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Joint Secretary To The Government Of India And Others v. Food Specialities Limited

Joint Secretary To The Government Of India And Others
v.
Food Specialities Limited

(Supreme Court Of India)

No | 30-09-1985


PATHAK J.

1. This appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment and order dated August 31, 1976 of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana allowing a Group of writ petitions filed by the respondent against the levy of excise duty.

2. The respondent, Messrs. Food Specialities Limited, Moga is a company registered under the Indian Companies Act, 1956. It entered into a number of agreements with Messrs. Nestles Products (India) Limited, a subsidiary of a foreign company, Messrs. Nestles holdings Limited, to manufacture for and on behalf of Messrs. Nestles Products (India) Limited (hereinafter referred to as Nestles ) sweetened condensed milk, soluble coffee, baby milk food, milk powders and infant cereal foods for sale in India by Nestles under certain trade-marks in respect of which the latter was registered as the sole registered user in India. The agreement stipulated that the respondent would manufacture the goods and supply them to Nestles in such quantities as Nestles might specify from time to time subject to a prescribed minimum and maximum, and Nestles was obliged to buy the products so manufactured by the respondent. The products were manufactured by the respondent in accordance with detailed quality specifications supplied by Nestles, and the price of t he products was determined under the agreements free on rail at Moga or free on lory at factory. The respondent enjoyed no interest in the trade marks and labels and undertook not to sell any of those products to any person other than Nestles.

3. The products manufactured by the respondent were subject to excise duty under the said Excises and Salt Act, 1944. The respondent disputed the value of the goods determined by the excise authorities for the purpose of the levy, and a number of questions were raised in that context. The controversy was processed through the statutory channels provided by the and ultimately the respondent filed writ petitions in the High Court. The High Court found in favour of the respondent and quashed the orders of the Excise authorities and the Government of India impugned in the writ petitions.In these appeals the only question pressed before us by the learned Attorney General on behalf of the appellant is that the value of the goods sold by the respondent to Nestles should, for the purpose on levy of excise duty, include the value of the trade marks under which the goods are sold in the market and that the value of such trade marks should be added to the wholesale price for which the goods are sold by the respondent to Nestles. It is urged by the lea med Attorney General that the High Court erred in holding that the value of the trade marks cannot form a component of the value of the goods for the purpose of assessment of excise duty. We are of opinion that the High Court was right in the view it took and the appeal must rail.

4. It may be noticed that the respondent manufactures the goods according to the specifications supplied by Nestles and affixes the trade marks of Nestles on the goods and supplies the same to Nestles at a wholesale price free on rail at Moga or free on lorry at factory stipulated under the agreements with Nestles. What are sold and supplied by the respondent are goods manufactured by it with the trade marks affixed to them and it is the whole sale price of such goods that must determine the value for the purpose of assessment of excise duty. It is immaterial that the trade marks belong to Nestles. What is material is that Nestles have authorised the respondent to affix the trade marks on the goods manufactured by it and it is the goods with the trade marks affixed to them that are sold by the respondent to Nestles. There can therefore be no doubt that the wholesale price at which the goods with the trade marks affixed to them are sold by the respondent to Nestles as stipulted under the agreements would be the value of the goods for the purpose of excise duty. That is the price at which the respondent sells the goods to Nestles in the course of wholesale trade and we fail to see how the value of the trade marks could be added to the wholesale price for the purpose of determining the value of the goods for the p urpose of levy of excise duty.We are satisfied upon the particular facts of this case that the value of Nestles trade marks cannot be added to the wholesale price charged by the respondent to Nestles for the purpose of computing the value of the goods manufactured by the respondent in the assessment to excise duty.

5. The appeals are dismissed with costs.

6. Appeals dismissed.

Advocates List

K. Parasaran, R.N. Poddar, Miss A. Subhashini, N.A. Paikhivala, Soli J. Sorabjee, Ravinder Narain, T.M. Ansari, Miss Rainu Walia, Advocates.

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE JUSTICE R. S. PATHAK

HON'BLE JUSTICE P. N. BHAGWATI (CJI)

HON'BLE JUSTICE A. N. SEN

Eq Citation

AIR 1986 SC 685

(1985) 4 SCC 516

1986 (8) ECC 145

[1985] (SUPPL.) 3 SCR 165

1985 (17) UJ 1095

1985 (2) SCALE 667

(1985) 3 COMPLJ 375

1985 ECR 2186

1985 (22) ELT 324

[1985] (SUPPL.) SCR 165

LQ/SC/1985/313

HeadNote

Excise — Valuation — Trade mark — Trade mark affixed by manufacturer on goods sold to manufacturer's customer — Value of, not to be included in valuation of goods for purpose of excise duty — Trade Marks Act, 1999, S. 29