Polynova Industries Ltd. and anr. Vs. Union of India (Uoi) and anr. - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citationsooperkanoon.com/359149
SubjectCustoms
CourtMumbai High Court
Decided OnSep-23-1993
Case NumberWrit Petition No. 351 of 1989
JudgeG.D. Kamat and ;E.S. Da Silva, JJ.
Reported in1995(3)BomCR13
ActsCentral Excise Tariff Act, 1985 - Sections 57A
AppellantPolynova Industries Ltd. and anr.
RespondentUnion of India (Uoi) and anr.
Appellant AdvocateM.S. Usgaokar, S.A. and ;S.S. Usgaokar, Adv.
Respondent AdvocateR.M.S. Khandeparkar, S.C.
DispositionPetition allowed
Excerpt:
customs - value added tax - section 57a of central excise tariff act, 1985 - whether release paper used for manufacture of coated textile fabrics commonly known as leather cloth is an input eligible for modified value added tax (modvat) credit - products used in manufacture of final product eligible for benefit under modvat - assesses' final product admittedly falls under chapter 59 to which benefits under modvat applies - release paper used to provide design and gloss to product - use of release paper though not directly connected with final product inevitable to create end product - said process deemed to be an integral part of manufacture and eligible to credit under modvat. - code of criminal procedure, 1973 [c.a. no. 2/1974]. section 41: [ swatanter kumar, cj, smt ranjana desai &.....g.d. kamat, j.1. whether release paper used for the manufacture of coated textile fabrics commonly known as leather cloth is an input eligible for modvat (modified value added tax) credit, or it is a tool, equipment, or appliance and therefore, excluded from the benefit of the modvat scheme, is the essential controversy in this petition.2. petitioner no. 1 is a manufacturer of coated textile fabrics coated with poly venyl choride or with poly urethane at its factory at kundaim, goa. they are holding the necessary licence under the central excise tariff act, 1985. in the manufacture of coated textile fabrics, they use release paper which is required to be imported and there is no dispute that upon import of release paper it is subject to the payment of customs duty. the product thus.....
Judgment:

G.D. Kamat, J.

1. Whether release paper used for the manufacture of coated textile fabrics commonly known as leather cloth is an input eligible for MODVAT (Modified Value Added Tax) credit, or it is a tool, equipment, or appliance and therefore, excluded from the benefit of the MODVAT scheme, is the essential controversy in this petition.

2. Petitioner No. 1 is a manufacturer of coated textile fabrics coated with Poly Venyl Choride or with Poly Urethane at its factory at Kundaim, Goa. They are holding the necessary licence under the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985. In the manufacture of coated textile fabrics, they use release paper which is required to be imported and there is no dispute that upon import of release paper it is subject to the payment of customs duty. The product thus manufactured by the first petitioner falls under Chapter 59 of the Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act which comes under the heading 'impregnated, coated, covered or laminated textile fabrics; textile articles of a kind suitable for industrial use'.

Under heading No. 59.03, in Chapter 59 of the Schedule, the item described reads thus :-

'textile fabrics, impregnated, coated, covered or laminated with plastics, other than of heading No. 59.02.'

Under heading No. 59.03 there are three special heads which are :---

(i) of base fabrics of cotton,

(ii) of base fabrics of man-made textile materials; and

(iii other.

There is no difficulty in straightaway mentioning that the final product manufactured by the first petitioner would fall under the category (iii)'Other' under heading No. 59.03. There is equally no dispute that duty leviable in so far as this manufactured product is under sub-heading 59.03.19. It appears that release paper is also known as multicast release paper and if such paper was to be manufactured in India it would be chargeable under Chapter 48 under sub-heading No. 4809.90 of the Central Excise Tariff Act.

3. MODVAT scheme was introduced in Rule 57-A of the Central Excise Rules sometime during the financial year 1986-87. In terms it states that it will apply to such finished excisable goods referred to as the 'final product' as the Central Government may, by Notification in the Gazette specify in that behalf for the purposes of allowing credit of any duty of excise or additional duty under section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 as maybe specified in the notification, paid on the goods used in or in relation to the manufacture of the said final products which are referred to as 'inputs' and further for utilising the credit so allowed towards payment of duty of excise leviable on the final product, whether under the Act or under any other Act, as may be specified in the Notification and subject to the provisions of the sections and the conditions and restrictions, that may also be notified in the Notification.

4. Proviso under the Rule empowers the Central Government to specify goods or classes of goods in respect of which the credit of specified duty may be restricted. A explanation is added to this Rule to suggest as to what 'input' includes. Under Clause (a) includes inputs which are manufactured and used within the factory of production in or in relation to the manufacture of final products and under (b) paints and packaging material, but then it makes a specific exclusion of five types of items, such as machines, machinery, plant equipment, apparatus, tools or appliance used for producing or processing any of the goods or for bringing about any change in any substance in or in relation to the manufacture of final products under sub-clause (i) Packaging material, cylinders for packing gases, plywood for tea chests, are also excluded under sub-clauses (ii) to (v), with which presently we are not concerned.

5. It appears that at some stage the MODVAT benefit was not made available for items falling under Chapter 59, with the result, such products were not available to MODVAT benefit, namely, credit. Subsequently, however, vide Notification No. 83/87-CE dated 1st March, 1987, the net of MODVAT benefits was extended and goods falling under Chapter 59 were covered.

6. Petitioners raised the issue of availment of MODVAT credit, by a communication made on November 29, 1988, to the Assistant Collector of Central Excise at Panaji. However, by his communication dated 3rd January, 1989, the Assistant Collector held that the release paper is not eligible for MODVAT benefit. Thereupon, a request for personal hearing was made and upon hearing the petitioners and consideration of the material, the Assistant Collector of Customs made the impugned order on 18th July, 1989, holding that the petitioners are not entitled for availment of MODVAT credit on the use of release paper in the process of manufacture of coated textile fabric. Broadly stated, two aspects found favour with the Assistant Collector, that in the first place the use of release paper is to obtain required design and gloss on the final product manufactured by the petitioners and despite the same is used repeatedly for identical operation till it is worn out, the release paper is not consumed during the course of its use. In the second place, he held, regard being had to the nature of the use of the paper, the same cannot be treated as having been used in the manufacture of final product. Therefore, the same is to be considered as tool, equipment or appliance. It is upon this making of the order that the petitioners have landed in this Court for the reliefs sought in the petition.

7. It may be mentioned at this stage itself, that the notification issued by Government under Rule 57-A has specified final products described in Column 3 of the table annexed to the notification. In the description of goods the goods which are classified under headings of different Chapters of the Central Excise Tariff have been mentioned. Description of inputs has been shown at serial No. 2 of the table showing at the same time their classification under headings of Chapters of Central Excise Tariff. The result is, as per classification of the so-called inputs release paper falls under heading 48 vide Column 2 of the table and the final product manufactured by the petitioners under heading of Chapter 59 vide Column 3 of the same table. As against the order of the Assistant Collector, in the first place the attack is two-fold. Firstly, to avail of MODVAT credit for an input, it is not necessary that such input must be consumed either wholly or partly. As corollary to the argument, it was submitted that inasmuch as the input is used in or in relation to the manufacture of the final product, it is not necessary that input must be even wholly consumed or defaced and the test is whether without the use of that input a manufacture is able to manufacture a final product which is known in the market as such. In the second place, it is urged that release paper could never be considered as a tool or an equipment or an appliance for, in the first place, it can never be a part of any machinery and secondly, regard being had to its use in the process of manufacture, it is imposed to get the gloss and the design of the release paper on the final product and therefore, it is nothing but an input.

8. The controversy centres in the very expression incorporated in Rule 57-A by which MODVAT scheme has been introduced. MODVAT credit is available on such inputs on goods used in or in relation to the manufacture of the final product. In addition to this expression, reliance has been placed by Counsel for the petitioners that the word 'manufacture' has been defined under the very Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944 in section 2(f). In the definition section under the Act. 'manufacture' includes any process :---

(i) incidental or ancillary to the completion of a manufactured product; and

(ii) which is specified in relation to any goods in the section or chapter notes of the schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 as amounting to manufacture.

What is sought to be highlighted is that the definition of 'manufacture' includes any process which is incidental or ancillary for the purposes of completion of a manufactured product, i.e. end product. It is now contended that the function of the release paper is to give design and gloss to the coated textile fabric which is the end product and in the absence of both the design and/or gloss, the end product can never be coated textile fabric or what is known as leather cloth. That release paper leaves imprint of its design and gives gloss to the product is not controverted, though it is urged that it is possible to manufacture coated textile fabric either without design or gloss and therefore, it cannot be an input as such. For that matter, the learned Standing Counsel had also urged that the use and function of a release paper can be brought within the net of an appliance, though it will be incorrect to hold that release paper is either a tool or an equipment.

9. In our view, the controversy raised in the petition must be determined in the light of whether the release paper used in or in relation to the manufacture of the final product by the petitioners, namely coated textile fabric and if it is held to be used in or in relation to the manufacture of the end product, then it will be an input which is eligible for MODVAT credit.

10. It must be plainly made clear that an erroneous order or decision rendered by an authority for that matter Assistant Collector, by itself does not entitle the petitioners to the relief claimed in the petition and the point in reality to be considered is whether release paper is an input used in or in relation to the manufacture or used in the process of manufacture of the end product and that way entitled for the benefit of the MODVAT scheme.

11. A large number of authorities have been cited for and against the propositions canvassed by the learned Counsel for the parties. Before we come to the authorities on the principal controversy Mr. M.S. Usgaonkar, learned Counsel contended that the Assistant Collector was bound by two decisions, one of Cegat and the other of Appellate Collector of Customs, Bombay, directly holding that release paper is an input eligible for MODVAT credit and that such decision could not have been ignored by Assistant Collector being an authority subordinate either to the Appellate Collector or the Cegat, as the case may be. In carrying this point further, he says in similar circumstances, this Court in the decision of Shah Enterprises v. Union of India, reported in 1990(47) E.L.T. 229, passed strictures against the authority who made an order and which authority had decided the matter despite the decision directly on the point of a superior authority. He then points out that the matter was carried by the Revenue in appeal before the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court in the decision of Union of India v. Kamlakshi Finance Corporation Ltd., reported in : 1991ECR486(SC) , rejected the contention of the Revenue and for that matter even upheld the strictures made. Mr. Usgaokar thereafter contended that the Assistant Collector should have held himself bound by those decisions but in flagrant violation of judicial discipline, took the view contrary, that release paper is not an input used in or in relation to the manufacture, but, on the contrary, a tool, equipment or an appliance.

12. Mr. Khandeparkar, learned Standing Counsel, indeed has come to the rescue of the Assistant Collector saying that the Central Board of Excise and Customs had issued a Circular dated 15th July, 1988 on the very subject MODVAT and the admissibility of credit duty paid on release paper. That Circular suggests that in the conference of the West Zone Collectors held sometime in December, 1987, discussion was held about the matter of release paper used in the manufacture of P.V.C. fabrics (leather cloth). A sort of decision was reached that release paper acts as a carrier/conveyor belt for transfer of platisol on fabrics as coating; that it is also capable of repeated use four or five times and therefore MODVAT credit cannot be made available to that item. A Trade Notice bearing No. 124 of 1988 issued by the Additional Collector (Technical) Central Excise, Bombay, dated 6th September, 1988 is also placed on record. Mr. Khandeparkar says that the petitioner did not bring to the notice of the Assistant Collector the decisions of Cegat or the Appellate Tribunal directly on the subject of release paper and in the absence thereof the Assistant Collector deemed himself bound by the Trade Notice bearing No. 124 of 1988 and the Circular of the Central Board of Excise and Customs and therefore, according to him, in all fairness this Court should refrain from making any strictures on this respondent.

13. The Assistant Collector has indeed made some reference to the decisions cited before him and regard being had to the absence of the decision of Cegat as also the decision of the Appellate Collector, we do not think that this is a fit case where we should pass strictures against the respondent No. 2.

14. Since at this stage we have made a reference to Trade Notice bearing No. 124 of 1998 and circular of the Board dated 15th July, 1988, we may touch upon a contention raised by the learned Standing Counsel. Based upon the principle of contemporaneous exposition, it was urged that neither the Trade Notice, not the Circular can be brushed aside. For that matter, it was urged that courts accept in principle as and by way of settled law, contemporaneous expositions and more particularly in matters relating to revenue, such as customs, excise, sales tax, etc., to view how the entries vis-a-vis their classification and entitlement of duties are required to be considered. If is not necessary for us to detain ourselves on this principle and suffice at this point of time to mention that in the matter of construction of modern statutes or sometimes even current matters, the principle of contemporaneous exposition is not adhered to. If any authorities are necessary for the proposition, then we can list a few of them, viz. J.K. Steel Ltd. v. Union of India & others, reported in : 1978(2)ELT355(SC) , M/s. J.K. Cotton and Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd. & another v. Union of India and others, reported in : 1987(32)ELT234(SC) and Ms. Doypack System Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India and others, reported in : 1988(36)ELT201(SC) .

The Supreme Court for that matter, even held that it will reject the attempt on the part of parties trying to import that principle on the ground that the same may lead the Court to forbidden track.

15. Coming back to the decisions of Cegat, to which a reference has been made, it must be said that in a reference case Collector of Central Excise, Bombay. v. National Cloth Leather ., the Western Regional Bench of Cegat by a decision rendered on 18th August, 1992, held that release paper is an input essentially required for the manufacture of final product and it does not form part of the machinery nor as an input for up-keep and maintenance of the machinery; that without the presence of release paper, artificial leather cloth cannot be manufactured.

This authority has been indeed attacked by the learned Standing Counsel on the ground that Cegat was influenced in deciding against the Revenue because release paper was classified under Chapter heading 4810.90. Mr. Khandeparkar made a grievance that mere classification of a particular item in a chapter heading by itself is not decisive and the real test is the use in or in relation to the manufacture of the end product. The second attack of the learned Standing Counsel was that Cegat was considering a very limited challenge and did not consider whether release paper could be an appliance from tariff point of view. It is true that in the decision rendered the Cegat itself held that there was no contention from the department that release paper has been classified as an appliance and the limited contention placed on behalf of the Revenue Authority was that release paper was being used as a transferring material and further that it was capable of repeated use.

The next reference we made earlier was to the decision of the Appellate Collector, Bombay and that was in the matter of M/s. Bore Industries Ltd. v. Assistant Collector, Excise. The Appellate Collector overruled Assistant Collector and upon an elaborate judgment rendered a finding that release paper has to be ultimately treated as input used in relation to the manufactured of coated fabrics. The Appellate Collector took stock of large number of authorities on the subject and on an application of the ratio decided the matter in favour of the assessee. To buttress the contention that release paper is an input essentially used in relation to the manufacture of coated textile fabrics and therefore entitled to MODVAT credit, a few decisions cited may be taken note of.

Indeed some of the decisions are on the point that input need not be consumed by the final or the end product and secondly the so-called input need not be present in the final product as such. In our view, the controversy as to the requirement of an input being consumed in the product or being present in any form in the end product need not detain us long as finally that does not appear to be a sine qua non, regard being had to the object and scheme of MODVAT as envisaged in Rule 57-A. Therefore, a brief reference to these authorities may be made.

In the decision of Collector of C. Ex. v. Eastend Paper Industries Ltd., reported in : 1989(43)ELT201(SC) , the question was whether wrapping paper is a raw material and component part of wrapping paper entitled to exemption under the concerned notification. The Supreme Court held, since the paper is marketed in packed and wrapped condition, the wrapping paper used in wrapping of paper has to be treated as raw material or component part and the paper so consumed or utilised would be entitled to exemption under the notification. The ratio laid down is, anything that enters into and forms part of the manufacturing process or is required to make the article marketable must be deemed to have been used in completion or manufacture of the end product What is relevant to be considered in this authority is that the raw material or component part must be consumed by the end product or that part gets integrated with the end product is tacitly negatived. In the same volume at page 804 in the decision of Collector of C. Ex. v. Ballarpur Industries Ltd., the Supreme Court held that sodium sulphate used for chemical reaction at pulp stage has to be treated as 'raw material' used in the manufacture of paper, even if sodium sulphate is burnt up and does not retain its identity in the end product. It was observed that the manufacture of pulp is an integrated process of manufacture of paper and therefore covered in the definition of manufacture as given in section 2(f) of the Central Excise and Salt Act, which clearly takes within its ambit all ancillary and incidental processes. Next is the decision of Collector of Central Excise, Bhubaneshwar v. Titaghur Paper Mills, reported in , the Special Bench of the Tribunal at New Delhi which is a larger Bench than the ordinary Benches, ruled that raw material need not necessarily form part of the final product and when consumption and utilisation of raw material in the process of manufacture is sufficient and therefore alum, salt cake sulphuric acid and caustic soda used in the manufacture of paper are held to be inputs entitled to exemption. The ratio that can be curled out from this decision is that raw material is a material that is put into the manufacturing system to help in the formation of the final product and such a raw material need go directly into the finished product. Similar is the view taken in Gujarat Alkalies & Chemicals Ltd. v. Collector of C. Ex, reported in This is again a Tribunal decision where the question was whether Titanium metal anodes essentially required for the manufacture of caustic soda are eligible for MODVAT credit being item excluded under Explanation to Rule 57-A of the Central Excise Rules, 1944. The question again turned on whether some parts get consumed. The Tribunal held that the Rule does not envisage that the raw material must get consumed in the process either as a whole or in part. To the same extent is the authority in Sae (India) Ltd. v. Collector of Central Excise, reported in . The question was whether lead used in galvanisation of M.S. Steel products being an input used in relation to manufacture of final product is eligible for benefit of MODVAT credit. It was held that there is no requirement that input should be present in the final product or that it should be consumed in order to qualify for MODVAT benefit, the only predicate being that the input must be used in or in relation to the manufacture of the end product and which is not specifically excluded by the Explanation to Rule 57-A. A decision of somewhat relevance to the facts of the present case is the one reported in Collector of Central Excise v. Weldekar Laminates (Pvt.) Ltd. The tribunal was considering whether BOPP films which are nothing but films made of synthetic resins could be construed as either an apparatus or an equipment or an appliance. The facts were that films get partly consumed in the process of manufacture of lamination sheets and lose their identity, with the result they directly go in the process of lamination, But they are finally retrieved and do not form part of the final product. Yet, it was held that MODVAT credit is available in respect of those films because those films lose their identity completely after the use.

16. The story as far as the present petition is concerned is that the release paper used in the process of bringing into being coated textile fabrics. The release paper leaves its imprint on the fabrics, that is to say, the design of the release paper gets itself released on to the fabric manufactured and in the process also adds gloss, to the end product. It is not disputed that the same release paper is used for a number of times anywhere between 5 to 7. Release paper thereafter becomes useless and has to be discarded. It cannot be used for manufacturing PVC fabric any further because it will not give any gloss to the manufactured product, nor the design. The design which was in existence on that paper before it was used gets defaced during the course of its use in the process of manufacturing and therefore has to be discarded.

17. In view of the use that we have seen of this release paper, it is necessary to consider a few authorities which are relied upon by the learned Standing Counsel. The first in line is the decision of Collector of C. Ex. v. Steel Authority of India, reported in . The question that fell for consideration was whether interleaving kraft paper used during coiling and uncoiling process of the stainless steel sheets as a protection against scratches was an input excluded under the Explanation to Rule 57-A. The Tribunal held that interleaving kraft paper is used for wiping stainless steel sheets during coiling and uncoiling process only to protect them against scratches; that such kraft paper was used and re-used and from the nature of its use they are either equipment or appliance used in the manufacture of the finished product, namely stainless steel sheets and therefore, stand validly excluded from the purview of the term 'input' entitling for MODVAT credit. The nature of the function could not be considered as a kraft paper used in or in relation to the manufacture. Mr. Khandeparkar asserts that the release paper is again used and re-used and regard being had to its use it must be held to be an appliance. What is however against Mr. Khandeparkar insofar as the present case is concerned is whereas the kraft paper has been used for absorption of oil, the release paper is used for the purpose of transferring its design on the end product. Therefore, in our view, the case of kraft paper will have to be distinguished from that of release paper. The next authority relied upon is Collector of Central Excise v. Ashim Paper Products (P.) Ltd., reported in . The question was whether wire mesh and industrial cloth being used for removal of moisture from pulp are in the nature of appliance and not inputs entitled for the benefit of MODVAT credit. The Tribunal held that wire mesh and industrial cloth cannot be held to be inputs, but they are in the nature of an appliance. On facts, it was found that wire mesh and industrial cloth are attached to the paper machine and regard being had to the operation, they were used as if they are part of the machinery and in that view of the matter, could not be treated as inputs. A distinction was clearly pointed out as to what is a manufacturing process and a manufacturing apparatus, which has special relevance in the context of bringing out a finished product. The third authority cited is Shivaji works Ltd. v. Collector of Central Excise, reported in , where the Tribunal was called upon to consider whether sand moulds being apparatus for casting are equipment and not available for MODCAT credit. It was found that sand moulds are independently manufactured and they do not occur at an intermediate stage of the product during the course of its manufacture and that way the relief sought for credit under MODVAT was negatived. To the same effect is another decision of Collector of Central Excise v. Indian Plywood Mfg. Co. Ltd, reported in 1993 (63) E.L.T. 328. Sand paper is being used for bringing about finishing to wood, whether such a paper was entitled to MODVAT credit. It was found on facts, that sand paper is mounted on the drums and then it works on the wood. The sanders become functional only by the mounting of the sand paper on the drum and in that view of the matter the sand paper was taken as an accessory to the machines to make it functional for the purpose of bringing about the required finish on the plywood. The further observation is that the sand paper by virtue of its working on the plywood was taken in the nature of a tool and therefore rightly excluded from the purview of Rule 57-A for the purposes of grant of MODVAT credit, regard being had to the explanation incorporated thereunder. Question indeed arose. Whether galvanized pipe is still a steel pipe and the same was answered in the authority of Gujarat Steel Tubes Ltd. v. State of Kerala, reported in : 1989(42)ELT513(SC) . The Supreme Court found that though the pipes underwent the process of galvanisation, there was no change in the structure, nor function and the pipes retained their identity as steel pipes. Of course, this authority is not on the subject of MODVAT and the matter was required to be considered from the relevant provisions of the Sales Tax Act. The learned Standing Counsel thereafter refers to a decision of Union of India and another v. Babubhai Nylchand Mehta, reported in : 1991ECR7(SC) . It appears that the respondent Company used to purchase water-proof kraft paper which used to be combined with some other material in its factory and thereafter a bitumenised water-proof packing paper was being manufactured. The end product was different and distinct from original kraft paper having distinct definite characteristics, different use and value. The question was whether it was liable to payment of duty under Item 17(2) of the Central Excise & Salt Act. The Assistant Collector found against the assessee, but the assesse's claim was upheld in the High Court. The Supreme Court however reversed the High Court's orders and restored the order of the Assistant Collector. Upon a view that manufacture is bringing into being goods, as known in the excise laws, that is to say, known in the market having distinct, separate and identifiable function. It was found that the kraft paper was mounted on a roller and then it is passed over a tank containing liquid bitumen. As the first roll of the kraft paper crosses the bitumen tank roller with a thin coat or layer of bitumen on one side, the second roll of kraft paper is released. The kraft paper coming from the other two sides is pressed against each other by rubber roller which is positioned in between the two rollers. The result is that the end product is two sheets of kraft paper pressed against each other with the help of a thin layer of bitumen sandwiched between them. The Court held that this process is nothing but lamination and the product being a laminated kraft paper which is distinct, separate and different and known as such in the market, cannot be equated with kraft paper.

In our view this authority would not help the department inasmuch as it is not possible that leather cloth or coated textile fabric, as is known in the market, can be produced without the use of the release paper. The learned Standing Counsel did try to contend before us that even in the absence of release paper the leather cloth may be had either without the gloss or the design, which ought not to make any difference. We are afraid that in the first place there is no material placed before the Court that any such end product without either design or the gloss can at all be marketed and sold as leather cloth. It is not necessary for us to detain on this aspect of the matter, for what is required to be considered finally is whether the raw material or input is used in or in relation to the manufacture and that as set out earlier will be the test that is required to be answered in the present case. Most of the authorities we have already seen earlier and for that matter even of the Supreme Court has profusely relied upon a decision in M/s.J.K. Cotton Spinning and Weaving Mills, Co. Ltd. v. The Sales Tax Officer, Kanpur & another, reported in : [1965]1SCR900 , where the question for decision turned on the interpretation and construction of the expression 'in the manufacture of goods' in section 8(3)(b) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. In paragraph 8 of the report the Supreme Court observed :---

'The expression in the manufacture of goods should normally encompass the entire process carried on by the dealer of converting raw materials into finished goods. Where any particular process is so integrally connected with the ultimate production of goods that but for that process, manufacture or processing of goods would be commercially inexpedient, goods required in that process would, in our judgment, fall within the expression 'in the manufacture of goods'. For instance, in the case of a cotton textile manufacturing concern, raw cotton undergoes various processes before cloth is finally turned out. Cotton is cleaned, carded, spun into yarn, then cloth is woven put on rolls, dyed, calendered and pressed. All these processes would be regarded as integrated processes and included 'in the manufacture' of cloth. It would be difficult to regard goods used only in the process of weaving cloth and not goods used in the anterior processes as goods used in the manufacture of cloth. To read the expression 'in the manufacture' of cloth in that restricted sense, would raise many anomalies. Raw cotton and machinery for weaving cotton and even vehicles for transporting raw and finished goods would qualify under Rule 13, but not spinning machinery, without which the business cannot be carried on. In our judgment, Rule 13 does not justify the importation of restrictions which are not clearly expressed, nor imperatively intended. Goods used as equipment, as tools, as stores, as spare parts, or as accessories in the manufacture or processing of goods, in mining, and in the generation and distribution of power need not, to qualify for special treatment under section 8(1), be ingredients or commodities used in the processes, nor must they be directly and actually needed for 'turning out or the creation of goods'.

In paragraph 9 of the report, the Supreme Court held that if the process or activity is so integrally related to the ultimate manufacture of goods so that without that process or activity manufacture may, even if theoretically possible, be commercially inexpedient goods intended for use in the process or activity will qualify for special treatment. Supreme Court however held that it does not mean that every category of goods in connection with manufacture of or in relation to manufacture or which facilitates the conduct of business of manufacture will be included within that Rule.

18. What is however required to be called out is the ratio laid down in paragraphs 8 and 9 of the report. We are indeed grateful to learned Standing Counsel for having brought to our attention a very recent decision of the Supreme Court in Collector of Central Excise, Jaipur v. Rajasthan State Chemical Works, Deedwana, Rajasthan, reported in : 1991ECR465(SC) . The question for decision directly was another Notification dated 18th June, 1977 on the subject of manufacture and definition of 'manufacturing process'. The facts were that brine was pumped into salt pans with diesel pumps for manufacturing sodium sulphate. Raw material was lifted to platform with the aid of power for manufacturing lime. The question, was whether both such processes were manufacturing processes carried with the aid of power and therefore, not entitled for exemption. We are plainly aware that we are not concerned here with the facts of the case, but then what is however required to be noticed is that upon viewing the matter in its correct perspective and taking stock of large number of decisions including J.K. Spinning and Weaving Mills' case (supra), section 2(f) of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944 also came for interpretation. The Supreme Court held that manufacture involves a series of processes. Process in manufacture or in relation to manufacture implies not only the production but the various stages through which the raw material is subject to change by different operations. It was further observed that it was the cumulative effect of various processes through which the raw material is subjected to obtain the final product which emerges from such process. Therefore, each step towards such production would be a process in relation to manufacture. The Supreme Court further observed that where any particular process is so integrally connected with the ultimate production of goods but for that process manufacture or processing of goods would be impossible or commercially inexpedient, that process is one in relation to manufacture. When we apply the ratio of this decision which is nothing but reiteration of the ratio laid down by the Apex Court in J.K. Cotton Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd., (supra), it is clear that the manufacture involves series of processes and each process is a step in the production of the final product, and when the particular process is integrally connected to achieve the end product, it must fall within the meaning and expression used in or in relation to manufacture. The release paper in the present case is used to get a particular gloss and design. It is used in the process of manufacture and in the absence of its use it is not possible to get the end product, which is known in the market as such. The use of the release paper is so integrally connected with the process that there can be no doubt that it falls within the meaning of the expression 'used in and in relation to the manufacture of coated textile fabric.'

19. We are therefore unable to sustain the impugned order of 18th July, 1989, of the second respondent. The same is quashed and set aside. Petition succeeds. Rule made absolute in terms of prayer (A). A direction must go to the respondents to give MODVAT credit to the petitioners on the input release paper. There shall be no order as to costs.