as respondent no.1 has fulfilled its obligation. We find that during the hearing many arguments are raised which are based on disputed questions of facts, some of which were not even pleaded in the writ petition. The case set up in the writ petition was entirely different from the one which is sought to be projected before us at the time of arguments which cannot be permitted.
We find that the High Court while allowing the appeal of respondent no.1 and dismissing the writ petition of the appellant had given an opportunity to the learned counsel to file civil suit. Civil Suit was in fact filed but the same was dismissed some time in the year 2011.
In these circumstances, we find no merit in these appeals and these are accordingly dismissed.
….....................J. (A.K.SIKRI) …......................J. (ROHINTON FALI NARIMAN) New Delhi;
Date: 7.4.2015.