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Arvinder Subgh Bagga vs State Of U.P

Supreme Court Of India|04 October, 1994

JUDGMENT / ORDER

The Judgement of the Court was delivered by R.M. SAHAI, J.- The short question of law that arises for consideration in this appeal directed against the judgment and order of the Customs, Excise & Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi, is whether the classification and the price list accepted by the Department and acted upon, found subsequently to be erroneous, is to be applied prospectively or retrospectively.
2. The appellant, a manufacturer of dyestuff, filed a price list in Part IV pro forma as applicable for sales to related persons. The price list showed various includible and excludable expenses as well as assessable value as claimed by the appellant. This was approved by the Department on 6- 12-1975 and the assessable value as declared was accepted. The approval was to be effective from 1-10-1975. After nearly a year the Assistant Collector issued a show-cause notice requiring the appellant to show cause as to why the net assessable value as per the method shown in the annexure should not be revised and differential duty recovered from the appellant. The reply of the appellant was not accepted either by the Assistant Collector or by the Appellate Collector or the Tribunal. In fact before the Tribunal it was conceded on behalf of the appellant that the method for determining the assessable value in the price list Submitted by the appellant was not correct.
3. The order of the Tribunal was challenged and it was urged that the classification and the price list submitted by the appellant having been accepted and acted upon under Rule 173-C(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 1944 the Department precluded the appellant from challenging it and, 565 therefore, it is estopped from claiming that the appellant was guilty of suppression of facts. The learned counsel urged that the classification and the price list having been accepted and acted upon, the Department was not justified in taking proceedings under Section 11-A of the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944. It was also urged that the Department could not have changed its opinion and the law does not contemplate issuing of any notice only because the Department felt that a particular item was dutiable in another entry. In the alternative the learned counsel submitted that where the Department has been acting upon the price list submitted by the appellant worked out in one manner but the Department claims that it should be calculated in a different manner then even if the calculation resorted to by the Department is held to be correct it should apply from the date of issue of notice and not from the date when the price list was submitted. Reliance for it was placed on the order passed by this Court in the case of Collector of Central Excise v. Indian Oxygen Ltd., Khardah
4. Since the appellant did not dispute that the method of calculation of the duty by the Department was correct, the submission of the learned counsel on lack of jurisdiction to initiate proceedings is not necessary to be decided as the power to issue show-cause notice vests even if the duty was short-levied as a result of erroneous application of law. However, once the Department accepted the price list, acted upon it and the goods were cleared with the knowledge of the Department, then in absence of any amendment in law or judicial pronouncement the reclassification should be effective from the date the Department issued the show-cause notice. The reason for it is clearance with the knowledge of the Department and no intention to evade payment of duty.
5. In the result, this appeal succeeds and is allowed in part. The appellant is held liable to pay duty on the dyestuffs manufactured by it in the manner calculated by the Department from 16-10-1976, the date the show-cause notice was issued to the appellant.
6. Parties shall bear their own costs.
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Title

Arvinder Subgh Bagga vs State Of U.P

Court

Supreme Court Of India

JudgmentDate
04 October, 1994
Judges
  • Mohan
  • S J