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[Cites 6, Cited by 11]

Supreme Court of India

Union Of India vs State Of Mysore on 19 October, 1976

Equivalent citations: 1977 AIR 127, 1977 SCR (1) 842, AIR 1977 SUPREME COURT 127, 1976 4 SCC 531, 1977 (1) SCR 842, 1977 (1) SCWR 498, 1977 (1) KANTLJ 28, 1976 U J (SC) 871, ILR 1977 1 KANT 169

Author: P.N. Shingal

Bench: P.N. Shingal, A.N. Ray, M. Hameedullah Beg

           PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MYSORE

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/10/1976

BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH

CITATION:
 1977 AIR  127		  1977 SCR  (1) 842
 1976 SCC  (4) 531
 CITATOR INFO :
	    1984 SC1675	 (8,9)


ACT:
	    Constitution  of  India--Article  131--Disputes  between
	State  and   Union-Jurisdiction of  High  Court---Charge  of
	Excise Duty---Condition of--Whether an article	manufactured
	or produced before the levy is imposed is excisable.



HEADNOTE:
	    The	 respondent  State  of	Mysore	runs  an  implements
	Factory.  The first schedule to the Central Excises and Salt
	Act, 1944, was amended whereby item No. 26AA was inserted by
	Finance Act, 1962.  On the date when the said amendment came
	into  force  the respondent had in his stock,  certain	iron
	rods and bars.	After ,the amendment, however, the rods	 and
	bars  were put through a further manufacturing	process	 and
	were  converted into shovels, spades and other	agricultural
	implements  which  were not  covered  by  schedule  1.	 The
	Central	 Excise Inspector issued a demand notice in  respect
	of  the said rods and the bars on the ground that they	were
	excisable.  The respondent contended that no excise duty was
	payable on the said articles because when the amendment came
	into force, they were already in the stock of the respondent
	and that they were not manufactured after the amendment came
	into force.  The contention of the respondent was  negatived
	by the authorities under the Act. The Writ Petition filed by
	the respondent under Article 226, was allowed.
	Dismissing the appeal by Special Leave,
	    HELD:  1. Under Section 3 of the Act the excise duty  is
	payable on articles produced or manufactured. It was  admit-
	ted in the counter affidavit of the appellant that the	rods
	and bars were not produced or manufactured in the implements
	factory of the respondent.  The goods which were made out of
	the rods and bars were admittedly not excisable goods.	 The
	appeal was dismissed as the goods were not liable to  excise
	duty. [844 E-H]
	    2.	The  contention that the High Court could  not	have
	decided the matter in view of the provisions of Article	 131
	of  the Constitution was negatived on the ground that  there
	was  nothing  on regard to show that there was	any  dispute
	between the Central and the State Governments.	The Union of
	India  was made a party merely because it had dismissed	 the
	revision  application of  the  State Government. [845 A-B]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1695 of 1968.

Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated 4/5-9-67 of the Mysore High Court in W.P. No. 1416/65. V.P. Raman, Addl. Sol. Genl., S.K. Mehta and Girish Chandra for the Appellant.

H.R. Datar and N. Nettar, for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SHINGHAL, J.--This appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment of the High Court of Mysore dated September 4/5, 1967. The High Court was moved by the State of Mysore under article 226 of the Constitution for quashing the demand notice dated July 21, 843 1962 issued by the Inspector of Central Excise for the payment of Rs. 2,465.91 as excise duty on the products despatched by the State's Implements Factory. The demand was made with reference to the newly inserted item 26AA in the First Schedule to the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944, hereinafter referred to as the Act. That item was added to the Schedule by the Finance Act of 1962, and it was claimed by the Central Excise Department that, on the date of the amendment, the State Government was in possession of some stock of iron and steel products, namely, flats, squares and rods in its factory, which had been obtained from their manufacturers when they were not excisable arti- cles. The precise claim of the Excise authorities was that the duty became payable on those articles by virtue of the newly inserted item 26AA because the aforesaid stock of iron and steel products was used for the manufacture of agricul- tural implements like 'mamties, pickaxes, 'sledge hammers, shovels and ploughs. The Assistant Collector of Central .Excise explained in his letter dated June 19, 1962, that the agricultural implements which were manufactured in the State's Implements Factory fell within the purview of item 26AA as they were forged or extruded during the process of manufacturing the agricultural implements. It was con- tended that the demand was justified because the aforesaid iron and 'steel products, out of which the agricultural implements were manufactured, had not borne any excise duty at all. An appeal was preferred to the Collector of Central Excise against the demand, but without success. A revision was taken to the Central Government under the provisions of the Act, but it was also dismissed. That was why the State Government applied to the High Court for quashing the demand and for setting aside the appellate order of the Collector and the revisional order of the Central Government. The Central Government traversed the claim of the State Government on the ground that as the rods and bars, which were held in stock by the State's Implements Factory, were "pre-excise stock", and as they were put to further process by forging them into shovels, spades and other agricultural implements, they became liable to duty . until the "pre- excise stock" held by the factory on April 24, 1962, was utilised and converted into forged implements and was cleared from the factory. It was also urged that the peti- tion was not maintainable in the High Court as it raised a dispute between the Government of India and the State Gov- ernment within the meaning of article 131 of the Constitu- tion.

The High Court rejected both the contentions of the Central Government and quashed the impugned demand notice and the appellate and the revisional orders. That is why the Union of India has preferred the present appeal. It is not in controversy that the claim for the levy of excise duty was based on sub-sections (1) and (1A) of sec- tion 3 of the Act which read as follows,--

"3(1) There shall be levied and collected in such manner as may be prescribed duties of excise on all excisable goods other than salt which are produced 4---1338SCI/76 844 or manufactured in India and a duty on salt manufactured in, or imported by land into, any part of India as, and at the rates, set forth in the First Schedule.
(1A) The provisions of sub-section (i) shall apply in respect of all excisable goods other than salt which are produced or manufactured in India by, or on behalf of, Government, as they apply in respect of good's which are not produced or manufactured by Government."

It is therefore quite clear, and is not in dispute before us, that the claim for the levy of excise duty in question could be justified only if it could be shown that excisa- ble goods (other than salt) were produced or manufactured in the Implements Factory of the State Government. It was however admitted in the counter-affidavit of the Senior Superintendent of Central Excise as follows,--

"In the case of the petitioner, since the rods and bars held in stock by the Imple- ments. Factory were pre-excise stock and since those rods and bars were put to further proc- ess by forging the same into shovels, spades and other agriCultural implements etc., they became liable to duty and therefore, duty was demanded on such forged articles during the period that is till such quantities of the bars and rods as were in stock with the facto- ry on 24-4-62 were utilised and converted into forged implements and cleared from the facto- ry."

This makes it quite clear that the rods and bars in question were not "produced or manufactured" in the State Govern- ment's implements Factory. They could not therefore be subjected to the levy of excise duty. It is true that the rods and bars were utilised for the manufacture of agricul- tural implements like shovels and spades; but those agricul- tural implements were not of the description specified in item 26AA of the First Schedule with reference to section 3 of the Act.

It is admitted by Mr. Raman that agricultural implements were not included in the First Schedule to the Act and were not excisable articles. This appears to be so because they are the basic tools of trade by which a vast majority of the citizens of the country earn their livelihood. There could therefore be no question of levying any excise duty on shovels and spades or other agricultural instruments 'manu- factured by the Implements Factory of the State Government and, as has been shown, the rods and bars which formed the pre-excise stock of the factory had not been manufactured by the Implements Factory. Section 3 of the Act could not therefore be invoked to levy excise duty merely on the ground that the "pre-excise stock" of rods and bars was utilised for the purpose of manufacturing agricultural instruments. There is therefore nothing wrong with the view which has prevailed with the High Court in this respect.

845

Mr. Raman tried to argue that the High Court erred in not applying article 131 of the Constitution to the contro- versy even though the writ petition was barred thereunder as it fell exclusively within the jurisdiction of this Court under article 131 of the Constitution as a dispute between the Government of India and the State of Mysore. The argu- ment is however futile because there is nothing on the record to show that there was any such dispute between the Central and the State Governments. As the High Court has pointed out, the Union of India was made a party to the writ petition merely because it had dismissed the revision appli- cation of the State Government.

There is thus no merit in this appeal anti it is dismissed with costs.

	M.R.						Appeal	dis-
	missed.
	846