Does a continuous manufacturing chain across separate job-work units using power at any stage negate exemption under Entry 106 of Notification No. 5/98-CE?

 

Summary

Category Data
Court Supreme Court of India
Case Number C.A. No. 3405-3407 of 2012
Diary Number 5839/2012
Judge Name HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE ATUL S. CHANDURKAR
Bench HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA; HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE ATUL S. CHANDURKAR
Precedent Value Binding on all subordinate courts
Overrules / Affirms Affirms
Type of Law Central Excise (Indirect Tax)
Questions of Law
  • Whether sequential processes across separate units constitute an integrated “manufacture” under Section 2(f)?
  • Whether use of power at any stage bars exemption under Entry 106 of Notification No. 5/98-CE?
Ratio Decidendi
  1. “Manufacture” under Section 2(f) includes any incidental or ancillary process integrally connected to the completion of the final product.
  2. Even if processes are carried out by distinct partnership units, if they form a continuous chain leading to the final product, they must be treated as a single “manufacture.”
  3. Any use of power at any stage of that integrated process—bleaching, mercerizing, squeezing, stentering, bailing or packing—negates the exemption under Entry 106.
  4. Independent identity of job‐work units or separate billing does not alter the integrated nature of the process.
  5. Retraction of earlier panchnama statements does not override documentary and machine‐inspection evidence of power usage.
  6. Established precedents (Standard Fireworks; Collector of Central Excise, Jaipur) govern interpretation of “process” and exemption notifications.
Judgments Relied Upon
  • Standard Fireworks Industries, Sivakasi & Anr. v. Collector of Central Excise, Madurai (1987) 1 SCC 600
  • CCE v. Rajasthan State Chemical Works (1991) INSC 235
  • Impression Prints v. CCE (2005) INSC 377
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon
  • Statutory definition of “manufacture” in Section 2(f) pre-2017 amendment
  • Interpretation of “process” as series of integrally connected operations (Collector of Central Excise, Jaipur)
  • Integral connection test: cumulative effect of processes necessary for final product
  • Exemption Notification Entry 106 construction: any use of power in the integrated chain disqualifies exemption
Facts as Summarised by the Court
  • Unit 1 (Bhagyalaxmi Processor Industry) and Unit 2 (Famous Textile Packers) processed grey cotton fabrics on a single compound.
  • Unit 1 performed bleaching and mercerizing; Unit 2 performed squeezing and stentering; Unit 1 then bailed and packed the dry fabrics.
  • Multiple electric motors and high electricity consumption were noted; power‐driven stentering admitted in panchnama.
  • Final cotton fabrics were cleared by Unit 1.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Binding On All subordinate courts
Persuasive For High Courts considering exemption notifications under the Central Excise Act
Follows
  • Standard Fireworks Industries, Collector of Central Excise, Jaipur
  • Impression Prints v. CCE
  • CCE v. Rajasthan State Chemical Works

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • Integrated multi-stage processes across separate job-work units must be clubbed to determine “manufacture” for exemption claims.
  • Any use of power in any stage of the integrated chain—however ancillary—voids the “without aid of power” exemption under Entry 106.
  • Distinct legal personalities or separate billing do not break the continuity of the manufacturing chain.
  • Retraction affidavits to panchnama statements cannot disregard contemporaneous machine‐inspection records of power use.
  • This decision is binding authority for quashing or defending exemption claims under indirect tax notifications.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  1. Statutory Definition: Section 2(f) pre-2017 defines “manufacture” to include any process incidental or ancillary to completion of a manufactured product.
  2. Nature of Process: Citing Collector of Central Excise, Jaipur, the Court held that “process” includes all integrally connected operations even if subordinately linked.
  3. Cumulative Chain Test: If distinct processes—bleaching, mercerizing, squeezing, stentering, bailing and packing—are essential steps for final conversion, they form one integrated manufacture.
  4. Exemption Construction: Entry 106 of Notification No. 5/98-CE grants exemption only if no process is carried on with power; any power use in the integrated chain disqualifies it.
  5. Application: Evidence of electric motors, high power consumption, and admitted power use in stentering establish disqualification. Independent identities of units irrelevant.
  6. Precedent Application: Reaffirmed Standard Fireworks and Impression Prints; applied the integral‐process test to uphold the Commissioner’s demand.

Arguments by the Parties

Appellant (Commissioner of Customs, Central Excise & Service Tax)

  • Panchnama and electricity records show power-driven bleaching, mercerizing, stentering and bailing.
  • All processes are integrally connected; conversion of grey to cotton fabrics is a single manufacture under Sec. 2(f).
  • Any power use in the chain defeats Entry 106 exemption.
  • Relied on Standard Fireworks and Impression Prints to support integral‐process interpretation.

Respondents (Units 1 & 2)

  • Distinct partnership concerns with separate ownership, machinery, billing and payments.
  • Unit 1 never used power during its job work; affidavits retract panchnama statements.
  • Independent processes should not be clubbed; benefit of exemption rightly granted by CESTAT.

Factual Background

Bhagyalaxmi Processor Industry (Unit 1) and Famous Textile Packers (Unit 2) operated on a shared compound. A search in January 2003 recorded electric motors on bleaching, mercerizing, squeezing and stentering machines. Unit 1 received grey fabrics, bleached and mercerized them, then sent wet goods to Unit 2 for squeezing and stentering. The dry fabrics returned to Unit 1 for bailing and packing before clearance. A show cause notice alleged power-assisted manufacture, duty demand and penalty under the Central Excise Act. CESTAT allowed the job-workers’ appeals; the Supreme Court restored the Commissioner’s order.

Statutory Analysis

  • Section 2(f), Central Excise Act, 1944: Defines “manufacture” to include incidental or ancillary processes integral to the final product.
  • Notification No. 5/98-CE, Entry 106: Exempts cotton fabrics “processed without the aid of power or steam.”
  • Interpretation: “Process” is construed broadly to cover all integrally connected operations; any use of power at any stage of the continuous chain negates the exemption.

Alert Indicators

  • ✔ Precedent Followed

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