IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
S.P.
Bharucha, R.C. Lahoti and Ruma Pal, JJ.
TATA IRON & STEEL CO. LTD.
Versus
COMMR. OF C.
EX. & CUS., BHUBANESWAR
Civil Appeal No. 96 of 1998 decided on 16-2-200
Valuation (Customs) –
Technical documents not being supplied or made available by Italian supplier to
Portugese supplier either free of charge at the instance of appellant nor cost
thereof incurred wholly or partially by appellant - Rule 9(1)(b) of Customs
(Valuation) Rules, 1988 not applicable.
-The
Portugese supplier (SNP) had purchased the entire steel plant equipment from an
Italian supplier more than six years before the transaction in question had
taken place with the appellant. Such documents must have accompanied the
equipments and materials made available to SNP by the Italian supplier of SNP.
It cannot be comprehended and certainly it is not the case of the Revenue that
the technical documents were supplied or made available by the Italian supplier
to SNP either free of charge at the instance of the appellant or cost thereof
was incurred wholly or partially by the appellant. Rule 9(1)(b) therefore has no
applicability. [para 14]
Valuation
(Customs) - Price paid by appellant for drawings and technical documents
forming subject matter of contract DM 301 not falls within the meaning of ‘an
obligation of seller’ to a third party - Payment also not made as a condition
of sale of imported goods - Rule 9(1)(e) of Customs (Valuation) Rules, 1988 not
applicable.
[para 16]
Valuation
(Customs) - Drawings and documents for use during construction, erection,
assembly etc. of imported goods being relatable to post import activity,
charges thereof not includible in the assessable value although value of
documents referable to imported equipments and materials mixed with value of
those documents referable to equipment yet to be imported or manufactured by
appellant - Section 14 of Customs Act, 1962 - Rule 4 of Customs (Valuation)
Rules, 1988.
-The
drawings and documents having been supplied to the buyer-importer for use
during construction, erection, assembly, maintenance etc. of imported goods,
they were relatable to post import activity to be undertaken by the appellant.
Such charges were covered by a separate contract i.e. Contract MD 301. They
could not have been included in the value of imported goods merely because the
value of documents referable to imported equipments and materials was mixed up
with the value of those documents which were referable to equipment which was
yet to be procured or imported or manufactured by the appellant; the value of
the latter category of documents also being neither dutiable nor clubbable with
the value of imported goods. The Tribunal has not doubted the genuineness of
the contracts entered into between the appellant and SNP. [para 17]
Valuation
(Customs) - Undervaluation - Plea as to undervaluation of blast furnace
equipment due to bifurcation of contract and segregation of value of documents,
raised before Tribunal but not considered - Tribunal having held the value of
documents to be includible in assessable value, found consideration of this
plea unnecessary - Matter remanded for examination of issue of undervaluation
on merits by Tribunal - Section 111(m) of Customs Act, 1962.
[para 18]
REPRESENTED BY : S/Shri Harish N.
Salve, Joseph Vellepally and Ashok Desai, Sr. Advocates, Ravinder Narain, Ashok
Sagar, Ms. Ipsita, Ms. Padmini Kumari, Sanjiv Sen, D.N. Misra and Ms. Amita
Mitra, Advocates, for the Appellant.
S/Shri Harish N. Salve, Solicitor
General, K.N. Raval, Additional Solicitor General and Dileep Tandon, P.
Parmeswaran, Hemant Sharma, V.K. Verma, Advocates with them for the Respondent.
[Judgment per
: R.C. Lahoti, J.]. - The Tata Iron
& Steel Company Ltd. (TISCO, for short), the appellant before us, has
imported certain equipments and drawings and engineering documents from
Siderugia National of Portugal – a Government of Portugal Undertaking. It
appears that some time in the year 1981 Italimpianti, Genevo, Italy supplied
materials, designs and engineering drawings etc. to Siderugia National Portugal
(hereinafter SNP, for short) for setting up rolling mill project in Portugal.
The supplies consisted of equipments for blast furnace, LD converter, steel
plant bellet castors, wire rod mills, torpedo ladle cars etc. However, before
the equipments could be installed, Portugal decided to join European Economic
Community (EEC) consequent whereupon Portugal could not have expanded its steel
making capacity, SNP decided to cancel its investment plan and to sell the
equipments and materials which were lying unused from 1981 to 1986. On 14th
April, 1988 a protocol was signed between the seller and purchaser companies
(i.e. SNP and TISCO) which inter alia stated
that the total price will be price for the equipment plus price for the
engineering FOB Portugal-Lisbon port. The price for the equipment with suitable
sea-worthy packing to be provided by SNP will be 13.5 million Deutsche Marks
(DM) and the price for engineering will be 12.5 million Deutsche Marks. The
protocol also provided that the equipment was being sold without any operation
on performance guarantees and in “as is where is” condition. Subsequently on
11th October, 1989 three contracts were entered into between the parties as
under :-
1. Agreement for
supply of technical documentation – called MD 301.
2. Agreement for sale of equipments and materials (part of
equipments of a blast furnace and three torpedo ladle cars) – called MD 302.
3. An overall sale contract, being an umbrella contract, covering the above said two agreements for establishing contractual relationship and setting up conditions both for sale of equipment and supply of technical documentation.
The over-all sale contract recited an overall price of 26
million DM and its break-up into two, namely, 12.5 million DM for technical
documentation and 13.5 million DM for equipments and materials. The earlier two
agreements recited the considerations of 12.5 million DM and 13.5 million DM
respectively. Thus the prices as recited in the protocol dated 14-4-1988
remained unchanged.
2.The appellant sought for registration of its contract MD 302
under Project Imports Regulations, 1986 with the Customs House, Paradeep which
was allowed entitling it to avail the benefit of concessional rate of duty for
project imports.
3.The consignment consisting of technical documents,
engineerings etc. covered by contract MD 301 arrived at Calcutta and was
cleared by Calcutta Customs House in the months of April-May, 1990. The
consignment was claimed by the appellant to be classifiable under sub-heading
No. 4906.00 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1985 assessable to nil duty.
4.As against the contract MD 302 the first consignment arrived
at Port Paradeep and was cleared under Bill of Entry dated 6-4-1990. The value
of the goods was shown as D.M. 60,75,000 FOB. The goods were assessed
provisionally and allowed clearance on payment of duty on the declared value.
The second consignment under this contract also arrived at Paradeep port. Bill
of Entry dated 7-7-1990 was filed declaring the value to be 6,75,739 D.M. In
between the department had gathered intelligence and formed an opinion that the
contract MD 302 registered under the Project Import Regulations was actually a
sub-contract of another contract of the same date and the value thereof was 26
MDM. The Assistant Collector of Customs, Paradeep, vide communication dated 7th
July, 1990, called upon the appellant to submit all the documents including the
correspondence with the foreign supplier, copy of the import licence etc. The
appellant submitted the required documents including copy of the agreement MD
301. An exchange of correspondence between the Assistant Collector of Customs
and the appellant followed. On 16th July, 1990 the Assistant Collector of
Customs, Paradeep issued a show cause notice to the appellant calling upon it
to show cause why the sum of 12.5 MDM being the value of the goods covered by
contract MD 301 should not be included in determining the assessable value of
the goods imported under the contract MD 302 followed by other consequences
flowing from under-valuation of the goods imported. Vide order dated 10-8-1990
the Assistant Collector permitted clearance of the goods upon furnishing of
bank guarantees of Rs. 7,44,80,300/- and extra duty deposit of Rs. 2,82,01,636
as also payment of admitted customs duty.
5.The appellant filed a writ petition before the Orissa High
Court challenging the show cause notice and the demand raised by order dated
10-8-1990. On 30-8-1990, the Orissa High Court disposed of the writ petition
directing the release of the goods subject to furnishing a bank guarantee of
Rs. 8 crores and depositing the extra duty reduced by 1 crore than that
demanded, accompanied by payment of admitted customs duty. The appellant
complied with the order of the High Court and got the goods cleared.
6.The appellant also filed a reply to the show cause notice.
Personal hearing was given by the Assistant Collector. On 23-8-1993 the
Commissioner of Customs and Central Excise, Bhubaneswar issued a second show
cause notice to the appellant and two of its officers and also to the
appellant’s engineering consultant. Replies were filed. On 30th April, 1996 the
Commissioner of Customs and Central Excise, Bhubaneswar passed an order
assessing the levy of customs duty at Rs. 15,49,09,060/-. A penalty of Rs. 5
crores was also imposed on the appellant under Section 112 of the Customs Act.
Penalties were imposed on other noticees also.
7.The appellant and other noticees preferred appeals before
the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, Calcutta which have
been disposed of by a common order. The Tribunal has held that the three
contracts entered into between the seller, i.e., SNP and the appellant were in
fact parts of one package that is, the three constituted one composite
agreement. The technical documentation supplied to the appellant could be
divided into three parts: (i) those pertaining to the imported equipment, (ii)
those pertaining to the equipment which was yet to be procured or manufactured
by appellant and (iii) those relatable to post-import activities undertaken by
the appellant for assembly, construction, erection, operation and maintenance
of the imported equipment. The value of the contract to the extent of (i) above
was liable to be included in the value of equipments and materials imported by
the appellant though the value of the technical documents covered by (ii) and
(iii) above could have been excluded for payment of customs duty by reference
to Interpretative Note to Rule 4 of Customs Valuation Rules, 1988 (hereinafter
‘Rules’ for short). However, since separate values have not been shown, the benefit
of Interpretative Note to Rule 4 abovesaid was not available to the appellant
and the entire value of the two contracts was liable to be clubbed together for
the purpose of levying customs duty.
8. It will be useful to extract and reproduce verbatim a few
findings from the order of the Tribunal as under :-
“It
is pertinent to mention on first appellant’s own admission that where an item
has been partly supplied and partly not supplied by S.N., technical documents
for the latter have been supplied. These technical documents will serve the
purpose for the whole items as such, technical documents being common to an
item. In this manner, the first appellant has got technical documents for
manufacture of substantial number of import items. It is therefore obvious that
the technical documents supplied to the appellants pertain both to (i) the
imported equipment and (ii) the equipment which was yet to be procured or
manufactured by the appellants. It may also contain (iii) technical documents
which are related to post-importation activities undertaken by the appellants
for assembly, construction, erection, operation and maintenance of the imported
equipment. Value of two categories of documents at (ii) and (iii) above could
be excluded, had these values been separately shown in the contract, MD-301 or
invoices. Since separate values have not been shown, support from
Interpretative Note to Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules, proposed by the ld.
Advocate Dr. Chakraborty cannot be taken. Hence the entire value of 12.5 million
DM of technical documentation will have to be included in value (13.5 million
DM) of the equipment of B.E. and T.L.Cs.” [Para
6.2. II]
“Claim
of the appellant’s Counsel that these are separate contracts is not tenable.
Article 2 relating to “Price” and Clause 1 thereof makes it abundantly clear
that “over-all price of the sale scope of the present contract is fixed and not
subject to any revision and amounts to DM-26 million” giving a break-up of the
same in 13.5 million and 12.5 million DMS. It is thus the overall price of 26
million DM which is material in the Contract. Article 3 makes it binding on
both the contracting parties that neither of them shall transfer totally or
partially its contractual position, either gratuitously or onerously, without
previous written consent of the other party. It is thus apparent that the
appellants cannot back out of contract for supply of technical documents, even
if they wished, without the written consent of the other party i.e. S.N.
Portugal. These facts bring out the element of compulsion in purchase of the
technical documents of whatever nature along with the purchase of equipments
and materials. That being the factual position, provisions of Rule 9(1)(e) of
the Valuation Rules 1988 come into play. Clause (e) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 9
envisages addition of “all other payments actually made or to be made as a
condition of the sale of the imported goods, by the buyer to the seller……..”.
Therefore, entire 26 million DM will have to be taken as value of the equipments
and materials.”
[Para
6.3. III]
9. In spite of the findings as abovesaid having been arrived
at vide para 10.4, the Tribunal has stated that though in its opinion the value
of equipments would be entire contract price of 26 million DM as against 21.2747826086
million DM computed by the adjudicating officer as detailed in Annexure 1
appended to his order, since only TISCO had appealed to it and the Revenue had
chosen not to file any appeal, the appellant could be put in a situation worse
than if it had not filed an appeal and therefore duty liability of the
appellant shall have to remain confined to the value of the equipment at
21.2747826086 million DM as found by the adjudicating officer. The quantum of
penalty imposed on the appellant was reduced by the Tribunal from Rs. 5 crores
to Rs. 4 crores. The penalties on other noticees were set aside. The appellant
has come up to this Court by filing this appeal under Section 130E of the
Customs Act, 1962.
10. We have heard Shri Ashok Desai, the learned senior counsel
for the appellant and Shri Kirit Raval, the learned Additional Solicitor
General for the respondents. We are satisfied that the impugned order of the
Tribunal cannot be sustained and therefore has to be set aside followed by a
remand so as to assess the value of the goods liable to payment of customs duty
and thereupon determine the quantum of duty and penalty, if any, for the
reasons stated hereinafter.
11. A perusal of the order of the Tribunal shows that it has
mainly proceeded on two sets of reasoning for holding against the appellant.
Firstly, the Tribunal has examined the applicability of Rule 9(1) (b) (iv) and
formed an opinion that benefit thereof was not available to the appellant. By
reference to the Interpretative Note to Rule 4 it has held that to the extent
the drawings and technical documents were referable to the manufacture and sale
of the imported equipments, their value was liable to be included in the value
of the equipments and material imported and inasmuch as separate values thereof
have not been shown the entire value of 12.5 million DM of technical
documentation covered by contract DM 301 was liable to be included in the value
of the equipments. Secondly, the Tribunal has held the provisions of Rule
9(1)(e) being attracted and coming into play for the purpose of determining the
valuation of the equipment and materials imported on the reasoning that the
drawings and engineerings were compulsorily purchasable by the appellant along
with the equipment and materials and hence the value of the two was liable to
be clubbed. Shri Ashok Desai, the learned senior counsel for the appellant has
vehemently attacked the correctness of the reasoning employed by the Tribunal
and has submitted that the Tribunal has gone totally amiss in interpreting the
rules and judging the case thereunder. It was submitted by Shri Ashok Desai
that the interpretation as placed on the rules by the Tribunal is not correct.
We will presently test the correctness of the contention so advanced.
12. Section 12 of the Customs Act is the charging section.
Section 14 provides for the duty of customs being chargeable on any goods by
reference to their value. In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 156 of
the Customs Act, 1962 the Central Government has framed Customs Valuation
(Determination of Price of Imported Goods) Rules, 1988. Clause (f) of Rule 2
defines “transaction value” to mean the value determined in accordance with
Rule 4. Under Rule 3 either the value of imported goods shall be the
transaction value or if it cannot be determined then the same shall be
determined by proceeding sequentially through Rules 5 to 8. Rule 4 provides
that the transaction value of imported goods shall be the price actually paid
or payable for the goods when sold for export to India adjusted in accordance
with the provisions of Rule 9. Under Rule 9, the value or price of certain cost
and services is liable to be added to the transaction value while determining
the value of the imported goods. Rule 9, insofar as relevant and to the extent
referred to by the Tribunal is extracted and reproduced hereunder :-
9. Cost and services. - (1) In
determining the transaction value, there shall be added to the price actually
paid or payable for the imported goods, -
xxxxxx xxx
(b)
the value, apportioned as appropriate, of the following goods and services where supplied directly or indirectly by the
buyer free of charge or at reduced cost for use in connection with the
production and sale for export of imported goods, to the extent that such value
has not been included in the price actually paid or payable, namely :-
(i)
materials, components, parts and similar used in the production of the imported
goods;
(ii)
tools, dies, moulds and similar items used in the production of the imported
goods;
(iii)
materials consumed in the production of the imported goods;
(iv)
engineering, development, art work, design work, and plans and sketches
undertaken elsewhere than in India and necessary for the production of the
imported goods;
xxxxxx xxx
(e)
all other payments actually made or
to be made as a condition of sale of the
imported goods, by the buyer to the seller, or by the buyer to a third
party to satisfy an obligation of the
seller to the extent that such payments are not included in the price
actually paid or payable.
xxxxxx xxx
(3)
Additions to the price actually paid or payable shall be made under this rule
on the
basis
of objective and quantifiable data.
(4)
No addition shall be made to the price actually paid or payable in determining
the value of the imported goods except as provided for in this rule.[emphasis
supplied].
13. Reference has also been made by the Tribunal to the
Interpretative Notes. Rule 12 provides that the Interpretative Notes specified
in the Schedule to these rules shall apply for the interpretation of these
rules. Note to Rule 4 reads as under :-
“
Note to Rule 4
Price
actually paid or payable
The
price actually paid or payable is the total payment made or to be made by the
buyer to or for the benefit of the seller for the imported goods. The payment
need not necessarily take the form of a transfer of money. Payment may be made
by way of letters of credit or negotiable instruments. Payment may be made
directly or indirectly. An example of an indirect payment would be the
settlement by the buyer, whether in whole or in part, of a debt owed by the
seller.
Activities
undertaken by the buyer on his own account, other than those for which an
adjustment is provided in Rule 9, are not considered to be an indirect payment
to the seller, even though they might be regarded as of benefit to the seller.
The costs of such activities shall not, therefore, be added to the price
actually paid or payable in determining the value of imported goods.
The value of imported goods shall
not include the following charges or costs,
provided that they are distinguished from the price actually paid or payable
for the imported goods :
(a)
Charges for construction, erection, assembly, maintenance or technical
assistance, undertaken after importation on imported goods such as industrial
plant, machinery or equipment;
(b)
The cost of transport after importation;
(c)
Duties and taxes in India.
The
price actually paid or payable refers to the price for the imported goods. Thus
the flow of dividends or other payments from the buyer to the seller that do
not relate to the imported goods are not part of the customs value.
[emphasis
supplied]
14. A bare reading of Rule 9(1)(b) shows that it refers to the
value of the four specified goods and services supplied by the buyer free of
charge or at a reduced cost for use in connection with the production and sale
of imported goods to the seller and to the extent that such value has not been included
in the price actually paid or payable. To illustrate, the seller may have
manufactured equipments of a design, drawings whereof were made available by
the buyer say by engaging an independent expert agency in the country of the
seller. Although the seller has not incurred any expenditure on the
technical/engineering design of the equipment manufactured by it yet the price
paid for securing the engineering designs and drawings will be a component of
the value of the equipment manufactured. In spite of the price for the services
rendered by the expert agency having been paid by the buyer, the value thereof
is liable to be added to the value of the imported goods for determining the
transaction value. In the case at hand it is nobody’s case that the buyer had
supplied any goods or services free of charge or at reduced cost for use in
connection with the production and sale for export of imported goods. All the
exercise done by the Tribunal in scrutinizing the documents forming subject
matter of contract DM 301 so as to classify them into three categories stated
earlier in this judgment was therefore uncalled for. SNP had purchased the
entire steel plant equipment from an Italian supplier more than six years
before the transaction in question had taken place with the appellant. Such
documents must have accompanied the equipments and materials made available to
SNP by the Italian supplier of SNP. It cannot be comprehended and certainly it
is not the case of the Revenue that the technical documents were supplied or
made available by the Italian supplier to SNP either free of charge at the
instance of the appellant or cost thereof was incurred wholly or partially by
the appellant.
15. Clause (e) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 9 is attracted when the
following conditions are satisfied :-
There
is a (i) payment actually made
or to be made as a condition of sale of
the imported goods by the buyer to the seller or to a third party :
(ii)
Such payment, if made to a third party, has been made or has to be made to satisfy an obligation of the seller;
and
(iii)
Such payments are not included in the price actually paid or payable.
16. It is nobody’s case that the seller had an obligation
towards a third party which was required to be satisfied by it and the buyer
(i.e. the appellant) had made any payment to the seller or to a third party in
order to satisfy such an obligation. The price paid by the appellant for
drawings and technical documents forming subject matter of contract DM 301 can
by no stretch of imagination fall within the meaning of ‘an obligation of the
seller’ to a third party. There was also no payment made as a condition of sale
of imported goods as such. Rule 9(1) (e) also, therefore, has no applicability.
17. So far as Interpretative Note to Rule 4 is concerned it is
no doubt true that the Interpretative Notes are part of the Rules and hence
statutory. However, the question is one of their applicability. The part of
Interpretative Note to Rule 4 relied on by the Tribunal has been couched in a
negative form and is accompanied by a proviso. It means that the charges or
costs described in clauses (a), (b) and (c) are not to be included in the value
of imported goods subject to satisfying the requirement of the proviso that the
charges were distinguishable from the price actually paid or payable for the
imported goods. This part of the Interpretative Note cannot be so read as to
mean that those charges which are not covered in clauses (a) to (c) are
available to be included in the value of imported goods. To illustrate, if the
seller has undertaken to erect or assemble the machinery after its importation
into India and levied certain charges for rendering such service the price paid
therefore shall not be liable to be included in the value of the goods if it
has been paid separately and is clearly distinguishable from the price actually
paid or payable for the imported goods. Obviously, this Interpretative Note
cannot be pressed into service for calculating the price of any drawings or
technical documents though separately paid by including them in the price of
imported equipments. Clause (a) in third para of Note to Rule 4 is suggestive
of charges for services rendered by the seller in connection with construction,
erection etc. of imported goods. The value of documents and drawings etc.
cannot be “charges for construction, erection, assembly etc.” of imported
goods. Alternatively, even on the view as taken by the Tribunal on this Note,
the drawings and documents having been supplied to the buyer-importer for use during
construction, erection, assembly, maintenance etc. of imported goods, they were
relatable to post-import activity to be undertaken by the appellant. Such
charges were covered by a separate contract, i.e. contract MD 301. They could
not have been included in the value of imported goods merely because the value
of documents referable to imported equipments and materials was mixed up with
the value of those documents which were referable to equipment which was yet to
be procured or imported or manufactured by the appellant : the value of the
latter category of documents also being neither dutiable nor clubbable with the
value of imported goods. The Tribunal has not doubted the genuineness of the
contracts entered into between the appellant and SNP. Rather it has observed
vide para 10.2 of its order that entering into two contracts (MD 301 and MD
302) was a legal necessity. The Tribunal has also stated that it was not
recording any finding of ‘skewed split up’. Shri Ashok Desai, the learned
senior Counsel for the appellant has pointed out that under Chapter Heading
49.06 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 plans and drawings for engineering and
industrial purposes being originals drawn by hand as also their photographic
reproductions on sensitized papers and carbon copies thereof are declared free
from payment of customs duty. Sub-rules (3) and (4) of Rule 9 clearly provide
that additions to the price actually paid or payable is permissible under the
Rules if based on objective and quantifiable data and no addition except as
provided for by Rule 9 is permissible.
18. The above said reasons demolish the edifice on which the
order of the Tribunal is based. However, still the only thing that remains to
be considered is whether there has been under valuation of blast furnace
equipment covered by the contract MD 302. It is a pure and simple case of
finding out ‘the price actually paid or payable for the goods’ – the phrase as
occurring in Rules 2(f), 4 and 9, so as to find out the transaction value and
levy duty thereon under Sections 12 and 14 of the Customs Act. One of the
allegations made in the show cause notice given to the appellant was of the
blast furnace equipments (BFE) having been undervalued by transferring a part
of the value of the equipments to the value of engineering documents and
drawings. In substance the show cause notice alleged the blast furnace
equipment having been under valued by artificially excluding therefrom the
value of technical documents. According to the Revenue such documents are even
otherwise and in ordinary course supplied by the seller to the buyer. Because
of the absence of such documents the goods sold being equipments would be of no
use at all but the appellant had so manipulated the single transaction by
bifurcating the single content into two documents so as to under value the
blast furnace equipments by transferring a part of the value of such equipments
to the value of engineering documents and drawings. The gist of the allegation
is under valuation of blast furnace equipment. Shri Kirit Raval, the learned
Additional Solicitor General has submitted that from the stage of the show
cause notice till before the Tribunal the Revenue has kept its plea alive. Vide
para 7 of its order the Tribunal noted this plea of the Revenue but did not go
into it as the Tribunal considered it not necessary in view of other findings
arrived at. The learned Additional Solicitor General submitted that if this
Court may not sustain the order of the Tribunal then in all fairness the
Revenue should be allowed an opportunity of substantiating its plea of
under-valuation followed by such other relief to which it may be entitled in
the event of its succeeding on its plea. We find merit in this submission. In
our opinion on the order of the Tribunal being set aside the matter needs to be
sent back to the Tribunal for examining on merits the above said plea of the
Revenue which was refused to be gone into earlier on account of its having been
found to be unnecessary.
19. The appeal is allowed. The impugned order of the Tribunal
is set aside. The case is sent back to the Tribunal to entertain and examine
the plea of the Revenue if the contract DM 302 is undervalued on the basis of
the material already available on record. The Tribunal shall consistently with
the observations made and findings recorded in this judgment hear and dispose
of the appeal before it within a period of six months from the date of
communication of this order. The bank guarantee furnished by the appellant
shall be kept alive and the amount deposited shall also continue to remain in
deposit till the date of decision by the Tribunal whereafter the bank guarantee
and the deposit shall be dealt with consistently with the order of the
Tribunal.
20.
Though we have set aside the order of the Tribunal and made a remand we would
like to clarify a few points. Apart from the appellant, two officers of the
company namely Dr. J.J. Irani and Shri S.L. Shrivastava and an engineering
consultant of the appellant, namely, M/s. M.M. Dastur & Co. were also proceeded
against and penalties were imposed on them. They were exonerated by the
Tribunal. The Revenue has not come up in appeal against the order of the
Tribunal exonerating the abovesaid three. This order of remand would not reopen
the proceedings against those three. Similarly, the Tribunal has held that the
duty liability of the appellant in spite of a finding of under valuation could
not be re-determined by pegging the value of the equipment at an amount over
and above 21.2747826086 million DM as this was the figure found by the
adjudicating officer and not challenged by the Revenue. The amount of penalty
levied on the appellant was reduced by the Tribunal to Rs. 4 crores which too
has not been challenged by the Revenue. On hearing the case after remand if the
plea of the Revenue may find favour with the
Tribunal, the dutiable value of the equipment and materials shall not exceed
21.2747826086 million DM and the amount of
penalty shall not exceed Rs. 4 crores. Shri Ashok Desai, the learned
Senior Counsel for the appellant submitted that the Tribunal has also held,
vide para 9 of its order, that the liability of the goods to confiscation did
not arise and that part of the order should also be held to have achieved a
finality. With this submission we do not agree. If the Tribunal may find the
equipments forming the subject matter of contract DM 302 to be under valued the
legal consequences flowing from such finding may follow.
21. The appeal stands disposed of accordingly. No order as to
the costs.
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