Jain Brothers v. Union of India, (SC) BS87113
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

Before:- B.N. Kirpal, M. Srinivasan and S. Rajendra Babu, JJ.

Writ Petn. (Civil) No. 5308 of 1983. D/d. 21.7.1999.

Jain Brothers and another - Petitioner

Versus

Union of India and others - Respondent

For the Appearing Parties :- S. K. Dholakia, Dushyant Dave, C. S. Vaidyanathan, Sr. Advocates, H. A. Raichura, N. D. Garg, Kailash Vasdev (Rahul Roy) for P. H. Parekh, Ashok K. Mahajan, Ramesh Singh, Siddhartha Goswami, Ms. Vanita Bhargava, Ashok Kumar Gupta, Ms. Bina Gupta, (Vineet Kumar) (NP), Musharaf Choudhary, N. K. Bajpai, Dilip Tandon, K. C. Kaushik, P. Parmeswaran, A. Subba Rao, Ms. Sushma Suri Advocates.

Customs Tariff Act, 1975, Section 3(2) - Customs - Levy of additional duty - Sub-section (2) of Section 3 provides that customs duty would be included in calculating the value of imported article - Provision of Section 3(2) not unconstitutional and ultra vires and does not travel beyond charging provision of Section 3(1).

[Paras 7 and 8]

Cases Referred :-

Hyderabad Industries Ltd. v. Union of India, 1999 (108) ELT 321.

J.K. Synthetics Ltd. v. Commercial Taxes Officer (1994) 94 STC 422.

Union of India v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd., AIR 1984 Supreme Court 420.

ORDER

The challenge in this writ petition is to the provisions of Section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975.

2. The petitioners are engaged in the business of import of automobile spare parts. They are liable to pay customs duty as levied under Section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 which provides that the customs duty will be levied at such rates as may be specified under the Customs Tariff Act, 1975.

3. The Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") provides for levy of additional duty under Section 3 which Section reads as follows :

4. The grievance of the petitioners is that in so far as sub-section (2) of Section 3 provides for inclusion of customs duty in calculating the value of the imported article for the purposes of levy under the said section is concerned, the same is unconstitutional and ultra vires.

5. Shri Dholakia, learned senior counsel for the petitioners contended that Section 3(1) is the charging section. Section 3(2) is really the machinery section which has been created for giving effect to the charging section. He submits that any loading of value to the goods imported is not permissible and in effect the machinery provision of Section 3(2) travelled beyond the charging provision and hence Section 3(2) is ultra vires Section 3(1). Learned senior counsel relied on the decision of this Court in Hyderabad Industries Ltd. v. Union of India, 1999 (108) ELT 321, in support of his contention that Section 3(1) is the charging section.

6. At the outset, we may mention that in Hyderabad Industries (supra), this Court was not concerned with the interpretation of Section 3(2). What arose for consideration was the interpretation of Section 3(1). Nevertheless in the course of considering the same, the Court took note of notes to clauses of the Customs Tariff Bill, 1975 and observed that the levy under Section 3 was "with a view to levy additional duty on an imported article so as to counter-balance the excise duty leviable on the like article indigenously made. In other words, Section 3 of the Act has been enacted to provide for a level playing field to the present or future manufacturers of the like articles in India."

7. As we read Section 3, we find that it is one composite section dealing with different aspects of the levy of tax. While sub-section (1) of Section 3 deals with the rate at which the duty is leviable on the value of the imported article. Sub-section (2) provides that in calculating the value of the imported article what are the ingredients which have to be taken into consideration for arriving at the said value. Sub-clause (ii) states that any duty of customs chargeable on the article under Section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 and any sum chargeable on that article under any law for the time being in force as an addition to and in the same manner as the duty of customs, shall be included in determining the value of the imported article. It is not necessary to refer to other sub-sections but it is clear from the aforesaid that both the sub-sections are different limbs of the charging section.

8. We do not see in the present case any impediment in the legislature providing for the manner in which the value of an article should be calculated for the purposes of determining the rate of tax which can be imposed. The customs duty which is required to be taken into consideration for the purposes of levying additional duty would normally form part of the value of the imported article on which the additional duty is to be imposed. In a sense sub-section (2) of Section 3 makes clear what is implicit in sub-section (1) of Section 3, namely, the value of the imported article would include the customs duty payable thereon. In commercial parlance, the value of an imported article may include customs duty and this is what has been made clear and accepted in sub-section (2) of Section 3. We, therefore, do not see any conflict between the two sub-sections and it is not possible to accept the contention that sub-section (2) has gone beyond the provisions of sub-section (1).

9. Learned senior counsel for the petitioners drew our attention to the decisions in J.K. Synthetics Ltd. v. Commercial Taxes Officer (1994) 94 STC 422 and Union of India v. Bombay Tyre International Ltd., AIR 1984 Supreme Court 420, but in our opinion these decisions are of no relevance in the present case.

10. For the aforesaid reasons, we do not see any merit in this writ petition. The same is dismissed with costs.

Petition dismissed.