Service Tax on upfront water supply infrastructure charges collected from lessees of industrial plots – Appellant collects a one-time upfront charge equal to fifty percent of the capital cost of water supply infrastructure from each lessee, with the appellant bearing the remaining fifty percent - Whether the fifty percent upfront capital cost collected towards water supply infrastructure constitutes a taxable service under the service tax provisions or qualifies as an exempt upfront amount under Section 104 of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The fifty percent capital cost for water supply is an upfront fee received for ... [Read more]
Service Tax on upfront water supply infrastructure charges collected from lessees of industrial plots – Appellant collects a one-time upfront charge equal to fifty percent of the capital cost of water supply infrastructure from each lessee, with the appellant bearing the remaining fifty percent - Whether the fifty percent upfront capital cost collected towards water supply infrastructure constitutes a taxable service under the service tax provisions or qualifies as an exempt upfront amount under Section 104 of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The fifty percent capital cost for water supply is an upfront fee received for setting up water supply infrastructure and qualifies as an exempt amount under Section 104 of the Finance Act, 1994. The statute exempts one-time upfront amounts by whatever name called in respect of taxable services provided by a State Government Industrial Development Corporation or Undertaking to industrial units by way of grant of long-term lease of thirty years or more for industrial plots during the period from first June 2007 to twenty-first September 2016 - Unlike the annual water charges paid on the basis of consumption, the capital cost is a one-time amount collected separately and forms part of the lease deed for a period of ninety-nine years. Since the department itself had decided the identical issue on merits in favour of the appellant for earlier periods by dropping the service tax demand on the same fifty percent capital cost under Section 104, and such decision was not challenged in appeal, it binds the department and precludes it from taking a different stand in subsequent proceedings for the dispute period - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax on Ocean Freight Mark-up – Appellant collects ocean freight charges from customers at a mark-up over the actual freight paid to shipping lines - Service tax demand on differential amount, contending it constitutes taxable service under steamer agent services - Whether the mark-up on ocean freight collected by an agent from customers is liable to service tax – HELD - The mark-up on ocean freight is not liable to service tax as it represents profit on transportation and not consideration for any taxable service activity. Supreme Court in Baroda Electric Meters established that excise duty is a tax on the manu... [Read more]
Service Tax on Ocean Freight Mark-up – Appellant collects ocean freight charges from customers at a mark-up over the actual freight paid to shipping lines - Service tax demand on differential amount, contending it constitutes taxable service under steamer agent services - Whether the mark-up on ocean freight collected by an agent from customers is liable to service tax – HELD - The mark-up on ocean freight is not liable to service tax as it represents profit on transportation and not consideration for any taxable service activity. Supreme Court in Baroda Electric Meters established that excise duty is a tax on the manufacturer and not on profits made by a dealer on transportation, and therefore when freight actually paid is less than the amount collected, the differential cannot be included in the assessable value as it constitutes profit unrelated to the core steamer agent service. This principle applies equally to service tax under the Finance Act – Further, the Tribunal's earlier order in the appellant's own case for the preceding period had already decided this issue in the appellant's favour. Consequently, the impugned order demanding service tax on the mark-up is unsustainable and is set aside – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Secondment of employee, Reimbursable Salary Expenses - Service tax liability on technical services provided under secondment agreement and segregation of reimbursable salary components - Appellant company entered into a secondment agreement with its foreign holding company for supply of qualified technical personnel. The holding company deployed personnel who continued as regular employees on the parent company's payroll - Whether the entire amount paid under a secondment agreement for technical services is liable to service tax, or whether the reimbursable salary component of employee costs can be excluded f... [Read more]
Service Tax - Secondment of employee, Reimbursable Salary Expenses - Service tax liability on technical services provided under secondment agreement and segregation of reimbursable salary components - Appellant company entered into a secondment agreement with its foreign holding company for supply of qualified technical personnel. The holding company deployed personnel who continued as regular employees on the parent company's payroll - Whether the entire amount paid under a secondment agreement for technical services is liable to service tax, or whether the reimbursable salary component of employee costs can be excluded from service tax liability – HELD - While service tax is payable on the technical assistance and services received from the foreign holding company as a commercial transaction governed by the RCM, the component comprising reimbursable salary expenses paid to employees is not liable to service tax - The secondment agreement does constitute a taxable service involving technical assistance and commercial exchange of benefits between the parties. However, the salary reimbursement portion, being a direct employee cost passed through without any service element, falls outside the taxable service. Since the entire payment was transparently documented through the agreement placed on record, there is no evidence of suppression of facts warranting an extended period of limitation; therefore, the demand is restricted to the normal assessment period - The demand is upheld only to the extent of service tax on the technical services component, excluding the reimbursable salary amount, for the normal period of limitation – The appeal is partly allowedrnrnService tax liability on management services received from their associate company – HELD - The services were clearly received from an associate company, not from an employee, and constitute taxable management services under the RCM. There is no dispute regarding the payment being made for services actually rendered by the associate company, which brings the transaction squarely within the scope of service tax. The demand for service tax on management services is confirmed and upheld.rnrnService Tax on Cost Sharing Arrangement - Allocation of Common Expenses - Whether amounts paid under a cost sharing arrangement for allocation of common expenses constitute taxable services liable to service tax – HELD - The amount in question is liable to service tax as the payments constitute services received rather than a mere cost sharing arrangement. The amount was admittedly paid for services rendered by the associate company and therefore cannot be exempted from service tax by merely characterizing it as a cost sharing arrangement. [Read less]
Customs - Duty exemption on re-imported goods under Notification No. 158/95-Customs and Notification No. 94/96-Customs - Compliance with conditions and availment of alternative notifications - Exporter of frozen buffalo meat claiming duty drawback. Subsequently, a small fraction of the exported goods were re-imported due to commercial exigencies. At the time of re-import, the importer claimed duty exemption under Notification No. 158/95-Customs and paid back the drawback benefit claimed at the time of initial export along with interest upon re-importation - Whether the conditions of Notification No. 158/95-Customs dated 14... [Read more]
Customs - Duty exemption on re-imported goods under Notification No. 158/95-Customs and Notification No. 94/96-Customs - Compliance with conditions and availment of alternative notifications - Exporter of frozen buffalo meat claiming duty drawback. Subsequently, a small fraction of the exported goods were re-imported due to commercial exigencies. At the time of re-import, the importer claimed duty exemption under Notification No. 158/95-Customs and paid back the drawback benefit claimed at the time of initial export along with interest upon re-importation - Whether the conditions of Notification No. 158/95-Customs dated 14.11.1995 for re-importation of goods have been duly complied with by the appellant, and whether the importer is entitled to claim duty exemption benefit under the said notification or alternatively under Notification No. 94/96-Customs, notwithstanding that the benefit was not initially claimed in the B/E – HELD - The documentary evidence clearly demonstrates that the appellant has adequately provided the linkage between the goods initially exported and those re-imported for carrying out the processes envisaged under the notification. The entire cycle of initial export, re-importation of goods and subsequent export was properly documented and the bonds executed by the appellant were cancelled by the Department - It is a settled position of law that once a bond is cancelled, no demand can be raised alleging violation of conditions of such bond execution. The repayment of duty drawback benefits along with interest upon re-importation has been permitted and duly certified by the authorities. The requirement of Notification No. 94/96-Customs dated 16.12.1996, as amended, has also been duly complied with by the appellant through payment of drawback benefits - The appellant is entitled to the benefit of duty exemption under either notification - The differential customs duty demand and the redemption fine along with penalties are set aside. The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Abatement of appeal on death of Appellant - When an appellant dies during the pendency of an appeal before the CESTAT, whether the appeal stands abated if no application for continuance of proceedings is filed by the legal representative within the prescribed period – HELD - On the death of the appellant, the appeal stands abated in terms of Rule 22 of the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (Procedure) Rules, 1982, which provides that where the appellant dies during proceedings, the appeal or application shall abate unless an application for continuance is made by the successor-in-interest, exec... [Read more]
Customs - Abatement of appeal on death of Appellant - When an appellant dies during the pendency of an appeal before the CESTAT, whether the appeal stands abated if no application for continuance of proceedings is filed by the legal representative within the prescribed period – HELD - On the death of the appellant, the appeal stands abated in terms of Rule 22 of the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (Procedure) Rules, 1982, which provides that where the appellant dies during proceedings, the appeal or application shall abate unless an application for continuance is made by the successor-in-interest, executor, administrator or other legal representative within sixty days of the death - No proceedings can be initiated or continued against a dead person as it amounts to violation of natural justice, inasmuch as the dead person who is proceeded against is not alive to defend himself. Since no application for continuance of proceedings was filed by any legal representative of the deceased appellant within the prescribed period, the appeal stands abated and is disposed of accordingly [Read less]
Customs - Entitlement to concessional Countervailing Duty on imported mobile phones under Notification No. 12/2012-CE - Respondents importing mobile phones initially discharged CVD at 12.5% on MRP basis at the time of import. Subsequently, claimed the benefit of concessional rate of CVD at 1% under Notification No. 12/2012-CE on the condition of non-availment of CENVAT credit - The original authority rejected the benefit contending that imported goods cannot fulfil the condition relating to non-availment of credit on inputs used in manufacture. On appeal, the Commissioner of Customs (Appeals) allowed the benefit relying on... [Read more]
Customs - Entitlement to concessional Countervailing Duty on imported mobile phones under Notification No. 12/2012-CE - Respondents importing mobile phones initially discharged CVD at 12.5% on MRP basis at the time of import. Subsequently, claimed the benefit of concessional rate of CVD at 1% under Notification No. 12/2012-CE on the condition of non-availment of CENVAT credit - The original authority rejected the benefit contending that imported goods cannot fulfil the condition relating to non-availment of credit on inputs used in manufacture. On appeal, the Commissioner of Customs (Appeals) allowed the benefit relying on the Supreme Court judgment in SRF Ltd., holding that importers are entitled to exemption as long as conditions are not violated - Whether the Respondent-importer is entitled to concessional Countervailing Duty under Notification No. 12/2012-CE – HELD - The Additional Customs Duty under Section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act is levied to counterbalance the excise duty leviable on like goods manufactured in India, thereby ensuring parity and maintaining a level playing field. The Hon'ble Supreme Court in the binding judgment of SRF Ltd. has categorically held that for the purpose of levy of Additional Customs Duty, imported goods are to be imagined as manufactured in India and the rate of duty, including exemption, has to be determined accordingly. The Court created a legal fiction under Section 3 whereby imported goods are treated as if manufactured in India for determining duty and exemption. Since like goods manufactured in India are eligible for concessional rate subject to non-availment of CENVAT credit, the same benefit cannot be denied to the importer merely on the ground that such condition cannot be demonstrated in a literal sense - The condition relating to non-availment of CENVAT credit, when applied to importers, must be interpreted consistently with the legal fiction under Section 3 and cannot be enforced so as to defeat the exemption. The Department's reliance on the principle that exemption notifications are to be strictly construed is distinguishable because in the present case, the condition is inherently linked to the manufacturing process, which is not applicable to an importer who is a trader and could not have availed any CENVAT credit. Further, the importer was prevented from availing the benefit at the time of import due to limitations of the EDI system and lack of permission for manual filing by the Department - The substantive benefit cannot be denied on account of procedural or technical limitations, particularly when the assessee is not at fault. The Department's contention that the SRF Ltd. judgment had not attained finality is found to be factually and legally untenable - The impugned order is upheld and the Revenue appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme - Time Limit for Issuance of Show Cause Notice - Appellant filed declaration under the VCES 2013, declaring unpaid service tax dues for a specified period - Designated authority issues a notice proposing rejection of the declaration beyond the prescribed time limit of thirty days stipulated in the Board Circular dated 25-11-2013 - Whether the SCN issued beyond the prescribed time limit can be acted upon to reject the voluntary compliance declaration filed by the assessee – HELD - The show cause notice is barred by time and cannot be acted upon. It is a settled posit... [Read more]
Service Tax - Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme - Time Limit for Issuance of Show Cause Notice - Appellant filed declaration under the VCES 2013, declaring unpaid service tax dues for a specified period - Designated authority issues a notice proposing rejection of the declaration beyond the prescribed time limit of thirty days stipulated in the Board Circular dated 25-11-2013 - Whether the SCN issued beyond the prescribed time limit can be acted upon to reject the voluntary compliance declaration filed by the assessee – HELD - The show cause notice is barred by time and cannot be acted upon. It is a settled position that the show cause notice is the foundation upon which the Department builds its case, and the tenability of any demand hinges on a valid SCN. The Circular dated 25-11-2013 expressly directs that the Commissioner shall ensure scrupulous compliance with the time limit of giving notice within thirty days. The term "give" implies actual service and receipt of the notice by the addressee, not merely its dispatch - Furthermore, the very nomenclature and underlying object of the scheme is to promote voluntary encouragement by the assessee and to reduce unnecessary litigation. The Circular also provides that the conditions enumerated in Section 106(2) of the Finance Act may be construed strictly and narrowly, and no declaration shall be rejected on frivolous grounds. The Revenue shall accept the declaration filed by the assessee - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Invocation of extended period of limitation, Issue arising from Departmental audit objection - The show cause notice was issued consequent to a Central Excise Revenue Audit (CERA) objection which was raised and disputed by the department itself, with the matter being kept in the call book - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked to issue a show cause notice when the underlying issue arises from a CERA audit objection that was itself disputed and not agreed with by the Department, thereby raising a question of suppression of facts by the assessee – HELD – The limitation is a jurisdictiona... [Read more]
Service Tax - Invocation of extended period of limitation, Issue arising from Departmental audit objection - The show cause notice was issued consequent to a Central Excise Revenue Audit (CERA) objection which was raised and disputed by the department itself, with the matter being kept in the call book - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked to issue a show cause notice when the underlying issue arises from a CERA audit objection that was itself disputed and not agreed with by the Department, thereby raising a question of suppression of facts by the assessee – HELD – The limitation is a jurisdictional issue which goes to the root of the matter and must be examined at the threshold - When a CERA objection is raised and the Department itself disputes and does not agree with such objection, the issue becomes one of interpretation between the revenue authority and the assessee, not suppression of facts by the assessee. The concept of suppression requires deliberate withholding of material facts, which cannot be attributed to the assessee when the department was equally uncertain of the CERA audit objection - Furthermore, the original authority failed to provide adequate reasoning on how suppression was established. The impugned order's finding of suppression was opaque and reduced to a single line without discussing how the charge of suppression could be alleged when the issue itself was raised by the audit body and was initially not agreed with by the department - The show cause notice is set aside as time-barred and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST – Date of Assessment, Date of system generation vs. date of adjudication - Validity of Assessment Orders passed beyond the Limitation period – The best judgment assessment order is uploaded to the GST common portal after the statutory deadline of 31.08.2024, which was the cut-off date for passing orders for the said tax period - Whether the assessment order passed and uploaded after the period of limitation prescribed under Section 73 of the CGST Act can be sustained in law, notwithstanding that the Department claims the substantive adjudication was completed within the time limit but only reflected in the system a... [Read more]
GST – Date of Assessment, Date of system generation vs. date of adjudication - Validity of Assessment Orders passed beyond the Limitation period – The best judgment assessment order is uploaded to the GST common portal after the statutory deadline of 31.08.2024, which was the cut-off date for passing orders for the said tax period - Whether the assessment order passed and uploaded after the period of limitation prescribed under Section 73 of the CGST Act can be sustained in law, notwithstanding that the Department claims the substantive adjudication was completed within the time limit but only reflected in the system after the deadline due to technical and administrative constraints – HELD - The assessment order cannot be sustained as it has been passed after expiry of the statutory period of limitation. The question of limitation goes to the root of the jurisdiction to pass an order imposing tax liability upon an assessee. The Department's explanation regarding the volume of orders requiring processing for two circles and the technical inability to upload due to change of day from Saturday to Sunday does not cure the jurisdictional defect – Notwithstanding the Department’s submission that the substantive order was completed and the date reflected in the portal is only the date of system generation and not the date of adjudication, an order passed and uploaded after the deadline cannot be sustained in the eye of law regardless of when the adjudicating mind was exercised - The Appellate authority failed to appreciate the jurisdictional infirmity in the original order while dismissing the appeal on grounds of delay - The impugned order-in-original and the appellate order are set aside – The writ petition is allowed [Read less]
GST - Applicability of Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, 2017 to Partners of Partnership Firm - Penalty for retention of benefits of fraudulent transactions – Petitioners are Partners of a partnership firm alleged to have been involved in GST evasion – Petitioners contested their liability for penalty under Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, contending that such penalty can only be imposed on the taxable person (the partnership firm) and not on individual partners - Whether partners of a partnership firm, who are not the registered taxable person, can be held liable for penalty under Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, 2017 ... [Read more]
GST - Applicability of Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, 2017 to Partners of Partnership Firm - Penalty for retention of benefits of fraudulent transactions – Petitioners are Partners of a partnership firm alleged to have been involved in GST evasion – Petitioners contested their liability for penalty under Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, contending that such penalty can only be imposed on the taxable person (the partnership firm) and not on individual partners - Whether partners of a partnership firm, who are not the registered taxable person, can be held liable for penalty under Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, 2017 – HELD – The Section 122(1A) applies to any person who retains the benefit of a transaction covered under clauses (i), (ii), (vii) or (ix) of sub-section (1) and at whose instance such transaction is conducted. The legislature deliberately differentiated between taxable person in sub-section (1), any person in sub-section (1A), and registered person in sub-section (2), indicating distinct legislative intent - When a juridical person like a partnership firm, company, or limited liability partnership commits violations, it cannot do so without involvement of natural persons. The provision aims to fix responsibility on individuals responsible for creating bogus invoices and unauthorized utilization of input tax credit – The distinction drawn by the Division Bench of Bombay High Court that only taxable persons can be penalized would render sub-section (1A) nugatory and otiose. With great respect, this Court cannot agree with the proposition of law laid down by the learned Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in Shantanu Sanjay Hundekari and Amit Manilal Haria cases - The observations of Delhi High Court in Gurudas Mallik Thakur case support the interpretation that Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act refers to such person who retains the benefit of the transaction - The Partners of the partnership firm can be held liable for penalty under Section 122(1A) when they retain benefits of the transaction and the transaction is conducted at their instance. In view of the two conditions being satisfied by the fact finding authority that the petitioners herein have retained the benefit of the transactions covered under Clause (i) and Clause (vii) of Sub-Section (1) of Section 122 of the Act of 2017 and at their instance, such transactions were conducted, the petitioners would come within the ambit of Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act and would be liable to the penalty – Ordered accordinglyrnrnIssue 2: Retrospective Applicability of Section 122(1A) for periods prior to 01.01.2021 – While the SCN covered the period from July 2017 to March 2023, the Section 122(1A) came into force with effect from 01.01.2021 - The petitioners contended that for periods prior to 01.01.2021, no penalty under Section 122(1A) could be imposed - Whether Section 122(1A) of the CGST Act, 2017, which came into force on 01.01.2021, can be retrospectively applied to impose penalties for violations committed during the period prior to 01.01.2021 – HELD - The Section 122(1A) does not create any new independent violation but merely identifies the person at whose instance violations of clauses (i), (ii), (vii) and (ix) of Section 122(1) were committed and who retained benefits thereof. Since Section 122(1) existed from the inception of the Act, and Section 122(1A) is complementary to and dependent upon violations under Section 122(1), there is no question of retrospective application of Section 122(1A). The penalty is relatable to violations existing since the Act's inception - The question of retrospectivity does not arise as Section 122(1A) does not spring into action until violations are adjudicated upon. What is essential is that Section 122(1A) should be in operation when the show cause notice is issued – The Section 122(1A) is applicable for transactions covered under clauses (i), (ii), (vii) and (ix) of sub-section (1) of Section 122 even for periods prior to coming into effect of Section 122(1A) – The writ petitions are disposed of [Read less]
GST – Issue of Consolidated Show Cause Notice encompassing multiple financial years - The petitioners contend that the proceedings under Sections 73 and 74 must be initiated financial year-wise, not consolidated across multiple years, while the Revenue submits that Sections 73(3), 73(4), 74(3) and 74(4) of the Act expressly permit issuance of notices "for any period" and "for such periods" without restricting to a single financial year – HELD – There is no express bar in the statutory provisions of the Act prohibiting issuance of consolidated Show Cause Notices for different financial years together under Sections 7... [Read more]
GST – Issue of Consolidated Show Cause Notice encompassing multiple financial years - The petitioners contend that the proceedings under Sections 73 and 74 must be initiated financial year-wise, not consolidated across multiple years, while the Revenue submits that Sections 73(3), 73(4), 74(3) and 74(4) of the Act expressly permit issuance of notices "for any period" and "for such periods" without restricting to a single financial year – HELD – There is no express bar in the statutory provisions of the Act prohibiting issuance of consolidated Show Cause Notices for different financial years together under Sections 73(1) or 74(1), nor is there any bar in passing consolidated orders for different financial years together under Sections 73(9) or 74(9) of the Act - The cause of action for issuing notice confers jurisdiction upon the Proper Officer to issue notice upon the existence of material facts satisfying the conditions - The restrictions on exercise of power to issue notice appear only in Section 73(2) and 74(2) of the Act which impose temporal restrictions regarding the time limit for issuance of notice, namely three months prior to the limitation period under Section 73(10) and six months prior under Section 74(10), but these provisions do not restrict the consolidation of multiple financial years – The sub-Section (3) and (4) of Section 73 and Section 74 of the Act expressly contemplate that if a notice is issued for any period under Sub-Section (1), the Proper Officer may serve a statement for periods other than those covered under Sub-Section (1), and such statement is deemed to be a notice, which demonstrates legislative intent permitting consolidated proceedings - While limitation periods are computed independently for each financial year under Section 73(10) and 74(10) of the Act, this does not preclude consolidation at the stage of notice and proceedings - Each financial year constitutes a separate cause of action and the doctrine of severability applies such that if a consolidated notice pertains to a period barred by limitation, that particular period can be segregated and excluded from the order - The proceedings under Sections 73 and 74 are adversarial and adjudicatory in nature distinct from assessment proceedings in Chapter XII, and therefore the financial year-specific scheme of assessment does not apply to demand and recovery proceedings in Chapter XV - The Proper Officer is within his jurisdiction to issue consolidated Show Cause Notices and pass consolidated orders for multiple financial years, subject to compliance with the limitation periods prescribed in Sections 73(2), 73(10), 74(2) and 74(10) respectively - The writ petitions are disposed of with liberty to the petitioners to approach the appropriate appellate forums under the Act – The petitions are disposed ofrnrnThe cause of action for initiation of proceedings under Section 73 and Section 74 of the CGST Act - The difference between Section 73(1) and Section 74(1) of the Act of 2017, is therefore clear that when it is a case of fraud or any willful misstatement or suppression of fact to evade tax, Section 74 of the Act of 2017 would be attracted otherwise, Section 73 of the Act of 2017 would be applicable. However, a perusal of both Section 73(1) and Section 74(1) of the Act of 2017 do not specify that the said notice should be against a single financial year or for that matter, for each financial year, there has to be a separate notice. The reason is that the cause of action for initiation of the notice under Section 73(1) or Section 74(1) of the Act of 2017 by virtue of the said Sub-Sections confers a jurisdiction upon the Proper Officer to issue the notice on the existence of the material facts satisfying the Proper Officer to issue the notice under Section 73(1) or 74(1) of the Act of 2017 as the case may be. In other words, the said Sub-Section (1) of Section 73 and Section 74 of the Act of 2017 do not impose any restrictions when the conditions stipulated in Sub-Section (1) satisfies the Proper Officer. [Read less]
Service Tax - Works Contract Service – Taxability of Construction of Educational Institutions - The Adjudicating Authority confirmed the demand for construction services to private educational institutions but dropped the demand for construction services provided to a deemed-to-be university and a private teacher training institute, treating them as Government educational institutions - Revenue appeals against the dropping of demand contending they are private institutions and therefore taxable - Whether works contract services provided for construction of buildings of a deemed-to-be university and a private teacher trai... [Read more]
Service Tax - Works Contract Service – Taxability of Construction of Educational Institutions - The Adjudicating Authority confirmed the demand for construction services to private educational institutions but dropped the demand for construction services provided to a deemed-to-be university and a private teacher training institute, treating them as Government educational institutions - Revenue appeals against the dropping of demand contending they are private institutions and therefore taxable - Whether works contract services provided for construction of buildings of a deemed-to-be university and a private teacher training institute are liable to service tax or are exempt as construction services for educational institutions. HELD - In a prior appeal by the same appellant against the confirmation of demand for private educational institutions, Tribunal had already allowed the appeal on the ground that the Board's Circular No. 80/10/2004 clarifies that constructions for educational institutions not for profit are non-commercial in nature and therefore not taxable - The Department has not established that the institutions in question are not used principally or solely for providing education. The substance of the Department's grievance is merely to treat these institutions as private institutions and thereby taxable, which contradicts the settled principle established by the Tribunal in the appellant's own earlier case - The demand of service tax on works contract services rendered to educational institutions up to July 1, 2012 cannot be sustained. The non-commercial nature of educational services, the bonafide belief of the service provider, the absence of positive suppression, and the interpretational nature of the issue militate against invoking extended period of limitation - The appeal preferred by the Department is rejected [Read less]
Service Tax - Reversal of cenvat credit, Eligibility for service tax refund under exemption notification – Export of IT-enabled services, Refund claims for service tax paid on input services - Assessee had initially availed cenvat credit on input services but subsequently reversed the same, communicating the reversal to the Department and reflecting it in the statutory tax Audit Report – Rejection of refund on the grounds that cenvat credit was availed in contravention of the exemption notification clause and that declaration was not filed prior to export of services for one period - Whether denial of refund claims on ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Reversal of cenvat credit, Eligibility for service tax refund under exemption notification – Export of IT-enabled services, Refund claims for service tax paid on input services - Assessee had initially availed cenvat credit on input services but subsequently reversed the same, communicating the reversal to the Department and reflecting it in the statutory tax Audit Report – Rejection of refund on the grounds that cenvat credit was availed in contravention of the exemption notification clause and that declaration was not filed prior to export of services for one period - Whether denial of refund claims on the grounds of non-compliance with the condition that no cenvat credit should be availed on inputs and input services where the assessee had availed credit but subsequently reversed it, and non-filing of declaration in one instance prior to export of services, is legally sustainable - HELD - Where cenvat credit has been availed but subsequently reversed by the assessee with the reversal communicated to the department and certified in the mandated tax audit report as nil, such reversal amounts to not having taken the cenvat credit at all - The Tribunal decisions establish the principle that reversal of cenvat credit is tantamount to non-availment of credit - Regarding the non-filing of declaration for one period, the declaration requirement serves to furnish details of inputs and input services used in export services, which are verifiable from the assessee's own records. The assessee admittedly engaged in export of services, paid service tax on inputs and input services, and used these for providing export services. Applying the principle that substantial justice cannot be denied for technical lapses, the absence of filing a declaration in a single instance does not warrant denial of the entire refund claim - The assessee is given an opportunity to file the declaration if not already filed, and all refund claims are to be processed without further delay - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Suspension of Customs Cargo Service Provider (CCSP) License – Appellant is Container Freight Station operating as a Customs Cargo Service Provider was immediately suspended following an incident where smuggled restricted goods (Chinese origin fireworks/firecrackers) were attempted to be removed from the facility - Whether the order continuing indefinite suspension of a Customs Cargo Service Provider's approval, without conducting a detailed inquiry as mandated under Regulation 12 of the Handling of Cargo in Customs Areas Regulations (HCCAR), 2009, and without substantiating the grounds for invoking immediate su... [Read more]
Customs - Suspension of Customs Cargo Service Provider (CCSP) License – Appellant is Container Freight Station operating as a Customs Cargo Service Provider was immediately suspended following an incident where smuggled restricted goods (Chinese origin fireworks/firecrackers) were attempted to be removed from the facility - Whether the order continuing indefinite suspension of a Customs Cargo Service Provider's approval, without conducting a detailed inquiry as mandated under Regulation 12 of the Handling of Cargo in Customs Areas Regulations (HCCAR), 2009, and without substantiating the grounds for invoking immediate suspension under Regulation 11(2) of HCCAR, 2009, is legally sustainable – HELD - The Regulation 11(2) of HCCAR, 2009 empowers the licensing authority to suspend approval only in appropriate cases where immediate action is necessary and an inquiry is pending or contemplated, but such suspension must be substantiated by proper factual evidence on record. The regulation requires that before taking a decision on suspension under Regulation 11(2), the licensing authority must establish through documented evidence that such immediate suspension is appropriate and necessary – In the present case, no SCN was issued, no inquiry was contemplated or pending, and no inquiry report was available on record establishing the case for immediate suspension. While preliminary investigation findings by the revenue authority provide allegations, they cannot substitute for the detailed procedure mandated under Regulation 12 - The Regulation 7(2) of HCCAR prescribes suspension of cargo entry only for a temporary period of fifteen days for specific reasons. While investigating agencies may conduct preliminary inquiries, the licensing authority must independently record specific factual findings supported by evidence before invoking the extraordinary power of suspension under Regulation 11(2) - The fact of cooperation by the facility with investigating authorities, submission of documents and CCTV footage, termination of errant employees, and submission of revised operational procedures demonstrate mitigating factors that require consideration within the prescribed inquiry framework - The order continuing indefinite suspension is set aside. However, the Commissioner as licensing authority remains free to initiate regular inquiry proceedings under Regulation 12 of HCCAR, 2009 by issuing a SCN with specific grounds and following the prescribed procedure for determining whether suspension or revocation of approval is warranted – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST – West Bengal AAR - Input Tax Credit Reclaim after Retrospective Amendment to Section 16(5) of CGST Act, 2017 – Applicability of Section 150 Finance Act 2024 - Applicant availed Input Tax Credit on invoices issued by a service provider during January, February and March 2020. The supplier filed its returns in November 2020, beyond the prescribed timeline. Consequently, the applicant reversed the entire Input Tax Credit pursuant to earlier Advance Ruling Order. Subsequently, Section 16(5) of the CGST Act was inserted retrospectively with effect from 01.07.2017 through the Finance Act 2024, which permits claiming Inp... [Read more]
GST – West Bengal AAR - Input Tax Credit Reclaim after Retrospective Amendment to Section 16(5) of CGST Act, 2017 – Applicability of Section 150 Finance Act 2024 - Applicant availed Input Tax Credit on invoices issued by a service provider during January, February and March 2020. The supplier filed its returns in November 2020, beyond the prescribed timeline. Consequently, the applicant reversed the entire Input Tax Credit pursuant to earlier Advance Ruling Order. Subsequently, Section 16(5) of the CGST Act was inserted retrospectively with effect from 01.07.2017 through the Finance Act 2024, which permits claiming Input Tax Credit for specified financial years in returns filed up to 30.11.2021, notwithstanding the earlier restriction in Section 16(4) - Whether, in view of the insertion of Section 16(5) of the CGST Act 2017 through the Finance Act 2024 which operates retrospectively with effect from July 2017, the applicant is entitled to reclaim the Input Tax Credit on inward supplies pertaining to January, February and March 2020 that had already been reversed pursuant to the earlier Advance Ruling dated 09.08.2021 – HELD - Although the Section 16(5) extends the date for claiming Input Tax Credit for financial years 2017-18 to 2020-21 up to 30.11.2021, it does not override or modify the other substantive conditions prescribed under Section 16(2) of the CGST Act, which remain applicable during the material period. The condition under Section 16(2)(c) requires that the tax charged must be actually paid to the Government. The supplier's delayed upload of invoice details in November 2020 for supplies made in January-March 2020 resulted in violation of Rule 36(4) of the CGST Rules regarding the 10 percent restriction on input tax credit for invoices not uploaded by suppliers within the prescribed period – Further, the reclaim of reversed Input Tax Credit constitutes a refund within the meaning of Section 150 of the Finance Act 2024, which expressly excludes refund of input tax credit reversed. The authority rejected the applicant's narrow interpretation of the term refund confined only to Section 54 of the CGST Act, as such interpretation would render the word reversed meaningless in Section 150 and create absurd results where cash payments would not be eligible for refund while input tax credit claims would be, contrary to established legal principles against absurd interpretations - The applicant is not entitled to reclaim the ITC previously reversed – Ordered accordingly [Read less]
GST - Anticipatory Bail, Condition of Seven Days' Prior Notice in GST Investigation - An inquiry was initiated against Directors of a company for alleged GST evasion involving issuance of e-way bills of substantial value without filing returns and availing ineligible ITC - The Respondents filed anticipatory bail applications which were dismissed by the learned ASJ with a direction to provide seven days' prior notice before taking any coercive action. The DGGI challenge this order contending that the notice requirement amounted to an impermissible blanket order of protection - Whether the direction to provide seven days pri... [Read more]
GST - Anticipatory Bail, Condition of Seven Days' Prior Notice in GST Investigation - An inquiry was initiated against Directors of a company for alleged GST evasion involving issuance of e-way bills of substantial value without filing returns and availing ineligible ITC - The Respondents filed anticipatory bail applications which were dismissed by the learned ASJ with a direction to provide seven days' prior notice before taking any coercive action. The DGGI challenge this order contending that the notice requirement amounted to an impermissible blanket order of protection - Whether the direction to provide seven days prior notice before effecting arrest in an anticipatory bail order constitutes an impermissible blanket protection against future prosecution in economic offence cases – HELD - No blanket protection has been granted to the respondents and the seven days' notice direction does not shield them against prosecution or constitute a passport for committing offences. The investigation was at an initial stage with only summons issued for joining proceedings and no arrest proposal had been placed before the Commissioner. The direction to provide seven days' notice is consistent with principles of natural justice and allows respondents to avail legal remedies, especially when there was no imminent threat of arrest at the time of passing the original order. Such orders have been upheld in similar cases and do not prevent the Dept from proceeding according to law if respondents fail to comply with notices or join investigation - The impugned orders directing seven days' prior notice are upheld as reasonable and consonant with natural justice – The petitions are dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Taxability of Goods Transportation services – Distinction between Goods Transport Operator and Goods Transportation Agency - Activity of transportation of goods by road - Adjudicating authority confirmed the demand, holding the service provider to be a Goods Transportation Agency (GTA) – Appellant contend that it is merely a Goods Transport Operator (GTO) engaged in the activity of transporting goods by road, which falls under the negative list of services - Whether the appellant's activity of transporting goods by road constitutes a taxable service as a Goods Transportation Agency or falls within the exe... [Read more]
Service Tax - Taxability of Goods Transportation services – Distinction between Goods Transport Operator and Goods Transportation Agency - Activity of transportation of goods by road - Adjudicating authority confirmed the demand, holding the service provider to be a Goods Transportation Agency (GTA) – Appellant contend that it is merely a Goods Transport Operator (GTO) engaged in the activity of transporting goods by road, which falls under the negative list of services - Whether the appellant's activity of transporting goods by road constitutes a taxable service as a Goods Transportation Agency or falls within the exemption under the negative list as a Goods Transport Operator – HELD - The definition of Goods Transportation Agency under Section 65(50b) of the Finance Act requires two essential conditions- providing service in relation to transport of goods by road, and issuing a consignment note. A Goods Transport Operator, on the other hand, is merely a commercial concern engaged in transportation of goods without issuing a consignment note - The GTA service is a composite service which may include intermediary and ancillary services such as loading, unloading, packing, unpacking, and temporary warehousing provided in relation to transportation. However, a GTO provides the activity of transport simpliciter without such related services - The appellant is not registered under the Carriage by Road Act, 2007; charges only freight as agreed without charging gross freight; does not provide services in relation to transport; does not issue consignment notes; and does not undertake loading, unloading, or ancillary services. The regulation under Rule 4B of the Service Tax Rules clearly mandates that a GTA must issue a consignment note, which the appellant does not do. Since the appellant's activity constitutes mere transport of goods by road without providing services in relation thereto, it falls squarely within the exemption provided under Section 66D(p) of the Finance Act - The order confirming the demand for service tax is set aside. The activity of the appellant is held to be mere transport of goods by road, which is covered under the negative list and therefore not subject to service tax - The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Imposition of Penalty under Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962 when goods are not liable to confiscation – Commissioner (Appeals) dropped proceedings initiated against respondents-importer imposing penalty under section 112(a) of the Customs Act on the ground that the imported goods were held not liable for confiscation as their value was at arm's length and correctly declared, and therefore did not violate section 111(m) of the Customs Act - Whether penalty under section 112(a) of the Customs Act can be imposed when the goods in question are held not liable to confiscation – HELD - The penalty under sec... [Read more]
Customs - Imposition of Penalty under Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962 when goods are not liable to confiscation – Commissioner (Appeals) dropped proceedings initiated against respondents-importer imposing penalty under section 112(a) of the Customs Act on the ground that the imported goods were held not liable for confiscation as their value was at arm's length and correctly declared, and therefore did not violate section 111(m) of the Customs Act - Whether penalty under section 112(a) of the Customs Act can be imposed when the goods in question are held not liable to confiscation – HELD - The penalty under section 112(a) of the Customs Act can be imposed only if the goods are held liable to confiscation. The goods which are neither prohibited nor have any duty implications cannot be confiscated under section 111(m) of the Customs Act for misdeclaration of value. As the charges of over-invoicing of import goods were held as not maintainable and the value of imported goods was determined to be at arm's length without any duty implications, the goods were not liable for confiscation. Consequently, since the foundational requirement for imposing penalty under Section 112(a) was absent, the imposition of such penalty is not permissible. There was no error in the order dropping the proceedings against the respondents as the condition precedent for the penalty did not exist. - The appeals filed by the department are dismissed [Read less]
Customs – Eligibility to benefit of exemption under Notification No. 24/2005-Cus - Non-fulfillment of Conditions – Appellant imported printed circuit board assemblies under Customs Tariff Item 8517 79 10 claiming exemption under Notification No. 24/2005-Cus, Entry 13S - Denial the exemption alleging non-compliance with the prescribed procedure under the Customs (Imports of Goods at Concessional Rate of Duty) Rules, 2017, which requires the importer to furnish an undertaking to the Deputy Commissioner or Assistant Commissioner of Customs that the goods shall not be used in manufacturing specified products and to follow ... [Read more]
Customs – Eligibility to benefit of exemption under Notification No. 24/2005-Cus - Non-fulfillment of Conditions – Appellant imported printed circuit board assemblies under Customs Tariff Item 8517 79 10 claiming exemption under Notification No. 24/2005-Cus, Entry 13S - Denial the exemption alleging non-compliance with the prescribed procedure under the Customs (Imports of Goods at Concessional Rate of Duty) Rules, 2017, which requires the importer to furnish an undertaking to the Deputy Commissioner or Assistant Commissioner of Customs that the goods shall not be used in manufacturing specified products and to follow the requisite documentation and bond procedures – HELD - Appellant contends that although the procedural conditions were not met due to a publisher's error in their reference material, the substantive purpose of the condition was achieved as they were only a trader who sold the goods without using them for manufacturing the excluded items - The exemption Notification No. 24/2005-Cus is a bit unusual as the exemption is available not on the condition that they will be used in a particular fashion but on the condition that they will not be used in a particular fashion viz., in the manufacture of the goods mentioned in clauses (b) to (i) of the entry - While the appellant failed to follow the prescribed procedure and did not furnish the mandatory undertaking, the fundamental purpose underlying the condition—ensuring that the goods were not used to manufacture the excluded products—was actually satisfied in the particular facts of the case as the appellant was merely a trader and had only sold the imported goods without any manufacturing activity - The IGCR Rules scheme is designed to monitor actual use of exempted goods, and when evidence conclusively demonstrates that the goods were not put to prohibited use regardless of procedural non-compliance, the substantive object of the exemption condition stands fulfilled - The demand of duty denying the benefit of the Notification No. 24/2005-Cus cannot be sustained and set aside. Consequently, the demand of interest and the penalties imposed on the appellant also cannot be sustained - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Lapsing of CENVAT credit balance under Rule 11(3) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 – Respondent-assessee produced both dutiable and exempted final products from common inputs and had a credit balance as on the date when one product became exempted - Whether the CENVAT credit balance lying as on the date of exemption lapses under Rule 11(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 when more than one final product is manufactured from common inputs and only some products become exempted while others remain dutiable – HELD - The Rule 11(3) applies only when all final products manufactured from the credited inputs bec... [Read more]
Central Excise - Lapsing of CENVAT credit balance under Rule 11(3) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 – Respondent-assessee produced both dutiable and exempted final products from common inputs and had a credit balance as on the date when one product became exempted - Whether the CENVAT credit balance lying as on the date of exemption lapses under Rule 11(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 when more than one final product is manufactured from common inputs and only some products become exempted while others remain dutiable – HELD - The Rule 11(3) applies only when all final products manufactured from the credited inputs become fully exempted from duty. When multiple final products are manufactured from common credited inputs and some become exempted while others remain dutiable, Rule 11(3) does not apply because the credit can still be utilized for payment of duty on the dutiable products in terms of Rule 3(4) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004. The Rule 3(4) of the CCR, 2004 provides that CENVAT credit may be utilised for payment of any duty of excise product. This means that if out of the same CENVAT credit availed inputs, more than one final product is manufactured and out of those final products, one is exempted from duty, CENVAT credit can be utilised for payment of duty for the other final products which are dutiable - The credit balance does not lapse merely because one product becomes exempted. Thus, the CENVAT credit balance as on 01.03.2008 shall not lapse under Rule 11(3) of the CCR, 2004. The Principal Commissioner did not commit any illegality in dropping the demand - The demand for recovery of credit balance as on the exemption date is not sustainable. The Revenue appeal is dismissedrnrn^Recovery of amount equal to percentage of value of exempted goods cleared for domestic market under Rule 6(3) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether the department can demand recovery of an amount equal to ten percent to five percent of the value of exempted final products cleared for domestic consumption under Rule 6(3) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 when the manufacturer has not exercised such an option and has maintained separate accounts without wrongly availing credit on inputs used for exempted goods – HELD – The Rule 6(3) merely offers options to manufacturers who do not maintain separate accounts for inputs used in manufacture of dutiable and exempted goods. When a manufacturer maintains proper separate accounts and has not taken credit on inputs used for exempted goods, the Department cannot demand the percentage amount under Rule 6(3) as the manufacturer has not exercised any such option. The statutory scheme does not vest the department with power to choose an option on behalf of the manufacturer - Further, the Department's acceptance in permitting re-credit of amounts mistakenly paid for a few months estops it from contending that an option was exercised for the entire year. Merely depositing the percentage amount out of abundance of caution for certain months cannot be construed as exercise of an option binding for the entire financial year - The demand for recovery under Rule 6(3) for domestic clearances is not sustainable.rnrn^Recovery of CENVAT credit for inputs used in manufacture of exempted goods exported under bond under Rule 6(3) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether the department can demand recovery of CENVAT credit or amount equal to percentage of value of exempted final products that have been exported under bond when such exports were properly authorized and Rule 6(6)(v) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 provides exemption from the bar on credit for exported goods – HELD - The Rule 6(6)(v) of the CCR, 2004 creates an exemption from the bar on CENVAT credit imposed by Rule 6(1) to 6(4) specifically in respect of excisable goods removed without payment of duty for export under bond. The non-allowability of input credit under Rules 6(1) to 6(4) applies only when inputs used in manufacture of exempted final products are cleared for home consumption, not when exempted final products are cleared for export under bond – Further, the SCN failed to allege that specific notifications prohibited export of exempted goods under bond, making it improper to raise this contention in appeal. All exports were properly authorized through ARE certificates countersigned by proper officers and accepted by the department without challenge. The Department's acceptance in approving exports under bond precludes it from subsequently demanding credit reversal - The demand for recovery of credit for exempted goods exported under bond is set aside. [Read less]
GST - Computation of period of limitation for filing appeal under Section 107 of the CGST Act, 2017, Interpretation of term “month” under Section 107(4) of the CGST Act - Appellate Authority rejected the appeal on the ground that it was filed beyond the statutory time limit of three months plus one month condonable period, observing that there was a delay of thirty-one days which was beyond the power of the Appellate Authority to condone - Whether the appeal was filed within the condonable period, in accordance with the General Clauses Act, 1897 and the Limitation Act, 1963 – HELD - The word "month" means a calendar ... [Read more]
GST - Computation of period of limitation for filing appeal under Section 107 of the CGST Act, 2017, Interpretation of term “month” under Section 107(4) of the CGST Act - Appellate Authority rejected the appeal on the ground that it was filed beyond the statutory time limit of three months plus one month condonable period, observing that there was a delay of thirty-one days which was beyond the power of the Appellate Authority to condone - Whether the appeal was filed within the condonable period, in accordance with the General Clauses Act, 1897 and the Limitation Act, 1963 – HELD - The word "month" means a calendar month reckoned according to the British calendar. Further, the first day on which the order is communicated must be excluded in accordance with Section 9 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 - The period of limitation for filing an appeal under Section 107(1) of the CGST Act commences from the day following receipt of the order. Therefore, when an adjudication order is communicated on 15th October, 2025, the limitation period commences from 16th October, 2025 and expires on 15th January, 2026, being three calendar months. The condonable period of one month extends the outer limit to 15th February, 2026. Since the appeal was filed on 13th February, 2026, there is a delay of only twenty-nine days, which falls within the condonable period of one month - The petitioner was deprived of a fair and reasonable opportunity of consideration as the reply explaining the reasons for delay. Non-consideration of the explanation on the record constitutes an error apparent on the face of the record - The order passed by Appellate Authority is set aside and the matter is remitted back to the Appellate Authority consider the reply of the petitioner regarding condonation of delay and, if satisfied, to decide the appeal on merit in accordance with law – The writ petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST – Eligibility of Input Tax Credit to Bonafide Purchaser, Failure of selling dealer to deposit tax - Denial of ITC alleging that the purchaser had wrongly availed and utilized the input tax credit in violation of Section 16(2)(a)(b) of the CGST Act, 2017 for failure of the suppliers to discharge their tax liability - Whether a bona fide purchasing dealer can be denied ITC merely because the selling dealer failed to deposit the tax collected from the purchaser – HELD - A bona fide purchasing dealer who has entered into purchase transactions with validly registered selling dealers, complied with all statutory requirem... [Read more]
GST – Eligibility of Input Tax Credit to Bonafide Purchaser, Failure of selling dealer to deposit tax - Denial of ITC alleging that the purchaser had wrongly availed and utilized the input tax credit in violation of Section 16(2)(a)(b) of the CGST Act, 2017 for failure of the suppliers to discharge their tax liability - Whether a bona fide purchasing dealer can be denied ITC merely because the selling dealer failed to deposit the tax collected from the purchaser – HELD - A bona fide purchasing dealer who has entered into purchase transactions with validly registered selling dealers, complied with all statutory requirements, verified tax invoices, received goods and made payment through proper banking channels cannot be denied input tax credit solely on account of failure of the selling dealer to deposit tax with the Government. The remedy of the Department in such circumstances lies against the defaulting selling dealer and not against a bona fide purchaser - The purchasing dealers cannot be asked to do the impossible, i.e., to anticipate or ensure that selling dealers deposit the tax collected, placing such burden on a bona fide purchasing dealer would be violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. However, where materials exist to indicate collusion or lack of bona fides in the transactions, the Department remains free to proceed in accordance with law. The orders are set aside and quashed - Writ petition accordingly stands disposed of [Read less]
Central Excise - Duty liability under Notification No. 43/2001-CE(NT) for supply of packing materials to exporters - Revenue raised a demand on the supplier, contending that since the exports by the buyers were not cleared under Bond or were exempted or subjected to Nil rate, the procurement of packing material by such exporters without payment of duty was impermissible - Whether the supplier of packing materials is liable to pay duty when the buyer/procurer has failed to comply with the conditions prescribed under Notification No. 43/2001-CE(NT) where the goods have been cleared against a valid CT-1 certificate – HELD -... [Read more]
Central Excise - Duty liability under Notification No. 43/2001-CE(NT) for supply of packing materials to exporters - Revenue raised a demand on the supplier, contending that since the exports by the buyers were not cleared under Bond or were exempted or subjected to Nil rate, the procurement of packing material by such exporters without payment of duty was impermissible - Whether the supplier of packing materials is liable to pay duty when the buyer/procurer has failed to comply with the conditions prescribed under Notification No. 43/2001-CE(NT) where the goods have been cleared against a valid CT-1 certificate – HELD - The liability for payment of duty arises on the procurer and not on the supplier. The notification, being issued under Rule 19 of the Central Excise Rules, 2001, prescribes a specific procedure whereby manufacturers intending to export can procure raw materials and inputs duty-free subject to conditions - The procedure requires the buyer to obtain a CT-1 certificate from the jurisdictional Assistant Commissioner after execution of a Bond. Once the supplier has cleared goods against a valid CT-1 certificate, the supplier's obligation ceases. If the procurer fails to comply with any conditions prescribed under the notification, it is the procurer who bears the liability to pay duty under Rule 6 of the Central Excise (Removal of Goods at Concessional Rate of Duty for Manufacture of Excisable Goods) Rules, 2001, and not the supplier who supplied the goods in compliance with the prescribed procedure - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax – Applicability to Exemption Notification No. 5/2012-ST to transport of gypsum – Service Tax demand on the premise that since gypsum was not listed in the Fertilisers (Control) Order, 1985, it did not qualify as a fertilizer and therefore the service was not eligible for exemption under notification 5/2012-ST, as amended - Whether the handling and transportation of gypsum falls within the scope of exemption notification 5/2012-ST as amended by notification 3/2013-ST dated 1.3.2013, which exempts services provided by a GTA by way of transport of chemical fertilizer, organic manure and oil cakes – HELD - Gy... [Read more]
Service Tax – Applicability to Exemption Notification No. 5/2012-ST to transport of gypsum – Service Tax demand on the premise that since gypsum was not listed in the Fertilisers (Control) Order, 1985, it did not qualify as a fertilizer and therefore the service was not eligible for exemption under notification 5/2012-ST, as amended - Whether the handling and transportation of gypsum falls within the scope of exemption notification 5/2012-ST as amended by notification 3/2013-ST dated 1.3.2013, which exempts services provided by a GTA by way of transport of chemical fertilizer, organic manure and oil cakes – HELD - Gypsum is a fertilizer in its natural composition as it provides both calcium and sulphur to plants and is used either directly or for manufacturing other fertilizers. The mere fact that the Fertiliser Control Order does not specifically mention gypsum does not mean it is not a fertilizer - Gypsum, being calcium sulphate, is recognized as a fertilizer and used either independently for certain crops or as a raw material in the manufacture of other fertilizers. The omission of gypsum from the Fertilizers (Control) Order, 1985 does not negate its character as a fertilizer. The Fertilizers (Control) Order was issued under the Essential Commodities Act for regulatory purposes and was not intended to provide an exhaustive definition or list of all substances that qualify as fertilizers – The exemption notification must be interpreted to include gypsum as it falls within the ordinary meaning and definition of fertilizer and serves the same functional purpose - The demand of service tax pertaining to transportation and handling of gypsum is set aside, and the penalty under section 78 is reduced proportionately. The demand relating to renting of immovable property is upheld as the appellant failed to produce documentary evidence to support its claim that the amounts received were mere reimbursements – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Cenvat credit on returned goods under Rule 16(2) of Central Excise Rules, 2002 - Remanufactured machine sold to different buyer – Demand of recovery of Cenvat credit, contending that the same machine was not returned to the same customer - Whether the appellant is entitled to claim cenvat credit under Rule 16(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 2002, when goods returned for remanufacturing are not returned to the original buyer but are instead remanufactured into a different product and sold to another buyer – HELD - Under Rule 16(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 2002, the determining factor for claiming ce... [Read more]
Central Excise - Cenvat credit on returned goods under Rule 16(2) of Central Excise Rules, 2002 - Remanufactured machine sold to different buyer – Demand of recovery of Cenvat credit, contending that the same machine was not returned to the same customer - Whether the appellant is entitled to claim cenvat credit under Rule 16(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 2002, when goods returned for remanufacturing are not returned to the original buyer but are instead remanufactured into a different product and sold to another buyer – HELD - Under Rule 16(2) of the Central Excise Rules, 2002, the determining factor for claiming cenvat credit is the date of removal (clearance). The rule does not mandate that the remanufactured goods must be returned to the original buyer who returned the goods. The provision uses language such as "re-made, refined, re-conditioned or for any other reason" which does not specify that the resultant outcome should be identical to the original product or that it must be returned to the same sender - The CBEC circular F.No. 354/66/2001-TRU dated 21.06.2001 cited by the department applies specifically to Rule 16(1) regarding return of goods, not to Rule 16(2) which governs remanufacturing cases. The provision does not require that remake or reconditioning result in goods of the same shape and size – Further, the Commissioner's finding that the appellant failed to prove use of all old machine parts travelled beyond the grounds stated in the SCN and amounted to an impermissible expansion of the department's original position - The manufacturer is entitled to avail cenvat credit as the conditions precedent for credit under Rule 16(2) were satisfied. The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Classification of service - Support Service vs. Renting of Immovable Property Service - Service Tax liability on licensing of Railway Space for advertisement – Respondent is engaged in providing advertisement services through hoardings and billboards obtained space from railways under license agreements by tender process and paid license fees for the right to display advertisements at railway stations – Demand of service tax under Reverse Charge contending that railways were providing Business Support Services - The adjudicating authority dropped the proceedings holding that the activity does not constitu... [Read more]
Service Tax - Classification of service - Support Service vs. Renting of Immovable Property Service - Service Tax liability on licensing of Railway Space for advertisement – Respondent is engaged in providing advertisement services through hoardings and billboards obtained space from railways under license agreements by tender process and paid license fees for the right to display advertisements at railway stations – Demand of service tax under Reverse Charge contending that railways were providing Business Support Services - The adjudicating authority dropped the proceedings holding that the activity does not constitute support service but falls under renting of immovable property service – HELD - The definition of support service under section 65B(49) contemplates outsourcing of functions that entities ordinarily carry out themselves. For an activity to qualify as support service including advertisement and promotion, the service provider must be ordinarily engaged in such activity but may obtain it through outsourcing - In the present factual matrix, there is no evidence that railways were engaged in carrying out advertisement or promotion activities that they subsequently outsourced to the respondent. The agreements do not categorically state that railways would provide support services; rather, they clearly indicate the letting out of specified demarcated space for installation of hoardings and display of advertisements - Once it is established that railways as service provider are not providing support services, the service tax, if any, would be payable on forward charge basis and not under RCM - The alternative classification of the activity as renting of immovable property service is correct, as railways provided specified demarcated space to the respondent for putting up hoardings and billboards against payment of license fee, which falls squarely within the definition of renting of immovable property service – Further, invocation of extended period was not tenable as there was no statutory requirement to declare services received not under RCM in service tax returns, and therefore non-declaration of license fees would not constitute suppression of material facts - The demand of service tax is not sustainable as the activity does not constitute support service but falls under renting of immovable property service which is payable on forward charge basis. The proceedings initiated are rightly dropped – The Revenue appeal is dismissed [Read less]
GST – Recovery of tax from customers of petitioner-supplier - Issue of Demand Notices prior to crystallization of Tax Liability - Validity of GST demand notices issued to customers of the petitioner prior to finalization of tax assessment of petitioners - The DGGI issued communications to customers of the petitioners, directing them to remit payments due to the petitioners directly to the Government account - The petitioners sought a No Objection Certificate to receive their entitled payments from customers and challenged the communications as invalid - Whether letters issued by the authorities to customers of a supplier... [Read more]
GST – Recovery of tax from customers of petitioner-supplier - Issue of Demand Notices prior to crystallization of Tax Liability - Validity of GST demand notices issued to customers of the petitioner prior to finalization of tax assessment of petitioners - The DGGI issued communications to customers of the petitioners, directing them to remit payments due to the petitioners directly to the Government account - The petitioners sought a No Objection Certificate to receive their entitled payments from customers and challenged the communications as invalid - Whether letters issued by the authorities to customers of a supplier, directing payment to the Government account, are valid when issued prior to the issuance of an order-in-original determining the tax liability of the petitioner – HELD - Any letter issued by the respondents to customers prior to the issuance of the order-in-original determining the tax liability of the petitioner-supplier is invalid and cannot form the basis for any further action - At the time such communications were issued, only a tax proposal had been made which had not crystallized into an actual tax liability. There existed no statutory authority under Section 79(1)(c) or Section 83 of the CGST Act, 2017 to issue such communications before the tax liability was formally determined through an order-in-original - The respondents are entitled to initiate appropriate recovery action, including under Section 79(1)(c), only after the issuance of the orders-in-original - The writ petitions are disposed of declaring the communications issued to customers prior to finalization of tax assessment as invalid, without prejudice to the right of the respondents to initiate appropriate recovery action after the orders-in-original are issued – The writ petitions are disposed of [Read less]
Customs - Certificate of Origin under Indo-Thailand Free Trade Agreement - Rejection and Recomputation of Local Value-Added Content – Appellant-importer imported gold jewellery studded with diamonds/ruby from Thailand and claimed exemption under Notification No. 85/2004-Cus based on CoO certifying 22% local value-added content - Department initiated investigation alleging that the declared value addition was incorrect and actual value addition was only 6.5% based on its own computation considering only labour and handling charges -Whether the Department is justified in rejecting the Certificate of Origin issued by the de... [Read more]
Customs - Certificate of Origin under Indo-Thailand Free Trade Agreement - Rejection and Recomputation of Local Value-Added Content – Appellant-importer imported gold jewellery studded with diamonds/ruby from Thailand and claimed exemption under Notification No. 85/2004-Cus based on CoO certifying 22% local value-added content - Department initiated investigation alleging that the declared value addition was incorrect and actual value addition was only 6.5% based on its own computation considering only labour and handling charges -Whether the Department is justified in rejecting the Certificate of Origin issued by the designated authority of the exporting country and recomputing Local Value-Added Content through an alternate methodology contrary to the Interim Rules of Origin, and whether such verification burden lies on the importer – HELD - The rejection of the Certificate of Origin and recomputation of LVAC by the Department is contrary to the Interim Rules of Origin. Rule 6(d) of the Interim Rules of Origin prescribes a specific statutory formula requiring computation of LVAC as the difference between the FOB value of the export product and the CIF value of non-originating materials, divided by the FOB value, which includes manufacturing, processing, overheads and profit components and is not restricted to labour and handling charges alone. By reducing value addition solely to labour and handling charges, the Department has impermissibly substituted the statutory formula with an artificial and truncated computation - The Interim Rules of Origin constitute a complete and self-contained code governing determination of origin and the Department cannot deviate from or substitute the statutory mechanism by adopting alternate methodologies. The importer, who does not have access to the cost structure of the foreign supplier, is required only to produce the Certificate of Origin. Unilateral rejection of the Certificate of Origin based on departmental computation, without invoking the statutory verification mechanism prescribed under Rule 15, strikes at the root of the statutory scheme – The Customs authorities cannot substitute the statutory formula by adopting alternate methodologies nor can they assume the role of the issuing authority in determining origin - The impugned Order-in-Appeal is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax Exemption on Government Fees and Levies - Appellant engaged in iron products manufacturing pays various fees to Governmental authorities including factory license renewal fees, environmental board consent fees, electricity generation duty, mining permission fees, and ISI licence fees – Demand of service tax on Government Fees and Levies under Reverse Charge Mechanism - Whether payments made for licenses, permits, and certifications required by law are exempt from service tax under Notification No. 25/2012 as amended by Notification No. 22/2016 – HELD - The requirement under law must be considered in the con... [Read more]
Service Tax Exemption on Government Fees and Levies - Appellant engaged in iron products manufacturing pays various fees to Governmental authorities including factory license renewal fees, environmental board consent fees, electricity generation duty, mining permission fees, and ISI licence fees – Demand of service tax on Government Fees and Levies under Reverse Charge Mechanism - Whether payments made for licenses, permits, and certifications required by law are exempt from service tax under Notification No. 25/2012 as amended by Notification No. 22/2016 – HELD - The requirement under law must be considered in the context of whether the appellant could have carried on its business without obtaining the aforementioned licenses and permits. Since the answer is clearly in the negative and the Department placed no evidence on record suggesting that the business could have continued without making these payments to various Governmental authorities, the services were clearly covered under the exemption provided by Notification No. 25/2012-ST – Further, the demand cannot sustain even on the ground of limitation as it pertains to RCM where any amount of service tax paid would be immediately available to the appellant as CENVAT credit. The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax – Classification and Taxability of Transportation of goods by road by non-GTA entity -Appellant charged lumpsum amounts for transportation of equipment and materials from vendors' locations to customer sites as part of project execution contracts for power transmission infrastructure – Taxability of charges recovered for arranging transportation of equipment/material from vendor's location to customer's site constitute taxable service tax - Whether such service can be classified as Business Support Service instead of Transportation service – HELD - Service tax is a contract-based levy that must be levied ... [Read more]
Service Tax – Classification and Taxability of Transportation of goods by road by non-GTA entity -Appellant charged lumpsum amounts for transportation of equipment and materials from vendors' locations to customer sites as part of project execution contracts for power transmission infrastructure – Taxability of charges recovered for arranging transportation of equipment/material from vendor's location to customer's site constitute taxable service tax - Whether such service can be classified as Business Support Service instead of Transportation service – HELD - Service tax is a contract-based levy that must be levied in accordance with the underlying contract between parties; therefore, the intent of the parties must be ascertained from the contract as a whole. The evidence clearly demonstrates that the intention was for the company to carry out the activity of transportation irrespective of whether it was done by the company itself or through engagement of others. Since transportation of goods by road by non-GTA entities was not subjected to service tax during the pre-negative list period and was explicitly excluded in the negative list introduced post-June 2012, the service provided remains non-taxable regardless of whether it was personally provided or provided through intermediaries - The allegation that such service constitutes BSS is unjustified as outsourcing contemplates activity normally undertaken by the recipient itself, which transportation is not. The classification cannot be altered merely because one category attracts taxation while another does not - The demand for service tax on charges for transportation of goods by road is set aside.rnrn^Service tax liability on accounting services provided to branch office located outside India – Appellant’s branch office established in Ethiopia engaged a local accounting firm in Ethiopia for complying with local accounting and statutory requirements of that country; the services were rendered and received entirely in Ethiopia - Whether service tax is leviable under reverse charge mechanism on services received by a branch in a foreign country when both the service provider and service recipient are located outside India and services are provided entirely outside Indian territory – HELD - Where the service provider, service recipient, and provision of services are all located and rendered outside India, no question of service tax levy can arise under either the pre-negative list or post-negative list regime. Section 66A of the Finance Act creates a legal fiction treating branch offices as separate permanent establishments; therefore, services availed by a branch office in Ethiopia cannot be deemed services availed by the company in India. The fact that such expenses form part of the consolidated balance sheet prepared as per accounting standards does not change the territorial location of the transaction. The impugned order's reliance on place of provision of service rules applicable to pre-negative list regime for the post-July 2012 period demonstrates lack of application of mind - The demand for service tax on accounting services provided to the foreign branch office is set aside.rnrn^Extended period of limitation based on suppression of facts - Whether extended period of limitation under the proviso to section 73(1) of the Finance Act can be invoked when the demand is based on facts appearing in the audited balance sheets and financial records – HELD - No finding on invocation of extended period of limitation has been recorded in the impugned order. Further, suppression of facts cannot be alleged when the entire demand is raised on the basis of information appearing in balance sheet as these are public documents. In the case where the assessee is a listed public company bound by statutory disclosures to the public, the facts underlying the demand were already in the public domain. Since the ingredients for invocation of extended period of limitation under section 73(1) and imposition of penalty under section 78 are identical, and the extended period cannot be invoked in the absence of proven suppression, the penalty under section 78 also cannot stand - The invocation of extended period of limitation is set aside, and the penalty imposed under section 78 is set aside accordingly. [Read less]
Customs – Penalty under Sections 112 (a) and 114AA on custom brokers for alleged misclassification of imported goods - Revenue alleged that the brokers knowingly overlooked the details regarding the nature of goods and customs tariff classification of the wheel loaders to enable the importer to claim concessional rate of duty - Whether the imposition of penalty under Sections 112(a) and 114AA of the Customs Act, 1962 on custom brokers is justified when the importer has been exonerated on the ground that the issue involved a matter of classification which is interpretational in nature and does not involve mala fides – H... [Read more]
Customs – Penalty under Sections 112 (a) and 114AA on custom brokers for alleged misclassification of imported goods - Revenue alleged that the brokers knowingly overlooked the details regarding the nature of goods and customs tariff classification of the wheel loaders to enable the importer to claim concessional rate of duty - Whether the imposition of penalty under Sections 112(a) and 114AA of the Customs Act, 1962 on custom brokers is justified when the importer has been exonerated on the ground that the issue involved a matter of classification which is interpretational in nature and does not involve mala fides – HELD - In a parallel case concerning the importer, this bench has confirmed the proposed classification but held that the demand should be restricted to the normal period of limitation as the show cause notice was issued beyond the normal period. Since the issue involved classification which is an interpretational matter, no mala fide intentions can be attributed to the importer. Extending this rationale, a custom broker who merely files Bills of Entry at the instructions of the importer cannot be found fault with for abetment when the underlying classification issue is interpretational in nature and the importer itself stands exonerated. Additionally, the same principle regarding the issuance of show cause notice beyond the normal period of limitation applies equally to the custom brokers - The order imposing penalties under Sections 112(a) and 114AA of the Customs Act, 1962 on the custom brokers stands set aside in its entirety. The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Distinction between Commission Agent and Trader – Appellant is a non-profit organization registered as a society claims to have purchased goods at 14% discount from registered sellers and sold them at 13% discount to registered buyers, retaining 1% margin - Revenue treated this 1% gain as commission income and demanded service tax thereon - Whether the margin retained by the appellant on purchase and sale of goods constitutes commission income liable to service tax or whether it represents trading profit and trade discount – HELD - The commission agents and buyers are two different categories of persons. ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Distinction between Commission Agent and Trader – Appellant is a non-profit organization registered as a society claims to have purchased goods at 14% discount from registered sellers and sold them at 13% discount to registered buyers, retaining 1% margin - Revenue treated this 1% gain as commission income and demanded service tax thereon - Whether the margin retained by the appellant on purchase and sale of goods constitutes commission income liable to service tax or whether it represents trading profit and trade discount – HELD - The commission agents and buyers are two different categories of persons. A commission agent acts on behalf of a principal, finds and connects buyers with sellers, and receives commission for services rendered without acquiring title to goods or making payment for them. In contrast, a buyer purchases goods on its own account, acquires title, and makes payment - Trade discount is the discount which a trader receives from the sale price when buying in bulk, whereas commission is a fee for facilitation services - The appellant, being a non-profit society with fixed registered sellers and buyers, operated on a minimal margin without conducting extensive marketing. The mere fact that the appellant operated on a small margin of 1% or had fixed registered sellers and buyers does not transform it into a commission agent – Further, when the so-called commission income is deducted, the total value of taxable services in every relevant year falls below the threshold which was exempted from service tax under the applicable notification. Therefore, the demand of service tax on the commission income cannot be sustained - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Abetment in smuggling - Applicability of Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962 when actual importer is not identified or prosecuted - Show cause notice proposing confiscation of smuggled goods and imposition of penalties against the appellants alleging involvement in attempted smuggling of foreign cigarettes concealed in declared cargo - Whether penalty for abetment under Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962 can be imposed against persons when the actual importer of the goods is neither identified nor prosecuted, and when the evidence against them consists only of uncorroborated and subsequently retracted st... [Read more]
Customs - Abetment in smuggling - Applicability of Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962 when actual importer is not identified or prosecuted - Show cause notice proposing confiscation of smuggled goods and imposition of penalties against the appellants alleging involvement in attempted smuggling of foreign cigarettes concealed in declared cargo - Whether penalty for abetment under Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962 can be imposed against persons when the actual importer of the goods is neither identified nor prosecuted, and when the evidence against them consists only of uncorroborated and subsequently retracted statements without proper investigation – HELD - The penalty under Section 112(a) cannot be sustained when the actual committer i.e. the actual importer is not found or charges against him for improper importation are not established. The legal definition of abetment requires the existence of at least two persons involved - one committer and one abetter. Abetment occurs only when there is active assistance, encouragement, command or procurement by one person to another for commission of an offence. An abetter cannot conspire with himself to commit a crime - In customs smuggling cases, the alleged crime is the improper importation and the importer is the committer. In the absence of the identification and prosecution of the actual importer, there cannot be any penal action for abetment merely on other persons who are otherwise least interested in the act of import. The court further observes that uncorroborated statements which are subsequently retracted, coupled with half-hearted investigation that fails to pursue crucial leads such as verification of call history and interrogation through cross-examination, cannot form the basis for imposing penalty on appellants - The investigative process in the instant case appeared to be carried out as a formality to exonerate the person whose phone number was mentioned while targeting other parties, which does not constitute fair and lawful investigation. The adjudicating authority's failure to consider the detailed replies and explanations filed by the appellants and the omission to mention the actual importer further demonstrates procedural irregularity and absence of proper evidence - The impugned order levying penalty under Section 112(a) against the appellants is set aside – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST - Levy of late fee under Section 47(2) along with General penalty under Section 125 of the CGST Act, 2017 for failure to file Annual return - The petitioner contends that the late fee may be levied only in respect of belated filing and not for non-filing of the return - Whether late fee under Section 47(2) and penalty under Section 125 can be imposed, in addition to the late fee, for failure to furnish the annual return – HELD - The late fee is leviable on any registered person who fails to furnish the return required under Section 44 by the due date. The plain text of Section 47(2) provides that late fee is leviabl... [Read more]
GST - Levy of late fee under Section 47(2) along with General penalty under Section 125 of the CGST Act, 2017 for failure to file Annual return - The petitioner contends that the late fee may be levied only in respect of belated filing and not for non-filing of the return - Whether late fee under Section 47(2) and penalty under Section 125 can be imposed, in addition to the late fee, for failure to furnish the annual return – HELD - The late fee is leviable on any registered person who fails to furnish the return required under Section 44 by the due date. The plain text of Section 47(2) provides that late fee is leviable for failure to file the return by the due date. This provision applies to both belated filing and non-filing of returns - Further, since no separate penalty is prescribed under the applicable GST statutes in respect of failure to file the Annual Return, the imposition of penalty under Section 125 is permissible and does not violate the principle against double punishment. The statutory language clearly establishes that the levy of late fee is contingent upon failure to furnish the return by the stipulated due date, regardless of whether the return is never filed or filed after the due date - The impugned order imposing late fee and penalty is upheld. The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
GST - Departmental Appeals to Appellate Tribunal - Delegation of Authority – Appeal filed by Assistant Commissioner before the Appellate Tribunal without proper authorization from the Commissioner as mandated under Section 112 of the CGST act, 2017, and subsequently delegates the matter to his Superintendent – HELD - The officer-in-charge of filing has not been authorized by the Commissioner as mandated under Sub-Section (3) of Section 112 of the CGST Act, 2017. Further, a delegated power cannot be further delegated - Registry, GSTAT is directed that let the issue be communicated to the Pr. Commissioner, Delhi South in... [Read more]
GST - Departmental Appeals to Appellate Tribunal - Delegation of Authority – Appeal filed by Assistant Commissioner before the Appellate Tribunal without proper authorization from the Commissioner as mandated under Section 112 of the CGST act, 2017, and subsequently delegates the matter to his Superintendent – HELD - The officer-in-charge of filing has not been authorized by the Commissioner as mandated under Sub-Section (3) of Section 112 of the CGST Act, 2017. Further, a delegated power cannot be further delegated - Registry, GSTAT is directed that let the issue be communicated to the Pr. Commissioner, Delhi South intimating that a delegated power cannot be further delegated - The appeal is transferred to the appropriate bench of the Tribunal [Read less]
Service Tax - Liability of cable operators to pay service tax independent of Multi-System Operators MSOs - Whether a cable operator, who receives signals from a multi-system operator and re-transmits them to subscribers, is liable to pay service tax independently or whether the payment of service tax by the MSO exempts the cable operator from such liability – HELD - The definition of cable operator under Section 2(aa) of the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995, includes any person who provides cable service through a cable television network and controls or is responsible for its management and operation. Th... [Read more]
Service Tax - Liability of cable operators to pay service tax independent of Multi-System Operators MSOs - Whether a cable operator, who receives signals from a multi-system operator and re-transmits them to subscribers, is liable to pay service tax independently or whether the payment of service tax by the MSO exempts the cable operator from such liability – HELD - The definition of cable operator under Section 2(aa) of the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995, includes any person who provides cable service through a cable television network and controls or is responsible for its management and operation. The re-transmission of broadcast television signals by a cable operator to multiple subscribers through its own closed transmission paths constitutes provision of cable service, making the cable operator a taxable service provider. The service tax chain extends from the customer to the broadcaster, and both the multi-system operator and the cable operator are liable to pay service tax on their respective services - The contention that double taxation occurs is without merit as the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004, provide mechanism for credit of service tax paid on input services against output service tax liability. The contention that service tax is paid twice on the same service is rejected as the statutory definition of "taxable service" clearly includes services provided by both MSOs and cable operators to "any person" - The appellant's liability to pay service tax on services rendered to subscribers stands confirmed - The appeal is disposed of with adjustment of excess payment of tax made during the preceding financial year against the current period's liability – The appeal is disposed ofrnrn^Branded Service Exemption - Whether a cable operator providing unbranded cable services is entitled to exemption under Notification No. 33/2012-ST dated 20.06.2012, which provides threshold exemption of ten lakh rupees for taxable services of aggregate value not exceeding that amount – HELD - A cable operator providing unbranded cable services is entitled to claim exemption under Notification No. 33/2012-ST, subject to fulfillment of the conditions specified therein. The exemption applies to services where there is no brand name relation to ultimate customers and the service provider is merely transmitting signals received from upstream service providers. However, the threshold exemption is not available to the cable operator when the aggregate value of taxable services rendered exceeds ten lakh rupees in the preceding financial year - The threshold is determined on a yearly basis with reference to the preceding financial year's turnover, and once exceeded, the exemption does not apply for that year – The appellant is not entitled to avail the threshold exemption under Notification No. 33/2012-ST for the relevant period as the turnover exceeded the prescribed limit.rnrn^CENVAT Credit Eligibility - Whether service tax paid by a multi-system operator on input services provided to a cable operator is available as CENVAT credit to the cable operator without compliance with procedural requirements of registration and filing of statutory returns – HELD - The CENVAT credit on service tax paid on input services is admissible to a service provider only upon strict compliance with the provisions of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004. The credit must be claimed and crystallized by filing statutory ST-3 returns within the prescribed time limit and maintaining proper CENVAT credit records. The non-filing of statutory returns within the prescribed period does not preserve the right to claim credit indefinitely - The appellant is not eligible for CENVAT credit due to non-compliance with procedural requirements of registration, timely filing of statutory returns, and maintenance of CENVAT records as mandated under the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004. [Read less]
Central Excise - Quashing of criminal complaint in Central Excise matter where civil adjudication has been decided in favor of assessee - Criminal complaint was filed under Sections 9 and 9AA of the Central Excise Act against a manufacturing company and its officials - The Appellate Tribunal decided the appeal on merits in favor of the assessee, setting aside the entire demand and holding that the assessee has not contravened the relevant provisions - Whether criminal proceedings initiated under the Central Excise Act can continue simultaneously with civil adjudication proceedings, and if so, whether such proceedings must ... [Read more]
Central Excise - Quashing of criminal complaint in Central Excise matter where civil adjudication has been decided in favor of assessee - Criminal complaint was filed under Sections 9 and 9AA of the Central Excise Act against a manufacturing company and its officials - The Appellate Tribunal decided the appeal on merits in favor of the assessee, setting aside the entire demand and holding that the assessee has not contravened the relevant provisions - Whether criminal proceedings initiated under the Central Excise Act can continue simultaneously with civil adjudication proceedings, and if so, whether such proceedings must be quashed after the competent appellate authority decides the matter on merits in favor of the assessee – HELD - While adjudication proceedings and criminal prosecution may theoretically continue simultaneously, criminal prosecution cannot be permitted to continue once the competent appellate authority decides the matter on merits in favor of the assessee - When the CESTAT adjudicated the matter on merits and categorically holds that the assessee has not contravened the relevant provisions, the very substratum and basis of the criminal prosecution disappears - Once the competent appellate authority decides the matter on merits in favor of the assessee, continuation of criminal proceedings amounts to abuse of process of law - The criminal complaint and the summoning order, along with all consequential proceedings arising therefrom, are quashed – The petition is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Health Security and National Security Cess Act - Jurisdiction of CGST Authority under Health Security and National Security Cess Act – Show-cause notice issued by the Assistant Commissioner, Central GST for alleged violation of the Health Security and National Security Cess Rules - Petitioner challenge the jurisdiction of the CGST authority, contending that jurisdiction vested only in authorities appointed under the Health Security and National Security Cess Act read with the Orders issued by the CBIC, and not in CGST authorities – Whether the Assistant Commissioner under the Central GST Act possesses ... [Read more]
Central Excise - Health Security and National Security Cess Act - Jurisdiction of CGST Authority under Health Security and National Security Cess Act – Show-cause notice issued by the Assistant Commissioner, Central GST for alleged violation of the Health Security and National Security Cess Rules - Petitioner challenge the jurisdiction of the CGST authority, contending that jurisdiction vested only in authorities appointed under the Health Security and National Security Cess Act read with the Orders issued by the CBIC, and not in CGST authorities – Whether the Assistant Commissioner under the Central GST Act possesses jurisdiction to issue SCN and pass orders under the Health Security and National Security Cess Rules, or whether such jurisdiction vests only in separately appointed authorities under the aforementioned Act – HELD - As per Order No. 01/2026 read in conjunction with Order No. 02/2026, the Assistant Commissioner or Deputy Commissioner under the Central GST Act is vested with jurisdiction under Rule 11 of the Health Security se National Security Cess Rules, 2026. The mere fact that the authority may have affixed an incorrect or different rubber stamp description below the signature does not vitiate the jurisdiction or create a material deficiency in the authority's power to issue the show-cause notice. The substance of authority vesting in the signatory remains unaffected by the cosmetic nature of the stamp impression. The objection on jurisdictional grounds is therefore unfounded – The petitioner is permitted to file appropriate objections and further replies to the show-cause notice. The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax – Classification of Service of Transportation of Ready Mix Concrete using Transit Mixers – Transportation of Ready Mix Concrete using specially designed Transit Mixers mounted on truck chassis – Respondent issued consignment notes to a cement company for such transportation services – Revenue contended that the activity constituted supply of tangible goods services rather than GTA - Whether the activity of transportation of Ready Mix Concrete using Transit Mixers constitutes GTA service or supply of tangible goods services under Section 66E(f) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The activity constitute... [Read more]
Service Tax – Classification of Service of Transportation of Ready Mix Concrete using Transit Mixers – Transportation of Ready Mix Concrete using specially designed Transit Mixers mounted on truck chassis – Respondent issued consignment notes to a cement company for such transportation services – Revenue contended that the activity constituted supply of tangible goods services rather than GTA - Whether the activity of transportation of Ready Mix Concrete using Transit Mixers constitutes GTA service or supply of tangible goods services under Section 66E(f) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The activity constitutes goods transport agency service and not supply of tangible goods services, therefore no service tax liability arises on the service provider as the obligation lies on the service recipient to discharge the same under Reverse charge – The contract between the parties was specifically for transportation of RMC from the manufacturing site to the customer's site, where the service provider was required to load the RMC in its own vehicles, transport the same to the required destination and unload it as per the directions of the service recipient. The charging structure based on quantity transported and distance travelled further corroborates that the transaction was one of transportation of goods by road and not hiring of vehicles. The mere fact that specialized vehicles were deployed does not convert the nature of activity into supply of tangible goods services - The order of the Commissioner (Appeals) setting aside the demand is upheld and the Revenue appeal is dismissed [Read less]
GST - Requirement to Record Reasons in Registration Cancellation Orders – Notice for cancellation of Registration for failure to furnish returns for a continuous period of six months - The cancellation order did not assign any specific reasons and merely states "Others" in the prescribed Form GST REG-19 – Whether an order cancelling GST registration under Section 29(2)(c) of the CGST Act, 2017 and Rule 22(3) of the CGST Rules, 2017 can be passed without recording specific reasons – HELD – The Form GST REG-19 itself mandates that specific reasons must be assigned for cancellation of GST registration. An order is ter... [Read more]
GST - Requirement to Record Reasons in Registration Cancellation Orders – Notice for cancellation of Registration for failure to furnish returns for a continuous period of six months - The cancellation order did not assign any specific reasons and merely states "Others" in the prescribed Form GST REG-19 – Whether an order cancelling GST registration under Section 29(2)(c) of the CGST Act, 2017 and Rule 22(3) of the CGST Rules, 2017 can be passed without recording specific reasons – HELD – The Form GST REG-19 itself mandates that specific reasons must be assigned for cancellation of GST registration. An order is termed speaking when it expressly states the reasons for the decision, whereas a non-speaking order does not provide a clear reason for its decision. The obligation to record reasons stems from the principles of natural justice and fair play, which are inherent in statutory adjudication. Recording of reasons is demonstrative of conscious application of mind by the adjudicating authority and serves as a check against arbitrary action - When a statute or rules prescribe the recording of reasons in a decision, the absence of such reasons constitutes violation of the statutory prescription and renders the order illegal. The fact that the petitioner failed to submit a reply to the SCN or appear before the Proper Officer does not absolve the officer from the obligation of passing a speaking order - The impugned cancellation order is set aside and quashed, and the matter is reverted to the stage of issuance of the Show Cause Notice – The writ petition is disposed of [Read less]
Customs - Confiscation of imported scrap goods based on alleged mis-declaration of country of origin – Import of LMS Bundle Scrap from UAE - Department seized the goods on the basis of reasonable belief that the goods were liable for confiscation under Section 111 of the Customs Act, 1962 as they were alleged to have mis-declared the country of origin - Commissioner (Appeals) ordered confiscation with an option to redeem on payment of redemption fine under Section 125 of the Customs Act, 1962 and imposed penalty under Section 112(a)(i) of the Customs Act, 1962 – Whether the appellant has imported the impugned goods in ... [Read more]
Customs - Confiscation of imported scrap goods based on alleged mis-declaration of country of origin – Import of LMS Bundle Scrap from UAE - Department seized the goods on the basis of reasonable belief that the goods were liable for confiscation under Section 111 of the Customs Act, 1962 as they were alleged to have mis-declared the country of origin - Commissioner (Appeals) ordered confiscation with an option to redeem on payment of redemption fine under Section 125 of the Customs Act, 1962 and imposed penalty under Section 112(a)(i) of the Customs Act, 1962 – Whether the appellant has imported the impugned goods in violation of the regulation for the provision of Foreign Trade Policy - HELD - There is no mis-declaration on the part of the appellant. Under Indian law, the import of Ferrous Waste and Scrap from Dubai/UAE is freely allowed and there exists no statutory bar on such imports. The appellant filed all requisite documents including Commercial Invoice, Packing List, Certificate of Origin, Bill of Lading, PSIC and Container Tracking, demonstrating complete compliance with import conditions - At the time of inspection on 12.04.2023, there was no effective ban on export from Dubai as the Dubai Customs Notice 05/2023 was issued only on 19.04.2023. Although the retrospective ban by UAE on export of scrap becomes effective from 20.03.2023, such retrospective ban does not affect imports made after full compliance with Foreign Trade Policy conditions - Further, an office memorandum issued by DGFT cannot retrospectively invalidate valid and legal certificates issued by PSIA. An OM issued by DGFT is neither a formal statutory document nor does it suggest any specific policy violation by PSIA - The order of confiscation, redemption fine under Section 125 of the Customs Act, 1962 and penalty under Section 112(a)(i) of the Customs Act, 1962 are set aside – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Kerala Value Added Tax Act, 2003 - Limitation Period for Assessment – Retrospective Application of Amendment – Whether the assessment proceedings initiated by notice issued on 25.01.2018 for the assessment year 2011-12 are barred by limitation under the unamended provisions of Section 25(1) of the KVAT Act - Whether the amendment introduced by the Kerala Finance Act, 2017 has retrospective effect to extend the limitation period for assessments where the original period had already expired – HELD - The amendment made to Section 25(1) of the KVAT Act by the Kerala Finance Act, 2017 does not have retrospective operation... [Read more]
Kerala Value Added Tax Act, 2003 - Limitation Period for Assessment – Retrospective Application of Amendment – Whether the assessment proceedings initiated by notice issued on 25.01.2018 for the assessment year 2011-12 are barred by limitation under the unamended provisions of Section 25(1) of the KVAT Act - Whether the amendment introduced by the Kerala Finance Act, 2017 has retrospective effect to extend the limitation period for assessments where the original period had already expired – HELD - The amendment made to Section 25(1) of the KVAT Act by the Kerala Finance Act, 2017 does not have retrospective operation and applies only prospectively with effect from 01.04.2017. The substitution of the expression "proceed to determine" in place of "complete the assessment" in the third proviso indicates the clear legislative intent to mandate assessing authorities to complete proceedings initiated under Section 25(1) within the stipulated time frame. For the assessment year 2011-12, the original limitation period of five years expired on 31.03.2017. The third proviso extended this period only up to 31.03.2018 for assessments where the original period had expired by 31.03.2017. Since the notice was issued only on 25.01.2018, which is after the expiry of the prescribed period of five years from the end of the relevant assessment year, the assessment proceedings are time barred - The decision in Assistant Commissioner (Asst) v. Cholayil Pvt. Ltd. and other precedents have settled that the law operates prospectively and does not permit reopening of assessments beyond the prescribed limitation period – The assessment order issued beyond the limitation period is rendered invalid and without jurisdiction - Writ petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST – Compliance with Appellate Authority's order directing restoration of cancelled GST registration - An appeal against the rejection of revocation application was allowed by the Appellate Authority directing immediate restoration of registration. The revenue authorities filed an appeal against this order but did not restore the registration, contending that no law required immediate compliance during the pendency of their appeal - Whether the filing of an appeal by the Revenue against the Appellate Authority's order directing restoration of GST registration operates as an automatic stay on the implementation of such o... [Read more]
GST – Compliance with Appellate Authority's order directing restoration of cancelled GST registration - An appeal against the rejection of revocation application was allowed by the Appellate Authority directing immediate restoration of registration. The revenue authorities filed an appeal against this order but did not restore the registration, contending that no law required immediate compliance during the pendency of their appeal - Whether the filing of an appeal by the Revenue against the Appellate Authority's order directing restoration of GST registration operates as an automatic stay on the implementation of such order, thereby exempting the revenue from the obligation to restore the registration - HELD - The mere filing of an appeal against an order passed by the appellate authority does not amount to grant of automatic stay against that order. The statutory provisions governing the matter are unambiguous and provide no provision for automatic grant of stay in such circumstances. There exists no legal sanction for the revenue's contention that it may refrain from restoring registration during the pendency of its appeal – Further, the revenue has acted in a wholly arbitrary and unreasonable manner by refusing compliance with a clear and positive direction issued by the appellate authority. Once the registration stands cancelled, it is reasonable to expect that business premises may remain locked until revival occurs, but this does not absolve the revenue from complying with the appellate mandate - The registration is directed to be restored forthwith subject to the outcome of the appeal preferred by the revenue against the appellate order – The writ petition is allowed [Read less]
Andhra Pradesh VAT Act, 2005 – Application for opting for Composition scheme, Time of filing of application – Petitioner undertakes infrastructure contracts commencing in 2004-05. Upon introduction of the VAT effective from 01.04.2005, the petitioner filed an application for composition of tax under the statutory provision on 01.04.2005 and paid tax at the concessional rate – Rejection of composition claim contending that the application was filed after contract commencement - Whether a taxpayer is entitled to the benefit of composition scheme under the tax statute when the application is filed on the date the law co... [Read more]
Andhra Pradesh VAT Act, 2005 – Application for opting for Composition scheme, Time of filing of application – Petitioner undertakes infrastructure contracts commencing in 2004-05. Upon introduction of the VAT effective from 01.04.2005, the petitioner filed an application for composition of tax under the statutory provision on 01.04.2005 and paid tax at the concessional rate – Rejection of composition claim contending that the application was filed after contract commencement - Whether a taxpayer is entitled to the benefit of composition scheme under the tax statute when the application is filed on the date the law comes into effect, even though the underlying contract had commenced prior to such date – HELD - While the statutory provision ordinarily requires applications to be filed before contract commencement, the special circumstance here is that the provision itself comes into effect after the contract has already commenced. The taxpayer has substantiated the filing of the composition application with documentary evidence bearing the official stamp, and the earlier assessment order recognizes the filing and grants composition relief. The subsequent officer cannot reject the claim merely on the ground that the record is unavailable when the earlier assessment conclusively establishes that the application was made and accepted - Further, since the law comes into force on 01.04.2005 at which point the petitioner filed the application, it satisfies the legislative intent as the taxpayer could not have complied with a requirement to file prior to a law's enactment – The impugned assessment order is set aside and the writ petition is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Club or Association Services - Service tax liability for services rendered by clubs to their own members - Whether services rendered by a club to itself or its members constitute taxable services under the 'Club or Association' category – HELD - The demand cannot be sustained as it is settled law that services rendered to oneself cannot be considered as a service for a consideration. The Supreme Court in State of West Bengal vs. Calcutta Club Limited has held that clubs do not render services for consideration when providing services to their own members. The fundamental principle of service tax is that the... [Read more]
Service Tax - Club or Association Services - Service tax liability for services rendered by clubs to their own members - Whether services rendered by a club to itself or its members constitute taxable services under the 'Club or Association' category – HELD - The demand cannot be sustained as it is settled law that services rendered to oneself cannot be considered as a service for a consideration. The Supreme Court in State of West Bengal vs. Calcutta Club Limited has held that clubs do not render services for consideration when providing services to their own members. The fundamental principle of service tax is that there must be a consideration flowing between distinct parties, and where a club renders services to its own members, this element of consideration is absent - The demand for service tax under 'Club or Association' services is set aside.rnrnService tax on downlinking charges for permitting commercial exploitation of racing events – Appellant received downlinking charges from other race clubs for transmitting racing events to their premises, and also shared betting revenue with other clubs under reciprocal arrangements under Turf Authorities of India agreement - Whether downlinking charges and revenue sharing from other clubs for permitting the commercial use or exploitation of racing events constitute taxable services under section 65(105)(zzzzr) of the Finance Act 1994 – HELD - The statutory definition of 'Commercial Use or Exploitation of Event' services means any service provided by granting the right or permitting commercial use or exploitation of any event organised by a person. The appellant shared telecast rights to other race clubs and collected downlinking charges for this permission. Any person wishing to watch the live telecast had to be physically present inside a race club and pay entry fees. The receipt of downlinking charges is for the sole purpose of permitting the event organised by the appellant to be used commercially by other clubs. The consideration received for this activity constitutes taxable service. The service became taxable only from 1.7.2010 onwards, and since the demand pertains to the period 01.07.2010 to 30.06.2012, the confirmation of demand is legally sustainable - The demand for service tax under 'Commercial Use or Exploitation of Event' services is confirmed and upheld.rnrnService tax on bookmakers stall fee for space provided in club premises - The appellant provided space to bookmakers to operate within the club premises in consideration of a bookmakers stall fee - Whether payment received by a club for providing space to licensed bookmakers operating under state betting tax laws constitutes 'Renting of Immovable Property' service liable to service tax – HELD - The bookmakers operate under the Mysore Betting Tax Act and Rules and are required to obtain licenses from the Government. The payment received by the appellant is not based on the area of the premises but on the race being conducted, as per the Betting Tax Act and Rules. The statutory definition of 'Renting of Immovable Property' contemplates payment based on the usage or area of property. Since the payment here is determined by the frequency of races and not by the property measurement or duration of use, it does not fall within the definition of renting of immovable property - The demand for service tax under 'Renting of Immovable Property' services is set aside.rnrnService Tax on food and beverage services provided in air-conditioned food court - Appellant operated an air-conditioned food court in its premises where food, beverages including alcohol were served to club members and the revenue demanded service tax for the period from 01.05.2011 to 30.06.2012 - Whether restaurant services provided to club members in an air-conditioned food court constitute taxable services under section 65(105)(zzzv) of the Finance Act 1994 – HELD - The statutory definition of restaurant services covers provision of food and beverages in an air-conditioned or air-ventilated place. The fact that the services are offered to members rather than the general public does not exempt them from service tax - The demand for service tax under 'Restaurant Services' is confirmed.rnrnSponsorship Services - Whether sponsorship of sporting events by an organization constitutes taxable sponsorship services liable to service tax – HELD - The appellant does not dispute the fact that these events were sponsored by it. The statutory framework provides that sponsorship services constitute taxable services. The claim of bona fide belief regarding unawareness of reverse charge mechanism liability cannot be accepted as a defence against the statutory liability. The appellant does not qualify for the Small Services Provider exemption as the conditions for such exemption are not satisfied - The demand for service tax under 'Sponsorship Services' is confirmed.rnrnExtended Period of Limitation - Whether suppression by the appellant in not disclosing other taxable services can be invoked to extend the period of limitation beyond the normal period – HELD - The correspondences between the department and the appellant consistently stated that the appellant was not liable to service tax as they were registered as 'Club or Association' service provider. The Department did not initially question this classification for many years. The appellant's consistent position regarding its status cannot be construed as suppression when the department was regularly corresponding with it. The Department cannot now claim suppression on the ground that they were unaware of other services being rendered, when they had adequate opportunity to investigate through the long-standing correspondence - Extended period of limitation is not invoked, and all demands are sustained only for the normal period of limitation. [Read less]
Customs - Classification of gold neck chains in running length as articles of jewellery – Importer imports gold neck chains in running lengths ranging from 2.8 feet to 206 feet from Indonesia, classifying them under Customs Tariff Heading 7113 (articles of jewellery) with nil basic customs duty under Notification No. 46/2011-Cus. dated 01.06.2011 - Customs authorities reclassify the goods under Customs Tariff Heading 7108 (gold in semi-manufactured forms) proposing confiscation and penalty – Whether gold neck chains in running length, which require only cutting to customer-specified length and attachment of hooks to be... [Read more]
Customs - Classification of gold neck chains in running length as articles of jewellery – Importer imports gold neck chains in running lengths ranging from 2.8 feet to 206 feet from Indonesia, classifying them under Customs Tariff Heading 7113 (articles of jewellery) with nil basic customs duty under Notification No. 46/2011-Cus. dated 01.06.2011 - Customs authorities reclassify the goods under Customs Tariff Heading 7108 (gold in semi-manufactured forms) proposing confiscation and penalty – Whether gold neck chains in running length, which require only cutting to customer-specified length and attachment of hooks to become finished wearable articles, are classifiable as articles of jewellery under Customs Tariff Heading 7113 or as semi-manufactured gold under Customs Tariff Heading 7108 – HELD - The Chapter Note 9(a) to Chapter 71 explicitly includes necklaces as articles of jewellery, and the impugned goods are gold neck chains intended for personal adornment. The Rule 2(a) of the General Rules of Interpretation provides that incomplete or unfinished articles attaining the essential character of a complete finished article shall be classified under the heading of the finished article – From the photographs of the goods it is seen that gold neck chains in running length have substantially attained the form of finished articles requiring only minor finishing operations of cutting and hook attachment, which do not alter the essential character of the goods as neck chains. The mere cutting or slitting of a product without change in its name, character or end-use does not constitute manufacture and does not warrant reclassification to a different commodity head. Consequently, the goods are not liable for confiscation under Section 111(d) and 111(m) of the Customs Act, 1962, and the imposition of redemption fine and penalty becomes untenable – The impugned order is set aside to the extent of imposition of redemption fine and penalty, and the appeal is disposed of [Read less]
Service Tax - Demand of cenvat credit of the service tax paid on the services of the 'air travel agent' provided to a SEZ Unit – Appellant rendered air travel booking services to units located in SEZ - Whether services provided to SEZ units for authorized operations are exempt from service tax under Section 26(1) of the Special Economic Zones Act, 2005, notwithstanding the provisions of the Finance Act, 1994, and whether the demand for service tax along with interest and penalties can be sustained – HELD - The services provided to SEZ units for authorized operations are exempt from service tax by virtue of the overrid... [Read more]
Service Tax - Demand of cenvat credit of the service tax paid on the services of the 'air travel agent' provided to a SEZ Unit – Appellant rendered air travel booking services to units located in SEZ - Whether services provided to SEZ units for authorized operations are exempt from service tax under Section 26(1) of the Special Economic Zones Act, 2005, notwithstanding the provisions of the Finance Act, 1994, and whether the demand for service tax along with interest and penalties can be sustained – HELD - The services provided to SEZ units for authorized operations are exempt from service tax by virtue of the overriding effect of Section 26(1) read with Section 51(1) of the Special Economic Zones Act, 2005. The Section 26(1) of the SEZ Act confers specific exemption from service tax on taxable services provided to a developer or unit to carry on authorized operations in a Special Economic Zone. Section 51(1) explicitly provides that the provisions of the SEZ Act shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law for the time being in force. The SEZ Act being a special enactment dealing with special economic zones prevails over the general provisions of the Finance Act, 1994 - The principle of law established through catena of decisions is that Section 26 is a special power of exemption under a special enactment, whereas notifications under Section 93 of the Finance Act, 1994 are general powers of exemption available to any person - In the absence of any evidence that the services do not pertain to authorized operations or were utilized for personal purposes of employees, the services must be considered as provided for authorized operations of the SEZ - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Export cargo handling service - Demand recovery of the cenvat credit availed on the services of export of cargo - Whether export cargo handling service constitutes an exempted service for purposes of Cenvat credit – HELD - The export cargo handling service is not an exempted service but is excluded from the definition of cargo handling service, and the service of cargo handling which is excluded from the definition of cargo handling service cannot be classified as an exempted service. The exempted services under clause 2(e) of the Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 would cover only services which are notified under ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Export cargo handling service - Demand recovery of the cenvat credit availed on the services of export of cargo - Whether export cargo handling service constitutes an exempted service for purposes of Cenvat credit – HELD - The export cargo handling service is not an exempted service but is excluded from the definition of cargo handling service, and the service of cargo handling which is excluded from the definition of cargo handling service cannot be classified as an exempted service. The exempted services under clause 2(e) of the Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 would cover only services which are notified under the Finance Act, 1994, and services outside the purview of service tax cannot be treated as exempted services. Therefore, the computation of 8% amount considering the export service as exempted service is incorrect and unsustainable - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowedrnrn^As regards service tax credit availed on the 'supply of tangible goods for use' service it is not tenable, since 'supply of tangible goods' service was introduced on 16.05.2008 and the dispute in this appeal is for the period prior to the introduction of this service, hence the demand is unsustainable. As regards the demand of service tax credit availed on 'Repair of cars' and the 'telephone', the Revenue has not adduced any evidence to the effect that these services were used for the personal use of the appellant's employees. Further, landline telephone services were considered as eligible for cenvat credit in catena of cases. [Read less]
Service tax on commission earned by franchisee – Appellant-franchisee operating as a commission-based distributor of SIM cards on behalf of a telecom service provider receives a show cause notice demanding service tax on commission earned from such sales, contending that service tax is already collected and remitted on the full face value of SIM cards by the service provider and that double taxation should not be imposed on the commission component - Whether a franchisee who merely purchases and sells SIM cards on commission basis, where the service provider has already discharged service tax on the gross amount of SIM c... [Read more]
Service tax on commission earned by franchisee – Appellant-franchisee operating as a commission-based distributor of SIM cards on behalf of a telecom service provider receives a show cause notice demanding service tax on commission earned from such sales, contending that service tax is already collected and remitted on the full face value of SIM cards by the service provider and that double taxation should not be imposed on the commission component - Whether a franchisee who merely purchases and sells SIM cards on commission basis, where the service provider has already discharged service tax on the gross amount of SIM cards, is liable to pay service tax on the commission earned – HELD - The activities of purchase and sale of SIM cards where the service provider has discharged service tax on the full value of the SIM cards does not amount to providing business auxiliary service, and imposing service tax on the commission would result in impermissible double taxation As the issue is no longer res integra, there is no necessity to remand the matter back to the appellate authority for reconsideration - The order passed by the CESTAT is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST - Interpretation of enabling provisions in GST waiver Notification - Taxable and exempted supplies - Restriction of input tax credit under Section 17(2) of the CGST Act, 2017 - Petitioner agreed with the audit observations and paid the common Input Tax Credit - Demand of interest under Section 50(1) of the CGST Act – On the basis of GST Council recommendation for waiver of interest or penalty relating to demands under Section 73 for financial years 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20, the assessee filed a waiver application, which was rejected as belated - Whether the rejection of a waiver application filed after the three-... [Read more]
GST - Interpretation of enabling provisions in GST waiver Notification - Taxable and exempted supplies - Restriction of input tax credit under Section 17(2) of the CGST Act, 2017 - Petitioner agreed with the audit observations and paid the common Input Tax Credit - Demand of interest under Section 50(1) of the CGST Act – On the basis of GST Council recommendation for waiver of interest or penalty relating to demands under Section 73 for financial years 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20, the assessee filed a waiver application, which was rejected as belated - Whether the rejection of a waiver application filed after the three-month period prescribed in the notification is legally valid when the Notification No.21/2024-Central tax dated 08.10.2024 uses the word 'may' instead of 'shall' – HELD - The provision in question employs the word 'may', which is enabling and directory in nature rather than mandatory 'shall'. The tax authorities erred in law by interpreting this discretionary provision as a strict time-bound obligation. The use of 'may' indicates that the provision grants discretion to the assessee and does not impose a mandatory, non-extendable deadline for filing the application. By rigidly adhering to the three-month period and rejecting the application solely on this ground, the Department has misinterpreted the legal nature of the provision and acted unreasonably - The rejection order is quashed and the Respondent is directed to consider the waiver application in accordance with law. Pending such consideration, the show cause notice, the summary thereof, and the Order-in-Original are kept in abeyance – The petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST - Registration - Denial of Registration in another State on Account of Non-Compliance in previous State - Whether a assessee-Company can be denied GST registration in one State merely on the ground that it failed to file returns in another State where it was previously registered – HELD - The GST Act operates as both State-centric and Central-centric legislation, creating a unified GST framework across States. A company that is registered in a particular State and fails to comply with statutory provisions becomes a defaulter under the GST regime and such a defaulting entity cannot be permitted to circumvent its oblig... [Read more]
GST - Registration - Denial of Registration in another State on Account of Non-Compliance in previous State - Whether a assessee-Company can be denied GST registration in one State merely on the ground that it failed to file returns in another State where it was previously registered – HELD - The GST Act operates as both State-centric and Central-centric legislation, creating a unified GST framework across States. A company that is registered in a particular State and fails to comply with statutory provisions becomes a defaulter under the GST regime and such a defaulting entity cannot be permitted to circumvent its obligations by merely shifting to another State and filing a fresh application for Registration instead of complying with the provisions of the Act in the State where it was originally registered – If a Company does not follow the provisions of law after having been registered in particular State, the Company cannot be allowed to move an application for getting registration in another State - The denial of GST registration is upheld and the writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
Customs - Confiscation and Redemption Fine for Re-exported Prohibited Goods - Appellant imported miscellaneous goods including prohibited cosmetic items in violation of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, along with goods having quantity mis-declarations - Adjudicating authority confiscated the goods under section 119 of the Customs Act, 1962, imposed redemption fine, and granted permission for re-export - Whether confiscation of goods and imposition of redemption fine can be imposed when permission is granted for re-exporting the confiscated goods – HELD - Confiscation under section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962, is ma... [Read more]
Customs - Confiscation and Redemption Fine for Re-exported Prohibited Goods - Appellant imported miscellaneous goods including prohibited cosmetic items in violation of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, along with goods having quantity mis-declarations - Adjudicating authority confiscated the goods under section 119 of the Customs Act, 1962, imposed redemption fine, and granted permission for re-export - Whether confiscation of goods and imposition of redemption fine can be imposed when permission is granted for re-exporting the confiscated goods – HELD - Confiscation under section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962, is mandatory when goods are imported in breach of statutory provisions and become offending goods liable for confiscation - The Supreme Court's interpretation of the word "liable" establishes that both confiscation of goods and imposition of penalty on the concerned person are not discretionary but mandatory. Re-export permission is a sequentially separate administrative process that comes into operation only after the importer redeems the confiscated goods by paying redemption fine. Confiscation is a necessary precedent action before administrative permission for export is granted. The bundling of the re-export permission with the quasi-judicial order does not alter this sequence of events - It is open to the adjudicating authority to impose both redemption fine and penalty when permission is granted for re-exporting the goods. Therefore, imposition of redemption fine on re-export of prohibited goods cannot be faulted - The matter be remanded to the original authority to examine afresh and state the basis of arriving at the revised value before determining the duty, interest, fine, and penalty, following principles of natural justice - The appeal is disposed of [Read less]
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