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1992 (12) TMI 152 - AT - Central Excise

Issues Involved:
1. Competence of a Superintendent of Central Excise to issue show cause notice within six months.
2. Interpretation of ingredients of fraud, collusion, suppression, or misstatement under Section 11A(1) of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 for invoking extended period or jurisdiction to issue show cause notice.

Detailed Analysis:

Issue 1: Competence of a Superintendent of Central Excise to Issue Show Cause Notice Within Six Months

The central question was whether a Superintendent of Central Excise is competent to issue a show cause notice for the demand of duty within six months from the relevant date, even if the non-levy or short-levy is due to fraud, collusion, or wilful misstatement of facts. The Tribunal noted that the show cause notice for recovery of duty had been issued by the Superintendent of Central Excise, alleging wilful misstatement with intent to evade duty. The Tribunal held that, according to the proviso to Section 11A(1) of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944, such a notice should be issued by the Collector of Central Excise, rendering the notice incompetent and without jurisdiction.

The Collector argued that since the notice was issued within six months from the relevant date, the proviso to Section 11A(ii) did not apply, as it only gets invoked when the extended period of limitation is used. The Karnataka High Court judgment in *Raletronics Ltd. v. Assistant Collector of Central Excise* supported this view, stating that notices issued within six months are valid even if they allege suppression of facts. The Tribunal, however, disagreed, emphasizing that the proviso to Section 11A(1) requires both substitutions (Collector for Central Excise Officer and five years for six months) to come into effect simultaneously when fraud, collusion, or wilful misstatement is involved.

Issue 2: Interpretation of Ingredients of Fraud, Collusion, Suppression, or Misstatement Under Section 11A(1)

The second issue was whether the ingredients of fraud, collusion, suppression, or misstatement in the proviso to Section 11A(1) are only for invoking the extended period of five years or also for deciding the jurisdiction to issue the show cause notice. The Tribunal clarified that the proviso covers situations where the short levy or non-levy of duty is due to fraud, collusion, wilful misstatement, etc. It explained that two situations are covered by Section 11A(1) and its proviso:
1. Short levy due to reasons other than fraud, collusion, wilful misstatement, suppression, or contravention of provisions with intent to evade duty.
2. Short levy due to fraud, collusion, wilful misstatement, suppression, or contravention of provisions with intent to evade duty.

The Tribunal emphasized that both substitutions (Collector for Central Excise Officer and five years for six months) are linked by the conjunction "and," meaning both must be applied together. It stated that the proviso is not split into separate periods but has a continuous five-year period. Therefore, any demand within five years, including within six months, falls under the proviso, requiring the Collector's involvement.

Conclusion:

The Tribunal concluded that the matter should be referred to the Patna High Court for advice due to the differing interpretations by the Karnataka High Court and the Tribunal. It approved the first question for reference to the High Court but rejected the second question, as the plain reading of the proviso indicated that both substitutions must be applied together. The Tribunal referred the following question to the Patna High Court:

"Whether a Superintendent of Central Excise is competent to issue a show cause notice for demand of duty within a period of six months from the relevant date, even if the non-levy or short-levy necessitating such notice is by reason of fraud, collusion, or any wilful misstatement of facts or contravention of the provisions with intent to evade payment of duty, or only the Collector of Central Excise can issue the notice in such cases, even if the same is issued within a period of six months from the relevant date."

The Registry was directed to send the order with necessary enclosures to the High Court.

 

 

 

 

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