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Collector of Customs and Excise, CochIn and ors. Vs. A.S. Bava - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citation
SubjectCustoms
CourtSupreme Court of India
Decided On
Judge
Reported inAIR1968SC13; 1973LC18(SC); 1978(2)ELT333(SC); 1967(0)KLT935(SC); [1968]1SCR82
ActsConstitution of India - Article 226; Central Excise Rules, 1944 - Rule 40; Customs Act, 1962 - Sections 129; Central Excise Act, 1944 - Sections 12 and 36
AppellantCollector of Customs and Excise, CochIn and ors.
RespondentA.S. Bava
Excerpt:
.....petitioner filed appeals against these orders - collector rejected representation and requested to deposit duty - petition under article 226 - high court allowed petition - observed that notification issued under section 12 of excise act was in excess of power conferred under act - appellant raised three points before supreme court - firstly petition under section 226 not maintainable - secondly petitioner having availed of remedy under section 129 of customs act was debarred from challenging impugned notification - thirdly impugned notification applying section 129 of custom act was good - apex court observed that existence of alternative remedy does not bar petition under article 226 - section 129 of custom act whittles down substantive right of appeal - held, it cannot be regarded as..........under this act, any person desirous of appealing against such decision or order shall, pending the appeal, deposit with the proper officer the duty demanded or the penalty levied : provided that where in any particular case the appellate authority is of opinion that the deposit of duty demanded or penalty levied will cause undue hardship to the appellant, it may in its discretion dispense with such deposit, either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as it may deem fit. (2) if upon any such appeal it is decided that the whole or any portion of such duty or penalty was not leviable, the proper officer shall return to the appellant such amount of duty or penalty as was not leviable.' 8. it will be noticed that s. 129 requires an appellant to deposit the duty or penalty levied.....
Judgment:

Sikri, J.

1. These appeals, by special leave, are directed against the judgment of the High Court of Kerala allowing two petitions filed by the respondent, M/s. A. S. Bava, under art. 226 of the Constitution. The High Court, by this judgment, quashed two orders dated February 4, 1964, and directed the Collector of Customs, & Central Excise, Cochin, to hear the appeals preferred by M/s. A. S. Bava.

2. The relevant facts are as follows : M/s. A. S. Bava hereinafter referred to as the petitioner, is a firm of dealers in Tobacco. By two orders of adjudication dated March 31, 1963, the Assistant Collector of Customs demanded the payment of duty under Rule 40 of the Central Excise and Salt Rules, 1944. The petitioner filed appeals against these orders on or about July 4, 1963, to the Collector of Customs & Central Excise. The petitioner made a representation on October 3, 1963, requesting that it may not be required to deposit the duty demanded pending appeal. The Collector, by letter dated January 9, 1964, rejected the representation and requested the petitioner to deposit the duty within 15 days of the receipt of the letter. On the petitioner failing to deposit the amount, the appeals were dismissed on December 4, 1964. There upon, as already stated, the petitioner filed two petitions under art. 226 and the petitions having been allowed, and the appellant having obtained special leave, the appeals are now before us. The High Court allowed the petitions on the ground that the notification No. 68/63 dated May 4, 1963 issued under s. 12 of the Excise and Salt act 1944, hereinafter referred to as the Excise Act, declaring that s. 129 of the Customs Act, 1962, relating to matters specified therein shall be applicable in regard to like matters in respect of the duties imposed by s. 3 of the Excise Act was in excess of the powers conferred under s. 12 of the Excise Act. The High Court also rejected the argument of the Collector of Customs and Central Excise that the petitioner having invoked s. 129 of the Customs Act, 1962, in the appeals preferred by it by praying for the dispensation of deposit, was precluded from proceeding under art. 226 of the Constitution.

3. The learned counsel for the appellants has raised three points before us :

(1) The petitions under at. 226 were not maintainable as the petitioner did not avail himself of the remedy of revision provided by s. 36 of the Excise Act.

(2) The petitioner having availed of the remedy under s. 129 of the Customs Act was debarred from challenging the impugned notification, dated May 4, 1963.

(3) The impugned notification applying s. 129 of the Customs Act was good.

4. There is no force in the first point. First, the point was not taken in the High Court. Secondly, it is settled that the existence of a remedy by way of revision does not bar the jurisdiction of the High Court to entertain a petition under art. 226. Moreover, the petitioner had alleged that the Collector had no jurisdiction to demand the deposit or duty pending the appeals as the notification dated May 4, 1963, was bad insofar as it applied s. 129 of the Customs Act. In these circumstances it was not necessary for the petitioner to have filed revisions.

5. There is equally no force in the second point. If the petitioner had not applied for dispensation of the deposit of the duty, the appellants would have contended that the petitions under art. 226 were not maintainable. Moreover, as already stated, the petitions raised a question of jurisdiction.

6. To appreciate the third point, it is necessary to extract the relevant statutory provisions. Section 12 of the Excise Act authorises the Central Government to apply provisions of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, now replaced by the Customs Act, 1962, in the following terms :

'12. The Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, declare that any of the provisions of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, relating to the levy of an exemption from customs duties, drawback of duty, warehousing, offences and penalties, confiscation, and procedure relating to offences and appeals shall, with such modifications and alternations as it may consider necessary or desirable to adapt them to the circumstances, be applicable in regard to like matters in respect of the duties imposed by section 3'.

7. The relevant part of the impugned notification dated May 4, 1963, reads as follows :

'In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 12 of the Central Excise & Salt Act 1944 (1 of 1944) ...... the Central Government declares that the provisions of ...... section 129 of the Customs Act, 1962 relating to mattes specified herein shall be applicable in regard to like matters in respect of the duties imposed by Section 3 of the first mentioned Act............'.

Section 129 of the Customs Act reads thus :

'129. (1) Where the decision or order appealed against relates to any duty demanded in respect of goods which are not under the control of customs authorities or any penalty levied under this Act, any person desirous of appealing against such decision or order shall, pending the appeal, deposit with the proper officer the duty demanded or the penalty levied :

Provided that where in any particular case the appellate authority is of opinion that the deposit of duty demanded or penalty levied will cause undue hardship to the appellant, it may in its discretion dispense with such deposit, either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as it may deem fit. (2) If upon any such appeal it is decided that the whole or any portion of such duty or penalty was not leviable, the proper officer shall return to the appellant such amount of duty or penalty as was not leviable.'

8. It will be noticed that s. 129 requires an appellant to deposit the duty or penalty levied pending an appeal. In other words, before an appeal can be heard the appellant must deposit the duty or penalty levied. But under s. 35 of the Excise Act, a person aggrieved by any decision or order has an unfettered right to appeal. The question that arises in these appeals is whether the provisions of s. 129 of the Customs Act can be said to be provisions relating to 'procedure...... relating to appeals' within s. 12 of the Excise Act.

9. As we have already said, the appeals are filed under s. 35 of the Excise Act. Section 129 of the Customs Act debars the hearing of them unless the duty or penalty is paid. This, it seems to us, is not procedure relating to appeals. This Court in Hoosein Kasam Dada (India) Ltd., v. The State of Madhya Pradesh : 1983(13)ELT1277(SC) had to consider a similar provision in s. 22 of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947. Section 22(1), as originally enacted, read thus :

'22. (1) Any dealer aggrieved by an order under this Act may, in the prescribed manner, appeal to the prescribed authority against the order :

Provided that no appeal against an order of assessment, with or without penalty, shall be entertained by the said authority unless it is satisfied that such amount of tax or penalty or both as the appellant may admit to be due from him, has been paid.' It was amended thus :

'22. (1) Any dealer aggrieved by an order under this Act may, in the prescribed manner, appeal to the prescribed authority against the order : Provided that no appeal against an order or assessment, with or without penalty shall be admitted by the said authority unless such appeal is accompanied by a satisfactory proof of the payment of the tax, with penalty, if any, in respect of which the appeal has been preferred.

10. S. R. Das, J., as he then was, repelled the argument of the learned Advocate that 'the requirement as to the deposit of the amount of the assessed tax does not affect the right of appeal it self, which still remains intact, but only introduces a new matter of procedure,' and observe :

'There can be no doubt that the new requirement 'touches' the substantive right of appeal vested in the appellant. Nor can it be overlooked that such a requirement is calculated to interfere with or fetter, if not to impair or imperil, the substantive right. The right that the amended section gives is certainly less than the right which was available before. A provision which is calculated to deprive the appellant of the unfettered right of appeal cannot be regarded as a mere alteration in procedure. Indeed the new requirement cannot be said merely to regulate the exercise of the appellant's pre-existing right but in truth whittles down the right itself and cannot be regarded as a mere rule of procedure.'

11. These observations are fully applicable in the present case. Section 35 of the Excise Act gave a right of appeal, but s. 129 of the Customs Act whittles down the substantive right of appeal and accordingly it cannot be regarded as 'procedure relating to appeals' within s. 12 of the Excise Act.

12. The appeals accordingly fail and are dismissed with costs. One hearing fee.

13. Appeals dismissed.


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