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Kartar Rolling Mills v. Commissiner Of Central Excise, New Delhi

Kartar Rolling Mills
v.
Commissiner Of Central Excise, New Delhi

(Supreme Court Of India)

Civil Appeal No. 641 Of 2001 With No. 642 & 643 Of 2001 | 08-03-2006


1. This order shall dispose of all the three appeals as the facts are identical in these appeals. For the sake of convenience, the facts are taken from Civil Appeal No. 641 of 2001.

2. This is a statutory appeal filed under S.35L(b) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 against the order passed by the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi (for short "the Tribunal") in Final Order No. 1055/2000-B (composite Final Orders Nos. 1052-55/2000-B) dated 3-7-2000 passed in Appeal No. E/2635/99-B.

3. Brief facts

The appellants were manufacturing hot rolled untrimmed sheets/circles of copper and copper alloys falling under Chapter Heading No. 74.09 of the Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985. The appellants were holding a Central excise registration certificate and were clearing the goods on payment of Central excise duty till 28-2-1994. They surrendered their Central excise registration certificate with effect from 24-3-1994. A show cause notice was issued under the on 12-7-1994 to show cause as to why the duty amounting to Rs. 2,14,780 for the period from 1-3-1994 to 31-3-1994 and Rs. 87,512 for the period 1-4-1994 to 10-4-1994 be not imposed and recovered under R.9(2) of the Rules read with S.11A of the. Notice for levy of penalty was also issued. The duty demand of Rs. 2,14,780 and Rs. 87,512 in respect of the goods cleared by them during the period 1-3-1994 to 31-3-1994 and 1-4-1994 to 10-4-1994 respectively were confirmed by the Additional Commissioner, Central Excise, Gurgaon and a penalty of Rs. 28,000 was also imposed on them vide Order in Original No. 55 of 1995 dated 16-3-1995, inter alia, on the following grounds:

"(i) The suppliers had sent raw material for job work under R.57F(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 to the appellants, after filing intimation under R.57F(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 but failed to follow the provisions of Chap.5AA of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 and also did not pay any duty on the goods job worked upon.

(ii) Hence, the documents based on which job work was done were not proper documents under R.57F(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 and nor the exemption under Notification No. 214/86 was attracted on intermediate products.

(iii) Even though R.57F(2) procedure was followed inasmuch goods were received by the appellants under the prescribed challans, the benefit under the said rule was not available for the following reasons:

(a) Declaration under R.57G of the Central Excise Rules was not filed.

(b) Credit under R.57A of the Central Excise Rules was not availed.

(c) Duty liability in terms of Notification No. 1/93 was not discharged by the suppliers of the semi finished goods/raw material."

4. The appeal filed by the appellants before the Commissioner (Appeals) was dismissed.

5. Aggrieved against the aforesaid order, the appellants filed an appeal before the Tribunal which remanded the case for fresh adjudication with the following observations:

"(i) Notification No. 59/94 (which amends Notification No. 1/93 and grants SSI benefits to goods under dispute) and this aspect should have been examined by the adjudicating authority as well as the Commissioner (Appeals).

(ii) Notification No. 214/86 fixes responsibility for payment of Central excise duty on suppliers of raw material/semi finished goods and lays down that the procedure for movement of goods shall be the same as prescribed under R.57F(2) and it is for the supplier to comply and the department to verify whether the conditions of Notification No. 214/86 have been observed. The duty liability if any, which may arise in case of non fulfilment of conditions prescribed in para 2 would lie on the suppliers of raw material or semi finished goods as the responsibility has been explicitly cast on him as a principal manufacturer.

(iii) That in normal course the responsibility under Central excise law is on the manufacturer (including job worker) but once the Government has chosen to depart from the principle explicitly and made provisions to take care of the resultant situation by making a specific provision in Notification No. 214/86, it is not the case law cited by the DR but the plain language of the notification, which will have to be taken note of."

6. The Deputy Commissioner vide his order dated 29-5-1998 confirmed the demand and also imposed a penalty of Rs. 28,000. It was held that clearance of the appellants had crossed Rs. 75 lakhs before 28-2-1994, hence Notification No. 1/93 i.e. SSI benefit was not available during 1-3-1994 to 31-3-1994; the clearance of the appellants had crossed Rs. 200 lakhs in the financial year 1993-94 hence Notification No. 1/93 i.e. SSI benefit was not available during 1-4-1994 to 10-4-1994; that in terms of the Tribunals judgment in Jinabakul Forge (P) Ltd. v. CCE (1997 (93) ELT 373 (CEGAT)) as the conditions in Notification No. 214/86 had not been observed, the goods manufactured by the appellants were liable to Central excise duty and the duty liability was on the appellants. It was also held that in view of this Courts decision in Union of India v. Kamlakshi Finance Corpn. Ltd. (1992 Supp (1) SCC 443) the order passed by the Tribunal in Jinabakul Forge (P) Ltd. (1997 (93) ELT 373 (CEGAT)) was of binding nature.

7. Aggrieved by the decision of the adjudicating authority, the appellants filed appeals which were dismissed by the Commissioner (Appeals). Being further aggrieved, the appellants filed appeals before the Tribunal which have been dismissed by the impugned order.

8. Before the Tribunal, twofold arguments were raised (i) since the goods were not marketable, no excise duty was leviable; and (ii) that the appellants were covered by Exemption Notification No. 214/86 and, therefore, entitled to the exemption from payment of excise duty.

9. The Tribunal has rejected the first contention holding that the finding recorded by it in the order of remand regarding the marketability of the goods and levy of excise duty, having not been challenged, has become final and cannot be reagitated again. On the second point, while upholding the order of the authorities below, the Tribunal observed:

" ... We find that no evidence has been brought on record by the appellants to prove that the supplier of the raw material had supplied the materials to them under the provisions of Notification No. 214/86. In view of absence of any material to this effect, it is not open to the appellants to claim that they were working under the provisions of Notification No. 214/86. The copies of challans brought on record by the appellants only refer to the movement of excisable goods under R.57F(2). In view of this, the reliance placed by the appellant on the observation of the Tribunal in respect of Notification No. 214/86 in the remand order is not tenable."

10. Before us, in addition to the two points which were urged before the Tribunal, counsel for the appellants for the first time urged that the benefit of Notification No. 83/94-CE dated 11-4-1994 be extended to the appellants with effect from 1-3-1994, in other words to give effect to the said notification with retrospective effect.

11. In the order of remand, the Tribunal had specifically held that the products manufactured by the appellants were marketable and therefore exigible to the levy of excise duty. The finding recorded in the order of remand regarding the marketability of the goods and exigibility to the levy of excise duty having not been challenged, has become final and it is not open to the appellants to challenge the same. On the second point, we find that the appellants failed to bring any evidence on record to prove that the supplier of the raw materials had supplied the materials to them under the provisions of Notification No. 214/86. The conditions laid in the notification for its applicability were not satisfied. The finding recorded by the Tribunal and the authorities below on this point is a finding of fact which cannot be interfered with in the absence of any material to the contrary. Since the third point had not been raised before the Tribunal and has been raised before us for the first time, the appellants are not entitled to raise the same in this Court. Otherwise also, we do not find any merit in this submission. It is trite to say that exemption notification has to be construed strictly. Since the notification came into effect from 11-4-1994, the benefit of the notification cannot be extended to the appellants retrospectively w.e.f. 1-3-1994.

12. For the aforesaid reasons, we do not find any merit in these appeals and dismiss the same with costs.

Advocates List

For the Petitioner ---------. For the Respondents ----------.

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

Bench List

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE ASHOK BHAN

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE G.P. MATHUR

Eq Citation

2006 (197) ELT 151

(2006) 4 SCC 772

2008 [9] S.T.R. 307

LQ/SC/2006/214

HeadNote

Excise — Exemption — Retrospective application of notification — Benefit of notification not extended retrospectively — Central Excise Rules, 1944 — R.57F(2) — Exemption Notification No. 214/86 dt. 26-11-1986 — Exemption Notification No. 83/94-CE dt. 11-4-1994 — Retrospective application of — Held, benefit of notification cannot be extended to the appellants retrospectively w.e.f. 1-3-1994 — Central Excise Act, 1944, S.11A