COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS BOMBAY Vs. J K SYNTHETICS LIMITED
LAWS(SC)-1996-9-39
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Decided on September 24,1996

COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, BOMBAY Appellant
VERSUS
J K Synthetics Limited Respondents

JUDGEMENT

- (1.) It is not in dispute that the judgment of this court in Thermax (P) Ltd. v. Collector of Customs' applies to the facts of this case. This court considered the terms of a letter of the central Board of Excise and Customs and agreed "with the observation of the Board that the benefit of exemption or concession should be granted wherever the intended use of the material can be established by the importer or by other evidence".
(2.) Had the judgment concluded here the learned counsel would have had no difficulty in staling that the appeal had to be dismissed because there was evidence on record that showed the intended use of the material by the respondents so that the respondents were entitled to the benefit of the exemption. The learned counsel for the Revenue, however, drew our attention to the following paragraph of the judgment, which reads thus: "This conclusion however does not entitle the assessee to the concession claimed in both these appeals. Its entitlement will depend on whether the purchaser is the holder of an L-6 licence (or C. T. 2 certificate) or not. The tribunal has pointed out that the goods were supplied by the assessee to Indian Rayon Corporation and M/s Nirlon Synthetics Fibre and Chemicals Ltd. , of which the latter was holder of 225 an L-6 licence. The position in regard to the former is not known. The grant of concession in respect of the former by the Collector (Appeals) in the first appeal is, therefore, correct and is upheld. So far as the other appeal is concerned, the assessee produced no material to show that the 'beneficiary' factory was eligible for the concession under Rule 192. The benefit of such concession to the assessee must therefore be held to have been rightly denied in that appeal. "
(3.) We do not read this paragraph (paragraph 13 as laying down a principle. The principle is laid down in the preceding paragraph, quoted above. In paragraph 13 the court was considering the material on the record and its observations in regard to eligibility for the concession under Rule 192 were limited to the case before it.;


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