Judgment:
with Civil Appeal No. 7453 of 2003
S.H. Kapadia, J.
1. A short question which arises for
determination in these civil appeals filed by the Department under
Section 130-E of the Customs Act, 1962 against the decision of Customs
Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate Tribunal ("the Tribunal") dated
4.7.2002 is: whether technical and installation fee amounting to Rs. 59
lacs was required to be loaded in the assessable value of a 20-Lane
Bowling Alley equipment imported in October, 1998 by the assessee-Galaxy
Entertainment (I) Pvt. Ltd.?
2. The assessee imported 20-Lane
Bowling Alley from M/s AMF Bowling Inc. based in USA for installation in
their premises situated at Phoenix Mills Compound, Lower Parel,
Mumbai-400013. On 18.5.1999, a show cause notice was issued in which it
was alleged that the assessee had grossly undervalued the said equipment
by declaring the price at US $ 15000 CIF as against the normal price of
US $ 30000 for a lane. According to the show cause notice, the assessee
had disguised part of the cost of the equipment as Technical and
Installation Fee which was payable to the subsidiary of the foreign
supplier, M/s AMF Bowling (I) Pvt. Ltd., amounting to Rs. 59 lacs
payable over a period of three years. According to the show cause
notice, prior to the importation of the above equipment, similar
equipment was imported into India during 1997-98 by nine different
assessees. According to the show cause notice, in those nine cases the
value of the equipment worked out to US $ 30000 per lane. Consequently,
according to the Department, the said equipment, in the present case,
stood undervalued, hence, liable to confiscation subject to payment of
redemption fund.
3. The demand was confirmed by the
Adjudicating Authority. It was held by the Adjudicating Authority that
the declared price at the rate of US $ 15199 per lane was highly
discounted price and there was no reason for granting discount of 45% to
the assessee. According to the Adjudicating Authority, the said
equipment was undervalued and it was further disguised under what is
called as technical and installation fees paid at the rate of Rs. 5.90
per game for one million customers of the assessee over a period of
three years. That agreement was dated 20.8.1998. The Adjudicating
Authority arrived at the figure of Rs. 59 lacs on the aforestated basis
and included the said amount in the assessable value of the equipment.
The Adjudicating Authority came to the conclusion that the cost was
artificially divided with the intention of evading payment of customs
duty. In the circumstances, the Adjudicating Authority held that the
transaction value under Rule 4(1) of the Customs Valuation
(Determination of Price of Imported Goods) Rules, 1988 ("Customs
Valuation Rules") cannot be taken and accordingly, the Adjudicating
Authority invoked Rule 5(1)(c) of the Customs Valuation Rules and called
upon the assessee to pay duty on the price calculated at the rate of US
$ 30000 x 20 + Rs.1.41 lacs per lane as Installation Charges, which M/s
Capital Leisure Pvt. Ltd. had paid, amounting to Rs. 28.33 lacs.
4. Aggrieved by the aforesaid
decision of the Adjudicating Authority, the matter was carried in appeal
by the assessee to the Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal came to the
conclusion that in the present case there was no undervaluation and,
therefore, there was no reason to deviate from the valuation under Rule
4(1). According to the Tribunal, the declared value of the equipments at
the rate of US $ 15199 per lane was the negotiated price. According to
the Tribunal, there was no suppression as the Technical and Installation
Agreement dated 20.8.1998 was post-clearance agreement. According to the
Tribunal, the facts of the present case stood clearly covered by the
judgment of this Court in the case of Basant Industries v. Additional
Collector of Customs, 1996 (81) E.L.T. 195. Consequently, the appeal
was allowed by the Tribunal. Hence, these civil appeals have been filed
by the Department.
5. We do not find any merit in these
civil appeals. In the present case, there were nine imports of the said
equipment during the year 1997-98. One such import was made by M/s
Capital Leisure Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi. In that matter, the cost came to
US $ 30000 per lane. This transaction has been taken by the Department
as the basis of valuation under Rule 5(1)(c). However, the import from
USA by M/s Capital Leisure Pvt. Ltd. was of 6-Lane Bowling Alley. We
have examined all the nine transactions. None of those transactions
exceeded 8-Lane Bowling Alley. In the present case, the assessee has
imported 20-Lane Bowling Alley. It is the largest in Asia. M/s AMF
Bowling Inc., USA, wanted to promote the game in India. The records
indicate hectic bargaining for 20-Lane Bowling Alley by the assessee. In
the circumstances, the Tribunal was right in coming to the conclusion
that the cost per lane at US $ 15000 was a proper negotiated price. In
the circumstances, in our view, the matter is fully covered by the
judgment of this Court in the case of Basant Industries (supra).
Further, there is no merit in the
contention advanced on behalf of the Department that the cost of the
equipment was deliberately bifurcated and that the Technical and
Installation Charges Agreement dated 20.8.1998 was a disguise to arrive
at the true value of the import. In this connection we find that, the
foreign supplier had its subsidiary in India; that subsidiary was M/s
AMF Bowling (I) Pvt. Ltd.. It is not the case of the Department that the
said subsidiary was a bogus company. As stated above, the equipment was
supplied by M/s AMF Bowling Inc., USA which wanted to promote the game
in India. As stated above, 20-Lane Bowling Alley was the biggest in
Asia.
The foreign supplier wanted the said
equipment to be installed properly. The said equipment was a synthetic
item. To install that item required specialized knowledge. That
expertise was available with M/s AMF Bowling (I) Pvt. Ltd. (subsidiary
of the foreign supplier). As a matter of promotion, the Technical and
Installation Charges Agreement dated 20.8.1998 stipulated raising of
revenue for next three years by charging a fee of Rs. 5.90 per game for
one million games bowled aggregating to Rs. 59 lacs. Therefore, that
agreement had no nexus with the sale proceeds of the equipment paid by
the assessee to M/s AMF Bowling Inc., USA. The post-clearance agreement
was revenue generation agreement. Rs. 59 lacs was not a quantified
amount. Rs. 59 lacs was calculated on the basis that one million games
were likely to be bowled in the next three years.
That risk was taken by M/s AMF
Bowling (I) Pvt. Ltd.. Even under Rules of Interpretation to the Customs
Valuation Rules, post-clearance agreements are excluded. Further, even
under the order of the Adjudicating Authority the validity or the
genuineness of the Agreement dated 20.8.1998 is not doubted. In fact, in
M/s Capital Leisure, the department has also taken into account the cost
of Technical and Installation services at Rs. 28.33 lacs which in the
present case is Rs. 59 lacs. As stated, in the case of M/s Capital
Leisure the transaction was concerning 6-Lanes Bowling Alley, whereas
here we have 20-Lanes.In the circumstances, we do not find any infirmity
in the impugned judgment of the Tribunal. One cannot compare the
impugned transaction with the transaction which M/s AMF Bowling Inc.,
USA had with M/s Capital Leisure Pvt. Ltd.. We find no merit in the
argument advanced on behalf of the Department that the Technical and
Installation charges was a disguise to cover the true cost of the
equipment. There is no evidence of any flow-back or extra-consideration
deflating the price and, therefore, there was no reason to include Rs.
59 lacs in the assessable value of the equipment. In our view, Rule 4(1)
of the Customs Valuation Rules was applicable and the Department had
erred in invoking Rule 5(1)(c) of the said Rules.
6. For the aforestated reasons, we
find no infirmity in the impugned judgment of the Tribunal dated
4.7.2002. Accordingly the civil appeals are dismissed with no order as
to costs.
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