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Issues:
1. Liability of a quasi-Government institution to pay excise duty on manufactured goods not intended for sale. 2. Interpretation of the definition of "manufacture" and "manufacturer" under the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944. 3. Distinction between goods manufactured for sale and goods manufactured for one's own use in relation to excise duty. 4. Impact of the 1964 amendment on the definition of "manufacturer" and its implications on excise duty liability. 5. Application of Section 3 of the Act in determining excise duty liability irrespective of the intended purpose of manufactured goods. Analysis: 1. The case involved the Corporation of Madras, a quasi-Government institution, contesting the Central Excise authority's demand for excise duty on iron and steel products manufactured for internal use. The petitioner argued that being a non-commercial entity, excise duty should not apply. The Assistant Collector and the Collector of Central Excise upheld the duty demand, leading to the writ petition. 2. The petitioner contended that the definition of "manufacture" and "manufacturer" under Section 2(f) of the Act, pre and post the 1964 amendment, did not encompass non-commercial manufacturing. However, the court disagreed, emphasizing the broad scope of the definitions, which included any process related to product completion, irrespective of the intended purpose, as per the Act's provisions. 3. The court rejected the petitioner's argument that excise duty under Section 3 only applied to goods intended for sale. It clarified that the Act did not differentiate between goods manufactured for sale or personal use. The judgment highlighted that the levy of excise duty was not contingent on commercial motives, citing precedent to support the taxation principle based on production rather than commercial transactions. 4. Post the 1964 amendment, the distinction between manufacturing for sale and personal use was eliminated. The court emphasized that even before the amendment, the Act did not exempt non-commercial manufacturing from excise duty. The broad definition of "manufacturer" encompassed all manufacturing processes, regardless of the goods' intended purpose. 5. The court concluded that the petitioner's argument was untenable, dismissing the writ petition. It reiterated that excise duty liability was determined by the Act's provisions, specifically Section 3, without regard to the goods' destination for sale or personal use. The judgment clarified that the Act's intent was to levy duty on manufactured goods, irrespective of the motive behind their production.
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