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Union of India (2004) 4 SCC 311 and the judgment of a Division
Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in PML Industries Ltd.
v. CCE (2013) SCC OnLine P&H 4440, which dealt with a similar
provision contained in Section 35C (2A) of the Central Excise
Act,1944, the Court held:
“23. Keeping in mind the principles set out by the
Supreme Court in Dr Subramanian Swamy (supra), we
need to examine whether the present challenge to the
validity of the third proviso to Section 254(2A) can be
sustained. This is not a case of excessive delegation of
powers and, therefore, we need not bother about the
second dimension of Article 14 in its application to
legislation. We are here concerned with the question of
discrimination, based on an impermissible or invalid
classification. It is abundantly clear that the power
granted to the Tribunal to hear and entertain an appeal
and to pass orders would include the ancillary power of
the Tribunal to grant a stay. Of course, the exercise of
that power can be subjected to certain conditions. In
the present case, we find that there are several
conditions which have been stipulated. First of all, as
per the first proviso to Section 254(2A), a stay order
could be passed for a period not exceeding 180 days
and the Tribunal should dispose of the appeal within
that period. The second proviso stipulates that in case
the appeal is not disposed of within the period of 180
days, if the delay in disposing of the appeal is not
attributable to the assessee, the Tribunal has the
power to extend the stay for a period not exceeding
365 days in aggregate. Once again, the Tribunal is
directed to dispose of the appeal within the said period
of stay. The third proviso, as it stands today, stipulates
that if the appeal is not disposed of within the period of
365 days, then the order of stay shall stand vacated,
even if the delay in disposing of the appeal is not
attributable to the assessee. While it could be argued
that the condition that the stay order could be extended
beyond a period of 180 days only if the delay in
disposing of the appeal was not attributable to the
assessee was a reasonable condition on the power of
the Tribunal to the grant an order of stay, it can, by no
stretch of imagination, be argued that where the
assessee is not responsible for the delay in the
disposal of the appeal, yet the Tribunal has no power
to extend the stay beyond the period of 365 days. The
intention of the legislature, which has been made
explicit by insertion of the words - ‘even if the delay in
disposing of the appeal is not attributable to the
assessee’- renders the right of appeal granted to the
assessee by the statute to be illusory for no fault on the
part of the assessee. The stay, which was available to
him prior to the 365 days having passed, is snatched
away simply because the Tribunal has, for whatever
reason, not attributable to the assessee, been unable
to dispose of the appeal. Take the case of delay being
caused in the disposal of the appeal on the part of the
revenue. Even in that case, the stay would stand
vacated on the expiry of 365 days. This is despite the
fact that the stay was granted by the Tribunal, in the
first instance, upon considering the prima facie merits
of the case through a reasoned order.