Central Excise – Refund, Unjust Enrichment in refund of excess excise duty - Refund applications claiming refund of excess duty paid based on estimated cost of production which was subsequently revised downward upon finalization of actual batch costing – Rejection of refund claims on the ground that they were barred by the doctrine of unjust enrichment under Section 11B - Whether refund claims for excess excise duty paid on estimated valuation are barred by the doctrine of unjust enrichment when actual cost finalization results in lower assessable value - HELD - The unjust enrichment is not attracted to such refund cla... [Read more]
Central Excise – Refund, Unjust Enrichment in refund of excess excise duty - Refund applications claiming refund of excess duty paid based on estimated cost of production which was subsequently revised downward upon finalization of actual batch costing – Rejection of refund claims on the ground that they were barred by the doctrine of unjust enrichment under Section 11B - Whether refund claims for excess excise duty paid on estimated valuation are barred by the doctrine of unjust enrichment when actual cost finalization results in lower assessable value - HELD - The unjust enrichment is not attracted to such refund claims. The excess duty arose solely from downward revision of cost of production following finalization of batch costing and not from any commercial price variation. The supplies are not sold as marketable goods but utilized as rolling stock for transportation operations. The revenue failed to establish that the incidence of excess duty was recovered from any independent buyer or that the manufacturer derived any commercial gain - The appellant-manufacturer successfully rebutted the statutory presumption under Section 12B by establishing that the excess duty incidence was not passed on to any other person - The rejection of refund claims on the ground of unjust enrichment is set aside - The appeals are partly allowed and partly remanded - Limitation Period for Refund Claims under Section 11B - Whether refund claims filed beyond one year from the date of clearance are barred by limitation under Section 11B when provisional assessment was not adopted - HELD - The refund claims filed beyond one year from the relevant date as prescribed under Section 11B are barred by limitation. In the absence of provisional assessment under Rule 7, assessments made at the time of removal are required to be treated as final assessments. No statutory provision permits treating the date of finalization of actual cost as the relevant date for Section 11B purposes where assessments were not made provisional. While the substantive right to seek refund may survive, the remedy can only be pursued under Section 11B which is subject to the prescribed limitation period. The court notes that the proper statutory course available to the assessee would have been to seek provisional assessment under Rule 7, and the failure to adopt it results in governance of refund claims under Section 11B limitation - Refund claims filed beyond the statutory period of one year are rejected as time-barred, while claims filed within the prescribed period remain admissible subject to verification of quantification and other requirements - Effect of Non-Adoption of Provisional Assessment - Whether failure to adopt provisional assessment under Rule 7 extinguishes the substantive entitlement to seek refund of excess duty - HELD - The failure to adopt provisional assessment does not extinguish the substantive entitlement to seek refund of excess duty. However, assessments cannot be treated as provisional in law in the absence of compliance with Rule 7. The court reasons that where valuation under Rule 8 is based upon estimated cost and actual cost becomes available subsequently, the proper statutory course would have been to seek provisional assessment under Rule 7. The consequence of not following Rule 7 is that the manufacturer cannot claim the benefit of formal finalization of provisional assessment and any refund claim is necessarily governed by Section 11B including the limitation prescribed therein. The mere acceptance of payment of differential duty by the Department whenever actual cost exceeded estimated cost cannot render the assessments provisional in law - The assessments cannot be treated as provisional in the absence of Rule 7 compliance, and refund claims remain maintainable but only under Section 11B subject to prescribed limitations - Valuation Based on CAS-4 Versus Indian Railway Code Chapter 13 - The appellant argued that cost of production should be determined as per Chapter 13 of the Indian Railway Code for Mechanical Department, while the valuation framework required determination under Rule 8 of the Central Excise Valuation Rules, 2000 using CAS-4 - Whether valuation of cost of production under Rule 8 should be determined on the basis of CAS-4 or on the basis of Chapter 13 of the Indian Railway Code for Mechanical Department - HELD - The valuation for the purposes of Rule 8 is required to be determined solely on the basis of CAS-4 and not on the basis of Chapter 13 of the Indian Railway Code. The court reasons that the valuation of goods captively consumed and not sold is governed by Rule 8 which requires determination of assessable value based on cost of production, and CAS-4 has consistently been recognized and adopted as the accepted costing standard in excise valuation matters. The statutory valuation mechanism under the Central Excise law cannot be substituted by internal costing methodologies followed for administrative, budgeting or accounting purposes within the Railways. While the Indian Railway Code may govern internal costing, budgeting and accounting procedures, such internal departmental instructions cannot override the valuation framework prescribed under the Central Excise Act and the Valuation Rules framed thereunder. Excise duty being a levy under a fiscal statute, assessable value must necessarily be determined in accordance with statutory provisions governing valuation - Valuation for Rule 8 purposes is determined exclusively on the basis of CAS-4 and not on the basis of the Indian Railway Code - Absence of Batch Numbers on Invoices as Ground for Refund Denial - Correlation between invoices and batch-cost records in refund claims – The appellant followed a batch-costing system where final cost of production was determined only after completion of manufacture and clearance of the batch. The invoices did not contain batch numbers or cost-sheet references - Revenue contended that refund claims were not capable of verification and therefore the excess duty paid could not be correlated with clearances - Whether refund claims can be rejected solely on the ground that invoices do not contain batch numbers or cost-sheet references for correlation with cost records – HELD - Refund claims cannot be rejected merely because invoices do not contain batch numbers or cost-sheet references. The court reasons that the manufacturer consistently followed a batch-costing system under which final cost was determined only after completion of the batch, which is undisputed. It is also undisputed that whenever finalization resulted in enhancement of cost, the consequential differential duty liability was accepted and discharged based on the same costing methodology and supporting records. Having accepted the very same methodology for determination and recovery of differential duty, the Department cannot reject the methodology itself for refund purposes solely on the ground that batch numbers were not reflected on invoices unless it is demonstrated that the claims are incapable of verification or that supporting records are unreliable. The absence of batch numbers on invoices may justify detailed verification but cannot constitute a valid ground for denial of refund - The Adjudicating Authority shall consider records produced for establishing such correlation and undertake verification in the same manner as would be adopted for determining and recovering differential duty arising from cost finalization - Refund shall not be denied merely because batch numbers are not reflected on invoices if the requisite correlation can otherwise be established from the records produced, subject to the manufacturer's burden of proof and the authority's verification process. [Read less]
Central Excise - Sugar Cess Exemption on sugar cleared for export – Appellant cleared sugar to merchant exporters for export under CT-1 certificates without payment of central excise duties including sugar cess during a specified period - Revenue issued show cause notice demanding sugar cess on the exported quantity along with interest and penalty - Whether Sugar cess is payable on sugar exported out of India – HELD – The Notification No. SO.585(E) dated 30.07.1993 issued by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution has explicitly exempted sugar produced by any factory in India from payment of ce... [Read more]
Central Excise - Sugar Cess Exemption on sugar cleared for export – Appellant cleared sugar to merchant exporters for export under CT-1 certificates without payment of central excise duties including sugar cess during a specified period - Revenue issued show cause notice demanding sugar cess on the exported quantity along with interest and penalty - Whether Sugar cess is payable on sugar exported out of India – HELD – The Notification No. SO.585(E) dated 30.07.1993 issued by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution has explicitly exempted sugar produced by any factory in India from payment of cess when such sugar is exported out of the country. Further, the Central Excise Tariff Act in its Appendix-III for the relevant years clearly shows that varying rates of sugar cess were levied on domestic clearances of sugar but sugar exported out of India was exempted from the whole of the sugar cess. Additionally, CBIC Circular No.10/93-Cx.8 dated 01.09.1993 had exempted sugar cess on sugar to be exported. Neither the show cause notice nor the appellate order disputes the fact of export and therefore the conditions for exemption are satisfied - The levy of sugar cess has been exempted on sugar exported out of India by virtue of the 1993 notification. Consequently, the impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Extended period of limitation for re-assessment of imported goods based on alleged mis-classification, Denial of concessional duty benefit under Customs notification - Appellant imported battery haulers in completely knocked down (CKD) condition availing concessional duty benefit at 15% as per Sl. No. 524(a) of Notification No. 50/2017 dated 30.06.2017 - After approximately four years and eight months from the date of final clearance, the Department issued SCN proposing re-assessment and denial of the concessional duty benefit on the ground that the goods were not genuinely imported in CKD condition but as part s... [Read more]
Customs - Extended period of limitation for re-assessment of imported goods based on alleged mis-classification, Denial of concessional duty benefit under Customs notification - Appellant imported battery haulers in completely knocked down (CKD) condition availing concessional duty benefit at 15% as per Sl. No. 524(a) of Notification No. 50/2017 dated 30.06.2017 - After approximately four years and eight months from the date of final clearance, the Department issued SCN proposing re-assessment and denial of the concessional duty benefit on the ground that the goods were not genuinely imported in CKD condition but as part shipments, thereby constituting misclassification - Whether the extended period of limitation under section 28(4) of the Customs Act, 1962 can be invoked when the Department seeks to re-assess imported goods on the basis that the importer has falsely claimed classification benefit under a Customs notification – HELD - Mis-classification of a product or claiming benefit under a Customs notification, by itself, can never constitute wilful misstatement or suppression of facts necessary to invoke the extended period of limitation. The issue involved is technical in nature relating to availment of concessional duty benefit subject to fulfillment of prescribed conditions, which cannot be construed as misstatement of material facts in the bills of entry - All relevant information pertaining to the import, including declarations regarding CKD condition and part shipment status due to lack of storage space, were made by the importer in the B/E and invoices submitted to and available with the Department at the time of clearance. The suppression of facts can be invoked only when the department was not aware of material facts, but here all facts were within the knowledge of the Department. The ingredients required for invoking the extended period of limitation, namely wilful misstatement or suppression of facts on the part of the importer, are completely absent in the present case - The demand for differential customs duty confirmed by invoking the extended period of limitation is set aside, and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Transfer of Right to use Goods - Service Tax and VAT Mutually Exclusive - Renting equipment for specified periods. As per the agreements, the equipment was deployed at customers' sites with possession, control, and custody transferred entirely to the customers, while ownership remained with the appellant. The appellant treated these transactions as "deemed sales" and paid applicable VAT/CST - Whether the transfer of equipment to customers for use on rental basis constitutes a "deemed sale" chargeable to VAT/CST or falls within the scope of service tax as "supply of tangible goods service" under Section 65(105... [Read more]
Service Tax - Transfer of Right to use Goods - Service Tax and VAT Mutually Exclusive - Renting equipment for specified periods. As per the agreements, the equipment was deployed at customers' sites with possession, control, and custody transferred entirely to the customers, while ownership remained with the appellant. The appellant treated these transactions as "deemed sales" and paid applicable VAT/CST - Whether the transfer of equipment to customers for use on rental basis constitutes a "deemed sale" chargeable to VAT/CST or falls within the scope of service tax as "supply of tangible goods service" under Section 65(105)(zzzzj) of the Finance Act, 1994, and whether service tax and VAT are mutually exclusive taxes – HELD - The Supreme Court in Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited v. Union of India establishes five essential attributes for "transfer of right to use goods". In the instant case, all five attributes stand fulfilled as the equipment were delivered to customers, the exact equipment were identified in schedules, customers possessed requisite permissions, entire control and custody vested exclusively with customers who could operate equipment at their discretion or appoint their own operators, and the appellant could not use equipment for any other purpose or withdraw them during the agreement tenure - Service tax and VAT are mutually exclusive taxes, and when a transaction involves transfer of possession and effective control of goods, it attracts VAT/CST and not service tax. The determination of whether a transaction involves transfer of possession and control is a question of fact based on contract terms and material facts, ascertainable from whether VAT is payable or paid. The appellant's obligation to undertake periodical routine and scheduled maintenance of equipment does not affect the transfer of right to possession and effective control to customers. Similarly, the fact that operators were generally provided by the appellant with an option for customers to appoint their own operators subject to prior concurrence does not negate the transfer of effective control and possession to customers - The appellant is not liable to pay service tax as the transaction constitutes a "deemed sale" falling within the scope of VAT/CST, and the appellant has duly paid the applicable VAT/CST thereon – The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Cenvat Credit for Common Input Services in Dutiable and Exempted Goods - Demand for the reversal of the entire Cenvat Credit taken without maintaining separate accounts - Whether the Revenue can demand reversal of the entire Cenvat Credit taken for common input services or whether only proportionate credit reversal or ten percent of the total assessable value of exempted goods should be demanded – HELD - Revenue cannot demand the reversal of the entire Cenvat Credit taken for common input services, as the statutory provisions prevailing at the time of the disputed period prescribe that only proportionate... [Read more]
Central Excise - Cenvat Credit for Common Input Services in Dutiable and Exempted Goods - Demand for the reversal of the entire Cenvat Credit taken without maintaining separate accounts - Whether the Revenue can demand reversal of the entire Cenvat Credit taken for common input services or whether only proportionate credit reversal or ten percent of the total assessable value of exempted goods should be demanded – HELD - Revenue cannot demand the reversal of the entire Cenvat Credit taken for common input services, as the statutory provisions prevailing at the time of the disputed period prescribe that only proportionate Cenvat Credit reversal or ten percent of the total assessable value of exempted goods should be demanded. The Show Cause Notice does not allege non-maintenance of separate accounts as grounds for demanding the entire credit reversal, and therefore, the Revenue cannot traverse beyond the scope of the Show Cause Notice at the appellate stage. Further, in the identical issue for a subsequent period, the Commissioner of Appeals has passed an order setting aside the demand and directing payment of only ten percent of the value of exempted goods, which order has not been challenged by the Revenue and has reached finality - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Waiver of late fee for delayed filing of supplementary Bills of Entry - Whether late fee is imposable for delayed filing of supplementary Bills of Entry when the delay is not attributable to the fault of the importer and the excess cargo forms part of consignments for which original bills of entry were filed within the prescribed time-limit – HELD - The proper officer possesses discretionary authority under the proviso to Section 46(3) to waive late fees when satisfied that sufficient cause exists for the delay. The delay in filing supplementary bills of entry in the present case is not attributable to any faul... [Read more]
Customs - Waiver of late fee for delayed filing of supplementary Bills of Entry - Whether late fee is imposable for delayed filing of supplementary Bills of Entry when the delay is not attributable to the fault of the importer and the excess cargo forms part of consignments for which original bills of entry were filed within the prescribed time-limit – HELD - The proper officer possesses discretionary authority under the proviso to Section 46(3) to waive late fees when satisfied that sufficient cause exists for the delay. The delay in filing supplementary bills of entry in the present case is not attributable to any fault of the importer, as the original bills of entry were filed timely and the excess cargo discovered was part of the same consignments. The late fees for delayed filing of B/E must be considered judiciously and not imposed in a routine mechanical manner, as emphasised in Circular No. 14/2017-Customs and the SOP dated 19.05.2023 – In the present case, the bona fides of the importer is not questioned, and subsequent developments were necessitated by post-import discoveries of legitimate excess cargo. No malafide or fraudulent intention is discernible. Therefore, considering the absence of any fault on the importer's part and the equitable circumstances, imposition of late fee is found to be unwarranted - The impugned orders imposing late fees are set aside with consequential relief as per law. The customs duty paid on supplementary bills of entry is upheld as no party contested its quantification – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax Liability on Revenue Sharing from Railway Infrastructure Investment under Private Participative Investment Model – Appellant invested capital to construct and maintain a railway line connecting a port under the Ministry of Railway's Private Participative Investment Policy. The entity received, as return on investment, an apportioned share of 95% of freight collected by Indian Railways after deduction of operational costs and fees, termed as "User Fee" - Department contended that this constituted business support service rendered to Railways and demanded service tax - Whether the revenue sharing arrangement co... [Read more]
Service Tax Liability on Revenue Sharing from Railway Infrastructure Investment under Private Participative Investment Model – Appellant invested capital to construct and maintain a railway line connecting a port under the Ministry of Railway's Private Participative Investment Policy. The entity received, as return on investment, an apportioned share of 95% of freight collected by Indian Railways after deduction of operational costs and fees, termed as "User Fee" - Department contended that this constituted business support service rendered to Railways and demanded service tax - Whether the revenue sharing arrangement constitutes provision of Business Support Service attracting service tax liability – HELD - The transaction constitutes a Joint Venture or partnership arrangement between two parties whereby one party invests capital and resources to create infrastructure while the other party uses the same, collects revenue, and shares it to compensate the investor. Such revenue sharing arrangement does not establish a service provider-service recipient relationship as is essential for service tax. The agreement demonstrates that the appellant steps into the shoes of Railway Administration, the entire capital expenditure is borne by the appellant, and the 95% revenue sharing is merely a return of capital investment with reasonable profit rather than consideration for rendering service. The activities undertaken by a partner or co-venturer for mutual benefit of partnership or joint venture cannot be regarded as taxable service. The appellant's belief that no service tax is payable is bonafide, hence no suppression is established and the extended period of limitation is not applicable - The appeal is allowed both on merits and on the ground of limitation [Read less]
Service Tax - Composite Works Contract vs. Consulting Engineer Service – Appellant engaged in execution of Government construction projects including roads, hospitals, educational institutions, and canals under turnkey contracts on cost-plus-margin basis raises the question whether the margin/fee earned constitutes taxable consulting engineer service - Whether a turnkey composite works contract involving construction and commissioning of projects with fee payable as a percentage of total project cost can be vivisected to impose service tax on the fee portion as consulting engineer service – HELD - The appellant is app... [Read more]
Service Tax - Composite Works Contract vs. Consulting Engineer Service – Appellant engaged in execution of Government construction projects including roads, hospitals, educational institutions, and canals under turnkey contracts on cost-plus-margin basis raises the question whether the margin/fee earned constitutes taxable consulting engineer service - Whether a turnkey composite works contract involving construction and commissioning of projects with fee payable as a percentage of total project cost can be vivisected to impose service tax on the fee portion as consulting engineer service – HELD - The appellant is appointed for construction and commissioning of projects on a turnkey basis where the contractor is responsible for total expenditure and receives a fee as profit margin. The nature of contract itself demonstrates that the appellant undertakes composite works contracts involving supply of materials and services, not merely consulting services. Applying the principle established in landmark judgments, a composite works contract cannot be vivisected to fasten service tax demand on a portion of the work under consulting engineer service category - The entire construction cost plus fee is treated as a single transaction and paid to the appellant under works contract classification, with tax deducted under section 194C applicable to contractors on full value, not merely on fee portion. Regarding the extended period demand, the projects were statutorily exempted from service tax both before and after 01.07.2012, warranting bonafide belief that no service tax was payable. The revenue has failed to establish any wilful suppression by the appellant, who declared all details in financial statements and income tax returns from which the department derived data for the show cause notice. The appellant being a reputed public sector undertaking has no intent to evade tax - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST – Fraud, Bail application – Petitioner is arrested in connection with a case alleging fraudulent availment and passing of Input Tax Credit without receiving actual goods, and subsequently passing the same to downstream entities through bogus invoices - Whether bail should be granted to the applicant when the proprietorship of the firm allegedly involved in the fraudulent ITC scheme stands registered in the name of another person and the prosecution seeks to establish the applicant's involvement primarily through statements recorded during investigation and financial transactions between related entities – HELD - ... [Read more]
GST – Fraud, Bail application – Petitioner is arrested in connection with a case alleging fraudulent availment and passing of Input Tax Credit without receiving actual goods, and subsequently passing the same to downstream entities through bogus invoices - Whether bail should be granted to the applicant when the proprietorship of the firm allegedly involved in the fraudulent ITC scheme stands registered in the name of another person and the prosecution seeks to establish the applicant's involvement primarily through statements recorded during investigation and financial transactions between related entities – HELD - Although the allegation against the applicant is that he is instrumental in creation and operation of the firm and the fraudulent ITC scheme, the proprietorship of the firm admittedly stands in the name of another person and no document of unimpeachable character has been pointed out to conclusively establish that the applicant is the proprietor of the firm. The prosecution seeks to connect the applicant with the alleged offence primarily on the basis of statements recorded during investigation, financial transactions between the accounts of the two entities and circumstances allegedly indicating operational control. Whether such material is sufficient to establish conscious involvement, beneficial ownership or criminal intent on the part of the applicant are questions which require detailed examination during trial and cannot be conclusively adjudicated at the stage of consideration of bail - The applicant is in custody for a substantial period, the investigation has substantially progressed, relevant documents and electronic evidence have already been seized, and no further custodial interrogation of the applicant appears to be necessary - The bail application is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Taxability of outbound tour operator services - Demand of service tax on outbound tours (tours conducted wholly outside India for Indian residents) for the period April 2005 to March 2010, on the ground that the company failed to pay service tax on gross amounts received towards rendering of outbound tour services - Whether services rendered in relation to outbound tours, where the tour commences outside India and terminates outside India, are liable to service tax under Section 65(105)(n) read with Sections 64 and 66 of the Finance Act, 1994, during the period from April 1, 2005 to March 31, 2010 – HELD - ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Taxability of outbound tour operator services - Demand of service tax on outbound tours (tours conducted wholly outside India for Indian residents) for the period April 2005 to March 2010, on the ground that the company failed to pay service tax on gross amounts received towards rendering of outbound tour services - Whether services rendered in relation to outbound tours, where the tour commences outside India and terminates outside India, are liable to service tax under Section 65(105)(n) read with Sections 64 and 66 of the Finance Act, 1994, during the period from April 1, 2005 to March 31, 2010 – HELD - On plain reading of the legal provisions defining taxable service as any service provided by a tour operator in relation to a tour, read with the definition of tour as a journey from one place to another, and harmoniously interpreting Sections 64 and 66 of the Finance Act, 1994, services rendered by a tour operator for a journey beginning outside India and ending outside India, being consumed by a person while remaining outside India, cannot be brought within the scope of taxable service - The definition of taxable service must fit within the framework that service tax is a destination-based consumption tax intended to tax specified activities that undisputedly take place in India and exclude tax on activities that undisputedly do not occur in India. Although the definition of tour operator was amended with effect from September 10, 2004 to expand the scope from limited tourist vehicles to any mode of transport, this amendment was merely to remove the restriction on mode of transportation and did not expand the tax base to include outbound tours performed wholly outside Indian territory. The Departmental instructions issued while expanding the scope of tour operator services in 2004 specifically refer to extension of levy on package tour operators organizing tours involving any mode of transport but do not contemplate bringing outbound tours within the service tax net - The scope of the phrase tour operator may cover persons performing services as per the definition, and the phrase taxable service may include services rendered by such tour operator, but the taxable nature of service tax levy under Sections 64 and 66 operates only for services rendered by a tour operator for journeys performed within the geographical area to which Chapter V of the Finance Act applies - The impugned order is set aside. The appeal filed by the company is allowed and the appeal filed by the revenue is dismissed [Read less]
Customs – Valuation, Recovery of Duty – Appellant imported embroidery threads from China declaring goods under Customs Tariff Item (CTI) 5403 4190. During investigation by the DRI, the Director voluntarily admitted to undervaluation by suppressing actual transaction values in commercial invoices and making differential payments to the overseas supplier through illegal cash channels - The importer subsequently paid differential duty during investigation. A show cause notice was issued demanding recovery of differential duties, confiscation of goods, and imposition of penalties - Whether the re-determination of assessabl... [Read more]
Customs – Valuation, Recovery of Duty – Appellant imported embroidery threads from China declaring goods under Customs Tariff Item (CTI) 5403 4190. During investigation by the DRI, the Director voluntarily admitted to undervaluation by suppressing actual transaction values in commercial invoices and making differential payments to the overseas supplier through illegal cash channels - The importer subsequently paid differential duty during investigation. A show cause notice was issued demanding recovery of differential duties, confiscation of goods, and imposition of penalties - Whether the re-determination of assessable value of imported goods and the confirmation of duty demand under section 28 of the Customs Act, 1962 read with section 14 ibid and the Customs Valuation Rules, 1988 is sustainable in the absence of comparable value data provided by the department, and whether penalties imposed on the importer and its director under sections 114A and 112(b) of the Act are legally sustainable – HELD - The valuation of imported goods must be determined under section 14 read with the Customs Valuation Rules, 1988 based on the transaction value, which represents the actual price paid or payable for goods. In the present case, the appellants themselves provided evidence of the suppressed value through voluntary statements and supplementary invoices, establishing that the real transaction value included all payments made to the supplier through both banking and illegal channels. Rule 4 and Rule 9 of the Customs Valuation Rules require that the transaction value include all costs and payments incurred by the buyer in procuring the goods - In the present matter, the appellants themselves furnished detailed information about the differential price paid through illegal channels, and the undervaluation was established with adequate evidence through the director's own admissions and supplementary invoices. The original authority had also reduced duty demands where corrections were required, demonstrating due application of law. The extended period of recovery under section 28 is justified as the case involves wilful misstatement and suppression of facts by the appellants with intent to evade customs duty. Penalties under sections 114A and 112(b) are warranted as the appellants knowingly and deliberately undervalued goods and made illegal payments to avoid duty - The appeals filed by the appellants are dismissed, and the impugned order upholding the confirmation of adjudged demands is upheld [Read less]
Customs - Refund of Extra Duty Deposit (EDD) - Whether delay in sanction of refund attracts interest under Section 27A of the Customs Act, 1962 – Whether there is a delay in sanction of refund of Extra Duty Deposit and whether interest under Section 27A of the Customs Act, 1962 is payable on such delayed refund, and if payable, for what period – HELD – The Extra Duty Deposit is distinct from customs duty as defined under Section 2(15) of the Customs Act, 1962. Extra Duty Deposit is a deposit of prescribed percentage of declared assessable value obtained pending submission of documents in respect of related party tran... [Read more]
Customs - Refund of Extra Duty Deposit (EDD) - Whether delay in sanction of refund attracts interest under Section 27A of the Customs Act, 1962 – Whether there is a delay in sanction of refund of Extra Duty Deposit and whether interest under Section 27A of the Customs Act, 1962 is payable on such delayed refund, and if payable, for what period – HELD – The Extra Duty Deposit is distinct from customs duty as defined under Section 2(15) of the Customs Act, 1962. Extra Duty Deposit is a deposit of prescribed percentage of declared assessable value obtained pending submission of documents in respect of related party transactions under Special Valuation Branch investigation, whereas duty refers to customs duties leviable under Section 14 of the Customs Act, 1962 read with the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. Extra Duty Deposit is secured by revenue for the specific purpose of obtaining documentation in time to enable timely finalization of provisional assessments, while duty and security of duty are determined by the proper officer to secure payment of deficiency between finally assessed and provisionally assessed duty. Upon furnishing of required information, the requirement of payment of Extra Duty Deposit is dispensed with while continuing imports under provisional assessment. Since Extra Duty Deposit is collected for purposes of Sections 17 and 18 of the Customs Act, 1962 and is refundable when not required to make good any deficiency of finally assessed duty, the legal provisions of Section 27A apply mutatis mutandis to Extra Duty Deposit as they apply to duty - The effective date for initiating the clock for refund claim is the date on which the orders of assessment upon finalization of provisional assessment were passed, determining the amount refundable. Therefore, the period for which interest on delayed refund commences from the expiry of three months from the date of passing of Orders-in-Original, till the date of actual payment of refund amounts - Once the issue of eligibility to sanction refund was determined by finalizing the provisional assessments after accepting the finality of the Special Valuation Branch, the importer was eligible to be sanctioned the refund amount claimed. The department failed to process the refund claims for more than 16 years from the date the refund application was received, which constitutes delay beyond the prescribed three-month period under Section 27A - Interest under Section 27A of the Customs Act, 1962 at the rate fixed by the Central Government is payable on the refunded Extra Duty Deposit amounts for the period commencing from the expiry of three months from the date of passing of Orders-in-Original till the date of actual payment of refund - The appeals are allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Service tax liability on tour operator services rendered in relation to tours within the State of Jammu & Kashmir - Whether a tour operator is liable to pay service tax under the Finance Act, 1994 on services provided in relation to tours where both the commencement and completion of the tour occur within the State of Jammu & Kashmir, to which Chapter V of the Finance Act, 1994 does not extend – HELDD - The Section 64(1) of the Finance Act, 1994 explicitly provides that Chapter V extends to the whole of India except the State of Jammu & Kashmir. Service tax is a destination-based consumption tax that must b... [Read more]
Service Tax - Service tax liability on tour operator services rendered in relation to tours within the State of Jammu & Kashmir - Whether a tour operator is liable to pay service tax under the Finance Act, 1994 on services provided in relation to tours where both the commencement and completion of the tour occur within the State of Jammu & Kashmir, to which Chapter V of the Finance Act, 1994 does not extend – HELDD - The Section 64(1) of the Finance Act, 1994 explicitly provides that Chapter V extends to the whole of India except the State of Jammu & Kashmir. Service tax is a destination-based consumption tax that must be levied at the place where services are consumed. When a tour commences and terminates within Jammu & Kashmir where the service receiver consumes the service while remaining within that territory, the service falls outside the taxable territory to which the Finance Act applies. The definition of taxable service under Section 65(105)(n) requires that the service be provided by a tour operator in relation to a tour, and such taxable service can only be levied under Section 66 within the geographical boundaries to which Chapter V of the Finance Act extends - The legislature deliberately excluded Jammu & Kashmir from the purview of service tax, and it is not permissible to extend the provisions of an Act made inapplicable by the legislature to a state through judicial interpretation, as this amounts to judicial enactment of legislation. The expansion of the definition of tour operator in 2004 to include planning, scheduling, organizing and arranging tours by any mode of transport was merely a widening of the tax base within the taxable territory and did not intend to bring services relating to tours in Jammu & Kashmir within the service tax net. Therefore, services provided in relation to journeys between places within Jammu & Kashmir are not covered under the service tax statute - The impugned order confirming service tax demand. The appeal filed by the tour operator is allowed and the appeal filed by the revenue is dismissed [Read less]
Service tax liability on manpower supply services rendered by individual service provider to corporate service recipient – Appellant engaged by a corporate entity to supply manpower for OPGW work under a work order, with manpower deployed under direct supervision and control of the service recipient, and no responsibility for execution of work or delivery of specific result - Whether service tax liability rests on the service provider or the service recipient when an individual service provider supplies manpower to a body corporate, and whether the reverse charge mechanism applies under Rule 2(g) of the Service Tax Rules... [Read more]
Service tax liability on manpower supply services rendered by individual service provider to corporate service recipient – Appellant engaged by a corporate entity to supply manpower for OPGW work under a work order, with manpower deployed under direct supervision and control of the service recipient, and no responsibility for execution of work or delivery of specific result - Whether service tax liability rests on the service provider or the service recipient when an individual service provider supplies manpower to a body corporate, and whether the reverse charge mechanism applies under Rule 2(g) of the Service Tax Rules, 1994 read with Notification No. 30/2012-ST dated 20.06.2012 - HELD - The service tax liability rests entirely on the service recipient and not on the service provider in respect of manpower supply services where the service provider is an individual and the service recipient is a body corporate. The invoices raised by the appellant that no service tax was charged or received from the recipient, thereby establishing that the true nature of transaction is merely supply of manpower. The liability cannot be shifted between service provider and recipient which is contrary to the express statutory framework governing reverse charge mechanism. Therefore, the demand cannot be fastened upon the service provider - The demand of service tax in respect of manpower supply service stands set aside on meritsrnrnSmall Service Provider Exemption Threshold - Eligibility for small service provider exemption threshold in the first year of operation - In the first year of operation, the appellant received income from multiple work orders, where one work order value fell within the first Rs. 10,00,000 threshold limit for exemption, and the department confirmed demand without considering the threshold exemption benefit - Whether the value of services on which service tax is payable by the service recipient under the RCM should be included while computing the aggregate value of taxable services for determining eligibility under the small service provider exemption threshold - HELD - For the purpose of computing the aggregate value of taxable services for eligibility under the exemption threshold, the value of services on which service tax is payable by the service recipient under the reverse charge mechanism is not liable to be included. The appellant is entitled to exclude such value while determining the exemption limit. Since the second work order amount would qualify for threshold limit exemption and the first year of operation qualifies for the Rs. 10,00,000 threshold, the confirmed demand is not sustainable - The demand in respect of the second work order stands set aside as the benefit of small service provider exemption was wrongfully denied.rnrnValidity of Show Cause Notice Based on Form 26AS Data and Invocation of Extended Period - Issuance of show cause notice invoking extended period of limitation based solely on Form 26AS data without independent investigation or corroborative evidence - The Department issued notice after the appellant had been regularly filing ST-3 returns, by comparing figures from Form 26AS of income tax returns with ST-3 returns without conducting any scrutiny of returns or audit. The allegation of suppression or wilful misstatement was not supported by any independent evidence from service tax records - Whether the extended period of limitation under Section 73(1) of the Finance Act, 1994 can be invoked and a show cause notice can be sustained when issued solely on the basis of Form 26AS data - HELD - Mere mechanical reliance on Form 26AS data or income tax entries without verification of the nature of receipts or proof of taxable services rendered is impermissible in law. Form 26AS is maintained on cash or receipt basis by the income tax department for purposes of tax deducted at source and is not a statutory document for determining taxable turnover under service tax provisions. Service tax is chargeable on mercantile or accrual basis on service provided whether the value is received or not, whereas Form 26AS operates on cash basis, creating fundamental incompatibility. It is a settled legal position that mere entries in income tax returns or Form 26AS cannot by themselves establish liability under the Finance Act, 1994 unless corroborated by evidence demonstrating rendition of taxable service - When an assessee has been regularly filing returns and has provided documents as asked, the entire information was in the knowledge of revenue, and the extended period is not invocable. The allegation of suppression in the present case has not been corroborated by any evidence by the revenue - The impugned order stands set aside on account of time bar as the extended period is not invokable and the demand is barred by limitation. [Read less]
Service Tax liability on Royalty amounts withheld by Government authorities from works contract payments - Appellants engaged in providing works contract services for road and bridge construction, which are fully exempt from service tax, recorded expenditure on account of "royalty on mineral" in their balance sheets - Revenue notices alleging service tax liability on reverse charge mechanism basis on the amounts representing royalty payments, claiming such payments were made for mining rights granted by the State Government - Whether service tax is payable on on amounts withheld by Government authorities as royalty from wo... [Read more]
Service Tax liability on Royalty amounts withheld by Government authorities from works contract payments - Appellants engaged in providing works contract services for road and bridge construction, which are fully exempt from service tax, recorded expenditure on account of "royalty on mineral" in their balance sheets - Revenue notices alleging service tax liability on reverse charge mechanism basis on the amounts representing royalty payments, claiming such payments were made for mining rights granted by the State Government - Whether service tax is payable on on amounts withheld by Government authorities as royalty from works contract bills, when the contractors have not been granted any mining license and the withheld amounts are merely security pending submission of prescribed forms certifying purchase of minerals from licensed vendors – HELD - The allegation of service tax liability cannot be sustained on the basis of mere balance sheet entries without corroborative evidence demonstrating that the appellants had actually obtained mining rights or licenses from any government authority. The documentary evidence produced, including Forms M and N and payment statements from road development authorities, establishes that the amounts recorded as "royalty on mineral" represent only the withheld portions of contract bills pending submission of prescribed affidavits and particulars certifying legitimate purchase of minerals from licensed vendors. These withheld amounts are subsequently released once the requisite forms are submitted, constituting an administrative mechanism to ensure compliance with minor mineral concession rules rather than actual royalty payments by the appellants for mining rights - The SCN is entirely silent regarding what type of license was obtained by the appellants or from which authority, and that no evidence demonstrating the filing of periodic returns with State authorities regarding mined quantities or royalty payments has been produced by the revenue. Since the demand is based solely on balance sheet data without any independent or corroborative evidence and the allegation of suppression remains uncorroborated, the extended period of limitation is not invocable and the demand is hit by time bar. Mere reliance on balance sheet entries, income tax data, or Form 26AS without verification of the actual nature of receipts or proof of taxable services rendered is impermissible in law - The impugned orders are set aside on merits as well as on the ground of time bar. The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Cenvat Credit on Capital Goods - Machinery, equipment and components used in erection of Air Separation Plant – Disallowance of credit on grounds that the parts lost their identity in the integrated plant, goods were procured by supplier, the plant became attached to earth and ceased to be goods - Whether duty-paid goods received in appellant's factory and used for erection of an Air Separation Plant qualify as capital goods under Rule 2(a) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - HELD - The CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 define capital goods to include all goods falling under Chapters 82, 84, 85, 90 and components... [Read more]
Central Excise - Cenvat Credit on Capital Goods - Machinery, equipment and components used in erection of Air Separation Plant – Disallowance of credit on grounds that the parts lost their identity in the integrated plant, goods were procured by supplier, the plant became attached to earth and ceased to be goods - Whether duty-paid goods received in appellant's factory and used for erection of an Air Separation Plant qualify as capital goods under Rule 2(a) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - HELD - The CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 define capital goods to include all goods falling under Chapters 82, 84, 85, 90 and components, spares and accessories thereof. The undisputed position is that the machinery and equipment fall under Chapter 84 and related chapters, were duty-paid, and were received in appellant's factory under valid invoices - Merely because various machinery, equipment, appliances and parts are assembled at the site to set up an integrated plant does not disentitle the appellant from claiming credit. The manufacturing plant facility in a factory comprises a number of capital goods which must be assembled together to function in unison to perform the required processes. In no manufacturing plant can all machineries be used independently; they have to function in conjunction with each other and for this purpose are assembled into a plant. Merely because all individual equipment, machinery or components are assembled together, it is preposterous to suggest that capital goods credit cannot be allowed on individual machinery, equipment or appliances - So long as individual machinery, equipment or appliance or parts and components thereof fall within the definition of capital goods under Rule 2(a) of the CENVAT Credit Rules and so long as they are used within the factory of production for manufacture of excisable goods which are chargeable to duty, the benefit of capital goods credit cannot be denied - The appellant is rightfully entitled to capital goods credit on various machinery, equipment, appliances and parts and components thereof used in setting up the manufacturing plant within the factory premises - The order denying capital goods credit is unsustainable in law and is set aside. The appeal is allowed - Ownership of Goods - Not a Criterion for CENVAT Credit - Revenue authority denied capital goods credit on the ground that the machinery and components were procured and owned by the supplier and not by the appellant, and that invoices were issued in the supplier's name - Whether ownership of goods remaining with the supplier disentitles the appellant from availing CENVAT Credit on capital goods received and used in its factory – HELD – The ownership of goods is not a criterion for availment of CENVAT Credit on capital goods. The CENVAT Credit Rules emphasize receipt and use of goods in the factory and nowhere prescribe ownership as a pre-condition for claiming credit. Even though the goods were initially procured and owned by the supplier, they were received in the appellant's factory under valid invoices naming the appellant as consignee and were used for setting up a manufacturing plant within the factory for production of excisable goods. The benefit of capital goods credit cannot be denied solely because ownership remained with the supplier – The denial of credit solely on the basis of ownership is legally not sustainable - The finding that ownership of goods remaining with the supplier disentitles the appellant from availing credit is set aside - Rule 4(3) of CENVAT Credit Rules - Leasing Arrangements with non-financing entities - Appellant had availed capital goods credit on machinery supplied under a leasing arrangement with a supplier which is not a financing company. Revenue authority contended that Rule 4(3) restricts credit only when goods are leased from a financing company, and since the supplier is not a financing company, credit is not admissible - Whether Rule 4(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules restricts credit only to goods leased from financing companies or whether it extends credit even in leasing arrangements with non-financing entities - HELD - Rule 4(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules provides that credit shall be allowed even if capital goods are acquired on lease, hire purchase or loan agreement from a Financing Company. The language "even if" is enlarging in nature and does not imply that the lessor must necessarily be a Financing Company. The Rule is enabling and enlarging in scope, not restrictive. It extends the benefit of credit and does not restrict it to financing companies alone. The Rule clarifies that credit shall be allowed even if capital goods are procured through various financial arrangements including leasing from any entity, not exclusively from financing companies. Therefore, the finding that credit is not admissible because the lessor is not a financing company is contrary to settled law. The structure of Rule 4(3) demonstrates that it was intended to expand the scope of eligibility to include various financial arrangements, ensuring that the benefit of CENVAT Credit remains available to the actual user of machinery regardless of the nature of the supplier - The finding that credit is inadmissible because the supplier is not a financing company is set aside - Immovability of Integrated Plant - The Air Separation Plant, after assembly of various machinery and components, became attached to earth through nuts and bolts and thus became immovable property. Revenue authority denied credit on the ground that the plant became attached to earth, ceased to be goods, and therefore credit on component goods was inadmissible - Whether the fact that individual machinery and components become assembled into a larger plant that becomes attached to earth affects the admissibility of capital goods credit on the individual duty-paid items - HELD - The law is well settled that even if individual machinery and components are assembled into a larger plant that becomes attached to earth, credit on the duty-paid capital goods remains admissible. Immovability of the integrated plant does not affect entitlement to credit on individual capital goods. The purpose of fastening machinery to earth by nuts and bolts is only to ensure operational stability, functionality, and vibration-free operation. Such fastening is universally recognized as temporary and functional attachment, insufficient to classify the plant as immovable property for the purpose of denying capital goods credit. The attachment does not destroy the identity of the constituent machines or components. Hence, the conclusion that the Air Separation Plant is immovable and therefore, credit is inadmissible is wholly mis-conceived - Extended Period Invocation - Whether the extended period of limitation under the proviso to Section 11A(1) of the Central Excise Act is invocable – HELD - The extended period under the proviso to Section 11A(1) is invocable only when there is suppression, misstatement or intent to evade duty. In the present case, all relevant facts were within the knowledge of the department, the credit was availed under valid invoices and disclosed in statutory returns, and the dispute is purely interpretational in nature involving substantial judicial debate on a pure question of law. There is no suppression, misstatement or intention to evade duty on the part of the appellant. The department was put to notice about the components of cenvat credit being availed and the lease arrangement was disclosed to the department well before the notice was issued. On this ground alone, the demands are not sustainable and the extended period cannot be invoked. [Read less]
Service Tax – SEZ Unit, Refund, Procedural Deficiencies - Refund claim under Notification No. 12/2013-ST dated 01.07.2013 – Rejection of substantial portion of the claim on grounds including mismatch of invoices, non-submission of original invoices, incomplete address in invoices, rubber stamp corrections and non-inclusion of certain services in the approved list - Whether refund of service tax paid on services admittedly used for authorized operations of a SEZ unit can be denied on account of procedural deficiencies in documentation – HELD - The object of the SEZ Act is to grant fiscal benefits and tax exemptions to... [Read more]
Service Tax – SEZ Unit, Refund, Procedural Deficiencies - Refund claim under Notification No. 12/2013-ST dated 01.07.2013 – Rejection of substantial portion of the claim on grounds including mismatch of invoices, non-submission of original invoices, incomplete address in invoices, rubber stamp corrections and non-inclusion of certain services in the approved list - Whether refund of service tax paid on services admittedly used for authorized operations of a SEZ unit can be denied on account of procedural deficiencies in documentation – HELD - The object of the SEZ Act is to grant fiscal benefits and tax exemptions to units carrying out authorized operations. Section 26 of the SEZ Act grants exemption from taxes and duties in respect of services used for authorized operations and Section 51 gives overriding effect to the Act's provisions over any inconsistent provisions in other laws - Where receipt of services, payment of service tax and nexus with authorized operations stand established, denial of refund merely on account of invoice presentation, clerical discrepancies, rubber stamp corrections or non-availability of some original invoices cannot be sustained - The Revenue has not disputed that the Hormone Block formed part of the appellant’s SEZ unit. Once such factual position is accepted, denial of refund merely because the exact description appearing in the invoice does not identically match the wording used in the approved list would amount to elevating form over substance. The procedural infractions which do not affect substantive eligibility cannot form the basis for denial of exemption or refund - Further, construction and infrastructure creation activities undertaken during establishment of the SEZ unit are intrinsically connected with authorized operations and the expression "used for authorized operations" requires liberal and purposive interpretation to give effect to the beneficial scheme - The appellant is entitled to refund of the service tax paid on all the disputed services. The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Admissibility of CENVAT Credit on Service Tax paid on Leadership Fee in Consortium Project – Under the consortium arrangement, the leader company is designated as the principal contractor and consortium members agree to pay leadership fee for overall management, coordination and integration of the entire project. The leadership fee is classified as consulting engineer service and service tax is paid under Reverse Charge Mechanism, which is subsequently distributed through ISD mechanism and availed as CENVAT credit - Department disallows the credit on the ground that the contract substantially relates to man... [Read more]
Service Tax - Admissibility of CENVAT Credit on Service Tax paid on Leadership Fee in Consortium Project – Under the consortium arrangement, the leader company is designated as the principal contractor and consortium members agree to pay leadership fee for overall management, coordination and integration of the entire project. The leadership fee is classified as consulting engineer service and service tax is paid under Reverse Charge Mechanism, which is subsequently distributed through ISD mechanism and availed as CENVAT credit - Department disallows the credit on the ground that the contract substantially relates to manufacture and supply of goods which is an exempted activity, and therefore the service tax paid is not eligible for credit – Whether the CENVAT credit on service tax paid on leadership fee – HELD - Once service tax is validly paid and accepted by the Department and credit is properly distributed through ISD mechanism without any dispute regarding genuineness of invoices or receipt of services, denial of credit at the recipient's end merely on account of procedural irregularity is legally unsustainable - The consortium arrangement constitutes an integrated turnkey project and the leadership fee forms part of the overall project management structure, therefore the Department's attempt to isolate one component contract and deny credit amounts to impermissible vivisection of a composite contractual arrangement - Additionally, consulting engineer service falls within the specified services covered under Rule 6(5) of CCR, 2004, which grants full credit unless such services are used exclusively in exempted goods or exempted services. The Department failed to establish that the impugned service was used exclusively for exempted activity, particularly when the project comprises both supply of goods and taxable service elements. Since the entire exercise is revenue neutral with service tax accepted as correctly paid and corresponding credit being legitimate, allegations of intention to evade become untenable, and imposition of penalty without any material establishing fraud, collusion, willful misstatement or suppression of facts is wholly unwarranted – The impugned order disallowing CENVAT credit and the demand, interest and equal penalty imposed are set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax – Taxability of manufacturing activity undertaken for principal manufacturer on piece rate basis - Agreement with a principal manufacturer to undertake manufacturing activities including packing, repacking, labelling, loading and unloading of goods on a piece rate basis. The principal manufacturer provided raw materials, technical knowhow, plant and machinery, while the service provider employed its own labour and charged consideration based on per piece basis and goods manufactured were cleared on payment of excise duty by the principal manufacturer - Whether the manufacturing activity undertaken by the appe... [Read more]
Service Tax – Taxability of manufacturing activity undertaken for principal manufacturer on piece rate basis - Agreement with a principal manufacturer to undertake manufacturing activities including packing, repacking, labelling, loading and unloading of goods on a piece rate basis. The principal manufacturer provided raw materials, technical knowhow, plant and machinery, while the service provider employed its own labour and charged consideration based on per piece basis and goods manufactured were cleared on payment of excise duty by the principal manufacturer - Whether the manufacturing activity undertaken by the appellant for the principal manufacturer amounts to manufacture or constitutes a taxable service under the Finance Act, 1994, thereby attracting service tax demand – HELD - The activity undertaken by the appellant amounts to manufacture and does not constitute a taxable service. The activity of converting raw materials into finished goods on behalf of the principal manufacturer, for which consideration is charged on a per unit or per piece basis rather than on value of service rendered, indicates a principal-supporting manufacturer relationship. The charges are measured in terms of conversion rates for units of finished goods manufactured, which reinforces that the principal activity is conversion of goods - The relationship is not that of a service provider but of a supporting manufacturer undertaking actual manufacture on account of and as per requirements of the principal manufacturer. Since the goods have suffered excise duty at the end of the principal manufacturer, the activity cannot be considered as a taxable service under business auxiliary services. Even if production of goods on behalf of a client is made a taxable service, it would not be covered under service tax if the production activity undertaken falls within the meaning of manufacture under the Central Excise Act - The demand of service tax along with interest and penalty is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs duty exemption under conditional notification – A appellant-hospital imported medical equipment during 1990-1993 claiming exemption under Notification No. 65/88-Cus based on Customs Duty Exemption Certificates issued by the DGHS. The exemption was conditional upon providing free treatment to 40% of outdoor patients and reserving 10% of hospital beds for economically weaker sections - The Director General subsequently cancelled the certificates on finding non-fulfillment of these mandatory conditions - Whether the cancellation of the exemption certificates by the competent authority disentitles the importer from a... [Read more]
Customs duty exemption under conditional notification – A appellant-hospital imported medical equipment during 1990-1993 claiming exemption under Notification No. 65/88-Cus based on Customs Duty Exemption Certificates issued by the DGHS. The exemption was conditional upon providing free treatment to 40% of outdoor patients and reserving 10% of hospital beds for economically weaker sections - The Director General subsequently cancelled the certificates on finding non-fulfillment of these mandatory conditions - Whether the cancellation of the exemption certificates by the competent authority disentitles the importer from availing customs duty exemption and whether the goods become liable for confiscation under Section 111(o) of the Customs Act, 1962 – HELD - The exemption Notification granted exemption not as an unconditional benefit but subject to strict compliance with specified social obligations, the object being to ensure that hospitals importing sophisticated medical equipment extend benefits to economically weaker sections. The records indicate that competent authorities found the hospital failed to provide free treatment to the prescribed percentage of outdoor patients and failed to reserve the required percentage of beds for poor indoor patients. It is a settled principle that where an exemption notification prescribes conditions, the beneficiary must establish strict compliance with those conditions, and failure to satisfy prescribed requirements renders the exemption unavailable - The Supreme Court in Mediwell Hospital case categorically held that hospitals availing benefit under the notification are under continuing obligation to comply with conditions and authorities are duty bound to ensure such compliance. Once the Director General cancelled the certificates on account of violation of notification conditions, the hospital ceased to possess the essential qualification for availing exemption, and customs authorities were justified in initiating action for recovery of duty foregone and confiscation of imported goods – The impugned order is upheld and the appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Benefit of Cum-tax Benefit – Appellant receives consideration from clients without separately recovering service tax, with receipts constituting gross amounts. Department quantifies demand treating receipts as exclusive of tax without granting cum-tax benefit – Whether service provider is entitled to cum-tax benefit while computing service tax liability when consideration received is inclusive of tax – HELD - The Supreme Court and Tribunal decisions consistently hold that where consideration received is inclusive of tax, the same must be treated as cum-tax value and service tax requires recomputation ac... [Read more]
Service Tax - Benefit of Cum-tax Benefit – Appellant receives consideration from clients without separately recovering service tax, with receipts constituting gross amounts. Department quantifies demand treating receipts as exclusive of tax without granting cum-tax benefit – Whether service provider is entitled to cum-tax benefit while computing service tax liability when consideration received is inclusive of tax – HELD - The Supreme Court and Tribunal decisions consistently hold that where consideration received is inclusive of tax, the same must be treated as cum-tax value and service tax requires recomputation accordingly. The Department has not produced evidence showing consideration was exclusive of service tax. Records indicate the adjudicating authority did not grant full cum-tax benefit and considerable force exists in the contention that after inclusion of TDS amount and recomputation on cum-tax basis, actual tax liability reduces substantially. Therefore, demand requires re-quantification after granting cum-tax benefit and proper consideration of TDS components – The matter remanded for re-quantification of service tax liability after extending cum-tax benefit – Appeal is allowed partlyrnrnWhether extended period of limitation can be invoked for mere omission or negligence in not discharging service tax on certain amounts without establishing deliberate suppression with intent to evade tax – HELD - The Supreme Court has established in multiple decisions that mere omission, negligence or incorrect interpretation of law does not amount to suppression of facts. For invoking extended period, Revenue must establish a deliberate act with intent to evade tax. In the present case, all transactions were recorded in regular books of accounts and the Department itself gathered information from statutory records and audit verifications. No positive evidence establishing fraud, collusion or wilful suppression has been produced. Therefore, ingredients necessary for invoking extended period are absent – Invocation of extended period set aside – Appeal is allowedrnrnPenalty under Section 78 – Whether penalty under Section 78 of Finance Act, 1994 can survive when allegation of suppression of facts fails and no evidence of fraud, collusion or wilful misstatement is established – HELD - The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that penalty under Section 78 requires establishment of fraud, collusion, wilful misstatement or suppression with intent to evade payment of tax. Since the allegation of suppression itself fails due to absence of evidence demonstrating deliberate evasion, the legal foundation for imposing penalty under Section 78 collapses. No evidence forthcoming in the present matter establishes the requisite mens rea – The penalty under Section 78 set aside. The appeal is allowedrnrnPenalty under Section 76 and Reasonable Cause under Section 80 – Whether genuine financial hardship coupled with substantial payment of tax and interest constitutes reasonable cause for waiver of penalty under Section 76 of Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - Genuine financial hardship coupled with payment of tax and interest constitutes reasonable cause for waiver of penalties. Section 80 of Finance Act, 1994 empowers authorities to waive penalties upon proof of reasonable cause. The explanation offered regarding financial constraints and delayed realization from clients appears plausible and has not been rebutted by contrary evidence. The fact that substantial service tax was paid before audit and remaining liability discharged along with interest before adjudication demonstrates substantial compliance with tax obligations. Therefore, appellant has demonstrated reasonable cause within meaning of Section 80 – Penalty under Section 76 set aside by extending benefit of Section 80.rnrnWhether penalty under Section 77 is warranted for procedural violation when service provider maintained statutory records and substantially complied with tax obligations – HELD - The violation alleged is purely procedural in nature. Considering that appellant maintained statutory records and substantially complied with tax obligations, imposition of penalty for procedural non-compliance is disproportionate and not justified. The penalty under Section 77 set aside. [Read less]
Service Tax - Demand based solely on Income Tax Returns data - Validity of extended period assessment - Whether a service tax demand can be raised and confirmed in the extended period of limitation based solely on reliance on income tax data from Form 26AS without corroborative evidence from service tax records demonstrating actual rendition of taxable services – HELD - The mere reliance on Form 26AS or income tax returns for issuing a show cause notice in the extended period is not legally sustainable. The Form 26AS is maintained on a cash or receipt basis by the Income Tax Department for income tax purposes, whereas se... [Read more]
Service Tax - Demand based solely on Income Tax Returns data - Validity of extended period assessment - Whether a service tax demand can be raised and confirmed in the extended period of limitation based solely on reliance on income tax data from Form 26AS without corroborative evidence from service tax records demonstrating actual rendition of taxable services – HELD - The mere reliance on Form 26AS or income tax returns for issuing a show cause notice in the extended period is not legally sustainable. The Form 26AS is maintained on a cash or receipt basis by the Income Tax Department for income tax purposes, whereas service tax is chargeable on a mercantile or accrual basis. Mere entries in income tax returns cannot establish liability under the service tax statute unless corroborated by independent evidence demonstrating the rendition of taxable services. The mechanical reliance on income tax data without verification of the nature of receipts or proof of taxable services is impermissible in law - The impugned order is set aside on account of time bar and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST - Anti-profiteering – Not passing on of benefit of rate reduction on cinema ticket – Respondents increased the base price of admission tickets despite a reduction in GST rate with effect from 01.01.2019 - The investigation by the DGAP established that the Respondents increased base prices across various ticket categories during the post-rate-reduction period – HELD - The statutory mandate under Section 171 requires that any reduction in the rate of tax on supply of goods or services must be passed on to the recipient through commensurate reduction in prices. The intention behind the anti-profiteering provision is... [Read more]
GST - Anti-profiteering – Not passing on of benefit of rate reduction on cinema ticket – Respondents increased the base price of admission tickets despite a reduction in GST rate with effect from 01.01.2019 - The investigation by the DGAP established that the Respondents increased base prices across various ticket categories during the post-rate-reduction period – HELD - The statutory mandate under Section 171 requires that any reduction in the rate of tax on supply of goods or services must be passed on to the recipient through commensurate reduction in prices. The intention behind the anti-profiteering provision is that the moment the GST rate is reduced, the benefit should immediately be passed on to the end-user by way of price reduction proportionate to the tax reduction. When prices are inclusive of GST, maintaining the same selling price while increasing the base price effectively denies the benefit of Government's decision to lower the tax rate. The Respondents’ contention regarding State licensing authority permissions lacks documentary substantiation. The Respondents failed to produce any government order or court order from the relevant period permitting the price increase. The subsequently filed Government orders pertaining to the year 2025 cannot be treated as evidence for matters occurring in 2019. Further, these orders do not prohibit theatre owners from reducing ticket prices when the central government reduces GST rate - The Section 171 places the onus on the service supplier to reduce prices to pass on the tax benefit, irrespective of regulatory permissions for price increases - The Respondent is directed to deposit the profiteered amount along with interest at 18 percent from 28.06.2019 onwards, with 50 percent of the amount plus interest deposited in the Central Consumer Welfare Fund and the remaining 50 percent plus interest deposited in the State Consumer Welfare Fund. No penalty is levied upon the operator as the penalty provision came into force on 01.01.2020 and cannot be applied retrospectively for the period from 01.01.2019 to 30.06.2019. The operator's objections to the anti-profiteering reports are rejected – Ordered accordingly [Read less]
Central Excise - Excise duty valuation where finished goods manufacturer supplies raw materials to sister concern and recipient availing Cenvat credit – Revenue Neutrality – Demand of differential excise duty on the ground that the assessable value adopted by the appellant based on CAS-4 certificate was lower than actual costing, resulting in short payment of excise duty for the period extending over several years - Whether demand for short payment of excise duty can be sustained when the goods supplied to a sister unit are used as raw material and the recipient fully avails Cenvat credit for the excise duty paid, irre... [Read more]
Central Excise - Excise duty valuation where finished goods manufacturer supplies raw materials to sister concern and recipient availing Cenvat credit – Revenue Neutrality – Demand of differential excise duty on the ground that the assessable value adopted by the appellant based on CAS-4 certificate was lower than actual costing, resulting in short payment of excise duty for the period extending over several years - Whether demand for short payment of excise duty can be sustained when the goods supplied to a sister unit are used as raw material and the recipient fully avails Cenvat credit for the excise duty paid, irrespective of the assessable value adopted by the supplier, thereby creating a revenue neutral situation – HELD - Since the goods cleared by the manufacturer are used by the receiving unit as raw material, the receiving unit takes Cenvat credit for the invoices raised by the manufacturer. Irrespective of the assessable value adopted by the manufacturer, the excise duty paid thereon is fully available and availed as Cenvat credit by the receiving unit. This constitutes a clear case of revenue neutrality where no prejudice to revenue occurs. The Revenue has failed to make out any case for imposing the demand on the manufacturer. Additionally, all factual details were reflected in the excise returns filed monthly while clearing goods to the sister unit, thereby negating any allegation of suppression by the manufacturer - The impugned order is set aside on merits and also on grounds of time bar. The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Confiscation of vehicle for removal of goods without Out of Charge clearance - Transporter acting on directions of importer and CHA - whether confiscation of a vehicle and imposition of redemption fine is justified when a transporter removes goods from customs area without obtaining out of charge clearance, though the customs duty has been fully paid by the importer and the transporter merely followed the directions of the importer – HELD - A transporter who removes goods from customs area without obtaining Out of Charge clearance, but does so on the directions of the importer and clearing and forwarding agent,... [Read more]
Customs - Confiscation of vehicle for removal of goods without Out of Charge clearance - Transporter acting on directions of importer and CHA - whether confiscation of a vehicle and imposition of redemption fine is justified when a transporter removes goods from customs area without obtaining out of charge clearance, though the customs duty has been fully paid by the importer and the transporter merely followed the directions of the importer – HELD - A transporter who removes goods from customs area without obtaining Out of Charge clearance, but does so on the directions of the importer and clearing and forwarding agent, and where the customs duty has been fully paid by the importer, the confiscation of the transporter's vehicle is not justified - While the removal of goods without proper authorization constitutes a contravention of the Customs Act, such contravention does not warrant confiscation of the vehicle when there is no allegation of contraband or restricted or prohibited goods being transported. The transporter, acting merely as a carrier following the explicit instructions of the importer and the authorized agent, cannot be held culpable to the extent of losing his vehicle and livelihood. However, a penalty is imposable as a measure to ensure greater vigilance and care in future transactions, and the same is modified to a reasonable amount rather than being set aside entirely. The confiscation and redemption fine are set aside, while the penalty is reduced proportionately – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]
Customs – Deemed Export, Discharge of Export Obligation, Duty Demand – Respondent obtained authorization for duty-free imports of polymer raw materials under Advance Authorization and Duty-Free Import Authorization schemes obtained Export Obligation Discharge Certificates after completion of deemed exports to a 100% EoU – Demand of duty on the ground of non-fulfillment of export obligation - Whether the Customs authorities can demand duty on the ground of non-fulfillment of export obligation when EODC have been issued by the licensing authority after due verification and have not been revoked - HELD - When an assesse... [Read more]
Customs – Deemed Export, Discharge of Export Obligation, Duty Demand – Respondent obtained authorization for duty-free imports of polymer raw materials under Advance Authorization and Duty-Free Import Authorization schemes obtained Export Obligation Discharge Certificates after completion of deemed exports to a 100% EoU – Demand of duty on the ground of non-fulfillment of export obligation - Whether the Customs authorities can demand duty on the ground of non-fulfillment of export obligation when EODC have been issued by the licensing authority after due verification and have not been revoked - HELD - When an assessee has obtained Export Obligation Discharge Certificate from the licensing authority and all bonds executed at the time of import have been duly discharged by the Customs authority after satisfying itself that the assessee has fulfilled all the conditions, confirming the demand of customs duty alleging violation of the conditions of the notification is bad in law - The Tribunal in similar facts has held that the issuance of Export Obligation Discharge Certificate by the licensing authority is determinative of completion of export obligations and discharge of bonds by Customs authorities represents administrative closure of authorizations. The demand cannot be sustained merely on suspicion or on the basis of intelligence developed by the DRI without prior consultation with the licensing authority or revocation of the certificates. When export obligations have been completed and bonds have been released, there is no question of wilful misstatement or suppression of facts with intent to evade payment of duty - The appeal filed by the Revenue is rejected [Read less]
Service Tax liability on turnkey/engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) projects for irrigation work – Appellants were awarded work contracts by the Irrigation and CAD Department for execution of turnkey/EPC projects involving construction of irrigation infrastructure - Department sought to levy service tax on these activities as works contract services - Whether the appellants are liable to service tax under the category of works contract service during the relevant period – HELD - The involves interpretation of the Larger bench decision in Lanco Infratech case which has examined the classification of turnkey... [Read more]
Service Tax liability on turnkey/engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) projects for irrigation work – Appellants were awarded work contracts by the Irrigation and CAD Department for execution of turnkey/EPC projects involving construction of irrigation infrastructure - Department sought to levy service tax on these activities as works contract services - Whether the appellants are liable to service tax under the category of works contract service during the relevant period – HELD - The involves interpretation of the Larger bench decision in Lanco Infratech case which has examined the classification of turnkey/EPC contracts. The larger bench had concluded that turnkey/EPC contracts must be classified based on the essential character of service provided, and where such contracts relate to construction of canals, pipelines or conduits for irrigation, water supply or sewerage disposal when provided to government or government undertakings, they would be for non-commercial, non-industrial purposes and would fall under the exclusionary clause of works contract service definition, thereby not being exigible to service tax. However, since the revenue had filed an appeal against the Larger bench decision before the Supreme court and the outcome of that appeal was not readily ascertainable at the time of hearing, the matter requires consideration of the Supreme court's decision before final adjudication - The appeals are allowed by way of remand, and the matter is remanded back to the original adjudicating authority with a direction to first ascertain the status of the Supreme court's decision and thereafter decide the issue keeping in view both the Larger bench order and the Supreme court decision - the appeal is allowed [Read less]
GST – Uttarakhand AAR - Governmental Authority, Special Purpose Vehicle for Smart Cities Mission – Applicant is Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) for implementation of smart cities project is established by the State Government through two public authorities holding equal equity shares, with its Bd comprising serving Government officials in ex-officio capacities, and exercises functions relating to urban development and infrastructure under the smart cities mission framework - Whether the SPV qualifies as a governmental authority within the meaning of the explanation to Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 28.... [Read more]
GST – Uttarakhand AAR - Governmental Authority, Special Purpose Vehicle for Smart Cities Mission – Applicant is Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) for implementation of smart cities project is established by the State Government through two public authorities holding equal equity shares, with its Bd comprising serving Government officials in ex-officio capacities, and exercises functions relating to urban development and infrastructure under the smart cities mission framework - Whether the SPV qualifies as a governmental authority within the meaning of the explanation to Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 28.06.2017, as amended by Notification No. 32/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 13.10.2017 – HELD - The Applicant qualifies as a Governmental authority as it is established by the Government of the State, has one hundred percent equity participation held by nominees of two public authorities in their official capacity functioning under State Government control, and is constituted to carry out functions entrusted to urban local bodies under the smart cities mission framework. Although not set up by legislation, the entity satisfies the second limb of the definition by meeting the requirements of Government establishment and participation both by way of equity and control. The complete Government ownership, along with the Board composition of serving government officers exercising management and strategic direction, demonstrates unqualified State Government control over the entity's functions, funding and execution, thereby fulfilling all conditions prescribed under the explanation to the Notification – The Applicant qualifies as a Governmental authority - Ordered accordingly - Exemption for Services by Governmental Authority relating to Municipal Functions under GST - Whether the services provided by the Applicant in relation to execution of smart city and energy savings company model projects to the water supply utility, pertaining to functions entrusted to a municipality qualify for exemption under serial number four of Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 28.06.2017, as amended by Notification No. 14/2018-Central Tax (Rate) dated 26.07.2018 – HELD - The services relate to water supply for domestic and industrial purposes, which is enumerated as Entry 5 of the Twelfth Schedule of the Constitution as a function entrusted to Municipalities. The project also advances Municipal functions relating to environmental protection and ecological aspects under Entry 8 of the Twelfth Schedule. The expression "in relation to" used in the exemption provision has wide amplitude covering both direct and indirect nexus with municipal functions. The services rendered by the applicant are integrally connected with the functioning, efficiency and sustainability of municipal water supply functions under Article 243W of the Constitution and therefore qualify for exemption under Serial No. 4 of Notification No. 12/2017-CT (Rate), as amended by Notification No. 14/2018-Central Tax (Rate) dated 26.07.2018 - Pure Agent Status - Integrated Project Implementation and Supervisory Role - Whether the applicant, in respect of amounts received from the water supply utility for remittance to the private contractor without any markup, deduction or value addition, acts as a pure agent of the recipient of supply under Rule 33 of the CGST Rules, 2017 – HELD - The applicant does not qualify as a pure agent within the meaning of Rule 33 of the CGST Rules. Although the amounts are transmitted without markup or deduction, the essential conditions for pure agency status are not satisfied because the applicant is not merely as a channel for payment but as an active and integral participant in the overall execution, supervision, financial management and implementation of the project - The services of the contractor are procured as an integral part of the applicant own contractual obligations under the overall project arrangement rather than as independent supplies obtained merely on behalf of the water supply utility. The amounts received and disbursed are intrinsically linked to the execution of the overall supply undertaken by the applicant, and therefore cannot be treated as reimbursements eligible for exclusion from the value of taxable supply. Such amounts are liable to be considered as part of the consideration for the supply made by the governmental authority. [Read less]
GST - Violation of Principles of Natural Justice – Demand on account of grounds of non-compliance of conditions for availing benefit under Notification No.41/2017-IGST (Rate), dated 23.10.2017 - During appellate proceedings, the petitioner submits documents including recipients details, bill of lading, shipping bills, purchase orders, invoices and export general manifests to substantiate that goods were exported and notification conditions were complied with. The appellate authority passes an order-in-appeal without addressing the grounds of appeal or the documents submitted by the petitioner - Whether the appellate auth... [Read more]
GST - Violation of Principles of Natural Justice – Demand on account of grounds of non-compliance of conditions for availing benefit under Notification No.41/2017-IGST (Rate), dated 23.10.2017 - During appellate proceedings, the petitioner submits documents including recipients details, bill of lading, shipping bills, purchase orders, invoices and export general manifests to substantiate that goods were exported and notification conditions were complied with. The appellate authority passes an order-in-appeal without addressing the grounds of appeal or the documents submitted by the petitioner - Whether the appellate authority violates the principles of natural justice by non-consideration of documents produced during appeal proceedings – HELD – The EGMs merely reflect shipping bill numbers and do not establish invoice-wise correlation or particulars of the goods supplied. In the absence of shipping bills evidencing such correlation and the date of export, compliance with the conditions of the Notification No.41/2017-IGST (Rate) could not be conclusively verified. The appellate authority therefore rightly held that the petitioner has failed to furnish the documentary evidence to demonstrate compliance with the conditions of Notification No.41/2017-IGST (Rate) despite sufficient opportunity - The petitioner is at liberty to avail the appellate remedy. Needless to say, it is open for the petitioner to take all such grounds of law and facts before the second appellate authority – The petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST – Return of Job worked goods - Invocation of extended period of limitation - Maintenance of proper records – Petitioner had sent goods to its sister concern for job work without maintaining proper records as required under Section 143 of the CGST Act read with Rule 45 of the CGST Rules. The goods were not returned within the stipulated period, and the taxpayer could not furnish Form ITC-04 due to alleged technical glitches - Tax demand along with interest and penalty invoking extended period - Whether the authorities can invoke extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the CGST Act when the taxpayer fails t... [Read more]
GST – Return of Job worked goods - Invocation of extended period of limitation - Maintenance of proper records – Petitioner had sent goods to its sister concern for job work without maintaining proper records as required under Section 143 of the CGST Act read with Rule 45 of the CGST Rules. The goods were not returned within the stipulated period, and the taxpayer could not furnish Form ITC-04 due to alleged technical glitches - Tax demand along with interest and penalty invoking extended period - Whether the authorities can invoke extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the CGST Act when the taxpayer fails to maintain records showing that goods sent for job work were returned within the prescribed time – HELD - The extended period of limitation under Section 74 has a much lower threshold compared to earlier indirect tax legislations. The GST scheme is based on self-assessment where the Department relies on records maintained by the assessee. If goods are dispatched on job work basis, proper accounts must be maintained and goods must be accounted for before supply from registered premises. When the taxpayer fails to maintain necessary records showing return of goods within the prescribed period, it is deemed that a supply has taken place and tax liability arises - The SCN sufficiently invokes Section 74 by referring to the relevant Sections and Rule provisions and calculating the demand with reference to Section 143(3), 144(4) and Rule 45(3) and 45(4). Technical objections regarding invocation of extended limitation cannot be countenanced in light of the scheme of GST enactment. The threshold for invoking extended period is lower compared to earlier legislation, and absence of detailed specification of all ingredients does not vitiate the proceedings when the statutory provisions are adequately referred to in the show cause notice - The writ petitions are disposed with liberty to the petitioner to establish that the issue is revenue neutral by demonstrating that inputs sent for job work suffered tax either in the hands of the principal or the job worker. The respondent shall thereafter pass final orders on merits after hearing the petitioner – The petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST - Demand on Reverse Charge Mechanism basis on professional and consultancy services availed by SEZ unit for failure to produce the Letter of Undertaking and SEZ Certificate - Department contended that the unit is not outside the GST framework merely by virtue of being an SEZ unit - Whether an SEZ unit is liable to pay tax under the RCM on services that qualify as zero-rated supplies under Section 16 of the IGST Act, 2017 – HELD - The assessment orders were passed primarily because the petitioner failed to produce the Letter of Undertaking and SEZ Certificate before the adjudicating authority for verification. The Sec... [Read more]
GST - Demand on Reverse Charge Mechanism basis on professional and consultancy services availed by SEZ unit for failure to produce the Letter of Undertaking and SEZ Certificate - Department contended that the unit is not outside the GST framework merely by virtue of being an SEZ unit - Whether an SEZ unit is liable to pay tax under the RCM on services that qualify as zero-rated supplies under Section 16 of the IGST Act, 2017 – HELD - The assessment orders were passed primarily because the petitioner failed to produce the Letter of Undertaking and SEZ Certificate before the adjudicating authority for verification. The Section 16 of the IGST Act treats supplies to an SEZ unit for authorized operations as zero-rated supplies, and where the supplier is not liable to pay tax, the recipient SEZ unit has to pay tax under the Reverse Charge or effect supplies without payment of tax under a valid Letter of Undertaking. Merely being an SEZ unit does not place the entity entirely outside the GST framework, but the assessee must establish its entitlement to benefits by producing necessary documents - The controversy can be effectively resolved by affording the petitioner a further opportunity to place the relevant documents before the adjudicating authority, as the requisite SEZ Certificate was subsequently produced before the court itself during hearing - The impugned assessment orders stand set aside. The petitioner is directed to file an additional reply, if any, and produce the Letter of Undertaking and SEZ Certificate before the adjudicating authority. The adjudicating authority shall thereafter consider the petitioner's claim in light of Section 16 of the IGST Act and pass fresh orders on merits and in accordance with law after affording due opportunity to the petitioner – The petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST - Breach of principles of natural justice – Petitioner discontinued business and obtained cancellation of its registration in June 2019. In 2025, an order-in-original is passed imposing tax demand petitioner generated two e-way bills in respect of each invoice – Order passed without affording reasonable opportunity to respond to the show cause notice – HELD - Although a person whose registration stands cancelled retains technical access to the tax portal, it is unreasonable to expect such person to access the portal six years after discontinuing business and after registration cancellation. The order passed witho... [Read more]
GST - Breach of principles of natural justice – Petitioner discontinued business and obtained cancellation of its registration in June 2019. In 2025, an order-in-original is passed imposing tax demand petitioner generated two e-way bills in respect of each invoice – Order passed without affording reasonable opportunity to respond to the show cause notice – HELD - Although a person whose registration stands cancelled retains technical access to the tax portal, it is unreasonable to expect such person to access the portal six years after discontinuing business and after registration cancellation. The order passed without hearing the assessee constitutes a breach of principles of natural justice and is liable to be set aside. The court reasons that the tax authority should have afforded a reasonable opportunity to the assessee to respond to the show cause notice before passing the assessment order. The principles of natural justice require that any person against whom an adverse order is to be passed must be given an adequate opportunity to present their case - The impugned order is set aside and the matter is remanded for reconsideration, subject to the assessee paying ten percent of the disputed tax demand – The petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST - Input Tax Credit - Wrongful Availment - Burden of Proof and Substantiation of Supply – Disallowance of input tax credit on the ground that lorry receipts and weighment slips had not been filed - Whether the availment of input tax credit can be disallowed merely on the ground that lorry receipts and weighment slips have not been filed, notwithstanding that the supplier was registered at the time of supply, invoices contained transport details, and the supplier had filed returns and paid taxes – HELD - The record shows that the supplier was a registered person during the relevant period, and the registration was ca... [Read more]
GST - Input Tax Credit - Wrongful Availment - Burden of Proof and Substantiation of Supply – Disallowance of input tax credit on the ground that lorry receipts and weighment slips had not been filed - Whether the availment of input tax credit can be disallowed merely on the ground that lorry receipts and weighment slips have not been filed, notwithstanding that the supplier was registered at the time of supply, invoices contained transport details, and the supplier had filed returns and paid taxes – HELD - The record shows that the supplier was a registered person during the relevant period, and the registration was cancelled subsequently. Each invoice contains the vehicle number under which the goods were transported. The impugned order records the petitioner’s contention that the supplier arranged the conveyance for the delivery of the goods to the petitioner - Where a supplier is a registered person at the time of supply, has issued tax invoices containing material details including vehicle numbers, and has filed requisite returns and paid taxes in respect of the supplies, a further examination into the genuineness of the supply becomes warranted before confirming a tax proposal. The burden of proof regarding availment of ITC is statutorily imposed on the person availing the credit, however, this burden must be discharged in the context of all available evidence and circumstances. Merely because certain ancillary documents are absent, and without undertaking a holistic examination of the transaction, the tax authority cannot reject the input tax credit – The impugned order is set aside and the matter is remanded to the respondent for reconsideration. The petitioner is permitted to place additional documents relating to the supply - The Writ Petition is disposed of [Read less]
GST - Blocking of Input Tax Credit under Rule 86A of CGST Rules, 2017 – Invocation of preventive power on finding of fraudulent transactions - Following searches conducted at the company's premises on two occasions, the tax authorities blocked the Input Tax Credit amounting to a substantial sum in three separate instances. The company submitted a representation seeking unblocking of the said credits. The tax authority passed speaking order rejecting the representation and maintaining the blockage - Whether the blocking of Input Tax Credit under Rule 86A of the CGST Rules, 2017, on the ground of fraudulent availing of cre... [Read more]
GST - Blocking of Input Tax Credit under Rule 86A of CGST Rules, 2017 – Invocation of preventive power on finding of fraudulent transactions - Following searches conducted at the company's premises on two occasions, the tax authorities blocked the Input Tax Credit amounting to a substantial sum in three separate instances. The company submitted a representation seeking unblocking of the said credits. The tax authority passed speaking order rejecting the representation and maintaining the blockage - Whether the blocking of Input Tax Credit under Rule 86A of the CGST Rules, 2017, on the ground of fraudulent availing of credit by the assessee, is justified - HELD - The power conferred under Rule 86A, being drastic in nature, must be exercised with due care and caution, and the statutory parameters prescribed must be strictly satisfied. The assessee possesses an entitlement to submit a representation seeking revocation of the blockage, and upon submission of such representation, the authority stands obliged to consider it and issue a reasoned speaking order. In the present case, the tax authority has recorded specific findings based on adequate material on record, including physical verification of supplier premises revealing vacant premises lacking infrastructure for handling the goods in question, examination of CCTV footage showing absence of vehicle movement on alleged dates and times, and documentary evidence indicating manipulation of records through reversal of chronological sequence in receipt slips. These materials constitute adequate grounds to establish the requisite "reasons to believe" as prescribed under the Rule. The characterization of transactions as fraudulent and the invocation of Rule 86A stands justified on the objective consideration of the materials placed on record. The contention that the blockage causes undue hardship to business operations lacks merit considering the company's substantial annual turnover, which renders implausible the assertion that the entire manufacturing unit would come to a standstill solely due to the blockage. However, the Revenue cannot indefinitely continue the blockage without expeditiously completing the consequential proceedings – The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
GST – Adjudication, Service of Show Cause Notice - Adjudication order passed without serving a Show Cause Notice on the registered email ID of the assessee, though the order refers to such service having been made. The assessee categorically denies receipt of the notice and claims that it was uploaded on the portal only after the adjudication order was passed – HELD - The adjudication proceeds solely on the ground that the assessee has not responded to the Show Cause Notice without reasoning otherwise, and the assessee claims that the Show Cause Notice was never sent to its registered email ID. The assessee must have a... [Read more]
GST – Adjudication, Service of Show Cause Notice - Adjudication order passed without serving a Show Cause Notice on the registered email ID of the assessee, though the order refers to such service having been made. The assessee categorically denies receipt of the notice and claims that it was uploaded on the portal only after the adjudication order was passed – HELD - The adjudication proceeds solely on the ground that the assessee has not responded to the Show Cause Notice without reasoning otherwise, and the assessee claims that the Show Cause Notice was never sent to its registered email ID. The assessee must have a real and meaningful opportunity to respond before being called upon to answer a demand including tax, interest, and penalty. As the principles of natural justice and procedural fairness require that no person can be condemned unheard - The order of adjudication is quashed and matter is restored to the respondent for due consideration, reserving liberty to the assessee to file a detailed response to the Show Cause Notice – The petition is partly allowed [Read less]
GST – Jurisdiction of Assistant Commissioner to adjudicate notices issued by DGGI - Petitioner challenges the Order-in-Original passed by the Assistant Commissioner confirming a Show Cause Notice issued by the DGGI for alleged misclassification of maintenance charges for wind-operated electricity generators - Whether an Assistant Commissioner of GST & Central Excise possesses the jurisdiction to pass an adjudication order on a SCN issued by the DGGI – HELD - The amendment to Notification No. 02/2017-Central Tax through Notification No. 02/2022 dated 11.03.2022 vests such power exclusively with Additional Commissioners ... [Read more]
GST – Jurisdiction of Assistant Commissioner to adjudicate notices issued by DGGI - Petitioner challenges the Order-in-Original passed by the Assistant Commissioner confirming a Show Cause Notice issued by the DGGI for alleged misclassification of maintenance charges for wind-operated electricity generators - Whether an Assistant Commissioner of GST & Central Excise possesses the jurisdiction to pass an adjudication order on a SCN issued by the DGGI – HELD - The amendment to Notification No. 02/2017-Central Tax through Notification No. 02/2022 dated 11.03.2022 vests such power exclusively with Additional Commissioners or Joint Commissioners of Central Tax - The parent Notification No. 02/2017-Central Tax originally designated various officers as proper officers vested with powers under the GST Acts. However, Notification No. 02/2022 inserted Clause 3A and Table V, expressly restrict the power to pass orders in respect of notices issued by DGGI officers to only Additional Commissioners or Joint Commissioners of Central Tax subordinate to the Principal Commissioners or Commissioners of Central Tax - The impugned order violates the mandatory requirements of said notification and thus suffers from a procedural irregularity and jurisdictional defect, rendering it liable to be quashed - The impugned Order-in-Original is quashed and the case is remitted back to the competent authority as per the modified Notifications to pass a fresh order on merits in accordance with law – The writ petition is allowed [Read less]
Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations, 2018 – Revocation of licence – Violation of principles of natural justice – Denial of cross-examination - Whether denial of effective opportunity to cross-examine witnesses whose statements and investigative findings formed the basis of the proceedings vitiated the adjudication – HELD - The Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations carry serious civil and commercial consequences affecting the broker's business, reputation and livelihood, and therefore strict compliance with principles of natural justice and procedural fairness is mandatory. The impugned proceedings were substantia... [Read more]
Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations, 2018 – Revocation of licence – Violation of principles of natural justice – Denial of cross-examination - Whether denial of effective opportunity to cross-examine witnesses whose statements and investigative findings formed the basis of the proceedings vitiated the adjudication – HELD - The Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations carry serious civil and commercial consequences affecting the broker's business, reputation and livelihood, and therefore strict compliance with principles of natural justice and procedural fairness is mandatory. The impugned proceedings were substantially founded upon statements recorded during investigation and conclusions drawn by departmental officers, yet despite repeated requests made during inquiry proceedings under Regulation 17(4), effective opportunity of cross-examination was denied. Whenever statements recorded behind the back of a noticee are relied upon to establish allegations having adverse civil consequences, fair procedure ordinarily requires that the noticee be afforded opportunity to test the veracity of such statements through cross-examination – The impugned order does not assign any cogent reasons for rejection of the request for cross-examination and merely proceeds upon the investigation record by accepting departmental conclusions, which is inconsistent with settled principles governing adjudication under fiscal statutes. The right of cross-examination assumes even greater significance in cases where findings are inferential in nature arising from investigative conclusions rather than direct documentary admissions. The adjudicating authority proceeded substantially on assumptions that the importer was non-existent and that the Customs Broker therefore necessarily failed in discharge of obligations, yet the appellant was denied meaningful opportunity to challenge the correctness of the verification process allegedly undertaken by investigating authorities. The impugned proceedings stand vitiated for violation of principles of natural justice on account of denial of effective cross-examination - Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations, 2018 – Regulation 10(n) – Verification of client's antecedents – Appellant sought to establish that it had substantially complied with obligations under Regulation 10(n) by verifying the importer's IEC particulars, GST registration, PAN, Aadhaar and Udyam registration through official Government portals and reliable sources - Whether Regulation 10(n) mandates compulsory physical verification of every importer's premises and whether verification through Government-issued credentials constitutes substantial compliance – HELD - The Regulation 10(n) merely requires verification of the functioning of the client at the declared address using reliable, independent and authentic documents, data or information, and does not mandate compulsory physical verification of every importer's business premises. Once a Customs Broker verifies IEC, GSTIN, PAN and other Government-issued credentials through official sources, the statutory obligation substantially stands fulfilled unless material exists demonstrating conscious knowledge, collusion or deliberate disregard of suspicious circumstances. It is unreasonable to interpret the regulation as casting an obligation of perpetual vigilance or continuous surveillance over the importer even after completion of KYC formalities, as a Customs Broker cannot be expected to continuously monitor whether an importer subsequently ceases operations or changes premises. The tribunal noted that to impose such an impossible obligation would effectively convert the Customs Broker into an investigative agency rather than a processing intermediary under the Customs Act - The Customs Broker acts primarily as a processing agent of documents and is not expected to undertake roving investigation into the genuineness of every importer or exporter transaction unless circumstances exist giving rise to reasonable suspicion. The appellant had substantially complied with the obligations under Regulation 10(n) by verifying IEC, GSTIN, PAN and other KYC credentials through reliable and authentic Government-issued documents and portals, and Regulation 10(n) does not mandate compulsory physical verification or perpetual surveillance of the importer by the Customs Broker - Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations, 2018 – Regulation 10(j) – Concealment or destruction of records – Whether the allegation of concealment or destruction of records under Regulation 10(j) is established where the Department extracted communications before commencing formal investigation proceedings – HELD - The allegation relating to deletion of WhatsApp chats is entirely speculative and unsupported by cogent evidence. In the absence of evidence showing wilful destruction of evidence sought by Customs authorities, invocation of Regulation 10(j) merely on assumptions cannot be sustained. The proceedings resulting in revocation of licence require proof of clear and deliberate misconduct and not mere suspicion or conjecture, and that the impugned order itself apparently records that no deletion occurred after summons were issued. The allegation under Regulation 10(j) regarding deletion of WhatsApp chats is unsupported by cogent evidence and therefore unsustainable - Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations, 2018 – Revocation of licence – Whether the extreme punishment of revocation of licence is proportionate to the alleged violations when no evidence of active collusion, fabrication of documents, pecuniary benefit or repeated violations exists – HELD - The revocation is the severest punishment contemplated under the Customs Brokers Licensing Regulations framework and is ordinarily justified only in cases involving fraud, deliberate facilitation of smuggling, forged documents, repeated violations or conduct fundamentally incompatible with continuation as a licensed Customs Broker. The tribunal observed that in the present case, there is no evidence of active collusion, fabrication of documents, participation in undervaluation or smuggling, monetary benefit derived by the appellant or repeated and habitual violations. The doctrine of proportionality, now firmly embedded in administrative law jurisprudence, forbids imposition of excessive punishment unsupported by the nature of established misconduct - The record indicates the appellant had been operating under a valid licence renewed up to a specified date and had been permitted to transact business at various Customs locations, with no previous major infraction or habitual misconduct attributable to it. Even assuming arguendo that there existed some procedural inadequacy in verification standards adopted by the appellant, the punishment of total revocation would nevertheless be shockingly disproportionate, and consequently the extreme punishment of revocation, forfeiture of security deposit and penalty is wholly unsustainable both on facts and in law. [Read less]
GST - Classification of unmanufactured tobacco – Petitioner engaged in tobacco business classifies its product under Chapter heading 24039990 and pays Compensation cess at 96% - Department reclassified the product under Chapter heading 24039910 with enhanced Cess, resulting in additional demand - Whether the product manufactured by merely sprinkling dried tobacco leaves with jaggery water, without addition of any other material or flavoring, constitutes a manufactured product requiring classification under HSN 2403 99 10 or whether it remains unmanufactured tobacco classifiable under CETH 2401 20 90 – HELD - The produc... [Read more]
GST - Classification of unmanufactured tobacco – Petitioner engaged in tobacco business classifies its product under Chapter heading 24039990 and pays Compensation cess at 96% - Department reclassified the product under Chapter heading 24039910 with enhanced Cess, resulting in additional demand - Whether the product manufactured by merely sprinkling dried tobacco leaves with jaggery water, without addition of any other material or flavoring, constitutes a manufactured product requiring classification under HSN 2403 99 10 or whether it remains unmanufactured tobacco classifiable under CETH 2401 20 90 – HELD - The product does not constitute a manufactured product as the process employed does not result in emergence of a new product having a distinct name, character and use. Relying on the authoritative precedent in Pachiappa Chettiar v. State of Madras, mere sprinkling of jaggery water and cutting of tobacco leaves without addition of flavors, fragrances or other materials does not amount to manufacturing - Manufacture requires processing that results in emergence of a new product with distinct name, character and use, which is absent here as the product continues to be raw tobacco capable of being chewed before and after the process - So long as the writ petitioner is confining its activity to what was approved in Pachiappa Chettiar's case, its products would fall under CETH 2401 20 90 - The writ petition is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Duty exemption on refined vegetable oils – Eligibility based on 'edible grade' classification irrespective of end-use - Respondents imported refined vegetable oils (peanut oil, sunflower oil, walnut oil, almond oil, and macadamia nut oil) classified under Customs Tariff Items 1508, 1512, and declared them as edible grade, seeking duty exemption under Serial Nos. 64 and 71 of Notification No. 50/2017-Customs dated 30.06.2017. The goods were tested by a Government-approved laboratory (FSSAI/NABL accredited) and confirmed to meet edible grade standards as per FSSAI regulations. However, the importer declared the i... [Read more]
Customs - Duty exemption on refined vegetable oils – Eligibility based on 'edible grade' classification irrespective of end-use - Respondents imported refined vegetable oils (peanut oil, sunflower oil, walnut oil, almond oil, and macadamia nut oil) classified under Customs Tariff Items 1508, 1512, and declared them as edible grade, seeking duty exemption under Serial Nos. 64 and 71 of Notification No. 50/2017-Customs dated 30.06.2017. The goods were tested by a Government-approved laboratory (FSSAI/NABL accredited) and confirmed to meet edible grade standards as per FSSAI regulations. However, the importer declared the intended end-use as cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and personal care products rather than direct human consumption - Whether goods can qualify for customs duty exemption under Notification No. 50/2017-Customs if they are of 'edible grade' as per prescribed standards but are intended for non-food industrial use such as cosmetics and pharmaceuticals – HELD – The goods meeting the two essential conditions prescribed in the exemption notification i.e. classification under specified chapter headings and certification as 'refined and edible grade', are eligible for Customs duty exemption regardless of their declared end-use - The exemption notification contains no explicit condition regarding end-use. The supplementary note to Chapter 15 of the Customs Tariff Act defines 'edible grade' with reference to standards prescribed by FSSAI and the Prevention of Food Adulteration Rules based on quality parameters alone. Laboratory test reports confirming that imported goods conform to edible grade standards as per FSSAI regulations constitute sufficient evidence of meeting the statutory definition of 'edible grade' – The Circulars issued by the Board cannot impose additional conditions beyond what is expressly stated in the exemption notification, as circular instructions cannot restrict or modify the scope of a statutory exemption - The taxable event occurs at the point of import when goods are classified, and subsequent end-use is immaterial to determining duty eligibility. The Department's reliance on CBEC Circular No. 40/2001 imposing an end-use condition is legally unsustainable as it contradicts the notification and cannot override statutory provisions - The order passed by the Commissioner of Customs (Appeals), which extended customs duty exemption to the imported goods under Serial Nos. 64 and 71 of Notification No. 50/2017-Customs, is upheld as proper and legal - The appeal filed by the Revenue is dismissed [Read less]
GST - Service of assessment orders through online portal – Petitioner received a tax assessment order dated 17.07.2025 for availing input tax credit on blocked credit, leading to levy of interest and penalty. The order is uploaded on the common portal but not communicated through other modes - Whether a writ petition filed after six months from the date of assessment order should be dismissed merely on the ground of delay, when the order was communicated only through uploading on the common portal without adopting other prescribed modes of communication – HELD - Under Section 169 of the CGST Act, 2017, various modes of... [Read more]
GST - Service of assessment orders through online portal – Petitioner received a tax assessment order dated 17.07.2025 for availing input tax credit on blocked credit, leading to levy of interest and penalty. The order is uploaded on the common portal but not communicated through other modes - Whether a writ petition filed after six months from the date of assessment order should be dismissed merely on the ground of delay, when the order was communicated only through uploading on the common portal without adopting other prescribed modes of communication – HELD - Under Section 169 of the CGST Act, 2017, various modes of service are contemplated including registered post, speed post, email and uploading on the common portal. While uploading on the portal constitutes valid service and is deemed to be served on the date of publication, it cannot be reasonably expected of a common man or small business person to repeatedly access the common portal through multiple windows to ascertain orders. The authorities have a duty to communicate orders through other practicable modes as well to ensure the prescribed period for filing appeal is properly reckoned. Since the authorities failed to adopt alternative modes of communication and the delay was caused by this procedural deficiency rather than the appellant's negligence, the appellant deserves one further opportunity - The writ appeal is disposed of and the appellant is granted liberty to file an appeal before the appellate commissioner to be considered and disposed on its own merits in accordance with law – The writ appeal is disposed of [Read less]
GST – Haryana AAAR - Input Tax Credit on Services for Qualified Institutional Placement – Appellant undertook a Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) to raise capital and procured various services including lead management, legal, and consultancy services from investment bankers and other intermediaries - Appellant sought Advance Ruling on whether ITC is eligible under Section 16(1) of the CGST Act, 2017 on services for Qualified Institutional Placement – The impugned AAR denied the entire ITC on the ground that fund-raising through QIP does not constitute business or activity in the course or furtherance of busine... [Read more]
GST – Haryana AAAR - Input Tax Credit on Services for Qualified Institutional Placement – Appellant undertook a Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) to raise capital and procured various services including lead management, legal, and consultancy services from investment bankers and other intermediaries - Appellant sought Advance Ruling on whether ITC is eligible under Section 16(1) of the CGST Act, 2017 on services for Qualified Institutional Placement – The impugned AAR denied the entire ITC on the ground that fund-raising through QIP does not constitute business or activity in the course or furtherance of business - Whether raising capital through QIP and the ancillary services thereto constitute business activities eligible for ITC purposes – HELD - The ITC eligibility must be examined separately for each component of fund deployment. For the portion of QIP proceeds utilized for repayment or pre-payment of borrowings undertaken by the company itself, such repayment represents discharge of financial liabilities undertaken in the course or furtherance of business, and efficient financial management is an integral component of commercial enterprise functioning, whereby activities for restructuring or repayment of borrowings directly contribute to stability and sustainability of business – The financial services rendered for raising capital bear nexus with business activities. Considering the broad definition of business under Section 2(17) of the CGST Act which includes any activity incidental or ancillary to trade or commerce, the services availed for raising funds utilized for repayment of the company's borrowings qualify as services used in the course or furtherance of business and thus ITC thereon is admissible under Section 16(1) - However, for the portion of QIP proceeds utilized for investment in the company's wholly owned subsidiary, the ITC is not admissible because although the subsidiary operates in the same line of business as the holding company, a holding company and its subsidiary are distinct legal entities and expenditure incurred by one entity cannot be claimed as ITC in the hands of another. The economic benefit of services procured for subsidiary investment accrues to the subsidiary and not to the holding company, and in the absence of direct and proximate nexus between input services and the business of the appellant holding company, ITC cannot be claimed despite consolidated financial statements reflecting subsidiary profits - The appeal is allowed in part, modifying the original ruling to permit ITC on services attributable to the portion of QIP proceeds utilized for repayment or pre-payment of borrowings of the company, while denying ITC on services attributable to the portion utilized for investment in the subsidiary – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]
GST – Rajasthan AAAR - Input Tax Credit on Solar Power Plant for Captive Consumption - Treatment of Electricity Supply in GST - Setting up a solar power plant at a different location within the same State, registered as an additional place of business under a single GSTIN - The entire electricity generated from the solar power plant is transferred to the DISCOM, which provides energy credits that are adjusted against the actual electricity consumed in the manufacturing factory. The manufacturer claims input tax credit on goods, capital goods, and input services used in the design, engineering, installation, commissionin... [Read more]
GST – Rajasthan AAAR - Input Tax Credit on Solar Power Plant for Captive Consumption - Treatment of Electricity Supply in GST - Setting up a solar power plant at a different location within the same State, registered as an additional place of business under a single GSTIN - The entire electricity generated from the solar power plant is transferred to the DISCOM, which provides energy credits that are adjusted against the actual electricity consumed in the manufacturing factory. The manufacturer claims input tax credit on goods, capital goods, and input services used in the design, engineering, installation, commissioning, and operation of the solar power plant - Whether input tax credit of GST paid on inputs, capital goods, or input services used in the installation, commissioning, and operation of a remotely located solar power plant is admissible when electricity generated therein is transferred to the grid and credited against factory consumption – HELD - The transfer of electricity from the solar power plant to the DISCOM grid constitutes a 'supply' under GST. The appellant has characterized the arrangement as a 'transfer of credits in lieu of electricity', which is an exchange, a mode of supply explicitly enumerated under Section 2(83) of the CGST Act, 2017 - The DISCOM credits constitute consideration as defined in Section 2(31), representing monetary value flowing to the appellant in response to the supply of electricity. Absent a wheeling and banking agreement, the transaction operates as a bilateral arrangement where the appellant supplies electricity to DISCOM in exchange for credits, meaning title in the electricity passes to DISCOM upon injection into the grid – Further, electricity is charged at nil rate under the GST regime as per Notification No. 02/2017-CT(Rate) dated 28.06.2017, making it an exempt supply. The term 'captive' qualifies the location where electricity is generated, not where it is consumed. Once power is transferred to the grid, it cannot be treated as captively consumed. The 'same GSTIN' principle does not assist the appellant since the supply runs from the appellant to DISCOM, a third party, not from one unit to another within the same entity - The appellant is not eligible to avail input tax credit of GST paid on inputs, capital goods, or input services used in the design, engineering, erection, installation, commissioning, and operation of the solar power plant, as the generation and transfer of electricity constitutes a supply of exempt goods under GST - The advance ruling order is upheld and the appeal is rejected [Read less]
Service Tax - Liability of sub-contractor providing works contract services – Appellant engaged in providing construction and works contract services argues that since the principal contractor has already discharged service tax on the entire contract value, demanding service tax again from the sub-contractor would amount to double taxation - Whether a sub-contractor is liable to pay service tax on services provided to a main contractor, even when the main contractor has already paid service tax on the gross contract amount – HELD - A sub-contractor is liable to pay service tax irrespective of whether the main contracto... [Read more]
Service Tax - Liability of sub-contractor providing works contract services – Appellant engaged in providing construction and works contract services argues that since the principal contractor has already discharged service tax on the entire contract value, demanding service tax again from the sub-contractor would amount to double taxation - Whether a sub-contractor is liable to pay service tax on services provided to a main contractor, even when the main contractor has already paid service tax on the gross contract amount – HELD - A sub-contractor is liable to pay service tax irrespective of whether the main contractor has paid service tax or not. The Larger bench decision in Melange Developers Pvt Ltd held that a sub-contractor is essentially a taxable service provider and the fact that services provided by sub-contractors are used as input services does not alter their taxability. The statutory framework under Sections 66 and 68 of the Finance Act, 1994 requires every person providing taxable service to pay service tax in the prescribed manner. The concern of double taxation is addressed through the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004, which allow the main contractor to take credit of service tax paid at the preceding stage. The mechanism ensures there is no actual double taxation as the credit provisions enable each service provider in the supply chain to utilize tax paid on input services against their output service tax liability. Therefore, the demand for service tax from the sub-contractor is valid and not barred by the principle of double taxation - The appeal is disposed of by way of remandrnrn^Applicability of extended period of limitation for raising service tax demand – HELD - For the period from February 2016 to December 2016, the relevant date for determining limitation would be the date of filing the ST-3 return, which was 25th April 2016 for the period October 2015 to March 2016. The show cause notice issued on 30th August 2018 falls within 30 months from the relevant date under the Finance Act, 2016. Therefore, even though the show cause notice invokes extended period in the charging section, the demand is actually within the normal period of limitation and the revenue's case is not hit by any time bar.rnrn^Admissibility of cum tax benefit in computing service tax liability - The appellant is entitled to the benefit of Section 67(2) of the Finance Act, 1994, which provides that where the gross amount charged by a service provider is inclusive of service tax payable, the value of taxable service shall be computed such that with the addition of tax payable it equals the gross amount charged - The matter is remanded to the adjudicating authority to recalculate the service tax liability by granting the benefit of cum tax as per Section 67(2). [Read less]
Customs - Valuation - Acceptance of Enhanced Value - Appellant, an importer of polyester knitted fabrics, submitted letters accepting enhancement of assessable value under protest after being denied provisional clearance and facing delays, demurrage and warehousing charges. The proper officer reassessed the value without following the mandate of Section 14 of the Customs Act, 1962 read with Rule 12 of the Customs Valuation Rules, 2007, and without communicating in writing the grounds for doubting the declared value. The Commissioner (Appeals) rejected the appellant's appeals holding that since the appellant had accepted th... [Read more]
Customs - Valuation - Acceptance of Enhanced Value - Appellant, an importer of polyester knitted fabrics, submitted letters accepting enhancement of assessable value under protest after being denied provisional clearance and facing delays, demurrage and warehousing charges. The proper officer reassessed the value without following the mandate of Section 14 of the Customs Act, 1962 read with Rule 12 of the Customs Valuation Rules, 2007, and without communicating in writing the grounds for doubting the declared value. The Commissioner (Appeals) rejected the appellant's appeals holding that since the appellant had accepted the enhancement in writing, no speaking order was required under Section 17(5) of the Customs Act, 1962 - Whether letter of acceptance submitted by importer under coercion relieves proper officer of obligation to issue speaking order and deprives importer of right to question reassessment – HELD - The mandate of Rule 12(2) of the Customs Valuation Rules, 2007 to intimate the importer in writing the grounds for doubting the truth or accuracy of the declared value cannot be ignored or waived. The proper officer is duty bound to communicate in writing the reasons for rejection of transaction value to the importer. The perceived concession made in respect of the opinion harboured by the proper officer cannot be construed as depriving the importer of the right to question the correctness of the decision of the proper officer in accordance with law, as the right to question is protected by statute - A letter of acceptance submitted under coercion due to delays in clearance and financial liabilities does not constitute a complete or abject surrender of the right to assail or question a reassessment. The proper officer could not be relieved of the obligation to pass a speaking order under Section 17(5) when the declared value is rejected and reassessed. The enhancement of value based solely on NIDB data without corroborative evidence or contemporaneous import comparisons is unwarranted, and any reassessment must be supported by independent and cogent evidence - The impugned orders are set aside and the appeals are allowed [Read less]
Service Tax – Demand based on information from Income Tax Department - Show cause notice was issued invoking extended period of limitation contending that the assessee had suppressed material facts and contravened provisions with intent to evade payment of service tax - Whether the extended period of limitation could be invoked against the assessee when the assessee entertained a bonafide belief that the value of services provided fell below the threshold exemption limit under Notification No. 33/2012-Service Tax and therefore no service tax liability was attracted – HELD - From the trading and profit and loss account ... [Read more]
Service Tax – Demand based on information from Income Tax Department - Show cause notice was issued invoking extended period of limitation contending that the assessee had suppressed material facts and contravened provisions with intent to evade payment of service tax - Whether the extended period of limitation could be invoked against the assessee when the assessee entertained a bonafide belief that the value of services provided fell below the threshold exemption limit under Notification No. 33/2012-Service Tax and therefore no service tax liability was attracted – HELD - From the trading and profit and loss account in the balance sheet for the preceding financial year 2015-16, the total service turnover was less than the prescribed threshold exemption limit of ten lakh rupees. This fact was further supported by the income tax return of the assessee wherein the same figure appeared. The assessee was engaged in providing services along with supply of goods, which qualify as work contract services, and the services provided attracted the composition scheme under section 194C of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The assessee had a bonafide belief that no service tax liability existed because the turnover during the year was less than the prescribed exemption limit - The onus to provide evidence in support of mala fide conduct lies on the revenue and not on the assessee. Since nothing on record displayed a willful default on the part of the assessee and the assessee made efforts in pursuit of adherence to the law, the extended period of limitation could not be invoked - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Goods Transport Agency services - Proceedings based on information received from income tax authority - Whether service tax can be demanded from the service provider on the difference between the total consideration and the amount on which the service recipient discharged tax under Reverse Charge Mechanism – Applicability of extended period of limitation applies when the service provider entertained a bonafide belief that the entire tax liability was on the service recipient – HELD – There is distinction between accrual basis of accounting (applicable to service providers under service tax law with effe... [Read more]
Service Tax - Goods Transport Agency services - Proceedings based on information received from income tax authority - Whether service tax can be demanded from the service provider on the difference between the total consideration and the amount on which the service recipient discharged tax under Reverse Charge Mechanism – Applicability of extended period of limitation applies when the service provider entertained a bonafide belief that the entire tax liability was on the service recipient – HELD – There is distinction between accrual basis of accounting (applicable to service providers under service tax law with effect from 2011) and receipt basis (applicable to service recipients as shown in 26AS statements). When services are provided on accrual basis and reflected in the service provider's books for the financial year 2016-17, but the service recipient makes payment and discharges tax in a subsequent period based on receipt, the liability to pay service tax on RCM basis rests with the service recipient only for that portion. The service provider cannot be held liable for tax on services not paid for during the financial year in question - The appellant entertained a bonafide belief that the entire service tax liability was on the service recipient under reverse charge mechanism, which belief is well-founded and supported by the records. The burden of proving mala fide lies on the Revenue, not on the assessee. Since the appellant made efforts to comply with law and entertained a reasonable bonafide belief regarding its tax obligations, the invocation of extended limitation period fails - The demand for service tax on the balance amount is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Rajasthan Value Added Tax Act, 2003 - Power of search and seizure of residential premises - sufficiency of material to form belief regarding tax evasion – Petitioners-firms challenged the search and seizure proceedings, contending that the search of residential premises was without jurisdiction as no material suggested that business activities were being conducted from the residence or that books of account were kept there - Whether the assessing authority had sufficient material and reasonable belief to conduct search and seizure proceedings at the residential premises of the proprietors under Section 75 of the Rajastha... [Read more]
Rajasthan Value Added Tax Act, 2003 - Power of search and seizure of residential premises - sufficiency of material to form belief regarding tax evasion – Petitioners-firms challenged the search and seizure proceedings, contending that the search of residential premises was without jurisdiction as no material suggested that business activities were being conducted from the residence or that books of account were kept there - Whether the assessing authority had sufficient material and reasonable belief to conduct search and seizure proceedings at the residential premises of the proprietors under Section 75 of the Rajasthan VAT Act, 2003 – HELD – The search and seizure proceedings at the residential premises are valid and do not violate Section 75 of the Act of 2003 or Rule 51 of the Rules of 2006. The assessing authority possessed tangible material sufficient to form a reasonable belief regarding possible tax evasion. The material before the authority included a specific complaint detailing alleged tax evasion methods, inquiry reports indicating that the six firms belonged to the same family and were engaged in similar business activities, and the existence of prior proceedings at various legal and administrative forums alleging tax evasion against these firms - While the impugned order did not explicitly record reasons, the respondents produced record from which it was evident that the authorities were aware of these facts. The Section 75(1)(a) and (d) of the RVAT Act do not prohibit search of residential premises provided statutory requirements are satisfied, as the statute permits inspection or survey of "any other place" where it is believed that business is being carried on or accounts are being kept, and permits search where concealment of facts relating to business is suspected. The recovery of business-related documents from the residential premises substantiates the formation of reasonable belief - The respondent authorities are directed to conclude the assessment proceedings on the basis of the survey and search conducted at both the business premises and residential premises of the proprietors. Before concluding the assessment proceedings, the authorities shall provide copies of seized documents to the petitioners and afford them an opportunity of hearing before passing the final assessment order – The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
Central Excise - Admissibility of Cenvat Credit on Services for Effluent Treatment Infrastructure – Appellant-cooperative sugar factory manufacturing excisable goods availed Cenvat Credit on civil construction and works contract services for construction of effluent treatment plant infrastructure, including bio-compost yard and storage lagoons, which are mandatory requirements under Pollution Control Act - Department disallowed the credit contending that construction and works contract services are excluded from the scope of input services under Rule 2(1) of Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether Cenvat Credit on services u... [Read more]
Central Excise - Admissibility of Cenvat Credit on Services for Effluent Treatment Infrastructure – Appellant-cooperative sugar factory manufacturing excisable goods availed Cenvat Credit on civil construction and works contract services for construction of effluent treatment plant infrastructure, including bio-compost yard and storage lagoons, which are mandatory requirements under Pollution Control Act - Department disallowed the credit contending that construction and works contract services are excluded from the scope of input services under Rule 2(1) of Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether Cenvat Credit on services used for construction/modernization of effluent treatment infrastructure is admissible under Rule 2(1) of the Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 – HELD – The effluent treatment activity is an essential and integral part of the manufacturing process. The Supreme Court in Indian Farmers Fertilizers Cooperative Ltd. case, established that apparatus used for effluent treatment forms part of the manufacturing process. As per the Pollution Control Act, 1981, it is mandatory for every industrial unit to treat effluent waste generated during manufacture of final product, and without such treatment, the factory cannot legally operate - The amended definition of input service from 01.04.2011 excludes construction services relating to new construction or setting up of new factory, but expressly continues to include services relating to modernization, renovation or repairs of a factory in the inclusion clause. Since the effluent treatment plant was set up in the existing running factory, the activity constitutes modernization of the factory. Therefore, services availed for effluent treatment are admissible input services, and Cenvat Credit cannot be denied on hyper-technical grounds when the services are used for fulfilling statutory obligations of controlling environmental pollution and ensuring uninterrupted manufacturing activity - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
This is Member Area - Please Login to view this page.
Schedule a demo to know the features and advantages of VILGST portal. Get to know the tips to find the desired results in faster way.
Didn’t find what you are searching for? No worries, please give us the following details and VIL will email you the desired Caselaws at the earliest:

