More Judgements

2026-VIL-1239-CESTAT-DEL-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Classification of QFT tubes and benefit of exemption notification - Individual components cannot claim exemption available to complete products; functional inter-dependence not a criterion for tariff classification when entry refers to complete unit - Respondent imported QFT tubes (blood collection tubes containing peptide antigens used for tuberculosis testing) and classified them under Custom Tariff Heading 3002 9020 claiming 5% concessional basic customs duty under Serial No. 166(A) of Notification 50/2017-Customs dated 30.06.2017 - Customs authorities reclassified the goods under CTH 3822 1990 (other diagnost... [Read more]

Customs - Classification of QFT tubes and benefit of exemption notification - Individual components cannot claim exemption available to complete products; functional inter-dependence not a criterion for tariff classification when entry refers to complete unit - Respondent imported QFT tubes (blood collection tubes containing peptide antigens used for tuberculosis testing) and classified them under Custom Tariff Heading 3002 9020 claiming 5% concessional basic customs duty under Serial No. 166(A) of Notification 50/2017-Customs dated 30.06.2017 - Customs authorities reclassified the goods under CTH 3822 1990 (other diagnostic reagents) with 10% BCD. Respondent later accepted the CTH 3822 1990 classification but contended that despite this classification, QFT tubes qualify for the 5% concessional BCD as integral components of ELISA kits citing functional interdependence between the tubes and ELISA plates - Whether QFT tubes, being components of ELISA kits, are eligible for the 5% concessional basic customs duty available for ELISA kits under Serial No. 166(A) of Notification 50/2017-Customs, or whether the exemption benefit is restricted to complete ELISA kits only and individual components cannot claim exemption meant for complete products – HELD – The exemption notifications must be strictly construed and when there is ambiguity, benefit goes to revenue not to assessee. Benefits cannot be extended beyond literal scope. The statute has extended exemption to ELISA kits as complete units. The imported goods are admittedly not the kit but a component thereof. Had legislature intended to extend benefit to individual components, it would have been specifically mentioned in the notification. QFT tubes are glass tubes meant for blood collection and being coated with antigens customizing them for use in ELISA kits does not render them ELISA kits. Functional interdependence of components does not fulfill criteria of strict interpretation of fiscal statutes. The established position is that individual components cannot claim exemption meant for complete products or systems - The end use or functional interdependence is not a criterion for determining classification unless the tariff entry explicitly refers to used or adaptation. The taxable event occurs when goods are imported and what matters is the condition of goods at time of import. The Commissioner (Appeals) wrongly extended exemption benefit of ELISA kit to QFT tubes by basing the decision on functional interdependence rather than on the literal wording of the notification - The order-in-appeal allowing respondent the benefit of 5% concessional BCD under Notification 50/2017 is set aside. QFT tubes do not qualify for the 5% concessional basic customs duty and should be classified under CTH 3822 1990 with 10% basic customs duty - The appeals filed by the department are allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-63-SC  | Supreme Court VAT

Karnataka Sales Tax Act, 1957 - Interpretation of Exemption Entry, Scope of an exemption granted to “sugar” - Appellant had imported sugar during a period when the statutory entry in the Fifth Schedule to the KST Act exempted sugar without specifying its origin. The respondent argued that because the entry referred to the Additional Duties of Excise, it was confined to domestic sugar - Whether imported sugar was covered by the exemption entry relating to sugar in the Fifth schedule to the Act prior to the 2001 amendment – HELD - The exemption entry must be construed on the strength of its own language and cannot be c... [Read more]

Karnataka Sales Tax Act, 1957 - Interpretation of Exemption Entry, Scope of an exemption granted to “sugar” - Appellant had imported sugar during a period when the statutory entry in the Fifth Schedule to the KST Act exempted sugar without specifying its origin. The respondent argued that because the entry referred to the Additional Duties of Excise, it was confined to domestic sugar - Whether imported sugar was covered by the exemption entry relating to sugar in the Fifth schedule to the Act prior to the 2001 amendment – HELD - The exemption entry must be construed on the strength of its own language and cannot be curtailed by adding words which the legislature did not employ. The reference to the Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance) Act, 1957 was for the limited purpose of identifying the commodity and did not incorporate a territorial limitation. If the exemption was intended to be confined to domestic sugar, the Legislature could have said so, and the subsequent 2001 amendment eventually did so - To accept the State’s argument would be to read into the pre-2001 entry words which were not there. It would amount to saying that “sugar” meant “sugar produced or manufactured in India” even before the Legislature inserted those very words. Such an approach would offend the settled rule of strict construction in taxing statutes - Prior to the Karnataka Act No. 5 of 2001, the imported sugar was covered by the exemption entry – The issue decided in favour of the appellant - Constitutional Validity of Retrospective Fiscal Legislation - The State legislature enacted an amendment inserting the words produced or manufactured in India after sugar in the exemption entry with a retrospective deeming clause. The single judge of the high court struck down the retrospective operation as unreasonable, but the division bench upheld it - Whether Karnataka Act No. 5 of 2001, inserting the words “produced or manufactured in India” with retrospective effect, is within the legislative competence of the State and constitutionally valid – HELD - The amendment is not merely clarificatory. Once it is held that imported sugar was covered by the exemption before 2001, the amendment cannot be characterized as a mere explanation of an existing legal position. It altered the legal position. It withdrew the exemption from imported sugar retrospectively. However, this conclusion does not by itself invalidate the amendment - The State Legislature, at the relevant time, had legislative competence under Entry 54 of List II to levy tax on sale or purchase of goods. The power to levy tax includes the power to grant exemption. The power to grant exemption includes the power to withdraw or restrict exemption - Retrospective fiscal legislation is not unconstitutional merely because it operates retrospectively, provided it stays within the legislative field. The amendment used clear language indicating a manifest intention to give retrospective effect and is within legislative competence and constitutionally valid - Issue decided in favour of the respondent - Enforcement of Retrospective Levy Regarding Penalty and Interest - After the retrospective withdrawal of the exemption for imported sugar, the respondent initiated reassessment proceedings to recover tax, penalty, and interest for past periods when the appellant had not collected tax from purchasers based on the earlier exemption regime - Whether the retrospective operation of the amendment can be enforced without qualification regarding penalty and interest against dealers who had acted under the earlier exemption regime – HELD - While the principal tax liability is valid, the imposition of penalty presupposes culpability or default, which is absent when the dealer acted in accordance with the statute and judicial understanding at the time. Similarly, interest should not be treated mechanically as it becomes punitive when the liability itself is created retrospectively and the dealer could not have collected tax at the time of sale the reassessment proceedings may continue for determination of principal tax liability in accordance with law. However, no penalty shall be imposed or recovered for the pre-amendment period. Interest, if otherwise leviable under the statute, shall run only from the date of lawful demand raised pursuant to reassessment after giving effect to this judgment and not from the date of the original transaction or the original assessment period – The issue decided partly in favour of the appellant - Computation of Central Sales Tax - Whether the reassessment in respect of inter-State sales must comply with the CST Act, 1956 notwithstanding the State amendment – HELD - The validity of the retrospective amendment under the State Sales Tax Act does not dispense with compliance with the CST Act. If tax is to be levied on inter-state sales, the assessing authority must apply the rate and conditions prescribed by the central sales tax act as applicable for the relevant period. The assessing authority shall recompute the liability in respect of inter-State sales strictly in accordance with the CST Act. [Read less]

2026-VIL-1233-CESTAT-KOL-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - Cross-utilization of Education Cess and SHE Cess Credit against Excise Duty - The appellant transferred accumulated Education Cess and Secondary and Higher Education Cess credit from its Cenvat Account towards payment of Excise Duty in May 2015, after the cesses were withdrawn and subsumed into Excise Duty and Service Tax effective from March 1, 2015 for excisable goods and June 1, 2015 for taxable services - Department raised a demand for Excise Duty contending that there was no provision to transfer the accumulated EC and SHE cess to the Cenvat account and utilize the same towards payment of Excise Duty ... [Read more]

Central Excise - Cross-utilization of Education Cess and SHE Cess Credit against Excise Duty - The appellant transferred accumulated Education Cess and Secondary and Higher Education Cess credit from its Cenvat Account towards payment of Excise Duty in May 2015, after the cesses were withdrawn and subsumed into Excise Duty and Service Tax effective from March 1, 2015 for excisable goods and June 1, 2015 for taxable services - Department raised a demand for Excise Duty contending that there was no provision to transfer the accumulated EC and SHE cess to the Cenvat account and utilize the same towards payment of Excise Duty - Whether accumulated Education Cess and SHE Cess credit under the Cenvat Credit Rules 2004 can be transferred to the Cenvat account and utilized towards payment of Excise Duty after these cesses were withdrawn and incorporated into the Excise Duty and Service Tax - HELD - The Delhi High Court in Cellular Operators Association of India held that under the Cenvat Credit Rules 2004, credit of EC and SHE was admissible and could be utilized only for payment of EC and SHE respectively, and that cross-utilization of EC and SHE towards excise duty or Service Tax was impermissible. Even though the cesses were withdrawn and subsumed into Excise Duty and Service Tax, this did not change the statutory restriction on cross-utilization - The confirmed demand is upheld. However, since the appellant was carrying much more balance than the amount in question when it utilized the ED and SHE cess, no interest was required to be paid on the confirmed demand. The issue as to whether ED and SHE cess could be transferred to the Cenvat account and utilized therefrom was being actively litigated and had reached the High Court and Larger Bench level at the time of the appellant's action. Hence, no penalty is called for under such circumstances where the question was subject to judicial determination. The penalty imposed is set aside – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1238-CESTAT-CHE-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Duty liability on destruction of duty-free inputs in export oriented units - Appellant, a 100% EOU engaged in pharmaceutical manufacturing, procured raw materials duty-free under Notification No. 52/2003-Customs and Notification No. 22/2003-Central Excise. Certain raw materials became obsolete and unusable and were destroyed within the factory after due intimation to departmental authorities. Revenue initiated proceedings claiming that the notifications prior to 2015 amendments did not permit destruction without payment of duty and that the Foreign Trade Policy could not override statutory provisions - Whether du... [Read more]

Customs - Duty liability on destruction of duty-free inputs in export oriented units - Appellant, a 100% EOU engaged in pharmaceutical manufacturing, procured raw materials duty-free under Notification No. 52/2003-Customs and Notification No. 22/2003-Central Excise. Certain raw materials became obsolete and unusable and were destroyed within the factory after due intimation to departmental authorities. Revenue initiated proceedings claiming that the notifications prior to 2015 amendments did not permit destruction without payment of duty and that the Foreign Trade Policy could not override statutory provisions - Whether duty is payable on raw materials procured duty-free and subsequently destroyed within the factory under intimation to departmental officials – HELD - The EOU scheme is a composite statutory scheme wherein the Foreign Trade Policy provides the substantive framework and exemption notifications provide the implementation mechanism. These must be read harmoniously, not in isolation. Paragraph 6.15 of the FTP expressly permits destruction of raw materials within the unit after due intimation. Destruction of unusable inputs is a recognized commercial reality expressly permitted under the FTP. In the absence of any allegation of diversion or misuse, and where the appellant complied with all procedural requirements and intimated the department prior to destruction, insisting on duty payment results in artificial liability not contemplated by the scheme. The decisions in Indian Tobacco Association, Mehler Engineered Products, Tyco Electronics and Saint Gobain Crystals support that destruction of obsolete materials under the FTP framework does not attract duty. Conversely, Revenue's reliance on Sandoz, Teva API and Bell Match Company is distinguishable as those cases involved non-compliance with mandatory conditions or violation of notification conditions, whereas here there was admitted compliance – The destruction of raw materials within the factory under due intimation does not attract duty liability. The appellant is not liable to pay Customs or Central Excise duties on duty-free inputs destroyed under intimation as such destruction is in accordance with the Foreign Trade Policy and the EOU scheme - Retrospective application of amendments clarifying destruction of inputs in export oriented units - Prior to 2015, the exemption notifications contained no explicit provision permitting destruction of goods without payment of duty. Vide Notification No. 30/2015-Central Excise and Notification No. 34/2015-Customs dated 25.05.2015, an express provision was inserted permitting destruction of raw materials, consumables, spares and other goods within the unit after intimation to customs authorities - Whether the amendments made in 2015 permitting destruction of inputs are clarificatory and retrospective or only prospective in nature – HELD - A comparative reading of pre-amended and amended notifications shows that while pre-amended notifications were silent, Paragraph 6.15 of the FTP already permitted destruction of raw materials prior to 2015. The amendments merely bring the notifications into line with the policy that already existed. The amendments do not introduce new conditions but merely align the notifications with existing FTP provisions - Accordingly, the amendments introduced vide Notification No. 30/2015-CE and Notification No. 34/2015-Cus are held to be clarificatory and retrospective in nature - Non-sustainability of duty, interest and penalty demands in EOU destruction cases involving bona fide compliance with policy framework - Revenue demanded Customs duty, Central Excise duty, interest and penalties for destruction of duty-free inputs within the factory. The appellant had acted transparently, intimated the department prior to destruction, and followed the policy framework - Whether the demands of duty, interest and penalties are sustainable in law – HELD - Given the findings that destruction of raw materials does not attract duty liability and the amendments permitting such destruction are clarificatory and retrospective, the demand of duty itself is unsustainable. Consequently, the demand for interest also fails. Regarding penalties, established judicial precedents prohibit imposing penalties in cases involving bona fide interpretation of law and absence of mens rea. The record clearly shows the appellant acted transparently, intimated the Department prior to destruction, followed the policy framework, and there is no evidence of suppression, wilful misstatement or intent to evade duty. Revenue has not produced material to rebut this position. Applying settled principles on penalty imposition, the penalties imposed are unsustainable. [Read less]

2026-VIL-1231-CESTAT-DEL-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Refundable Advances for Construction Services - The Respondent, engaged in providing construction services, received advances from customers described as security deposits for finding suitable property. Department raised a service tax demand treating these advances as taxable consideration for construction services rendered - Whether service tax is payable on refundable advances received for providing construction services – HELD - The evidence clearly established that the advances were received as refundable security deposits for the service of finding suitable property for customers, and in the event of n... [Read more]

Service Tax - Refundable Advances for Construction Services - The Respondent, engaged in providing construction services, received advances from customers described as security deposits for finding suitable property. Department raised a service tax demand treating these advances as taxable consideration for construction services rendered - Whether service tax is payable on refundable advances received for providing construction services – HELD - The evidence clearly established that the advances were received as refundable security deposits for the service of finding suitable property for customers, and in the event of non-fulfillment thereof, the amounts were refunded back to the clients. No taxable service was rendered in respect of these advances. The amount received as refundable advance does not constitute taxable consideration. The contention that advances were reflected as current liabilities instead of short/long-term borrowings had no merit as such classification does not affect the nature of the payment - The challenge to the benefit of cum-tax value extended to the appellant is also not sustainable in view of the provisions of Section 67(2) of the Act which specifically provides that where tax is not separately recovered, the gross amount shall be treated as inclusive of tax. It is not the case of the Revenue that separate recovery of tax has been made by the appellant - The demand on advances was rightly dropped by the Commissioner. Answered in favour of assessee – The Revenue appeal is dismissed - Service Tax on Real Estate Agent Services relating to Meerut Development Authority Flats - Whether service tax is payable on the sale of immovable property where the seller had acquired ownership of the property through purchase – HELD - The purchase agreement and the allotment letter shows that the flats were originally allotted to another entity and were subsequently purchased by the assessee. Having acquired the flats and become the owner, the subsequent sale was merely a transaction of sale and purchase of its own immovable property and not a service. Such transaction does not fall within the ambit of service tax - The demand on real estate agent services relating to Meerut Development Authority flats was rightly dropped - Validity of Completion Certificate - Department contended that the certificate relied upon by the assessee was merely an occupancy certificate and not a completion certificate, and that statutory provisions take cognizance only of completion certificates - Whether the benefit of completion certificate can be denied on the ground that occupancy certificate was initially produced instead of completion certificate – HELD - The completion certificate issued by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi was rejected by the investigating officer merely on the ground of not producing the original. The assessee subsequently produced the original certificate which was verified and returned. The benefit cannot be denied to the assessee on the basis of such procedural non-compliance when the original certificate was later produced and verified. [Read less]

2026-VIL-1237-CESTAT-DEL-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Demand of Service Tax on Meeting Fees paid to Whole-time Directors under Reverse Charge Mechanism – Appellant incurred expenses on meeting fees paid to whole-time directors. The revenue raised a service tax demand under Reverse Charge Mechanism contending that meeting fees constituted taxable service and the lower authorities confirmed the demand - Whether service tax is payable on meeting fees paid to whole-time directors under RCM – HELD – It is settled jurisprudence that a whole-time director is essentially an employee of the company under the provisions of the Companies Act and is recognized as key ... [Read more]

Service Tax - Demand of Service Tax on Meeting Fees paid to Whole-time Directors under Reverse Charge Mechanism – Appellant incurred expenses on meeting fees paid to whole-time directors. The revenue raised a service tax demand under Reverse Charge Mechanism contending that meeting fees constituted taxable service and the lower authorities confirmed the demand - Whether service tax is payable on meeting fees paid to whole-time directors under RCM – HELD – It is settled jurisprudence that a whole-time director is essentially an employee of the company under the provisions of the Companies Act and is recognized as key managerial personnel. Whatever remuneration is paid to a whole-time director in conformity with the Companies Act is pursuant to an employer-employee relationship - The levy of service tax on such payment falls within the exclusion clause of the definition of Service under Section 65B(44)(b) of the Finance Act, 1994, which excludes provision of service by an employee to the employer in the course of or in relation to his employment – Further, the CBEC Circular dated 01.12.2008 clarifying that so long as the activities performed are duties within the framework of the terms of employment, the amount paid by an employer to an employee would not be subject to service tax - No service tax is leviable on the Meeting Fees paid to Whole-time Directors and therefore, the impugned order is unsustainable and set aside - The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-674-UTR  | High Court SGST

GST – Revocation of GST registration, Violation of principles of natural justice - Whether an order of rejection can be validly passed when the Show Cause Notice and the rejection order bear the same date, thereby denying the petitioner any reasonable opportunity to respond to the notice – HELD - When a Show Cause Notice and the order of rejection of application for revocation bear the same date, it violates the principles of natural justice and procedural fairness. Although there was some contest to the medical certificate submitted by the petitioner, the glaring procedural defect that the Show Cause Notice was stated... [Read more]

GST – Revocation of GST registration, Violation of principles of natural justice - Whether an order of rejection can be validly passed when the Show Cause Notice and the rejection order bear the same date, thereby denying the petitioner any reasonable opportunity to respond to the notice – HELD - When a Show Cause Notice and the order of rejection of application for revocation bear the same date, it violates the principles of natural justice and procedural fairness. Although there was some contest to the medical certificate submitted by the petitioner, the glaring procedural defect that the Show Cause Notice was stated to have been issued on the same date on which the order of rejection was passed makes the order invalid - No reasonable opportunity was afforded to the petitioner to submit his response to the Show Cause Notice before passing the rejection order - The order of rejection is set aside. The petitioner is granted liberty to submit his response to the Show Cause Notice and the Department is directed to pass a fresh order taking into consideration the reply - The writ petition is disposed of [Read less]

2026-VIL-1222-CESTAT-HYD-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service tax - Manpower recruitment or supply agency service - Contract for washing and servicing activities - Appellant entered into a contract for undertaking washing activities, stacking bottles in godowns, cleaning of washing areas, bottling areas, blending areas and godown servicing using the appellant's own manpower - Revenue alleged that the services rendered amounted to supply of Manpower service - Whether the provision of labour-intensive services using contractor's own personnel constitutes manpower recruitment or supply agency service within the taxable definition – HELD - The contract basically relates to prov... [Read more]

Service tax - Manpower recruitment or supply agency service - Contract for washing and servicing activities - Appellant entered into a contract for undertaking washing activities, stacking bottles in godowns, cleaning of washing areas, bottling areas, blending areas and godown servicing using the appellant's own manpower - Revenue alleged that the services rendered amounted to supply of Manpower service - Whether the provision of labour-intensive services using contractor's own personnel constitutes manpower recruitment or supply agency service within the taxable definition – HELD - The contract basically relates to provision of specific work activities namely washing, cleaning and servicing using the contractor's own manpower, and contains no obligation on the appellant to supply manpower to the service recipient - The contract explicitly prescribes performance of quality work activities rather than supply of personnel - The issue being no longer res-integra in light of consistent decisions rendered by the Tribunal in similar matters concerning the same service recipient; accordingly, the appeal is allowed and the impugned order is set aside [Read less]

2026-VIL-1226-CESTAT-HYD-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - CENVAT credit on Countervailing duty paid at concessional rate - Eligibility based on nature of duty not rate of levy - Appellant imported steam coal and sought to avail CENVAT credit on CVD paid at concessional rates of one percent and two percent under Notification No. 12/2012-Cus dated 17.03.2012 - Revenue denied the credit contending that Central Excise Notification No. 1/2011 exempts central excise duty on steam coal and therefore the additional duty of customs equivalent to such excise duty should not be allowed as credit - Whether CVD paid at concessional rates of one percent or two percent qualifie... [Read more]

Central Excise - CENVAT credit on Countervailing duty paid at concessional rate - Eligibility based on nature of duty not rate of levy - Appellant imported steam coal and sought to avail CENVAT credit on CVD paid at concessional rates of one percent and two percent under Notification No. 12/2012-Cus dated 17.03.2012 - Revenue denied the credit contending that Central Excise Notification No. 1/2011 exempts central excise duty on steam coal and therefore the additional duty of customs equivalent to such excise duty should not be allowed as credit - Whether CVD paid at concessional rates of one percent or two percent qualifies as additional duty of customs equivalent to duty of excise eligible for CENVAT credit, or whether such credit can be denied on the ground of payment at concessional rate rather than tariff rate – HELD - When more than one Notification is available, the importer is free to choose any notification and no particular notification can be pressed upon the importer. The expression equivalent to duty of excise in Rule 3(1)(vii) of CENVAT Credit Rules refers to the measure or yardstick of levy and not to the quantum or rate at which duty is paid - The countervailing duty paid under Notification No. 12/2012-Cus remains a duty under Section 3 of Customs Tariff Act and is eligible for credit irrespective of the concessional rate at which it is paid; the Rule does not impose any condition that such duty must be paid at the tariff rate or must strictly correspond to the rate of excise duty, reading such condition into the Rule would amount to importing words into the statute which is impermissible – Further, denial of credit on the basis of concessional rate would defeat the very purpose of the CENVAT scheme which is designed to avoid cascading of taxes and ensure seamless flow of credit; circulars and administrative instructions cannot override statutory provisions - The extended period cannot be invoked when the dispute relates to pure interpretation of statute and credit is claimed under bona fide belief of entitlement; accordingly, the demand for disallowance of CENVAT credit and associated penalties are set aside, though a discretionary penalty of approximately ten percent of the credit availed is imposed to meet the interest of justice – The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-670-UTR-CE  | High Court CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - Mandatory Pre-deposit for Appeal - Cumulative Compliance of pre-deposit requirement – Rejection of appeal before the Commissioner (Appeals) on the ground that the Appellant had not complied with the mandatory pre-deposit requirement. Subsequently, when the Appellant filed a further appeal before the Tribunal, the Tribunal dismissed it on the ground that the Appellant had failed to deposit the required percentage at the First appellate stage, and therefore the appeal was not maintainable. The Appellant contended that it had deposited a portion of the required amount at the first appellate stage and deposi... [Read more]

Central Excise - Mandatory Pre-deposit for Appeal - Cumulative Compliance of pre-deposit requirement – Rejection of appeal before the Commissioner (Appeals) on the ground that the Appellant had not complied with the mandatory pre-deposit requirement. Subsequently, when the Appellant filed a further appeal before the Tribunal, the Tribunal dismissed it on the ground that the Appellant had failed to deposit the required percentage at the First appellate stage, and therefore the appeal was not maintainable. The Appellant contended that it had deposited a portion of the required amount at the first appellate stage and deposited the remaining amount before the Tribunal, thereby fully satisfying the statutory pre-deposit requirement - Whether the pre-deposit made at the First appellate stage should be taken into account while reckoning compliance with the mandatory pre-deposit requirement for appeal before the Tribunal under Section 35F of the Central Excise Act, 1944 – HELD - The mandatory pre-deposit requirement for a second appeal before the Tribunal is inclusive of the deposit already made at the First Appellate stage and that the Appellant is not required to deposit a fresh amount in addition to the earlier deposit - Since the Tribunal and the Commissioner (Appeals) had dismissed the appeal on technical grounds without considering the merits, both orders are set aside. Accordingly, the impugned orders of the Tribunal and the Commissioner (Appeals) are set aside and the matter is remitted back to the Commissioner (Appeals) for deciding the appeal on its merits - The appeal stands disposed of [Read less]

2026-VIL-1234-CESTAT-ALH-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax – Refund of service tax paid erroneously on supplying RMC and cement slurry - Applicability of Doctrine of Unjust Enrichment when Service Tax is Initially Collected and Subsequently Refunded through Credit Notes - Whether the doctrine of unjust enrichment applies to prevent refund of service tax when the assessee has initially charged the tax from the customer and subsequently issued credit notes reversing the charge – HELD - The supply of RMC is a pure sale contract and does not involve any provision of service and accordingly the appellant was not liable to pay service tax. Since service tax was not payab... [Read more]

Service Tax – Refund of service tax paid erroneously on supplying RMC and cement slurry - Applicability of Doctrine of Unjust Enrichment when Service Tax is Initially Collected and Subsequently Refunded through Credit Notes - Whether the doctrine of unjust enrichment applies to prevent refund of service tax when the assessee has initially charged the tax from the customer and subsequently issued credit notes reversing the charge – HELD - The supply of RMC is a pure sale contract and does not involve any provision of service and accordingly the appellant was not liable to pay service tax. Since service tax was not payable, the amount paid was an erroneous payment and refund thereof is admissible – The Supreme Court in CCE Vs. Addison & Co. Ltd. held that when the assessee returns the excess duty amount to its buyers evidenced by credit notes and a Chartered Accountant's certificate, it is presumed that the incidence of duty has been borne by the assessee and such incidence has not been passed on, thereby rebutting the presumption of unjust enrichment. When the appellant returned the duty recovered from customers back to the customers by way of credit notes immediately after filing the refund claim, the presumption is rebutted. The appellant had subsequently transferred the amount by RTGS to the customer with supporting certificates from the customer and Chartered Accountant confirming receipt and payment - The presumption of unjust enrichment is rebutted and the appellant is held eligible for refund of the erroneously collected service tax – The appeals are allowed - Interest on refund of erroneously collected Service Tax, Applicability of Limitation Period under Section 11B – The appellant filed a refund claim for interest paid on the erroneously collected service tax, which was rejected on the ground that the refund was barred by limitation under Section 11B of the Central Excise Act - Whether the limitation period under Section 11B applies to refund of interest paid on erroneously collected amounts that do not constitute lawfully payable duty, and whether interest is refundable when the principal amount is determined to be erroneously collected – HELD - When an amount is collected by the Revenue without authority of law, it must be refunded with interest. The tribunal held that any amount paid under mistaken notion of law remains only a deposit and not duty, and provisions of Section 11B are not attracted to such deposits. The interest is a corollary to such erroneous payment and should be treated as a deposit like the principal amount, and the Revenue cannot retain such deposits unlawfully - Since amounts paid erroneously do not acquire the character of duty, the provisions of Section 11B which refer only to refund of duty are not applicable, and therefore the limitation of one year does not apply – The refund of interest paid on the erroneously collected service tax is allowed without any limitation period applying. [Read less]

2026-VIL-1232-CESTAT-ALH-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Exemption from Service Tax for Intermediate Production Process Job Work in Liquor Manufacture under Entry 30(c) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST - Appellant undertook job work activities for liquor manufacturers including repacking of old bottles, repackaging of glass bottles, barcode sticking, and cleaning of bottles and claimed exemption from service tax under Serial No. 30(c) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST - Department denied the exemption contending that the activities did not constitute an intermediate production process and were not essential to the manufacturing process, and hence were liable to service ... [Read more]

Service Tax - Exemption from Service Tax for Intermediate Production Process Job Work in Liquor Manufacture under Entry 30(c) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST - Appellant undertook job work activities for liquor manufacturers including repacking of old bottles, repackaging of glass bottles, barcode sticking, and cleaning of bottles and claimed exemption from service tax under Serial No. 30(c) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST - Department denied the exemption contending that the activities did not constitute an intermediate production process and were not essential to the manufacturing process, and hence were liable to service tax - Whether the activities undertaken by the appellant constitute an intermediate production process carried out as job work in relation to the manufacture of liquor and qualify for exemption under Entry 30(c) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST – HELD - Each activity undertaken by the appellant facilitated or completed a particular stage in the production, finishing and marketability of the final product. The activities undertaken formed part of the process resulting in manufacture or finishing of liquor and constituted an intermediate production process carried out as job work in relation to liquor manufacture on which appropriate State Excise Duty is payable by the principal manufacturer – Further, as per the CBEC Circular F.No.249/1/2006-CX-4 dated 27-10-2008, the manufacturing process includes any process incidental or ancillary to the completion of a manufactured product and that packaging and bottling of liquor come within the ambit of manufacture as defined under Section 2(f) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 - The job work undertaken by the appellant is an intermediate production process essential for completion of the manufacturing process of alcoholic liquor and the appellant is entitled to the benefit of exemption under Serial No. 30(c) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST - The demand of service tax is set aside and the interest and penalties imposed were also set aside. However, late fees and interest for delay in filing returns for certain periods were confirmed – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-672-P&H  | High Court SGST

GST - Requirement of Reasoned Order – Rejection of the Petitioner's written explanation to the Show Cause Notice without adequate and specific reasons. The authority had merely stated that the explanation was not satisfactory without addressing the particular issues raised therein – HELD - An adjudicating authority, while exercising quasi-judicial functions, must deal with the specific issues urged before it and cannot simply state that an explanation is not satisfactory. Merely making a blanket statement regarding unsatisfactory explanation would not serve the purpose of valid adjudication and that reasons form the so... [Read more]

GST - Requirement of Reasoned Order – Rejection of the Petitioner's written explanation to the Show Cause Notice without adequate and specific reasons. The authority had merely stated that the explanation was not satisfactory without addressing the particular issues raised therein – HELD - An adjudicating authority, while exercising quasi-judicial functions, must deal with the specific issues urged before it and cannot simply state that an explanation is not satisfactory. Merely making a blanket statement regarding unsatisfactory explanation would not serve the purpose of valid adjudication and that reasons form the soul of an order. An order lacking adequate reasoning and failing to address the specific contentions raised by the Petitioner suffers from an inherent defect rendering it invalid - The impugned order was set aside, and the matter was remitted to the adjudicating authority for fresh consideration on merits in accordance with law - The writ petition is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-673-CAL  | High Court SGST

GST – Cancellation of registration for non-filing of returns - Petitioners expressed their willingness to continue with business operations and agreed to comply with the provisions of the Act and to pay the outstanding tax, interest, penalty and fine as may be applicable – HELD - While the Department is empowered to cancel registration for non-filing of returns, suspension or revocation of registration in cases where there is no allegation of fraudulent or dubious practices would be counterproductive and work against the interest of revenue. When registration is suspended or revoked, the registered person cannot carry ... [Read more]

GST – Cancellation of registration for non-filing of returns - Petitioners expressed their willingness to continue with business operations and agreed to comply with the provisions of the Act and to pay the outstanding tax, interest, penalty and fine as may be applicable – HELD - While the Department is empowered to cancel registration for non-filing of returns, suspension or revocation of registration in cases where there is no allegation of fraudulent or dubious practices would be counterproductive and work against the interest of revenue. When registration is suspended or revoked, the registered person cannot carry on business, cannot raise invoices, and consequently cannot make payments or file valid declarations, which ultimately impacts recovery of tax and the revenue's interest. The petitioner's willingness to comply with statutory obligations and file overdue returns provides a basis for a pragmatic approach - The Department should permit the petitioner to continue business operations while ensuring compliance with statutory obligations rather than impose a blanket cancellation that defeats revenue interests - The order of cancellation is set aside subject to the condition that petitioner files returns for the entire period of default and pays the requisite amount of tax, interest, penalty and fine as may be applicable. If the petitioner complies with these directions within the stipulated period, the registration shall be restored by the jurisdictional officer - The writ petition is disposed of [Read less]

2026-VIL-1228-CESTAT-HYD-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Refund of Customs duty - Lapse of limitation period under Section 27 of Customs Act – Import of capital goods and spares – Pursuant to audit conducted by the CAG that additional duty of customs was not required to be paid, Appellant filed a refund application more than three years after the payment of duty - Whether the Appellant is eligible for refund of customs duty paid when the refund application is filed after lapse of more than three years, beyond the one-year period stipulated under Section 27 of the Customs Act, 1962 – HELD - The refund application was filed after expiry of the stipulated period of ... [Read more]

Customs - Refund of Customs duty - Lapse of limitation period under Section 27 of Customs Act – Import of capital goods and spares – Pursuant to audit conducted by the CAG that additional duty of customs was not required to be paid, Appellant filed a refund application more than three years after the payment of duty - Whether the Appellant is eligible for refund of customs duty paid when the refund application is filed after lapse of more than three years, beyond the one-year period stipulated under Section 27 of the Customs Act, 1962 – HELD - The refund application was filed after expiry of the stipulated period of one year from the date of payment of duty in terms of Section 27 of the Customs Act, 1962; no formal refund claim was filed with all the required annexures - The Larger Bench of the Tribunal in the case of ONGC has held that all refund claims except that of unconstitutional levy must be filed and adjudicated under the provisions of the Central Excise and Salt Act or the Customs Act, as the case may be. The provisions of Section 11B of the Central Excise Act, 1944 and Section 27 of the Customs Act, 1962 do constitute law within the meaning of Article 265 of the Constitution of India and to be refunded as prescribed under the statutory provisions; these acts provide a complete mechanism for correcting any errors whether of fact or law – The appeal is devoid of merit and the appeal is dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-38-GSTAT-CTT  | Tribunal SGST

GST - Section 107(6) and Section 112(8) of the CGST Act, 2017 – Modification of Original Tax demand by the First Appellate Authority, Quantum of pre-deposit required to be made for admission of appeal before GSTAT - Petitioner had already made pre-deposit during the first appellate stage based on a significantly higher original demand, which was subsequently scaled down by the First Appellate Authority - Whether the Petitioner is required to make a fresh pre-deposit when the amount already deposited at the first stage exceeds the requirement for the revised demand - HELD – The ld. First Appellate Authority has reduced ... [Read more]

GST - Section 107(6) and Section 112(8) of the CGST Act, 2017 – Modification of Original Tax demand by the First Appellate Authority, Quantum of pre-deposit required to be made for admission of appeal before GSTAT - Petitioner had already made pre-deposit during the first appellate stage based on a significantly higher original demand, which was subsequently scaled down by the First Appellate Authority - Whether the Petitioner is required to make a fresh pre-deposit when the amount already deposited at the first stage exceeds the requirement for the revised demand - HELD – The ld. First Appellate Authority has reduced the original demand of tax and now the original demand of tax stands to the extent ordered by the ld. First Appellate Authority. The appellants have already made a pre-deposit of ten per cent of the original disputed tax during first appeal while preferring appeal before the First Appellate Authority, this amount now also covers the pre-deposit required for filing the present appeal before the Appellate Tribunal - The issue of pre-deposit decided by the Hon’ble Jharkhand High Court in the case of M/s Ashirwad Food Industries squarely applies to the present case of pre-deposit contested by the Appellant. Accordingly, no further pre-deposit is required to be made under the Section 112 of the Act - Upon proof of payment of the required statutory Court fees and verification of pre-deposit made during the first appeal by the appellant, the Registry shall place the matter before the Bench for Orders regarding admission of the appeal – Ordered accordingly [Read less]

2026-VIL-688-MP  | High Court SGST

GST - Validity of Service of Notices through GST Portal - Show-cause notices for non-filing of returns and subsequently for cancellation of GST registration were uploaded on the GST portal - Petitioner did not file any response to these notices nor did it seek revival of the cancelled registration or file statutory appeal within the prescribed time limit. Petitioner approached the High Court by writ petition contending that mere uploading of notices on the portal does not constitute valid service of notice and that notices should have been served physically - Whether service of SCNs through uploading on the GST portal cons... [Read more]

GST - Validity of Service of Notices through GST Portal - Show-cause notices for non-filing of returns and subsequently for cancellation of GST registration were uploaded on the GST portal - Petitioner did not file any response to these notices nor did it seek revival of the cancelled registration or file statutory appeal within the prescribed time limit. Petitioner approached the High Court by writ petition contending that mere uploading of notices on the portal does not constitute valid service of notice and that notices should have been served physically - Whether service of SCNs through uploading on the GST portal constitutes valid and sufficient service of notice under the GST Act – HELD – The service of notice by uploading on the GST portal is a valid mode of service of notice as provided under the GST Act. Although the Madras High Court had identified issues with the portal architecture where notifications were placed under different tabs making it difficult for taxpayers to notice them, the portal has since been redesigned to address these concerns - Once the show-cause notices have been duly served through a valid mode, they cannot be challenged on the ground of insufficiency of service, particularly when the assessee fails to demonstrate reasonable diligence. A writ petition under Article 226 cannot be invoked by a person who was not vigilant about his rights and who failed to avail of alternative statutory remedies available under the GST Act and Rules, including the right to revive cancelled registration under the statute and the right to file statutory appeal within prescribed time - The strict limitation period for filing statutory appeals and the mandatory pre-deposit requirement cannot be bypassed by invoking writ jurisdiction, especially when the petitioner's delay in approaching the court is due to its own negligence - The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-689-MAD  | High Court SGST

GST - Reimbursement of tax on account of change in tax regime – Petitioners were awarded contracts for construction work when the tax regime was governed by the VAT Act and Finance Act - During the execution of the contract, the GST enactments were implemented; Petitioners sought reimbursement of the increased tax component based on the General Conditions of Contract and Government Orders, which Respondent rejected - Whether the Petitioners are entitled to reimbursement of the additional tax burden arising from the change in the tax regime during the subsistence of the contract – HELD - As per the relevant clause of th... [Read more]

GST - Reimbursement of tax on account of change in tax regime – Petitioners were awarded contracts for construction work when the tax regime was governed by the VAT Act and Finance Act - During the execution of the contract, the GST enactments were implemented; Petitioners sought reimbursement of the increased tax component based on the General Conditions of Contract and Government Orders, which Respondent rejected - Whether the Petitioners are entitled to reimbursement of the additional tax burden arising from the change in the tax regime during the subsistence of the contract – HELD - As per the relevant clause of the General Conditions of Contract, the project manager shall adjust the contract price if taxes, duties, and other levies are changed between the date 28 days before the submission of bids and the date of the last completion certificate. The change in the tax regime from the VAT to GST law entitles the Petitioners to reimbursement in terms of the principle akin to Section 64A of the Sale of Goods Act. The relevant Government Order also states that the entire tax of the supply will have to be finally borne by the purchaser; since the tax regime changed post-award, the amount of tax due to the change has to be reimbursed as it was not reflected in the contract price. Accordingly, Respondent is directed to refund the tax component - Refund of retention amounts and impact of audit objections - Petitioners completed the works under the respective contracts and sought the return of the retention amounts; Respondent rejected the request for refund on the ground that retention amounts could not be released due to pending audit objections related to the work packages - Whether the pendency of audit objections is a valid ground for Respondent to withhold the refund of retention amounts – HELD - The retention amounts are to be refunded back unless there are reasons for appropriating the same on account of the works executed by the Petitioners under the contract; merely because audit objections were raised by the Audit General would not be a ground for not processing the amount claimed by the Petitioners for refund of the retention amounts. The existence of audit objections does not justify the withholding of amounts due for work already executed; accordingly, Respondent is directed to refund the retention amounts with interest at commercial rate. [Read less]

2026-VIL-675-GUJ  | High Court SGST

GST – Limitation period for filing of appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal for stay on Recovery proceedings, Claim for refund of recovered tax - Failure to file appeal within statutory timeline and non-compliance with procedural requirements of Circular No. 224/18/2024 - Respondents passed an Order-in-Appeal and recovered tax from petitioner pursuant to the appellate order. Petitioner filed an appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal beyond the statutory timeline for filing appeal before the GSTAT under Section 112 of CGST Act, 2017 read with the Ninth Removal of Difficulties Order, 2019 dated 03.12.2019. The notific... [Read more]

GST – Limitation period for filing of appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal for stay on Recovery proceedings, Claim for refund of recovered tax - Failure to file appeal within statutory timeline and non-compliance with procedural requirements of Circular No. 224/18/2024 - Respondents passed an Order-in-Appeal and recovered tax from petitioner pursuant to the appellate order. Petitioner filed an appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal beyond the statutory timeline for filing appeal before the GSTAT under Section 112 of CGST Act, 2017 read with the Ninth Removal of Difficulties Order, 2019 dated 03.12.2019. The notification dated 17.09.2025 conferred power on the Appellate Tribunal to examine appellate orders and extended the deadline to 31.07.2026, but the original deadline was 01.04.2026 - Whether a taxpayer who failed to file an appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal within the prescribed 3-month timeline under Section 112 of CGST Act, but filed it after 7 months, is entitled to refund of tax already recovered, notwithstanding the existence of a procedure under Circular No. 224/18/2024 that could have stayed recovery if complied with in time – HELD - The Circular No. 224/18/2024 prescribes a clear procedure whereby taxpayers intending to file appeal before the Appellate Tribunal within the 3-month timeline can prevent or stay recovery by filing an undertaking to appeal and paying an amount equal to pre-deposit. The petitioner failed to observe this prescribed procedure. Ignorance of law is not an excuse. The petitioner was obliged to file the appeal within the statutory 3-month period to avail of the stay provision, which was not done. The appeal was filed after 7 months, well beyond the prescribed timeline - The tax was already recovered after the appellate order and before the appeal was filed. Issuing a refund would tantamount to waiver of pre-deposit, which is impermissible under the statutory and regulatory framework. The judgments cited by the petitioner from other High Courts do not come to the rescue because those courts have not dealt with the requirements of Circular No. 224/18/2024. The statutory framework under Section 112 of CGST Act and the procedural guidelines under the Circular are mandatory and must be complied with to obtain relief from recover - The petitioner's claim for refund of the recovered tax is dismissed. The petitioner's remedy lies before the GST Appellate Tribunal where all issues may be examined on merits, but no interim relief for refund is granted on the basis of the present petition – The petition is rejected [Read less]

High Court Judgement  | High Court SGST

Since the petitioner has discharged the tax liability, albeit under the wrong head, it cannot be penalised by being directed to first pay the taxes and then seek refund. Dept is directed to appropriate the IGST amount towards CGST and SGST liability.

2026-VIL-671-RAJ  | High Court SGST

GST - Condonation of Delay in Filing Appeal Against Cancellation of Registration – The appeal against the cancellation order was filed beyond the statutory period with a delay of 167 days. The Appellate Authority dismissed the appeal on limitation grounds, holding it had no power to condone the delay - Petitioner challenged this dismissal, contending that the delay was occasioned by circumstances beyond its control, having initially decided to discontinue business and thereafter being compelled to pursue the appeal following a subsequent GST drive during which notices were issued to purchasers for reversal of Input Tax C... [Read more]

GST - Condonation of Delay in Filing Appeal Against Cancellation of Registration – The appeal against the cancellation order was filed beyond the statutory period with a delay of 167 days. The Appellate Authority dismissed the appeal on limitation grounds, holding it had no power to condone the delay - Petitioner challenged this dismissal, contending that the delay was occasioned by circumstances beyond its control, having initially decided to discontinue business and thereafter being compelled to pursue the appeal following a subsequent GST drive during which notices were issued to purchasers for reversal of Input Tax Credit – HELD - While the Appellate Authority is bound by statutory limitations under Section 107, constitutional courts exercising plenary powers under Article 226 of the Constitution may in appropriate cases condone delay to prevent complete denial of remedy. The GST Act is not merely a statute for revenue collection but a comprehensive fiscal reform intended to consolidate indirect taxes and facilitate trade and commerce. Cancellation of GST registration results in loss of livelihood and economic paralysis, and denial of opportunity to an assessee undermines the inclusive and facilitative objective of the GST regime, thereby violating constitutional guarantees relating to livelihood and equality - An interpretation which renders appellate remedies illusory on hyper technical grounds would defeat the very purpose of the enactment. Accordingly, the impugned order dismissing the appeal is set aside, the delay is condoned, and the Appellate Authority was directed to entertain the appeal and adjudicate it on merits – The petition is disposed of [Read less]

2026-VIL-1224-CESTAT-MUM-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service tax - Export of service - Refund of unutilized CENVAT credit on investment advisory services provided to overseas entity - Appellant provided investment advisory services including identifying investment opportunities, analyzing financial and economic intelligence, monitoring portfolio companies and providing advisory services to an overseas entity located outside India - Appellant availed CENVAT credit on input services and sought refund of unutilized credit under Rule 5 of CENVAT Credit Rules 2004 and Notification No. 5/2006; original authority sanctioned the refund but Commissioner (Appeals) rejected the refund ... [Read more]

Service tax - Export of service - Refund of unutilized CENVAT credit on investment advisory services provided to overseas entity - Appellant provided investment advisory services including identifying investment opportunities, analyzing financial and economic intelligence, monitoring portfolio companies and providing advisory services to an overseas entity located outside India - Appellant availed CENVAT credit on input services and sought refund of unutilized credit under Rule 5 of CENVAT Credit Rules 2004 and Notification No. 5/2006; original authority sanctioned the refund but Commissioner (Appeals) rejected the refund claim, holding that services were provided in relation to Indian investment opportunities and their effective use and enjoyment was possible only in India - Whether investment advisory services provided to an overseas service recipient constitutes export of service – HELD - The services provided to an overseas entity on principal-to-principal basis, invoiced in foreign currency with no agreement for provision of services to Indian customers of the overseas entity, constitute export of service within the meaning of Rule 3(1)(iii) of Export of Service Rules 2005. The fact that analysis and research relates to Indian investment opportunities does not change the character of export when the service recipient is located outside India and has paid consideration in convertible foreign exchange. The location of the service recipient and the mode of payment of service charges are determinative of the export character of service rather than the subject matter of the service or the location of service delivery - The consistent Tribunal decisions establish that investment advisory services provided to overseas entities qualify as export of service – The appellant is entitled for refund of accumulated CENVAT credit. The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1236-CESTAT-MUM-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - CENVAT Credit Eligibility on Sales Promotion Services - The appellant, engaged in the manufacture of engines and parts, availed CENVAT Credit on service tax paid by authorized dealers for sales promotion activities of the appellant's goods. The Department denied the credit contending that such services did not fall within the definition of input service under Rule 2(l) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether services provided by dealers for sales promotion activities of goods manufactured by the appellant qualify as input services under Rule 2(l) of the CCR, 2004 – HELD – In terms of contract betwee... [Read more]

Central Excise - CENVAT Credit Eligibility on Sales Promotion Services - The appellant, engaged in the manufacture of engines and parts, availed CENVAT Credit on service tax paid by authorized dealers for sales promotion activities of the appellant's goods. The Department denied the credit contending that such services did not fall within the definition of input service under Rule 2(l) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether services provided by dealers for sales promotion activities of goods manufactured by the appellant qualify as input services under Rule 2(l) of the CCR, 2004 – HELD – In terms of contract between the appellant and the dealers, the dealers were specifically engaged for promoting the sale of goods manufactured by the appellant. Since the phrase sales promotion is specifically found in the inclusive part of the definition of input service as per Rule 2(l) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, the services provided by the dealers towards sales promotion of the appellant's goods appropriately fall under the purview of sales promotion – The denial CENVAT Credit of service tax paid for sales promotion activities is not justified. The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-687-AP  | High Court SGST

GST - Withdrawal of Best Assessment Order - Respondent passed an assessment order under Section 62 of the CGST Act, 2017. The petitioner subsequently filed the required statement and return by paying the entire tax liability along with applicable interest and late fees - Whether an assessment order passed under Section 62 of the CGST Act can be deemed to have been withdrawn when the taxpayer files the statutory returns after the prescribed time limit but within the subsequently extended time limit, while paying the entire tax, interest and late fees – HELD - The assessment orders shall be deemed to have been withdrawn on... [Read more]

GST - Withdrawal of Best Assessment Order - Respondent passed an assessment order under Section 62 of the CGST Act, 2017. The petitioner subsequently filed the required statement and return by paying the entire tax liability along with applicable interest and late fees - Whether an assessment order passed under Section 62 of the CGST Act can be deemed to have been withdrawn when the taxpayer files the statutory returns after the prescribed time limit but within the subsequently extended time limit, while paying the entire tax, interest and late fees – HELD - The assessment orders shall be deemed to have been withdrawn once returns are filed within the prescribed time or beyond the prescribed time along with payment of late fees. When a taxpayer substantively complies with statutory requirements by filing the returns and discharging all tax dues including interest and late fees, the assessment order becomes inoperative and stands withdrawn. The fact that the petitioner paid not only the tax but also interest and late fees demonstrates sufficient compliance with the statutory requirements - The impugned assessment order is declared to be deemed withdrawn, and the respondent is directed that no steps for recovery of tax and dues can be initiated or continued – The writ petition is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1227-CESTAT-KOL-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Burden of proof regarding smuggled nature of exotic wildlife not notified under Section 123 of the Customs Act, Absolute confiscation under Section 111 of the Customs Act - Appellant was apprehended for possession of exotic birds and mammals seized from a domestic air cargo terminal and residential premises; Department alleged they were smuggled items of foreign origin, while Appellant claimed they were procured through domestic suppliers within the country - Whether the onus lies on the Revenue or the Appellant to prove the smuggled nature of exotic birds and mammals which are not notified under Section 123 of t... [Read more]

Customs - Burden of proof regarding smuggled nature of exotic wildlife not notified under Section 123 of the Customs Act, Absolute confiscation under Section 111 of the Customs Act - Appellant was apprehended for possession of exotic birds and mammals seized from a domestic air cargo terminal and residential premises; Department alleged they were smuggled items of foreign origin, while Appellant claimed they were procured through domestic suppliers within the country - Whether the onus lies on the Revenue or the Appellant to prove the smuggled nature of exotic birds and mammals which are not notified under Section 123 of the Customs Act – HELD - The exotic birds and mammals are not notified items within the meaning of Section 123 of the Customs Act; therefore, the onus lies on the Revenue to prove that the exotic birds and mammals in question are of foreign origin and that the Appellant has smuggled the same into the country through illicit means; the Appellant has discharged their onus regarding procurement of the exotic birds and mammals through licit means within the domestic area; the burden is cast on the Revenue to prove by means of tangible and corroborative evidence that the said exotic birds and mammals have been procured through illegal or illicit means in violation of the relevant Act or Rules, which the Revenue has failed to prove; accordingly, the burden of proof is held to lie on the Revenue - As the exotic birds and mammals in question are not notified under Section 123 of the Customs Act, the burden lies on the Revenue to prove that the Appellant has procured the same through illicit means and are smuggled in nature; the Revenue failed to establish the allegation of smuggling with any cogent evidence; internal trade within the country of exotic species is not found in any schedule of the Wildlife Protection Act and was never prohibited; mere acquisition, purchase or possession of exotic birds and mammals does not violate provisions under the Customs Act; it is only at the entry point, at the time of import, that any consignment of exotic birds and mammals intercepted upon establishing violation of the statutory provisions would be liable for confiscation; the Revenue failed to prove their case through tangible and corroborative evidence; accordingly, the confiscation of the exotic birds and mammals is set aside – The appeals are disposed of - Sustainability of penalties under Section 112 of the Customs Act - Whether penalties can be sustained when the Revenue fails to prove the illicit importation of the goods – HELD - As the Revenue has failed to prove their case regarding the smuggled nature of the goods, no penalty can be imposed on the Appellant in the facts and circumstances of the case; the Tribunal found no infirmity in the setting aside of the penalty imposed on the Respondent as the Revenue could not establish the illegal procurement or smuggling of the exotic birds and mammals; accordingly, the penalty imposed on the Appellant is set aside and the setting aside of the penalty on the Respondent is upheld - Liability of a vehicle for confiscation under Section 115 of the Customs Act - Vehicle was seized and ordered for confiscation on the belief it was used for the carriage of smuggled exotic birds and mammals from a domestic air cargo terminal - Whether the vehicle is liable for confiscation when the goods carried are not proved to be smuggled – HELD - The vehicle in question is not liable for confiscation because the Revenue failed to prove their case regarding the illicit nature of the goods transported; the Tribunal directed the release of the vehicle without the imposition of any redemption fine thereon; accordingly, the confiscation of the vehicle is set aside and the vehicle is directed to be released. [Read less]

2026-VIL-1221-CESTAT-KOL-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - Determination of Date of export - Appellant exported goods vide Are-1 with Bill of lading on the same date and filed the Export General Manifest within one month thereof, but the Customs Preventive Officer delayed certification of the export details by approximately nine months, resulting in certification occurring beyond the six-month period from the date of factory clearance - Revenue issued show cause notice and demand excise duty payment on such exported consignment - Whether the actual date of export as evidenced by contemporaneous documents or the delayed date of certification by the Customs Preventi... [Read more]

Central Excise - Determination of Date of export - Appellant exported goods vide Are-1 with Bill of lading on the same date and filed the Export General Manifest within one month thereof, but the Customs Preventive Officer delayed certification of the export details by approximately nine months, resulting in certification occurring beyond the six-month period from the date of factory clearance - Revenue issued show cause notice and demand excise duty payment on such exported consignment - Whether the actual date of export as evidenced by contemporaneous documents or the delayed date of certification by the Customs Preventive Officer determines excise duty liability – HELD - The date of issuance of the Let Export Order, being coincident with the date of factory clearance, constitutes the date of export and the Export General Manifest filed within one month thereafter provides documentary evidence that the goods were exported within the statutory period prescribed - The delayed certification by the Customs Preventive Officer does not alter the factual position regarding the actual date of export and cannot form the basis for imposing a duty demand where contemporaneous documentary evidence establishes compliance with the statutory requirements – The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1219-CESTAT-MUM-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - Valuation of Prototype Vehicles – Applicability of Rule 8 versus Rule 4 of Central Excise Valuation Rules – The appellant, engaged in manufacture of prototype commercial vehicles, removed goods to its other manufacturing unit for testing and computed Central Excise duty liability under Rule 4 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000 -Department contended that the value should be determined under Rule 8 at 110% of the cost of production. The original order dropped the Department's proposals, but the Commissioner (Appeals-I) allowed the Revenue's appeal and set aside the original order – Whether Rul... [Read more]

Central Excise - Valuation of Prototype Vehicles – Applicability of Rule 8 versus Rule 4 of Central Excise Valuation Rules – The appellant, engaged in manufacture of prototype commercial vehicles, removed goods to its other manufacturing unit for testing and computed Central Excise duty liability under Rule 4 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000 -Department contended that the value should be determined under Rule 8 at 110% of the cost of production. The original order dropped the Department's proposals, but the Commissioner (Appeals-I) allowed the Revenue's appeal and set aside the original order – Whether Rule 8 or Rule 4 of Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000 applies to the valuation of prototype vehicles removed for testing purposes – HELD – The Rule 8 is not applicable as the primary condition for its invocation is consumption of goods in manufacture of another article. Prototype vehicles subject to testing under Rule 126 of the Central Motor Vehicle Rules, 1989, cannot be said to be consumed in further manufacture, as commercially manufactured similar vehicles are copies of prototypes. The value of comparable goods under Rule 4 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000, therefore applies. The issue being identical to an issue already decided by the Co-ordinate Bench in an earlier case, the matter was no more res integra and different interpretation could not be placed – The impugned order is set aside and the appeals are allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1223-CESTAT-CHD-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Construction of multi-level parking for local authority – Demand of service tax on construction of a multi-level parking built for Municipal Corporation to provide parking facilities to the public – Revenue case that the activity was commercial in nature and not covered by Notification No. 25/2012 whereas Respondent contended the construction was for public benefit and fell within the exemption provisions for services provided to local authorities for construction of original works meant for use other than commerce, industry or business - Whether construction of a multi-level parking for a local authority... [Read more]

Service Tax - Construction of multi-level parking for local authority – Demand of service tax on construction of a multi-level parking built for Municipal Corporation to provide parking facilities to the public – Revenue case that the activity was commercial in nature and not covered by Notification No. 25/2012 whereas Respondent contended the construction was for public benefit and fell within the exemption provisions for services provided to local authorities for construction of original works meant for use other than commerce, industry or business - Whether construction of a multi-level parking for a local authority for providing public parking facilities constitutes a taxable service or qualifies for exemption under the notification – HELD - The construction of a multi-level parking by a local authority for providing parking facilities to the public at large is not a commercial activity and therefore not subject to service tax. Providing public parking facilities is one of the main objectives of a Municipal Corporation and constitutes a welfare measure for public convenience aimed at public benefit rather than profit generation. Even though nominal fee may be collected from users, such collection does not convert the activity into a commercial undertaking as providing public amenity cannot be for generating profit – The services provided to a local authority for construction of original works meant predominantly for use other than for commerce, industry or business are expressly exempted under para 12A of Notification No. 25/2012 - The issue is well-settled by consistent Tribunal decisions in similar cases involving construction of multi-level parking for development authorities - The impugned order of Commissioner (Appeals) is upheld and the Revenue's appeals are dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1225-CESTAT-CHD-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Exemption to railway projects - Liability of project management consultant acting as agent - Appellant was engaged as project management consultant and power of attorney holder for a public sector undertaking to supervise construction of a railway siding by executing agencies - Department issued a show cause notice contending that services relating to railway infrastructure provided by contractor to the public sector undertaking, with Appellant acting as intermediary, constitute taxable services and Appellant is liable to service tax - Whether a project management consultant acting as power of attorney holder... [Read more]

Service Tax - Exemption to railway projects - Liability of project management consultant acting as agent - Appellant was engaged as project management consultant and power of attorney holder for a public sector undertaking to supervise construction of a railway siding by executing agencies - Department issued a show cause notice contending that services relating to railway infrastructure provided by contractor to the public sector undertaking, with Appellant acting as intermediary, constitute taxable services and Appellant is liable to service tax - Whether a project management consultant acting as power of attorney holder on behalf of a disclosed principal for railway construction activities is liable to service tax – HELD - Service tax is not leviable on railway projects and the exemption from tax is available to railways irrespective of whether the railway is for public or private purpose. There is no distinction between railway for private purpose and railway for public service in the Finance Act, 1994, and any such distinction cannot be artificially contrived to suit tax administration. The term ‘railways’ in Notification No. 25/2012 is to be understood according to common parlance as there is no definition provided in the Finance Act or Notification, and definitions from other statutes such as the Railways Act, 1989 cannot be imported. The use of public includes use by PSUs and corporations and not merely individuals. Accordingly, the impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1220-CESTAT-MUM-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - Applicability of Rule 6 of Central Excise Valuation Rules to Related-Party Transactions – Receipt of Lump Sum Compensation – The appellant received a lump sum compensation from its related subsidiary company for development of market and business transfer purposes. The Department contended that such compensation should be treated as additional consideration on which Central Excise duty was payable under Rule 6 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000, and confirmed a demand of excise duty - Whether Rule 6 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000 applies to lump sum compensation received in a rela... [Read more]

Central Excise - Applicability of Rule 6 of Central Excise Valuation Rules to Related-Party Transactions – Receipt of Lump Sum Compensation – The appellant received a lump sum compensation from its related subsidiary company for development of market and business transfer purposes. The Department contended that such compensation should be treated as additional consideration on which Central Excise duty was payable under Rule 6 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000, and confirmed a demand of excise duty - Whether Rule 6 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000 applies to lump sum compensation received in a related-party transaction under Section 4(1)(b) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, when no specific goods are identified as being attributable to such compensation – HELD – The Rule 6 Valuation Rules, 2000, by its express terms, applies only to cases governed under Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, and therefore cannot be applied to related-party transactions which fall under Section 4(1)(b). Additionally, since excise duty is a duty levied on the manufacture of excisable goods, and the Department had failed to identify the specific goods against which the lump sum compensation was made, the valuation rules cannot apply. A one-time lump sum payment cannot be attributed to any particular goods for purposes of determining transaction value – The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

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