Jharkhand High Court
Ms Sukh Sagar Metals P Ltd Through One Of ... vs Union Of India Through The Chief ... on 3 July, 2017
Equivalent citations: 2018 (2) AJR 339, (2018) 1 JCR 429 (JHA) (2017) 4 JCR 459 (JHA), (2017) 4 JCR 459 (JHA)
Author: D.N. Patel
Bench: Amitav K. Gupta, D.N. Patel
1
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JHARKHAND AT RANCHI
W.P.(T) No. 2868 of 2017
M/s Sukh Sagar Metals (P) Limited, A company registered under the
Companies Act, 1956 having its Industrial Unit at Jamdol, P.O. and P.S.
Chakulia, District East Singhbhum832301, Jharkhand through one of its
Director, Deepu Kumar, son of Sri Raghbir Thakur, resident of Outer
Circle Road, South Park, Bistupur, P.O. and P.S. Bistupur, Jamshedpur,
District East Singhbhum. ........Petitioner
Versus
1. Union of India through the Chief Commissioner, Central Excise and
Service Tax (Bihar and Jharkhand), having its office at1st Floor, Central
Revenue (Annexee) Building, Vir Chand Patel Path, Patna, P.O.GPO, P.S.
Kotwali, Patna, PIN 800001, District Patna (Bihar).
2. The Commissioner of Central Excise & Service Tax, Jamshedpur, having
its office at 143, New Baradwari, Sakchi, Jamshedpur831001, P.O. and
P.S. Sakchi, District East Singhbhum.
3. The Additional Commissioner of Central Excise & Service Tax,
Jamshedpur, having its office at 143, New Baradwari, Sakchi, Jamshedpur
831001, P.O. and P.S. Sakchi, District East Singhbhum.
........Respondents
CORAM: HON'BLE THE ACTING CHIEF JUSTICE
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE AMITAV K. GUPTA
For the Petitioner : M/s Sumeet Gododia, Dhananjay Kr. Pathak,
Ritesh Kumar Gupta, Shashi Kant Mishra,
Advocates
For the Respondents : M/s Prashant Kr. Singh, Mr. Abhijeet Kr. Singh,
Advocates
03/Dated 3rd July, 2017:
Oral Order:
Per D.N. Patel, A.C.J.:
1. This writ petition has been preferred challenging the showcause
notice dated 07.02.2014 (Annexure1), issued by the Commissioner,
Central Excise and Service Tax, Jamshedpur as well as the Orderin
Original No. 12/Commr/2015 passed by the Commissioner, Central
Excise and Service Tax, Jamshedpur dated 27.02.2015/13.03.2015
(Annexure3), mainly on the ground that the show cause notice and
2
OrderinOriginal has been passed on presumption and surmises. The
highest case of the department is that there is some possibilities of
clandestine removal of the M.S. Ingots, which is a final product of this
petitioner.
2. Factual matrix:
This writ petitioner is manufacturing M.S. Ingots since long.
Show cause notice dated 07.02.2014 was given by the
Commissioner, Central Excise and Service Tax, Jamshedpur for the period
running from January, 2009 to September, 2013.
Personal hearing in the case was held on 29.10.2014, 03.12.2014
and 22.12.2014.
Thereafter, the OrderinOriginal was passed by the Commissioner,
Central Excise and Service Tax, Jamshedpur on 27.02.2015/13.02.2015
(Annexure3).
The petitioner had earlier filed an Appeal before the learned
CESTAT, Kolkata which was subsequently dismissed vide order dated
06.01.2016.
The petitioner further filed Tax Appeal being T.A. No. 24 of 2016 before this Hon'ble Court primarily challenging the order passed by the learned CESTAT, Kolkata which was withdrawn.
Being aggrieved and dissatisfied by the show cause notice as well as by the OrderinOriginal, the present writ petition has been preferred.
3. Arguments canvassed by the counsel for the petitioner:
Counsel appearing for the petitioner submitted that there is gross violation of principle of natural justice. The documents, which are referred to and relied upon, in the show cause notice like:
a. Nucleus Group report; though were demanded, but, never supplied.
b. The All India Induction Furnace Association report, though they were never supplied.
The whole show cause notice is issued upon presumptions and surmises about unaccounted manufacturing of M.S. Ingots and clandestine removal of the final product and nothing has been proved by the respondents. Only on the basis of presumptions, the show cause notice has been decided. The consumption of electricity pattern, which is 3 referred in the show cause notice as well as in the OrderinOriginal, is absolutely baseless. It is submitted by the counsel for the petitioner that looking to AnnexureF, as referred in para 5 of the show cause notice, reveals the electricity consumption per M.T., which is absolutely in consonance with the report given by the Joint Plant Commissioner constituted by the Ministry of Steel, Government of India and as per this report, the consumption can be 1800 KWH/T (as referred in paragraph no 20 of a decision reported in 237 ELT 674 in the case of R.A. Casting (Private) Ltd. Vs. CCE, case. Thus, there is no scientific survey carried out by the respondents which can lead to conclusive evidence of unaccounted manufacturing of M.S. Ingots and clandestine removal thereof.
It further submitted by the counsel for the petitioner that Dr. N.K. Batra's report has been referred to every now and then, since 2003 onwards, by the respondents and there are no less than one dozen judgments in which it has been observed right from the learned Tribunal to the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India that electricity consumption per se cannot be relied upon by the respondents for proving clandestine removal of final product, because there is no set pattern for consumption of electricity. There are several reports given by more reliable institutions and persons than Dr. N.K. Batra, which have been referred in the aforesaid decisions of R.A. Castings. The respondents ought to have carried out experiment of consumption pattern of electricity at the factory premises of the noticee, which has been referred to paragraph no. 22 of the decisions of R.A. Castings Private Ltd, which has not been gone into by the respondents. The whole show cause notice is based upon presumptions and surmises. The burden of proof lies upon the respondents that there is clandestine removal of finished product, which has not been discharged, at all, by the respondents. It is also submitted by the counsel for the petitioner that the respondents are surprised about the loss sustained by the petitioner. Merely because there is a loss to this petitioner that does not mean that there is a clandestine removal.
Counsel appearing for the petitioner has relied upon the decisions which are as under: 4
(a) R.A. Castings decisions reported in 237 ELT 674, which is confirmed by the Division Bench of Allahabad High Court reported in 2010(1) taxman.com. 342 (Allahabad), against which SLP preferred by the department, has also been dismissed, and
(b) W.P. No. 173 of 2014 decided on 22.04.2014 by the Calcutta High Court.
Counsel for the petitioner has pointed out that in several similarly situated cases, in which Dr. N.K. Batra report's report has been referred to and relied upon, for proving clandestine removal of the finished products, in the show cause, ultimately in the OrdersinOriginal, the show cause notices have been dropped by the adjudicating authority itself. The similarly situated cases are as under: a. Globe Steel & Alloys Pvt. Ltd, the OrderinOriginal:
02/Central Excise/commr/2015 dated 31.03.2015, copy whereof has been given to the counsel for the respondents. b. M/s. Madhura Ingots & Steel Co. Pvt. Ltd. OrderinOriginal:
07/ Central Excise/commr/2015 dated 19.05.2015. c. M/s. Jagannath Cement Works Pvt. Ltd being Orderin Original: 31/Denovo/Commr/2015 dated 15.12.2015. d. M/s. Kamsa Steel Pvt. Ltd. being OrderinOriginal: 33/commr/2015 dated 21.12.2015, and several other orders, copies of which have been given to this Court and given to the respondents.
On the basis of aforesaid decisions, it is submitted by the counsel for the petitioner that electricity consumption pattern, is useless argument, on behalf of the respondents. Every now and then, such argument has been canvassed, in the OrderinOriginal and the first adjudicating authority has dropped the baseless notice and whenever the first authority has confirmed such ground, the tribunals have passed the Orders and quashed such ground, like in the case of R.A. Castings Pvt. Ltd Vs. CCE, which is approved by the Allahabad High Court and SLP has been dismissed by the Hon'ble Supreme Court. It is further submitted that whenever Ordersin Original are passed as stated hereinabove, dropping the show cause notice, the same are placed before the committee, consisting of two Chief Commissioners and they are taking decisions, whether to prefer any 5 further appeal or not and all aforesaid cases where the show cause notice has been dropped and the ground of the electricity consumption pattern has also not been approved, in the OrderinOriginal, no appeal has been preferred by the department. Thus, it has become fashion with the respondent that arbitrarily in few cases, ground of Dr. N.K. Batra will be raised for few industries and for rest of the industries, no such ground is ever raised. Because of this N.K. Batra's report, several petitions have been filed and several decisions have to be given by the Courts. Counsel for the petitioner has submitted that even a circular has been issued, which is at Annexure2 dated 26.06.2014 that whenever any decision has been finally accepted by the respondentsdepartment, the same has to be followed in other cases. This circular has also not been followed in this case. In fact, the respondents could not prove the clandestine removal of the finished products viz. M.S. Ingots and hence showcause notice dated 07.02.2014 as well as OrderinOriginal dated dated 27.02.2015/13.03.2015 which are at Annexure1 and Annxure3, respectively, may kindly be quashed and set aside.
4. Arguments canvassed by the counsel for the respondents:
Counsel for the respondents submitted that the petitioner is having efficacious and alternative remedy against the OrderinOriginal and the appeal has been preferred before the Central Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT) under Section 35(B) of the Central Excise Act, 1944. In fact, appeal has also been preferred. Counsel appearing for the respondents submitted that Dr. N.K. Batra's report is not an only ground as mentioned in the showcause notice. There are several other grounds like high cost of production visavis income from sale, unrealistic low amount of expenditure incurred on salary of employees and manufacturing activity incurs losses and still petitioner continues, whereas in the profit & loss account from the noncore activities, profit has been shown by manipulating books of account. In detail, consumption of electricity pattern has been mentioned in AnnexureF, which is referred in paragraph5 of the showcause notice. Similarly, other grounds have also been dealt with in detail, in the Order inOriginal. Very meager amount of salary has been paid by this petitioner to his employees, there is a loss caused to the petitioner since long, still 6 they are continuing in the manufacturing activities and the petitioner is showing profit in their profit and loss account by showing the profit from the noncore activities and no satisfactory explanation has been given by the petitioner. These aspects of the matter have been mentioned in detail in the OrderinOriginal and hence, this Court may not entertain this writ petition.
R E A S O N S
5. Having heard counsels for both the sides and looking to the facts and circumstances of the case, we, hereby, quash and set aside the Orderin Original dated 27.02.2015/13.03.2015 (Annexure3 to the memo of this writ petition) mainly for the following facts and reasons:
(i) Showcause notice was given by the respondents on 07.02.2014 for the period running from January, 2009 to September, 2013 mainly on the ground that there is unrealistic electricity consumption, high cost of production visavis income from sale, unrealistically low amount of expenditure towards salary of employees and though manufacturing activity incurs losses, still the petitioner unit continues and profit is shown in the books of account from noncore activities by manipulating books of account. On this ground, the showcause notice has been given by the Commissioner, Central Excise and Service Tax, Jamshedpur.
(ii) In the showcause notice, Dr. N.K. Batra's report has been referred to and relied upon. Moreover, there is also reference of Nucleus Group report as well as there is a reference of All India Induction Furnace Association report.
(iii) Counsel appearing for the petitioner has relied upon several decisions, as stated hereinabove. It ought to be kept in mind by the respondents that the electricity consumption pattern can be a corroborative ground and not a substantive ground at all. Thousands of possibilities cannot be equated with one truth. The grounds, which are referred in the OrderinOriginal, are in fact leading the respondents towards the highest probabilities and nothing beyond that to suspect that there is clandestine removal of the finished product by the noticee. Nonetheless, for exact proof of unaccounted 7 manufacturing of finished products and for clandestine removal thereof, more labour was required to be done by the respondents. It has become fashion with the respondentsdepartment to rely upon a document, since 2003 onwards, which is known as report given by Dr. N.K. Batra, socalled Professor of IIT, Kanpur. Petitioner is in possession of an email communicated by IIT as to whether such report has ever been given by IIT, Kanpur, the answer given by IIT, Kanpur in negative (Annexure4, 4/1 to the memo of this petition).
(iv) Right from 2003 onwards, in not a single matter decided by the Commissioner or by the Tribunal or by any adjudicating authority, the department has produced Dr. N.K. Batra for cross examination by any assessee in whole of India. Nobody knows the authenticity of Dr. N.K. Batra's report. Nobody is errorproof authority much less, Dr. N.K. Batra. Hence, his cross examination is must. His report is not a conclusive piece of evidence as per Indian Evidence Act, 1972.
(v) Several decisions have been given by the Tribunals which have been confirmed by the High Courts that electricity consumption alone if adopted as a basis of the demand, the same is not tenable. The respondents can take the electricity consumption pattern as a corroborative piece of evidence, but, in absence of substantive proofs like
(a) Details about the purchase of the raw material within the manufacturing units and no entries are made in the books of account or in the statutory records.
(b) Manufacturing of finished product with the help of the aforesaid raw material, which is not mentioned in the statutory records.
(c) Quantity of the manufacturing with reference to the capacity of production by the noticee unit.
(d) Quantity of the packing material used.
(e) The total number of the employees employed and the payment made to them.
In this case, statements of the labourers ought to have been reduced in writing, by the department which ought to refer that over and above of the salary paid by the noticee, 8 some other type of remunerations, in cash or kind have been paid by the noticee, such statements are must.
(f) Ostensible discrepancy in the stock of raw materials and the finished product.
(g) Clandestine removal of goods with reference to entry/exit of vehicles like trucks etc. in the factory premises.
(h) If there is any proof about the loading of the goods in the Truck, like weight of truck etc. at the weighbridge, security gate records, transporter documents such as lorry receipts, statements of the truck drivers, entries of the trucks/vehicles at different checkpost. Different types of forms which are supplied by the Commercial Tax Department like Road Permit supplied by the Commercial Tax Department, receipts by the consignees etc. These documents ought to have been collected by the respondentdepartment, if at all, they are interested in collection of the correct Central Excise Duty from the noticee upon whom or upon which allegation of clandestine removal of the finished product is levelled. The electricity consumption report like Dr. N.K. Batra's report can hardly be treated as a substantive evidence. Time and again, the decisions have been given by the Tribunals but the respondentsdepartments are turning deafear to. In this case, they are also turning deafear to t heir own circular dated 26.06.2014 (Annexure2 to the memo of this writ petition). In this case, the respondents are relying upon Dr. N.K. Batra's report. All these are nothing, but, the possibilities, for clandestine removal, but, for proving the clandestine removal, the substantive piece of evidence is must. Few such evidences have been referred by this Court. The list of these evidences is not exhaustive:
(i) The department should have collected the proof of amount received from the consignees, statement of consignees, receipts of sale proceeds by the consignor and its disposal.
(vi) In the instant case, though the petitioner was granted an opportunity of being heard, but, while passing the OrderinOriginal, 9 the adjudicating authority has not dealt with the main contention advanced on behalf of the petitioner and no reasons have been assigned for differing with the decisions rendered in the case of R.A. Castings Ltd. In this context, reference may be made to the decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Assistant Commissioner, Commercial Tax Department, Works Contract Act and Leasing, Kota Vs. Shukla and Brothers, reported in (2010) 4 Supreme Court Cases 785. In the said decision the Hon'ble Supreme Court vide para 14 has held under: "14. The principle of natural justice has twin ingredients: firstly, the person who is likely to be adversely affected by the action of the authorities should be given notice to show cause thereof and granted an opportunity of hearing and secondly, the orders so passed by the authorities should give reason for arriving at any conclusion showing proper application of mind. Violation of either of them could in the given facts and circumstances of the case, vitiate the order itself."
Further, the High Court of Gujarat, in the case of Vadilal Gases Ltd. Vs. Union of India, reported in (2015) 64 Taxmann.com 56 (Gujarat), in paras 10 and 11, has held as under: "10. At this juncture, reference may be made to the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Asstt. Commissioner of Commercial Tax V. Shukla and Brothers (2010) 4 SCC 785 on which reliance has been placed by the learned counsel for the petitioner wherein the court has held that the principles of natural justice has twin ingredients; firstly the person who is likely to be adversely affected by the action of the authorities should be given notice to show cause thereof and granted an opportunity of hearing; and secondly, the orders so passed by the authorities should give reasons for arriving at any conclusion showing proper application of mind. Violation of either of them could in the given facts and circumstances of the case vitiate the order itself.
11. Examining the facts of the present case in the light of the above decision, while it cannot be said that the impugned orders are totally nonreasoned orders, at the same time, the main contention advanced on behalf of the petitioner has not been dealt with and no reasons have been assigned for not accepting the same. The impugned order does not show that the authority concerned has applied its mind to the contention raised by the petitioner. Therefore, as held by the Supreme Court in the above decision, the principles of natural justice would stand violated in the light of the fact that the concerned authority has not applied its mind to the principal contention raised by the petitioner, inasmuch as, it has not given any reason in respect thereof."
In view of the aforesaid decisions, If there is a violation of principle of natural justice, writ is always tenable at law.
10(vii) Thus, the department has not done any home work and the show cause notice dated 07.02.2014 (Annexure1) has been issued. This type of shortcut should not have been followed by the department. There is no shortcut for success. The aforesaid documents and evidences could have been collected very easily by the department, if at all, department is of the opinion that there is a clandestine removal of finished product viz. M.S. Ingots by the petitioner.
(viii) The respondents have also been given time and again the guidance by various decisions that whenever they are relying upon the electricity consumption pattern, experiment in the very same unit ought to have been carried out for manufacturing of 1 MT of the finished product or for at least 1000 such unit, if any other product is involved, so that average consumption of electricity can be accurately measured by the respondentdepartment. Electricity consumption, which is based upon Dr. N.K. Batra's report is absolutely useless, with reference to the units for which allegation is levelled for clandestine removal without carrying out any experiment of consumption of electricity in the very same unit. Hence, we, hereby direct the respondents, henceforth not to use Dr. N.K. Batra's report against any noticee especially when the department is levelling allegations of clandestine removal of finished products, unless, the experiment of consumption of electricity is carried out at the factory premises of the very same assessee/noticee. The consumption of the electricity depends upon the efficiency of the machines also. It also depends upon the fact whether the noticee is utilizing obsolete machinery or modern machinery. Dr. N.K.Batra might have carried out experiment in a factory where there may be efficient machinery, whereas machines used by the noticee may not have the same efficiency. Therefore, cross examination of Dr. N.K. Batra is must. Department can use the report of Dr. N.K. Batra's as the guidelines and nothing beyond that. Department has to bring its own experts at the factory premises of the noticee. Department must carry out an experiment of the consumption of the electricity at the manufacturing place of the noticee either for 1 MT or for 1000 unit etc. so that, the electricity 11 consumption pattern can be measured for the very same machinery and thereafter, it can be compared with the quantity of the finished products mentioned, in the books of accounts, with the electricity bills of the noticee. This exercise is must before issuing the show cause notice by the respondentdepartment, whenever the department is levelling allegation of clandestine removal on the basis of electricity consumption pattern. Instead of doing this exercise, straight way, Dr. N.K. Batra's report has been relied upon, which has no relevance with the factory premises of the noticee. Hence, such report shall not be relied upon by the respondents, unless the aforesaid experiment is carried out at the factory premises of the noticee. This is not a first case in which such guidelines has been given. Observations made in paragraph Nos. 20.1, 20.2, 21, 22.1, 23 & 24 of the decisions rendered by the Tribunal in the case of R.A. Castings Pvt. Ltd. Vs. CCE, reported in 237 ELT 674 read as under: "20.1 From the perusal of these reports, we find that wide variations in the consumption of electricity have been reported for the manufacture of one MT of steel ingots. This renders the norm of 1046 units adopted by the Revenue as arbitrary. Why not adopt the norm of 1800 KWH/T or 1427 KWH/T or 650 to 820 units/MT or 851 units/MT as per various reports referred to above or why not adopt some figure between 555 to 1046 units as norm as per Dr. Batra's report? 20.2 We note that no experiments have been conducted in the factories of the appellants for devising the consumption norms of electricity for producing one MT of steel ingots. It is the basic philosophy in the taxation matters that no tax can be levied on the basis of estimation. In this case, there is added problem. Estimation of production fluctuates widly depending upon the fact as to which report is adopted. Tax is on manufacture and it is to be proved beyond doubt that the goods have been actually manufactured, which are leviable to excise duty. Unfortunately, no positive evidence is coming on record to that effect. Article 265 of the Constitution of India says that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law. Unless the manufacture of the steel ingots is proved to the hilt by authentic, reliable and credible evidence, duty cannot be demanded on the basis of hypothesis and theoretical calculations, without taking into consideration the ground realities of the functioning of the factories. High consumption of electricity by itself cannot be the ground to infer that the factories were engaged in suppression of production of steel ingots. The reasons for high consumption of electricity in the case of the appellants' factories have not at all been studied and analysed by the Revenue independently. Instead, the norm of 1046 units fixed as per Dr. Batra's report has been blindly applied to the appellants' cases to work out the excess production. This approach is flawed and does not have sanctity.
21. The law is well settled that the electricity consumption cannot be the only factor or basis for determining the duty liability that too on 12 imaginary basis especially when Rule 173E mandatorily requires the Commissioner to prescribe/fix norm for electricity consumption first and notify the same to the manufacturers and thereafter ascertain the reasons for deviations, if any, taking also into account the consumption of various inputs, requirements of labour, material, power supply and the conditions for running the plant together with the attendant facts and circumstances. Therefore, there can be no generalization nor any uniform norm of 1046 units as sought to be adopted by the Revenue especially when there is no norm fixed under Rule 173E till date by the Revenue and notified by it. The electricity consumption varies from one unit to another and from one date to another and even from one heat to another within the same date. There is, therefore, no universal and uniformly acceptable standard of electricity consumption, which can be adopted for determining the excise duty liability that too on the basis of imaginary production assumed by the Revenue with no other supporting record, evidence or document to justify its allegations. In the following case laws, it has been held that the consumption of the electricity alone is not sufficient to determine the production;
(i) Pure Enterprises (P) Ltd. v. CCE, Rajkot1999 (111) E.L.T.407 (Tri.)
(ii) Kapadia Dyeing Bleaching and Finishing Works v. CCE, Surat 2000 (124) E.L.T. 821 (Tri.)
(iii) A. Arti Leathers (P) Ltd. v. CCE and C, Ahmedabad2001 (136) E.L.T. 1255 (Tri.Mum.)
(iv) Parshuram Cement Ltd. v. CCE, Lucknow2003 (160) E.L.T. 213 (TriDel.)
(v) Mukesh Dye Works v. CCE, MumbaiVI2006 (196) E.L.T. 237 (tri.Mum.)
(vi) Hans Castings Pvt. Ltd. v. CCE, Kanpur1998(102) E.L.T. 139 (T)
(vii) M/s. Padmanabh Dyeing and Finishing Works v. CCE, Vadodara1997 (90) E.L.T. 343(T)
(viii) M/s. Madhu Products v. CCE, Hyderabad 1999 (111) E.L.T. 197(T).
22.1 For want of evidence relating to the above points, clandestine removal cannot be sustained merely on the basis of the technical opinion report of Mr. Batra. In this connection, the following case laws are relied:
(i) Emmtex Synthetics Ltd. v. Commissioner of Central Excise, New Delhi reported in 2003 (151) E.L.T. 170 (Tri.Del.);
(ii) Commr. of Central Excise, Chennai v. Dhanavilas (Madras) Snuff Co. reported in 2003 (153) E..T. 437 (Tri.Chennai);
(iii) Commissioner of Central Excise, Madurai v. Madras Suspensions Ltd. reported in 2003 (156) E.L.T.807 (Tri.Chennai);
(iv) Commissioner of Central Excise, Coimbatore v. Sangamitra Cotton Mills (P) Ltd. reported in 2004 (163) E.L.T. 472 (Tri Chennai);
(v) Commissioner of Central Excise Coimbatore v. Velavan Spinning Mills reported in 2004 (167) E.L.T. 91 (Tri.Chennai);
(vi) M. Veerabadhran and others v. Commissioner of Central Excise, ChennaiII reported in 2005 (182) E.L.T. 389(T)= 2005 (98) ECC 790 (T).
23. The Tribunal has consistently taken the view that wherever electricity consumption alone is adopted as the basis to raise demands, the order of the lower authorities have been held to be unsustainable in 13 law and set aside and the Revenue had been directed to carry out experiments in different factories on different dates to arrive at the average to be adopted as a norm, which can be followed thereafter and the Revenue in the present case not having conducted any experiment whatsoever cannot be permitted to justify the demands raised. It will be appropriate on the part of the Revenue to conduct experiments in the factory of the appellants and others and that too on different dates to adopt the test results as the basis to arrive at a norm, which can be adopted for future. The impugned demand based merely on assumptions and presumptions cannot, therefore, be sustained nor could be justified both on facts and in law.
24. The law is well settled that in every case of alleged clandestine removal, the onus is on the Revenue to prove what is alleges with positive and concrete evidence. In the absence of any positive evidence brought by the Revenue to discharge its onus, the impugned order cannot be sustained."
(emphasis supplied)
(ix) The aforesaid decision has been upheld by the Division Bench of Allahabad High Court in a decision reported in 2010(1) taxman.com 342 (Allahabad) and SLP preferred against the said decision has also been dismissed by the Hon'ble Supreme Court. Thus, the report of Dr. N.K. Batra has been several times, criticized by various adjudicating authority visavis clandestine removal and the respondent department has also issued a circular dated 26.06.2014 and several times such notice has also been dropped while passing the Orderin Original, as stated herein above, as pointed out by the counsel for the petitioner. Despite these facts, in violation of such directions and the circular of the department, the respondents are still issuing show cause notices, levelling allegations of clandestine removal of the finished product, based upon the electricity consumption pattern shown by Dr. N.K. Batra. We, therefore, direct the respondents not to mention Dr. N.K. Batra's report in their show cause notice unless an experiment is carried out by the respondent department in the factory premises of the noticee for production of 1 MT or for production of more than sufficiently large quantity like 1000 units etc. in any other cases, because electricity consumption depends upon the nature of machinery. Even two refrigerators of same kind and type andcapacity may not have the same consumption of electricity, because one may be new and another may be old.
(x) Likewise such type of other reports are also available in this country, which are as under: 14
(a) Dr. N.K. Batra's report
(b) Report by Joint Plant Committee constituted by the Ministry of steel, Government of India.
(c) Report of NISST, Mandi Gobindgarh given in JuneJuly, 2006.
(d) Report of Executive Director, All India Induction Furnace Association, New Delhi, and all these reports say different electricity consumption, per ton. These facts have been referred in paragraph nos.19 & 20 of the decision reported in 237 ELT 674 and the same reads as under : "19. The main question to be decided in the instant appeals here is whether the appellants during the period December 2001 to March, 2005 have actually manufactured M.S. Ingots in excess of what has been recorded in their statutory records and removed the said quantity clandestinely from their factory without payment of duty. The excess production has been worked out on the basis of electricity consumption for which the standard norms are imported from report of late Mr. N.K. Batra, Professor of Material and Metallurgical Engineers, IIT Kanpur.
20. We find that the following reports have been referred to either by the appellants or the Revenue laying down the norms for the consumption of electricity for the manufacture of one MT of steel ingots:
(i) 555 to 1046 (KWH/T) as per Dr. Batra's report;
(ii) 1800 KWH/T as per the report by Joint Plant Committee constituted by the Ministry of Steel, Government of India;
(iii) 1427 KWH/T as per the report of NISST, Mandi, Gobindgarh given in JuneJuly, 2006;
(iv) 650 units to 820 units/MT as per the Executive Director, All India Induction Furnace Association, New Delhi;
(v) 851 units/MT in the case of Nagpal Steel v. CCE, Chandigarh reported in 2000 (125) E.L.T. 1147".
(emphasis supplied) In view of the aforesaid electricity consumption report, per tonnage, it appears that the variation is from 555 units to 1800 KWH/Per Ton. This is mainly because of the nature of the machinery utilized by the noticee. Looking to the facts of the present case, the electricity consumption pattern as has been given in AnnexureF, as stated in paragraph 5 of the show cause notice, which is at page no. 53 of this memo of writ petition which reveals that this petitioner has 15 consumed electricity absolutely in consonance with the report given by Joint Plant Committee, constituted by the Ministry of Steel, Government of India and for few months it is even less than that. Thus, there are varieties of report available in the markets, one could not have been chosen by the respondents, arbitrarily, without carrying out the experiment of consumption of electricity for one ton of manufacturing at the noticee's manufacturing unit. This type of experiment is a must by the department, whenever respondents are canvassing the ground of electricity consumption pattern visavis clandestine removal of finished products. Otherwise, without such experiment, if any one of the aforesaid report relied upon, then it is arbitrariness on the part of the respondents and whenever there is any arbitrariness, there is always violation of Article 14 of the Constitution of India because for few of the noticees such type of reports are not relied upon whereas for rest of the assessee, as per the choice of the respondents, such type of reports will be relied upon and in fact, this has happened in this case. Several OrdersinOriginal have been pointed out during the course of arguments by the counsel for the petitioner wherein electricity consumption pattern allegation levelled in show cause notice and ultimately after adjudication, the show cause notice has been dropped. Thus, without experiment is being carried out at the premises of the noticees, use of any of the committee's report for electricity consumption pattern always leads to arbitrariness on the part of the respondentdepartment. Whenever arbitrariness is present, equality is absent. Equalities and arbitrariness are strong enemies of each other. When equality is present, arbitrariness is absent.
6. Hence, this Court is remanding the matter to the Commissioner, Central Excise & Service Tax, Ranchi. This Court is not much going into detail of further arbitrariness in the OrderinOriginal about the lower remuneration to the employees of the petitionerunit as well as the manufacturing unit is running in loss and the profit is made from noncore activities etc. There appears to be very high sounding reasons, but, if they are viewed with zoom lens camera, it appears that nothing is proved by the respondents. "Low remuneration" is a relative word and therefore, 16 statement of the employees of the noticee, ought to have been reduced to writing by the respondentsdepartment. If the employees are stating that they are getting more remuneration than what is shown in the books of account by the noticee, then these statements ought to have been reduced in writing and they must be referred in the show cause notice. Copies of the gist of the statements should be given to the noticee and those employees must be kept to have been followed by the respondents department. Instead of doing this exercise, allegation has been levelled that there is low remuneration paid by the noticee, is not sufficient at all.
7. The OrderinOriginal is based upon mere presumptions and possibilities, and, nothing has been proved at all by the respondents, especially unaccounted manufacturing of M.S. Ingots and the clandestine removal thereof.
8. The documents which are referred to in the show cause notice and relied upon, should have been supplied to the petitioners. These documents are: Nucleus Group report. The document has been referred in the show cause notice dated 07.02.2014 ( Annexure1). Imaginary is the basis of the show cause notice and without proof, the OrderinOriginal has been passed in the same breath.
9. We, therefore, quash and set aside the OrderinOriginal passed by the Commissioner, Central Excise & Service Tax, Jamshedpur dated 27.02.2015/13.03.2015 (Annexure3 to the memo of this writ petition).
10. As a cumulative effect, as the OrderinOriginal passed by the Commissioner, Central Excise & Service Tax, Jamshedpur dated 27.02.2015/13.03.2015 (Annexure3 to the memo of this writ petition) is quashed and set aside, the matter is remanded for adjudication of the show cause notice dated 07.02.2014 and the matter will be decided afresh, keeping in mind the aforesaid principles, especially if the respondents are relying upon Dr. N.K. Batra's report, the experiment shall be carried out at the premises of petitionerunit, as stated herein above, for manufacturing of one ton or any such quantity which should be sufficiently large, so as to understand the pattern of consumption of electricity for manufacturing of M.S. Ingots as well as keeping in mind the nature of evidences as referred in para 5(v) may also be collected as far as possible.
1711. Accordingly, this writ petition is allowed and disposed of.
( D.N. Patel, A.C.J.) (Amitav K. Gupta,J.) VK/AFR