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appeal under Section 35G of the Central Excise Act

ritu bhadana ,
  23 April 2009       Share Bookmark

Court :
punjab and haryana high court
Brief :
Section 35G shows that appeal is competent before High Court from every order passed in appeal by Appellate Tribunal. No appeal would be competent against an order which answers the question referred to Full Members Tribunal, especially, when appeals are yet to be decided by Division Benches of Tribunal. Appeal of the Revenue rejected.
Citation :
2009 (235) ELT 0226 (P & H)
IN THE HIGH COURT OF PUNJAB & HARYANA AT CHANDIGARH

M.M. Kumar and H.S. Bhalla, JJ.

Commissioner of Central Excise, Ludhiana

Versus

Mohan Bottling Co. Ltd.

Central Excise Appeal No. 69 of 2007, decided on 22-1-2009

[Order per : M.M. Kumar, J.]. -

The instant appeal filed under Section 35G of the Central Excise Act, 1944 (for brevity, "The Act') is directed against the order dated 28-8-2006. The Full Members Tribunal has answered two questions of law and has further observed that the appeal would/be placed before the concerned Division Benches of the Tribunal for the decision on merits in the light of the answer given to the questions of law.


2. Mr. A.S. Chandhiok, learned Senior Counsel has raised a preliminary objection that under Section 35G of the Act appeals are maintainable only against the orders emerging from the appeal decided by the Tribunal. He has emphasised the use of expression appeal in Section 35G(1) of the Act which reads as under:

"35G. Appeal to High Court. - (1) An appeal shall lie to the High Court from every order passed in appeal by the Appellate Tribunal on or after the 1st day of July, 2003 (not being an order relating, among other things, to the determination of any question having a relation to the rate of duty of excise or to the value of goods for the purposes of assessment), if the High Court is satisfied that the case involves a substantial question of law.

xxx xxx xxx xxx


3. A perusal of the aforesaid section shows that the appeal is competent before the High Court from every order passed in appeal by the Appellate Tribunal. It is, thus, evident that no appeal would be competent against an order which answers the question referred to the Full Members Tribunal, especially, when the appeals are yet to be decided by the Division Benches of the Tribunal. We sustain the objection and dismiss the appeal on that ground.


 
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Published in Corporate Law
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