SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Commissioner of Customs, Mumbai
Vs
Messrs Toyo Engineering India Limited
Appeal (Civil) 2532 of 2001
(Ashok Bhan and Markandeya Katju, JJ)
31.08.2006
ASHOK BHAN, J.
Revenue has filed this appeal against the final Order No. 1813/2000-B dated
25.10.2000 in Appeal No. C/164/89-B2 passed by the Customs, Excise and Gold
(Control) Appellate Tribunal (for short "the Tribunal") whereby the
Tribunal has set aside the order in original as well as the order passed in the
appeal and held that the machinery and equipment imported by the
assessee-respondent was classifiable under Heading 98.01 of the First Schedule
to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (for short "the
Tariff Act") and granted the benefit of Project Import under the Project
Import Regulation to the assessee. Facts:
Assessee-respondent (for short "the respondent") is engaged in the
setting up of industrial unit such as fertiliser plant. M/s. Indian Farmers
Fertilisers Cooperative Ltd. entered into a contract with their parent Company
M/s. Toyo Engineering Corporation, Japan for designing, engineering,
fabricating and commissioning an Ammonia Storage Package Unit and a
Co-generation Plant. Their Parent Company in turn entered into an agreement
with the respondent to carry out all the works, services, erection and
commissioning of the project on turn key basis. The respondent filed an
application on 17.03.1986 with the Contract Registration Cell for grant of the
benefit under the Project Import Scheme read with Notification No. 72/85-Cus.,
dated 17.03.1985 in respect of goods sought to be imported. Respondent has
imported various special construction equipments, available at their overseas
project at Kuwait, and filed eleven Bills of entry in March, 1986 for the
clearance of goods, which were cleared on payment of duty under protest.
The Assistant Collector, under Adjudication Order No. S/5-Misc. 376/86-CC,
dated 18.08.1987, rejected the request of the respondent for registration under
the Project Import Regulation on the ground that the imported goods are the
property of the respondent and even after execution and completion of the work,
these goods would remain the property of the respondent and the ownership of
the imported goods would not pass on to the Project Authority. It further held
that as the goods could be used for other work elsewhere after the completion
of the present project, the imported goods would not qualify for classification
under Heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act.
Being aggrieved, the respondent filed an appeal before the Appellate Authority
which was rejected. It was held that as per Heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act the
items of machinery or component parts should go into the initial setting up of
the unit and should not merely be used as an aid for the setting up of the unit
or its substantial expansion. As the respondent could utilise the machinery
elsewhere in the setting up of other plants, the impugned goods could not be
classified under Heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act.
The respondent being aggrieved filed an appeal before the Tribunal which has
been accepted by the impugned order. The Tribunal held that the grounds on
which both the lower authorities have denied the facility of project import to
the respondent were not sustainable in law. After detailed discussion the
Tribunal set aside each of the findings recorded by the appellate authority and
held that the respondent would be eligible to the benefit asked for.
Heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act reads as under:
"98.01 All items of machinery including prime movers, instruments,
apparatus and appliances, control gear and transmission equipment, auxiliary
equipment (including those required for research and development purposes,
testing and quality control), as well as all components (whether finished or
not) or raw materials for the manufacture of the aforesaid items and their
components, required for the initial setting up of a unit, or the substantial
expansion of an existing unit, of a specified:
(1) Industrial plant
,
(2) Irrigation project,
(3) Power project,
(4) Mining project,
(5) Project for the exploration for oil or other minerals, and
(6) Such other projects as the Central Government may, having regard to the
economic development of the country notify in the Official Gazette in this
behalf; and spare parts, other raw materials (including semi-finished
material), or consumable stores not exceeding 10% of the value of the goods
specified above provided that such spare parts, raw materials or consumable
stores are essential for the maintenance of the plant or project mentioned in
(1) to (6) above."
Heading 98.01 covers all the items of machinery including prime movers,
instruments, apparatus and appliances; control gear and transmission equipment,
auxiliary equipments besides components and raw materials required for the
initial setting up of a unit or the substantial expansion of an existing unit
of specified industrial plant. The industrial plant would include fertiliser
plant as well, as it is designed to be employed directly in the performance of
processes necessary for manufacture of fertiliser. Since the fertiliser plant
is covered by the industrial plant specified in Heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act
all the "auxiliary equipments" which are required for the initial
setting up of the unit could be imported under the Project Import Scheme. As
per Words and Phrases of Excise and Customs by S.B. Sarkar
"auxiliary"
Means:
"giving additional help; supplemental or subsidiary; an item not directly
a part of a specific component or system but required for its functional
operation.
According to Black's Law Dictionary, sixth edition, 'auxiliary' means:
"Aiding; attendant on."
According to the World Book Dictionary, 'auxiliary' means:
"a person or thing that helps; aid; syn; accessory".
Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, (1996
Edn.) "auxiliary" means:
"giving support; serving as an aid; helpful"
It is not disputed that construction equipments imported by the respondent were
used in the initial setting up of the plant. The Assistant Collector and the
appellate authority denied the facility of the project import as the ownership
of the imported goods would not pass to the project authority and that the
machinery imported could be utilized elsewhere in the setting up of any other
plant. What is required under heading 98.01 Tariff Act is that the machinery
imported should be required "for the initial setting up of a unit, or the
substantial expansion of an existing unit". This heading specifically
mentions and includes "auxiliary equipment". The "auxiliary
equipment" has not been defined under the Tariff Act. As per Dictionary
meaning, extracted above, it is an equipment which aids or helps. Any equipment
which aids or helps in the setting up of an industrial plant would fall and be
covered under heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act. The mere possibility of its
being used subsequently for other project would not debar the respondent from
availing the facility of project import. If the contention of the Revenue
is accepted, then resultant effect as put by the Tribunal would be:
"no equipment can be imported for projects like Konkan Railway Project,
Road Development Projects of the National Highway Authority of India, etc.
specified under Heading 98.01 of CTA."
We agree with this observation of the Tribunal. Counsel appearing for the
appellant strenuously contended that the respondent could not be given the
benefit of the project import under heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act in view of
the decision of this Court in the Punjab State Electricity Board Vs. Collector
of Customs, Bombay, 2 (SC).
We do not find any substance in this submission. In that case this Court did
not consider the vehicles imported to be an item of auxiliary equipment
required for setting up of an initial unit on the ground that it was used only
in shifting of the transformers which would not constitute an integral part of
the power project. The vehicles imported were required for transportation of
the transformers from railway yards to the erection sites and had no relation
to power generation or power project. After transporting the specified number
of transformers to the site of sub-station the utility of the vehicles would be
over at the end of such transport and thereafter the vehicles could certainly
be used for other purposes of the assessee. That the vehicles, which are used
in the shifting of the transformers, would not constitute integral activity of
the project. In the present case goods imported by the respondent are hydle
truck cranes, excavator, shovel loader, truck, forklift truck, power
generators, diesel welder, welding rectifier, containers tools and tackles
instruments, level Nako with tripod, theodlite nako with accessories &
tripod besides window air conditioners, electric typewriter and camera with
flash (the total cost of last three items is only Rs.70, 000/-, which is
negligible). In fact, it was not disputed before the Tribunal or before us as
well that the construction equipments imported by the respondent were used in
the initial setting up of the plant. The goods imported by the respondent such
as hydle truck cranes, excavator, shovel loader, truck, forklift truck, power
generators, diesel welder, welding rectifier, containers tools and tackles
instruments, level Nako with tripod and theodlite nako with accessories &
tripod would certainly be auxiliary equipments which would help in the initial
setting up of the industrial plant. The facility of the project import was
denied to the respondent because the ownership of the imported goods did not
pass to the project authority. Since it is not disputed that the construction
equipments imported by the respondent were used in the initial setting up of
the plant, then, as per the provisions of heading 98.01 of the Tariff Act the
respondent could not be denied the benefit of the project import. Before the
Tribunal learned departmental representative appearing for the Revenue had made
various other submissions such as (1) that absence of a contract specifically
registered for import of construction material; (2) that note (2) to Chapter 98
according to which Heading 98.01 would apply to goods which are imported in
accordance with the Project Imports Regulations, 1986; (3) that under
Regulation 4 the assessment under Heading 98.01 shall be available only to
those goods which are imported against one or more specific contract which have
been registered with the appropriate Customs House. In the absence of a
specific contract being registered Heading 98.01 would not be applicable to the
impugned goods imported by the respondent; and (4) that the benefit of
concessional duty under Project Import was not available if the goods had arrived
before the application was submitted for registration of the goods. All these
submissions were not allowed to be raised by the tribunal as these submissions
had been made for the first time before the Tribunal. These submissions had
neither been raised before the adjudicating authority nor the first appellate
authority. It was held by the Tribunal that the Department could not be allowed
to make out a new case at the appeal stage.
Learned counsel for the Revenue tried to raise some of the submissions which
were not allowed to be raised by the Tribunal before us, as well. We agree with
the Tribunal that the revenue could not be allowed to raise these submissions
for the first time in the second appeal before the Tribunal. Neither
adjudicating authority nor the appellate authority had denied the facility of
the project import to the respondent on any of these grounds. These grounds did
not find mention in the show cause notice as well. The Department cannot be
travel beyond the show cause notice. Even in the grounds of appeals these
points have not been taken. For the reasons stated above, we do not find any
merit in this appeal. We agree with the findings recorded by the Tribunal.
Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed, leaving the parties to bear their own
costs.