Union of India & ANR Vs. M/S.
Parameswaran Match Works [1974] INSC 221 (4 November 1974)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
RAY, A.N. (CJ) UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION: 1974 AIR 2349 1975 SCR (2) 573 1975
SCC (1) 305
CITATOR INFO:
R 1975 SC2299 (235,385) R 1976 SC1003
(3,9,10,13) F 1980 SC 271 (17) D 1983 SC 130 (55,57) D 1983 SC 420 (19) R 1985
SC1367 (42) D 1989 SC 665 (4,5,7) RF 1990 SC1300 (7)
ACT:
Central Excise and Salt Act 1944--S.
3--Concessional rate of duty on matches granted to smaller Units-Whether
discriminatory.
HEADNOTE:
For the purpose of levy of excise duty match
factories were classified by the Government on the basis of their production
during a financial year, the higher rate being levied on matches produced in
factories having a higher output. In 1967, in place of classification on the
basis of production, a higher rate, for matches produced on mechanised units
and a lower rate on matches produced on non-mechanised units 'was adopted. In
the case of cottage units and units on co-operative basis a concessional rate
of duty was levied. The notification of July 21, 1967 contained a proviso to
the effect that if a manufacturer was to give a declaration that the total
clearance of matches from a factory would not, exceed 75 million during a
financial Year he would be entitled to a concessional rate of duty. This
notification enabled the manufacturers with higher capacity to avail of the
concessional rate of duty by filing a declaration as visualised in the proviso
to the notification by restricting their clearance to 75 million matches. To
avoid such a contingency the notification dated 21st July, 1967 was amended on
September 4, 1967 with a view to give bona fide small manufacturers, whose
total clearance was not estimated to be in excess of 75 million matches, the
concessional rate of duty prescribed under the notification dated July 21,
1967. The respondent applied for a licence for manufacturing matches on September
5, 1967 and filed a declaration that the estimated manufacture for the
financial year would not exceed 75 million matches, but this was rejected. In,
its Writ Petition before the High Court it was contended that it had been
denied the benefit of the concessional rate of duty on the ground that it
applied for a licence and filed the declaration only a day after the date
mentioned in clause (b) of the notification and that that was discriminatory.
The High Court held that the classification was unreasonable inasmuch as the
fixation of the date for making a declaration had no nexus with the object of
the Act.
Allowing the appeals.
HELD : (1) The reasoning of the High Court is
not correct.
The purpose behind the proviso is to enable
only bona fide small manufacturers of matches to earn a concessions rate of by
filing the declaration. The small manufacturers whose estimated clearance in a
year was less than 75 million matches, would have availed themselves of the
opportunity by making the declaration as early as possible as they would become
entitled to the concessional rate of duty on their clearance from time to time.
The purpose of the notification was to prevent larger units who were producing
and clearing more than 100 million matches in a year and, who could not have
made a declaration, from splitting up into smaller units in order to avail the
concessional rate of duty by making the declaration subsequently. [577FG;
578BC] (2)In the matter of granting
concession or exemption from tax the Government has a wide latitude of
discretion. It need not give exemption or concession to everyone in order that
it may grant the same to some. That a classification can be founded on a
particular date and yet be reasonable, has been held in several decisions.
[578G-H] M/s Hathising Mfg. Co. Ltd. v. Union of India [1960] 3 SCR, 528, at
543; Dr. Mohammad Saheb Mahboon Medico v. The Deputy Custodian General [1962] 2
SCR 371, at 379; Mls. Bhikuse Yamasa Kshatriya (P) Ltd. v. Union of India
[1964] 1 SCR 860, at 880; Daruka & Co. V. Union of India AIR 1973 SC.
2711 referred to.
574 (3) The choice of a date as a basis for
classification cannot always be dubbed as arbitrary even if no particular
reason is forthcoming for the choice unless it is shown to be capricious or
whimsical in the circumstances. [579B] Louisville Gas Co. v. Alabama Power Co.
240 U.S. 30 at 32 (1927) per Justice Holmes, referred to.
Arguments for the Appellants:
The impugned notification dated 4th
September, 1967 does not violate article 14 of the Constitution. All
applications for licences and declaration were filed after the 4th September
1967 and therefore none of the respondents was entitled to any exemption in
view of clause (ID) of the notification. The history of the match industry
shows that there was a recognised tendency on the part of the bigger units to
split up themselves into smaller units for the purpose of availing exemption
from excise duty which was really intendea for the benefit of bona fide smaller
Units.
The object of the notifications was to assist
the smaller manufacturers with less duty and secondly to help two classes of
manufacturers with still lesser duty and to extend the exemption to all
manufacturers who made the necessary declaration. The declaration was intended
to safeguard the interests of the genuine smaller manufacturers as far as
possible. The object of the notification dated 4th September, 1967 was to
further safeguard the interests of existing bona fide small manufacturers for
preventing fragmentation of larger manufacturing units in future in order to
benefit at the expense of the existing smaller units. The fixing of the date of
the notification as the dividing line and limiting the exemption to those who
filed the requisite declaration is not arbitrary. It is well settled that there
must be a great deal of flexibility in the incidence of taxation, in the case
of a taxing statute the legislature has a wider discretion in selecting the,
objects, persons and the methods; the legislature possesses larger freedom
regarding classification, the classification of transactions with reference to
a date is valid; and a rule which makes a difference between. past and present
does not violate article 14 of Constitution.
Arguments for the respondents:
While the earlier Notification No. 162 of
1969 dated 21-7- 1967 did not put any time limit, the later Notification No.
205 of 1967 dated 4-9-1967 sets an arbitrary
time limit making discrimination between the same category of manufacturers
simply on the basis of the applications being before or after 4-9-1967. The
fixation of 4-9-1967 as the dividing line is-arbitrary and it does not relate
to the object of the Act and the Rules contained therein.
The fact that in one case declaration has
been filed before the specified date and in the other no such declaration has
been filed does not provide the, basis for any intelligible differentia between
the two sets of manufacturers of matches. There is no rational basis for such
classification which is arbitrary in the sense that it does not relate to the
fiscal object of the Central Exercise and Salt Act, 1944. Classification on the
basis of presentation of application before or after the specified date without
reference to production or manufacture of goods but by mere reference to the
presentation of applications before or after 4-9-1967 is arbitrary and
unreasonable. The respondents are similarly placed with those who had submitted
their applications prior to 4-9-1967 but commenced production after the said
date.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
Nos. 262 to 273, 587/ to 591 and 1351 to 1402 of 1971 and Civil Appeal Nos.
1883 to 1921 of 1972.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment
and Order dated 11th December, 1968/22nd September, 1969 and 28th July, 1970 of
the Madras High Court in W. Ps. Nos. 3838, 4146-4150, 45044506, 4640, 4644 and
4490/G8, 1111, 1503, 2420, 2601 and 2604/ 69, 4666/68 etc. and 411-414 of 1969
etc. etc.
575 Niren De, Attorney General of India (In
C. A. Nos. 262-273 and 1351 and 1883, P. P. Rao (In CA. Nos. 262 and. 1883) and
Girish Chandra for the appellants.
S. S. Javali and Saroja Gopalakrishnan, for
the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MATHEW, J. In these appeals, the facts are similar and the question for
consideration is same. We will take up for consideration the appeal filed by
the writ petitioner in Writ Petition No. 3838 of 1968 (hereinafter called the
'respondent') against the common order in all the writ petitions.
The respondent filed the writ petition before
the High Court of Madras questioning the validity of clause (b) of notification
of- the Government of India, Ministry of Finance (No. 205/67-CE dated September
4, 1967) on the ground that clause (b) is violative of the fundamental right of
the respondent under Article 14. The High Court allowed the petition and this
appeal, by special leave, is filed against the order.
Section 3 of the Central Excise and Salt Act,
1944 (for short, 'the Act') imposes excise duty on manufacture in respect of
items mentioned in Schedule I of the Act. Match boxes are mentioned in item 38
of the said schedule and duty is leviable on the manufacture of match boxes at
the rates specified therein. For the purpose of levy of excise duty, match
factories were classified on the basis of their production during a financial
year and, matches produced in different factories were subject to varying rates
of duty-a higher rate being levied on matches produced in factories having a'
higher output. In 1967, the classification of match factories on the basis of
production was abandoned and they were classified as mechanised units and non mechanised
units and, by notification No. 115 of 1967 dated June 8, 1967, two rates of
levy were prescribed i.e., Rs. 4.60 per gross boxes of 50 matches each cleared
in mechanised units and Rs. 4.15 per gross boxes of 50 matches each cleared in
non-mechanised units. A concessional rate of duty of Rs. 3.75 per gross up to
75 million matches was allowed in respect of units certified as such by the
Khadi and Village Industries Commission or units set up in the cooperative
sector. Notification No. 162 of 1967 dated July 21, 1967 superseded the earlier
notification and the rate of duty in respect of non-mechanised units was raised
from Rs. 4.15 to Rs. 4.30 per gross boxes. This notification contained a
proviso to the effect that if a manufacturer were to give a declaration that
the total clearance from the factory will not exceed 75 million matches during
a financial year, the manufacturer would be entitled to the concessional rate
of duty of Rs. 3.75 per gross boxes of 50 matches each up to 75 million
matches, and the quantity of matches, if any, cleared in excess up to 100
million matches will be charged at Rs. 4.30 per gross, and, if the clearance
exceeds 100 million matches, the entire quantity cleared during the financial
year will be charged to duty at Rs. 4.30 per gross. This notification, however,
enabled the manufacturers with a capacity to produce more than 100 million
matches and who were clearing more than 100 million matches during the previous
years to avail of the-L319SCI/75 576 concessional rate of duty at Rs. 3.75 per
gross by filing a declaration as visualized in the proviso to the notification
by restricting their clearance to 75 million matches. This would have defeated
the very purpose of the notification, namely, the grant of concessional rate of
duty only to small manufacturers. In order to avert this tendency on the part
of the larger units, the notification dated July 21, 1967 was amended by
notification No. 205 of 1967 dated September 4, 1967. The notification reads :
"In exercise of the powers conferred by
sub- rule (1) of rule 8 of the Central Excise Rules, 1944, the Central
Government hereby makes the following amendment in the noti- fication of the
Government of India in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue and
Insurance) No. 162/ 67, Central Excises dated the 21st July, 1967, namely:- In
the proviso to the said notification after clause (i) the following shall be
inserted, namely :- (ia) nothing contained in the foregoing clause shall apply
to any factory other than the factories :
(a)whose production during the financial year
1966-67 did not exceed 100 million matches;
(b)whose total clearance of matches during
the financial year 1967-68, as per declaration made by the manufacturer before
the 4th September, 1967 in pursuance to this proviso is not estimated to exceed
75 million matches;
(c)which fall under category D under
notification No. 75/66-Central Excises dated the 30th April, 1966, but bad no
production till the 4th September, 1967;
(d)whose production during any financial year
does not exceed or is not estimated to exceed 100 million matches and are
recommended by the Khadi and Village Industries Commission for exemption under
this notification as a bona fide cottage unit or which is set up by a
cooperative society registered under any law relating to cooperative societies
for the time being in force." The purpose of this notification was to give
to bona fide small manufacturers whose total clearance, according to the
declaration, was not estimated to be in excess of 75 million for the financial
year 1967, the concessional rate of duty prescribed under the notification
dated July 21, 1967. The manufacturers who came to the field after Sep- tember
4, 1967 were entitled to concessional rate of duty if they satisfied the
condition prescribed in clause (d) of the aforesaid notification.
The respondent applied for a licence for
manufacturing matches on September 5, 1967 stating that it began the industry
from March 5, 1967, and also filed a declaration that the estimated manufacture
for the financial year 1967- 68 would not exceed 75 million matches. It 577 was
on this basis that the respondent sought to restrain the appellants from
recovering excise duty in excess of Rs. 3.75 per gross of boxes of 50 matches
each up to 75 million matches by challenging the validity of clause (b) of the
notification.
The contention of the respondent before the
High Court was that it has been denied the benefit of the concessional rate of
duty on the ground that it applied for 'licence and filed the declaration only
on September 5, 1967, a day after the date mentioned in clause (b) of the
aforesaid notification and that was discriminatory.
The High Court was of the view that the
classification was unreasonable inasmuch as the fixation of the date for making
the declaration, namely, September 4, 1967 as the basis of the classification
between those who are entitled to the benefit of the concessional rate of duty
and those who are not so entitled, has no nexus with the object of the Act.
The High Court said that all manufacturers
whose estimated production would not exceed 75 million matches in the financial
year 1967-68 would fall under one class and the fact that some among them filed
the declaration before September 4, 1967 is not a differentia having a nexus
with the object of the Act for putting that-in a different Class.
The High Court, therefore, came to the
conclusion that there was no difference between the two classes of manufacturers
from the point of view of revenue as they were all men aged in production of
matches and as none of them was expected to produce in the financial year more
than 75 million matches on an estimate.
We do not think that the reasoning of the
High Court is correct. It may be noted that it was by the proviso in the
notification dated July 21, 1967 that it was made necessary that a declaration
should be filed by a manufacturer that the total clearance from the factory
during a financial year is not estimated to exceed 75 million matches in order
to earn the concessional rate of Rs. 3.75 per gross boxes of 50 matches each.
The proviso, however, did not say, when the declaration should be filed. The
purpose behind that proviso was to enable only bona fide small manufacturers of
matches to earn the concessional rate of duty by filling the declaration. All
small manufacturers whose estimated clearance was less than 75 million matches
would have availed themselves of the opportunity by making the, declaration as
early as possible as they would become entitled-to the concessional rate of
duty on their clearance from time to time. If is difficult to imagine that any
manufacturer whose estimated total clearance during the financial year did not
exceed 75 million matches would have failed to avail of the concessional rate
on their clearances by filing the declaration at the earliest possible date. As
already stated, the respondent filed its application for licence on September
5, 1967 and made the declaration on that date. The concessional rate of duty
was intended for small bona fide units who were in the field when the
notification dated September 4, 1967 was issued, the con- cessional rate was
not intended to benefit the large units which had split up into smaller units to
earn the concession. The tendency towards fragmentation of the bigger units
into smaller ones in order to earn the concessional rate of duty has been noted
by the Tariff Com- mission in its report (see the extract from the report given
at p. 500 578 in M. Match Works v. Assistant Collector, Central Excise.(1) The
whole object of the notification dated September 4, 1967 was to prevent further
fragmentation of the bigger units into smaller ones in order to get the
concessional rate of duty intended for the smaller units and thus defeat the
purpose which the Government had in view. In other words, the purpose of the
notification was to prevent the larger units who were producing and clearing
more than loo million matches in the financial year 1967-68 and who could not
have made the declaration, from splitting up into smaller units in order to
avail of the concessional rate of duty by making the declaration subsequently.
To achieve that purpose, the Government chose September 4, 1967, as the date
before which the declaration should be filed. There can be no doubt that any
date chosen for the purpose would, to a certain extent, be arbitrary. That is
inevitable.
Rule 8 of the Central Excise Rules, 1944,
made under sections 6, 12 and 37 of the Act reads :
"Power to authorise exemption from duty
in special cases-(1) The Central Government may from time to time, by
notification in the Official Gazette, exempt subject to such conditions as may
be specified in the notification any excisable goods from the whole or any part
of duty leviable on such goods.
(2) The Central Board of Revenue may by
special order in each case exempt from the payment of duty, under circumstances
of an exceptional nature an excisable goods." The concessional rate of
duty can be availed of only by those who satisfy the conditions which have been
laid down under the notification. The respondent was not a manufacturer before
September 4, 1967 as it had applied for licence only on September 5, 1967 and
it could not have made a declaration before September 4, 1967 that its total
clearance for the financial year 1967-68 is not estimated to exceed 75 million
matches. In the matter of granting concessions or exemption from tax, the
Government has a wide latitude of discretion. It need not give exemption or
concession to everyone in order that it may grant the same to some. As we said,
the object of granting the concessional rate of duty was to, protect the
smaller units in the industry from the competition by the larger ones and that
object would have been frustrated, if, by adopting the device of fragmentation,
the larger units could become the ultimate beneficiaries of the bounty. That a
classification can be founded on a particular date and yet be reasonable, has
been held by this Court in several decisions (see M/s.Hathisingh Mfg. Co. Ltd.
v. Union of India,(2) Dr. Mohammed Saheb (1) A. 1. R. 1974 S. C. 497.
(2) [1960] 3 S. C. R. 528 at 543.
579 Mahboon Medico v. The Deputy Custodian
General(1) M/s.Bhikuse Yamsa Kshatriya (P) Ltd. v. Union of India(2) and Daruka
& Co. v. Union of India.(3) The choice of a date as a basis for
classification cannot always be dubbed as arbitrary even if no, particular
reason. is forthcoming for the choice unless it is shown to be capricious or
whimsical in the circumstances. When it is seen that a line or a point there
must be and there is no mathematical or logical way of fixing it precisely, the
decision of the legislature or its delegate must be accepted unless we can say
that it is very wide of the reasonable mark. See Louisville Gas Co.
v. Alabama Power Co.-240 U. S. 30 at 32
(1927) per Justice Holmes.
We set aside the orders of the High Court,
dismiss the writ petitions and allow the appeals with costs.
P.B.R. Petitions dismissed and Appeals
allowed.
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 371. (2) [1964] 1 S.C.R.
860 at 880.
(3) A.I.R. [1973] S.C. 2711.
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