Real Optical Co. v. Appellate Collector of Customs, (SC)
BS78208
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Before:- S.S.M. Quadri and S.N. Phukan, JJ.
Civil Appeal No. 467 of 1987. D/d.
23.2.2001.
Real Optical Co. - Appellant
Versus
Appellate Collector of Customs and another - Respondents
For the Appellant :- Ambrish Kumar, Advocate.
For the Respondent :- Gowri Shankar Moorthy, T. Raja and P. Parameshwaran, Advocates.
Central Excise Tariff Act, 1986, Schedule 1 - Tariff Item 23-A (4) (After amendment on 1-3-1979), Item 68 - Rough optical blanks - Held that it cannot be classified as 'Other glass or glass-ware set forth in Item 23-A (4) such items falls under residuary Item 68 - Further held that classification has to be associated with the functional character of an item - Impugned judgment set aside - Appeals allowed.
[Paras 12 and 15]
Cases Referred :-
M/s. Indo International Industries v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Uttar Pradesh, (1981 Tax LR 2963).
Atul Glass Industries (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Collector of Central Excise, (1986) 3 SCC 480 .
JUDGMENT
Phukan, J. - This appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment dated 1-7-1986 of the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi.
2. The question raised in this appeal is whether Rough Ophthalmic Blanks falls under tariff Item No. 23-A (4) or under Residuary Tariff Item No. 68 of Central Excise Tariff.
3. The appellant imported Rough Ophthalmic Blanks and was called upon to pay countervailing duty, which was paid. The Appellate Collector of Customs, Mumbai in another appeal held that Rough Ophthalmic Blanks could be charged to duty only under Residuary Tariff Item No. 68. The appellant, therefore, applied to the Assistant Collector of Customs (Incharge of Refund), Madras claiming refund of the above countervailing duty, which was rejected. The appeal and the review filed by the appellant were also dismissed. Thereafter, the appellant filed the appeal before the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi. The Tribunal heard the appeal filed by the appellant along with other appeals and dismissed the appeal of the appellant by the impugned judgment dated 1-7-1986.
4. The facts are not disputed that Rough Ophthalmic Blanks with optical properties are manufactured out of combination of highly purified form of raw glass and other materials such as silica, alumina, sodium potassium and rare earths etc. after technical, chemical and thermal processes.
5. The Tribunal rejected the contention on behalf of appellant that Rough Ophthalmic Blanks are not imported as glass simpliciter but as a special commodity for the purpose of manufacture of spectacle lenses. According to Tribunal, the true test for classification is not the actual process adopted for manufacture but the identity of the goods with the relevant description or definition in the First Schedule to the Act or falling that, in terms of commercial parlance and further that the existence or otherwise of optical properties, as distinguished from the exact specification required for optical glass, is no criterion for inclusion in, or exclusion out of the above item. The Tribunal also referred to Indian Standard Glossary of terms relating to glass and glassware and after discussion did not accept the contention on behalf of the appellant that Rough Ophthalmic Blanks though made of glass are not known in the trade as glass.
6. Learned counsel for the appellant has placed reliance on other authorities to explain how Rough Ophthalmic Blanks are made from glass. In our opinion it is not necessary to go into these authorities as we have already explained how Rough Ophthalmic Blanks are made and this is not disputed.
7. According to learned counsel for revenue, Rough Ophthalmic Blanks would fall under the above Tariff Item 23-A (4), as these are articles of glass.
8. Tariff Item 23-A (4) after amendment on 1-3-1979 read as follows :-
"other glass, glassware including tableware"
9. Tariff Item 68 is of residuary character and relates to all other goods not elsewhere specified. The rate of duty is higher if the product falls under Tariff Item No. 23-A (4) then if it fell under Tariff Item No. 68.
10. It is settled position of law that in interpreting items in Statutes like Excise Acts or Sales Tax Acts resorts should be had not to the scientific or technical meaning of the terms or expressions used but how is the product identified by the class or section of people dealing with or using the product, however, if any term or expression has been defined in the enactment then it must be understood in the sense in which it is so defined. It is also a common experience that the identity of an article is associated with its primary function inasmuch as a customer buys it to perform a specific function from it.
11. What was imported by the appellant was not glass simpliciter but Rough Optical Blanks. We have already referred that Rough Optical Blanks with optical properties are manufactured out of combination of highly purified raw glass and other material after highly technical, chemical and thermal process.
12. A general merchant dealing in glass or tableware does not deal in articles like Rough Optical Blanks with optical properties which may be used for making spectacles. The functional character of Rough Optical Blanks is different from glass or glassware, as these commodities are used for different purpose viz. making of optical lenses, etc. Rough Optical Blanks are purchased by manufacturer of spectacles for making spectacle lenses not for the purpose of other glasses or glassware including tableware.
13. In M/s. Indo International Industries v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Uttar Pradesh, (1981 Tax LR 2963) a three Judge Bench of this Court considered the entry "glassware" falling within Entry No. 39 of First Schedule of U. P. Sales Tax Act and held that clinical syringes would not fall under the said entry. It was also held that in commercial sense glassware would never comprise article like clinical syringes, thermometer, etc., which have specialised significance and utility. In this appeal also Rough Optical Blanks has specialised utility and, therefore, would not come under Tariff Item No. 23-A (4).
14. In Atul Glass Industries (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Collector of Central Excise, (1986) 3 SCC 480 , the Bench of this Court held that glass mirror cannot be classified as other glass or glassware set forth in Tariff Item 23-A (4) and must, therefore, fall under the residuary Tariff Item 68 of the First Schedule to the Act.
15. For the reasons stated above, we have no hesitation to hold that Rough Optical Blanks would not come under Tariff Item No. 23-A (4) and will come under Residuary Tariff Item No. 68. Accordingly we hold that the appeal has merit and it is allowed by setting aside the impugned judgment. In the facts and circumstances of the case we direct the parties to bear their own costs.
Appeals allowed.