Customs - Classification of Nikrothal Wire under Customs Tariff - The Appellant imported various items including Nikrothal wire of different grades, which were initially self-assessed and classified under CTH 75052200 - Revenue disputed this classification on the ground that the items contained no cobalt content and reclassified them under CTH 72230091 – HELD - The coordinate bench of Tribunal in the Appellant's own case for an earlier period involving the considered identical goods and substantially similar facts, where the same goods were initially declared under CTH 75051220 and the Revenue had attempted reclassificat... [Read more]
Customs - Classification of Nikrothal Wire under Customs Tariff - The Appellant imported various items including Nikrothal wire of different grades, which were initially self-assessed and classified under CTH 75052200 - Revenue disputed this classification on the ground that the items contained no cobalt content and reclassified them under CTH 72230091 – HELD - The coordinate bench of Tribunal in the Appellant's own case for an earlier period involving the considered identical goods and substantially similar facts, where the same goods were initially declared under CTH 75051220 and the Revenue had attempted reclassification under CTH 72189910. The coordinate bench had considered the mill test certificate, the disputed classifications in light of chapter notes and sub-heading notes, and concluded that the Revenue's reclassification could not be sustained. Since no factual differences or change in law are pointed out in the present case, the scope of the present appeal is squarely covered by the earlier proceedings and principles. The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Refund claims for service tax paid on input services received for authorized operations by SEZ Unit – Appellant filed refund claim after the one-year limitation period prescribed under Notification No. 40/2012-ST dated 20.06.2012 and Notification No. 12/2013-ST dated 01.07.2013. The adjudicating authority rejected the refund claims on the ground that they were time-barred - Whether the time period prescribed under Notification No. 40/2012 dated 20.06.2012 and Notification No. 12/2013 dated 01.07.2013 are mandatory in nature – HELD - The Notifications issued under the Finance Act, 1994 cannot impose restri... [Read more]
Service Tax - Refund claims for service tax paid on input services received for authorized operations by SEZ Unit – Appellant filed refund claim after the one-year limitation period prescribed under Notification No. 40/2012-ST dated 20.06.2012 and Notification No. 12/2013-ST dated 01.07.2013. The adjudicating authority rejected the refund claims on the ground that they were time-barred - Whether the time period prescribed under Notification No. 40/2012 dated 20.06.2012 and Notification No. 12/2013 dated 01.07.2013 are mandatory in nature – HELD - The Notifications issued under the Finance Act, 1994 cannot impose restrictions or time limits on SEZ units which are not prescribed under the SEZ Rules, 2006. Section 51 of the SEZ Act gives overriding effect to its provisions over any other law. Section 26(1) of the SEZ Act specifically exempts services provided to developers and units in SEZs from payment of service tax, subject only to the manner, terms and conditions prescribed under Section 26(2) through the SEZ Rules - The GMR Aerospace Engineering Limited case, held that the exemptions granted under Section 26 of the SEZ Act are subject only to the terms and conditions prescribed in the SEZ Rules, 2006, and not to the conditions prescribed in exemption notifications issued under the Finance Act - There is no legal authority to levy service tax on services supplied to SEZ units. Therefore, exemption notifications and the conditions prescribed therein, including limitation periods, are redundant and cannot restrict or deny the refund of service tax to SEZ units. Rule 22 of the SEZ Rules, 2006 does not stipulate any limitation period for filing refund claims, and the one-year limitation prescribed in the notifications cannot be applied to SEZ units - The impugned order rejecting the refund claim on the ground of limitation is set aside. The appellant is entitled to refund of service tax paid on input services received for authorized operations. The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Classification of Electronic Control Unit for Electronic Power Steering - Appellant imported Electronic Control Unit for Electronic Power Steering (EPS-ECU) claiming classification under CTH 8537, 8543, or 9032, whereas the Dept-Respondent classifies it under CTH 8708 94 00 as a part of steering system - Whether EPS-ECU and its parts are classifiable under CTH 8537 10 00/8543 70 99 or CTH 9032 89 10 – HELD - The issue involved in the present appeals stands already adjudicated in favour of the department in appellants’ own case. EPS-ECU is not an electrical control board under CTH 8537 10 00 as it is not desig... [Read more]
Customs - Classification of Electronic Control Unit for Electronic Power Steering - Appellant imported Electronic Control Unit for Electronic Power Steering (EPS-ECU) claiming classification under CTH 8537, 8543, or 9032, whereas the Dept-Respondent classifies it under CTH 8708 94 00 as a part of steering system - Whether EPS-ECU and its parts are classifiable under CTH 8537 10 00/8543 70 99 or CTH 9032 89 10 – HELD - The issue involved in the present appeals stands already adjudicated in favour of the department in appellants’ own case. EPS-ECU is not an electrical control board under CTH 8537 10 00 as it is not designed for electricity distribution or electric control but rather forms an integral part of the automobile power steering system - EPS-ECU does not qualify as an electrical machine with individual functions under CTH 8543 70 99 as it is specifically designed to be a part of power steering with no independent function and the residual category of CTH 8543 cannot cover automobile parts - EPS-ECU does not merit classification under CTH 9032 89 10 as it is not an instrument or apparatus but merely a microprocessor component that receives information from sensors and processes it to regulate assistance - The mere fact that EPS-ECU is in the form of printed circuit board does not transform it from a part of an automobile into an instrument or apparatus. Following the General Interpretative Rule 2(a) that a specific heading should be preferred over a general heading, CTH 8708 94 00 is the more specific heading covering steering wheels, steering columns, and parts thereof. EPS-ECU and its parts are correctly classified under CTH 8708 94 00 – The impugned order is upheld and the appeals are dismissed [Read less]
Central Excise - Cenvat Credit on Input Services - Centralized Registration - ISD Distribution Requirement - Assessee paid service tax under Reverse Charge through its centralized registration and availed Cenvat Credit on the basis of GAR-7 challans - Department contended that since the head office was registered as an Input Service Distributor (ISD), the credit should have been distributed by the ISD unit to the manufacturing unit - Whether an assessee can avail Cenvat Credit on input services received at its manufacturing unit by paying service tax through its centralized registration and claiming credit on the basis of ... [Read more]
Central Excise - Cenvat Credit on Input Services - Centralized Registration - ISD Distribution Requirement - Assessee paid service tax under Reverse Charge through its centralized registration and availed Cenvat Credit on the basis of GAR-7 challans - Department contended that since the head office was registered as an Input Service Distributor (ISD), the credit should have been distributed by the ISD unit to the manufacturing unit - Whether an assessee can avail Cenvat Credit on input services received at its manufacturing unit by paying service tax through its centralized registration and claiming credit on the basis of GAR-7 challans, without the requirement of distribution through the ISD route – HELD - The assessee has rightly availed the Cenvat Credit on input services through its centralized registration. The service tax payment challan is a valid and admissible document for claiming credit as provided under Rule 9(1)(e) of the Cenvat Credit Rules. Distribution through ISD is not mandatory when the input services are availed only by a specific unit and not common to all units. The invoices were issued directly to the assessee's manufacturing unit, and the payment of service tax was made by the assessee itself through its centralized registration. The impugned orders have been passed on an incorrect factual understanding of the transaction - The Tribunal in M/s Luminous Power Technologies Pvt Ltd case held that service tax payment challans are valid documents for credit availment and that non-registration as ISD or non-distribution through ISD route is a procedural lapse which cannot deny the substantive right of Cenvat Credit when all material facts and conditions are satisfied – Further, the entire transaction is revenue neutral and the records are available for verification. Procedural infirmities cannot be used to deny a substantive statutory right when the underlying substance of the transaction is correct and compliant with the rules - The impugned orders are set aside and the appeals are allowed [Read less]
GST - Validity and Jurisdiction to issue Consolidated Show-Cause Notice for Multiple Financial Years – Appellant challenges consolidated show-cause notice issued under Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017, which clubbed multiple financial years (2018-19 to 2023-24) into a single notice - Whether a single show-cause notice can be issued for multiple financial years under Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017 – HELD - A single show-cause notice for multiple financial years is impermissible under Section 74 of the Act. Upon plain reading of Section 74(10), the provision prescribes a limitation period of five years from the due dat... [Read more]
GST - Validity and Jurisdiction to issue Consolidated Show-Cause Notice for Multiple Financial Years – Appellant challenges consolidated show-cause notice issued under Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017, which clubbed multiple financial years (2018-19 to 2023-24) into a single notice - Whether a single show-cause notice can be issued for multiple financial years under Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017 – HELD - A single show-cause notice for multiple financial years is impermissible under Section 74 of the Act. Upon plain reading of Section 74(10), the provision prescribes a limitation period of five years from the due date for furnishing the annual return "for the financial year" to which the tax not paid or short paid relates. The legislature deliberately used the expression "for the financial year" (singular), thereby treating each financial year as a separate and independent unit with its own distinct limitation period - The language and expression employed in sub-section (10) regarding "the financial year" is of paramount significance and demonstrates that the legislature intended each assessment year to have a specific period of limitation commencing independently – A show-cause notice must be issued based on the relevant tax period determined by the filing of returns for a specific financial year, and cannot be clubbed with multiple financial years – The limitation periods cannot be carried forward or enlarged beyond statutory prescription. By issuing a consolidated notice for multiple years, the revenue authority seeks to indirectly achieve what it cannot do directly. This violates the golden rule that if a statute prescribes a particular manner and time for taking action, such action must be carried out in that manner and within the fixed time or not at all, all other modes are expressly forbidden – The consolidated show-cause notice and the consequential order are set aside and quashed as being illegal, without jurisdiction and in violation of Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017. The authorities are permitted to proceed afresh strictly in accordance with law, by issuing separate show-cause notices for each financial year within the prescribed limitation period – The writ petition is allowed - Maintainability of Writ Petition – HELD - Although a statutory appellate remedy exists under the Act, the writ petition is maintainable because the jurisdictional error is apparent on the face of the record and no further fact-finding inquiry is required. Hence, the instant writ petition is maintainable. [Read less]
GST – Benefit of Notification No.06/2020-CT dated 03.02.2020 to Revenue, Jurisdiction to initiate proceedings beyond statutory limitation period, Prohibition on parallel proceedings on identical subject matter - Appellant received a Demand-cum-Show Cause Notice for financial year 2017-18 issued on 22.07.2024, which was beyond five years from 31.12.2018 (the due date for furnishing annual return for 2017-18) - Whether the Respondent had jurisdiction to initiate proceedings under Section 74(1) of the CGST Act, 2017 for the financial year 2017-18 when the notice was issued beyond the statutory limitation period of five year... [Read more]
GST – Benefit of Notification No.06/2020-CT dated 03.02.2020 to Revenue, Jurisdiction to initiate proceedings beyond statutory limitation period, Prohibition on parallel proceedings on identical subject matter - Appellant received a Demand-cum-Show Cause Notice for financial year 2017-18 issued on 22.07.2024, which was beyond five years from 31.12.2018 (the due date for furnishing annual return for 2017-18) - Whether the Respondent had jurisdiction to initiate proceedings under Section 74(1) of the CGST Act, 2017 for the financial year 2017-18 when the notice was issued beyond the statutory limitation period of five years – HELD - The Notification No.06/2020 dated 03.02.2020 extending the time limit for furnishing annual return for 2017-18 was intended for the benefit of assesses who had not filed their annual return by the original due date and was not intended to extend the time limit for the Respondent to initiate proceedings under Section 74(10). No other notification under Section 168A of the CGST Act, 2017 extending the time limit for exercising powers under Section 74 was placed before the Court. The notice issued by CGST authorities regarding wrongful deposit of VAT did not constitute initiation of proceedings under Section 74 as it was merely a notice for scrutiny and did not contain allegations of fraud or willful misstatement required under Section 74(1). Therefore, the Respondent acted without jurisdiction in issuing the show cause notice and passing the Order-in-Original for financial year 2017-18 – The SCN and Order-in-Original for 2017-18 are set aside and the writ petition is allowed - Prohibition on parallel proceedings on identical subject matter - Appellant received show cause notices from State GST authorities regarding mismatches between Input Tax Credit availed in Electronic Credit Ledger and amounts declared in Annual returns for financial years 2018-19 and 2019-20, which proceedings were subsequently dropped. Thereafter Respondent-CGST Authorities issued a Demand-cum-Show Cause Notice covering excess availment of ITC for the same financial years - Whether Respondent could initiate proceedings for the same subject matter of excess availment of ITC for 2018-19 and 2019-20 when proceedings on identical subject matter had already been initiated by SGST authorities – HELD - The Section 6(2)(b) of the CGST Act, 2017 prohibits initiation of any proceedings on the same subject matter, and identity of subject matter is a mandatory pre-condition for invoking the statutory bar, as established by the Supreme Court in M/s Armour Security (India) Ltd. v. Commissioner, CGST, Delhi East Commissionerate. The expression "initiation of proceedings" refers to formal commencement of adjudicatory proceedings by way of issuance of show cause notice and the term "subject matter" refers to any tax liability, deficiency or obligation arising from any particular contravention. Where two proceedings initiated by the Department seek to assess or recover an identical or partial overlap in tax liability, deficiency or obligation from the same contravention, the bar of Section 6(2)(b) is attracted. Since the SGST authorities had already issued SCNs covering the aspect of excess availment of ITC for 2018-19 and 2019-20, Respondent could not have initiated proceedings into the same aspect - Show cause notice and Order-in-Original are set aside to the extent they relate to excess availment of ITC for 2018-19 and 2019-20; however, proceedings relating to short payment of GST for these years, which was not subject matter of SGST proceedings, are permitted to continue. [Read less]
GST – Situs of cause of action, Jurisdictional of High Court – Petitioner is registered GST dealer operating in multiple States/Union territories, filed a writ petition before the Patna High Court challenging an assessment order passed by the Excise and Taxation Officer at Chandigarh regarding alleged non-payment of GST under RCM on lease fees paid to organizations - Whether the Patna High Court has jurisdiction to entertain and decide a writ petition challenging an assessment order passed by the GST authority at Chandigarh when the return was filed and the cause of action arose at Chandigarh – HELD - Writ petition c... [Read more]
GST – Situs of cause of action, Jurisdictional of High Court – Petitioner is registered GST dealer operating in multiple States/Union territories, filed a writ petition before the Patna High Court challenging an assessment order passed by the Excise and Taxation Officer at Chandigarh regarding alleged non-payment of GST under RCM on lease fees paid to organizations - Whether the Patna High Court has jurisdiction to entertain and decide a writ petition challenging an assessment order passed by the GST authority at Chandigarh when the return was filed and the cause of action arose at Chandigarh – HELD - Writ petition challenging an order passed by the assessing officer of one jurisdiction cannot be entertained by a High Court of another jurisdiction merely because the assessee happens to be registered or has undertaken transactions in the territorial jurisdiction of that Court. The jurisdiction of a High Court to entertain a writ petition is limited to matters where the cause of action has arisen within its territorial jurisdiction or where the respondent authority falls within its supervisory or appellate purview. Since the impugned order has been passed by the ETO-cum-Proper Officer at Chandigarh and the return was filed at Chandigarh, the entire cause of action has arisen in Chandigarh. The fact that the appellant has obtained leases from entities located in Patna, Chandigarh and Delhi does not confer jurisdiction upon the Patna High Court to entertain the petition. Any challenge to the order passed by the Chandigarh authority must be made before a competent court having appellate or supervisory jurisdiction over that authority - The writ petition is not maintainable for lack of jurisdiction and dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Export of Business Support Services vs. Intermediary Services, Refund of unutilized CENVAT Credit – Appellant is engaged by its overseas parent entity to provide Business Support Services including market research, vendor selection, quality inspection, trademark protection compliance, and logistics coordination for procurement of goods from India on a cost-plus mark-up basis - Whether business support services comprising market research, vendor information gathering, quality inspection and logistics coordination provided by an Indian company to its overseas principal entity qualify as 'export of services' u... [Read more]
Service Tax - Export of Business Support Services vs. Intermediary Services, Refund of unutilized CENVAT Credit – Appellant is engaged by its overseas parent entity to provide Business Support Services including market research, vendor selection, quality inspection, trademark protection compliance, and logistics coordination for procurement of goods from India on a cost-plus mark-up basis - Whether business support services comprising market research, vendor information gathering, quality inspection and logistics coordination provided by an Indian company to its overseas principal entity qualify as 'export of services' under Rule 6A of the Service Tax Rules, 1994, or constitute 'intermediary services' as defined under Rule 2(f) of the Place of Provision of Services Rules, 2012 – HELD - The critical distinction in determining intermediary services lies in the relationship between the service provider and recipient and the nature of services provided. Intermediary services require the intermediary to act as an agent, broker or facilitator arranging or facilitating services between two or more persons, which necessarily implies authority to contract with third parties on behalf of the principal - In the present case, the service provider acted as an independent contractor providing services directly to the overseas entity on a principal-to-principal basis without any tripartite arrangement with vendors. The service provider neither had authority to approve or conclude contracts on behalf of the overseas entity nor did it facilitate transactions between the overseas entity and vendors; rather, it provided information and performed quality checks upon instructions from the principal. The consideration received by the service provider was based on cost-plus mark-up and was independent of the value of goods supplied by vendors, thereby negating any element of facilitation or arrangement of supply – The appellant is entitled to refund of unutilized CENVAT Credit. The impugned order rejecting the refund claim is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Taxability of Late Payment Surcharge on Electricity Supply – Respondent is a power generation company collected late payment surcharge from distribution companies for delayed payment of electricity bills beyond the prescribed due date in accordance with Power Purchase Agreements and Central Electricity Regulatory Commission Regulations - Revenue authority sought to levy service tax on such surcharge as a declared service under Section 66E(e) of the Finance Act, 1994 - Whether late payment surcharge collected for delayed payment of electricity bills constitutes a taxable declared service under Section 66E(e)... [Read more]
Service Tax - Taxability of Late Payment Surcharge on Electricity Supply – Respondent is a power generation company collected late payment surcharge from distribution companies for delayed payment of electricity bills beyond the prescribed due date in accordance with Power Purchase Agreements and Central Electricity Regulatory Commission Regulations - Revenue authority sought to levy service tax on such surcharge as a declared service under Section 66E(e) of the Finance Act, 1994 - Whether late payment surcharge collected for delayed payment of electricity bills constitutes a taxable declared service under Section 66E(e) of the Finance Act, 1994, or forms an integral component of the exempt electricity supply – HELD - The late payment surcharge is not a separately taxable service but an integral and ancillary component of the principal supply of electricity, which is exempt from service tax under the negative list regime. The electricity generation and distribution is a goods supply exempted under Section 66D(f) of the Finance Act, and late payment surcharge is intrinsically linked to electricity supply with no independent existence. The CBIC Circular No. 214/1/2023-ST dated 28.02.2023 and Circular No. 178/10/2022-GST dated 03.08.2022, clarify that late payment charges constitute facilities naturally bundled with the main supply and must be assessed as part of the principal supply – Further, prior to the negative list regime, various Circulars issued by the Board itself clarified that late payment surcharges are penal in nature for losses caused by delayed payment and do not represent any service provided by one person to another. There is no artificial bifurcation of activities; rather, late payment surcharge is a composite supply integrated with electricity delivery such that without electricity supply there would be no surcharge - The order-in-original dropping the entire service tax demand on late payment surcharge is upheld and the Revenue appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Central Excise - Classification of GI Wire Welded Mesh - The adjudicating authority classified the goods under CETH 7314 20 90 as articles of iron and steel, whereas the appellant contended that the goods should be classified under CETH 8436 as parts of poultry keeping machinery - Whether GI welded wire mesh can be considered as poultry machinery or parts of poultry keeping machinery, or whether it should be classified as articles of iron and steel under heading 7314 – HELD - From analyzing the definition of machinery from various judicial precedents, a machinery must consist of fixed and moving parts that work together ... [Read more]
Central Excise - Classification of GI Wire Welded Mesh - The adjudicating authority classified the goods under CETH 7314 20 90 as articles of iron and steel, whereas the appellant contended that the goods should be classified under CETH 8436 as parts of poultry keeping machinery - Whether GI welded wire mesh can be considered as poultry machinery or parts of poultry keeping machinery, or whether it should be classified as articles of iron and steel under heading 7314 – HELD - From analyzing the definition of machinery from various judicial precedents, a machinery must consist of fixed and moving parts that work together to perform a function, and that a mere structure or equipment for poultry keeping, even if ultimately intended for use in poultry farms, does not qualify as machinery under heading 8436. In Azra Poultry Equipments versus Union of India case the Delhi High Court held that wire mesh manufactured, even if sold to poultry farmers for assembling cages or batteries, cannot qualify as machinery under heading 8436 and would be an article of iron and steel within heading 7314 - The form in which the wire mesh is cleared from the factory is that of a structure without moving parts, and therefore it cannot be considered as part of machinery meant for poultry keeping - The impugned goods are to be classified under heading 7314 and not under heading 8436. The demand of Central Excise duty is upheld within the normal period. Penalty under section 11AC as well as under Rule 25 read with section 11AC is set aside – The appeal is partly allowed - Extended Period of Limitation - Invokability of extended period in classification disputes involving interpretation of tariff headings - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked by the department in a case involving classification disputes and interpretation of tariff headings – HELD - The entire issue relates to interpretation of contrasting tariff headings, which is a complex matter of statutory interpretation, and there is no evidence of any deliberate attempt to not pay duty or willfully misclassify the product – Further, the issue of classification concerning poultry equipment was pending before the High Court since 1991 and was only finally decided in 2012, indicating the complexity and ambiguity that existed in the interpretation of the relevant headings - The appellant's belief that the goods were attracting a nil tariff rate was bonafide, and there was no deliberate intention to wrongly classify the product. Therefore, the conditions necessary to invoke the extended period are not satisfied. The extended period of limitation cannot be invoked, and consequently, penalty under section 11AC is also not invokable - Penalty under Rule 25 and Confiscation - Whether penalty under Rule 25 and confiscation of immovable and movable property can be sustained when the extended period of limitation is not invokable – HELD – Penalty under Rule 25 read with section 11AC and confiscation of plant, building, machinery, materials, and conveyance cannot be sustained. The appellant's submission that Rule 25 does not empower confiscation of immovable property and that separate order for confiscation is not tenable when extended period cannot be invoked is correct. Since extended period cannot be invoked and the appellant's action was bonafide, the imposition of penalty under Rule 25 based on the extended period is not sustainable - Personal Penalty on Partner Under Rule 26 - Whether personal penalty can be imposed on the partner under Rule 26 when the firm itself has not been found to have committed any deliberate contravention and the action is bonafide – HELD - Since the appellant's conduct was bonafide and based on a reasonable interpretation of the applicable tariff headings, the imposition of personal penalty on the partner is not justified - Service Tax on Erection, Commissioning and Installation Service - Levy of service tax on erection, commissioning and installation activities performed at the buyer's premises - Whether service tax is leviable on the activities of erection, commissioning and installation of wire mesh performed by the appellant at the poultry farm premises – HELD - Service tax is leviable on such erection, commissioning and installation activities. The appellant was clearly engaged in doing certain erection, installation and commissioning work at the poultry farms, and therefore, as held by the adjudicating authority, such activities squarely fall under the category of erection, commissioning and installation service. The levy of service tax on such activities is justified and sustainable. The demand of service tax and penalty under section 78 is upheld. [Read less]
Central Excise - Mining of iron ore and manganese ore, Manufacture of Iron Ore Concentrate – Activity of Crushing and Screening - Appellant, a mine owner engaged in mining iron ore and manganese ore, carried out raising, crushing and screening of iron ore through a contractor - Respondent issued notices proposing recovery of duty on the ground that crushing and screening of iron ore amounts to manufacture of "iron ore concentrate" under Chapter Note 4 to Chapter 26 of the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 - Whether the process of crushing and screening of iron ore undertaken by or on behalf of the appellant amounts to "man... [Read more]
Central Excise - Mining of iron ore and manganese ore, Manufacture of Iron Ore Concentrate – Activity of Crushing and Screening - Appellant, a mine owner engaged in mining iron ore and manganese ore, carried out raising, crushing and screening of iron ore through a contractor - Respondent issued notices proposing recovery of duty on the ground that crushing and screening of iron ore amounts to manufacture of "iron ore concentrate" under Chapter Note 4 to Chapter 26 of the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 - Whether the process of crushing and screening of iron ore undertaken by or on behalf of the appellant amounts to "manufacture" of "iron ore concentrate" within the meaning of Chapter Note 4 to Chapter 26 of the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985, when the said process effects only size reduction and segregation of the iron ore - HELD - The HSN Explanatory Notes to Chapter 26 provide that concentrates apply to ores which have had part or all of the foreign matter removed by special treatments. Chapter Note 4 operates only upon the conversion of an ore into a concentrate, and the deeming fiction is conditional upon a concentrate first coming into existence - The burden of proving that a concentrate came into existence by special treatment lies squarely upon the respondent. Crushing and screening are primarily processes of size reduction and separation, and without the employment of special treatment and removal of foreign matter there cannot be any concentration. The CBEC Circular No.332/1/2012-TRU dated 17.02.2012 clarifies that levy of excise duty is attracted only in cases where the product meets the definition of concentrate as per HSN Notes and that crushing and screening of run-of-mines into lumps and fines does not amount to the production of concentrate. The Ministry of Mines has itself clarified that no special treatment is involved in crushing and screening of ore, and the end product can be termed as concentrate only when the grade of ore is sufficiently improved through beneficiation processes - The activity undertaken by the appellant does not amount to manufacture and does not result in the end product being concentrates falling under Chapter 26 of the Central Excise Tariff Act. The iron ore remains iron ore in name, character and use, and continues to remain unconditionally exempt as "ores" under the applicable notifications - The impugned order confirming the demand of excise duty is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Customs - Prohibited Goods - Invalid Pre-Shipment Inspection Certificate (PSIC) - Whether non-compliance with PSIC requirement regarding authorized area of operation of inspecting agency, when goods are subsequently inspected by DGFT-approved Indian agency and found to contain no objectionable material, constitutes improper import warranting confiscation under Section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962 – HELD - The requirement of a valid PSIC from an agency authorized for a specific country is an important condition for import of metallic scrap, however, non-compliance thereof does not tantamount to improper import of goods... [Read more]
Customs - Prohibited Goods - Invalid Pre-Shipment Inspection Certificate (PSIC) - Whether non-compliance with PSIC requirement regarding authorized area of operation of inspecting agency, when goods are subsequently inspected by DGFT-approved Indian agency and found to contain no objectionable material, constitutes improper import warranting confiscation under Section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962 – HELD - The requirement of a valid PSIC from an agency authorized for a specific country is an important condition for import of metallic scrap, however, non-compliance thereof does not tantamount to improper import of goods as contemplated under Section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962 - The Section 111(d) permits confiscation only where goods are imported contrary to any prohibition imposed by or under the Act or contrary to any prohibition imposed by any other law for the time being in force, and mere non-compliance with import policy conditions that are subject to fulfillment by the exporter may entail 100 percent inspection of goods but would not constitute improper import – Further, in the present case, though the inspecting agency was DGFT-empanelled, the only lapse was that it was not authorized to operate in the specific area where inspection took place. When the subsequent post-shipment inspection by a local DGFT-approved agency did not reveal any objectionable material, war material, or excess radiation levels in the goods, it amounts to substantial compliance of the DGFT policy - The confiscation order, redemption fine, and penalties imposed by the lower authorities are set aside – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax Liability on commission received from print media for Sale of Advertisement Space – Demand of service tax on the entire commission/trade discount received from Print Media, treating it as taxable under Business Auxiliary Services - Whether the services provided by the Appellant in purchasing and selling advertisement space in Print Media fall within the negative list under Section 66D(g) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The Appellant's core activity constitutes selling of space for advertisements in Print Media, which expressly falls within the negative list under Section 66D(g) of the Finance Act, 1994, a... [Read more]
Service Tax Liability on commission received from print media for Sale of Advertisement Space – Demand of service tax on the entire commission/trade discount received from Print Media, treating it as taxable under Business Auxiliary Services - Whether the services provided by the Appellant in purchasing and selling advertisement space in Print Media fall within the negative list under Section 66D(g) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The Appellant's core activity constitutes selling of space for advertisements in Print Media, which expressly falls within the negative list under Section 66D(g) of the Finance Act, 1994, and is therefore not subject to service tax. The fact that the Appellant was registered under the category of Advertising Agency Service and paid service tax on profit margins does not alter the nature of their actual business activities, which are exempted from taxation. The classification of services was dispensed with after the introduction of the negative list regime with effect from 01.07.2012 and the Appellant's fundamental activity of direct purchase and resale of advertisement space does not constitute a taxable service under the statutory framework - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed - Taxability of Trade Discount and Incentives Received from Print Media - Whether the trade discount and incentives/free advertisement space received by the Appellant from Print Media constitute consideration for services rendered and are thus subject to service tax – HELD - The trade discount of 15% allowed to the Appellant as an accredited member of Indian Newspaper Society does not constitute commission but rather a trading margin. The Revenue's characterization of these amounts as commission is incorrect as the Appellant did not receive any Form 26-AS under Section 194H of the Income Tax Act, and no Tax Deduction at Source was deducted by the Print Media, which would be mandatory if commission were actually paid. Further, the incentives and volume discounts are received based on bulk purchase targets achieved by the Appellant and are not related to any service rendered to clients or any contractual obligation to promote the Print Media's business - Trade discount and incentives are not recovered from clients and do not form part of the value of taxable services since the Print Media/Publishing House is not the client of the Appellant; rather, the advertisers are the clients. The learned Adjudicating Authority's finding that the Appellant acted as an intermediary is beyond the scope of the Show Cause Notices, which alleged only Business Auxiliary Services, not intermediary services - The demands on trade discount and incentives are set aside - Invocation of Extended Period of Limitation - Whether the extended period of limitation is properly invocable in the present case where the issue involves interpretation of statutory provisions regarding taxability of trade discount and incentives – HELD - The department has not been able to establish any of the required ingredients to invoke the extended period of limitation because the issue involved in the present case relates to interpretation of statutory provisions, specifically whether commission/trade discount/incentives given by Print Media are subject to service tax. It is settled law that the extended period of limitation cannot be invoked when the issue relates to interpretation of statutory provisions, as distinguished from cases involving willful mis-statement, suppression, or concealment of facts with an intent to evade tax. The Appellant's payment of service tax on profit margins and filing of ST-3 returns under the Advertising Agency Service category, while ultimately being engaged in a non-taxable activity under Section 66D(g), does not constitute suppression but rather reflects a difference of opinion on interpretation of law - The demand for the period 01.07.2012 to 31.03.2016 is time-barred, and the Show Cause Notice dated 26.04.2018 is not maintainable - Imposition of Interest and Penalties - The learned Adjudicating Authority imposed interest under Section 75 and penalties under Sections 76, 77, and 78 following the confirmation of service tax demand - Whether interest and penalties are imposable when the underlying demand for service tax is not sustainable - HELD - Since the primary demand for service tax is not sustainable in law, the ancillary question of imposition of interest and penalties does not arise. Interest and penalties are consequential to a valid and sustainable demand; when the principal demand itself fails, the foundation for imposing interest and penalties disappears — Interest and penalties are set aside. [Read less]
Service Tax liability on markup in purchase and resale of cargo space by freight forwarders - Whether the markup earned by a freight forwarder on the purchase and resale of cargo space on a principal-to-principal basis constitutes taxable consideration for Business Support Services or whether such markup represents mere business profit arising from trading in cargo space which is not taxable as a service – HELD - Firstly, profit is the basic motive in any buying and selling transaction and cannot, merely by virtue of a markup, be converted into a taxable service. The Respondent assumes without any evidence or substantiat... [Read more]
Service Tax liability on markup in purchase and resale of cargo space by freight forwarders - Whether the markup earned by a freight forwarder on the purchase and resale of cargo space on a principal-to-principal basis constitutes taxable consideration for Business Support Services or whether such markup represents mere business profit arising from trading in cargo space which is not taxable as a service – HELD - Firstly, profit is the basic motive in any buying and selling transaction and cannot, merely by virtue of a markup, be converted into a taxable service. The Respondent assumes without any evidence or substantiation that the markup arises from rendering of ancillary services such as local transportation, cargo handling and facilitation charges, which allegation is wholly baseless - Respondent takes contradictory stands, on one hand claiming the Appellant is not a pure agent because of the markup, and on the other hand claiming the markup itself represents the value of services rendered - Where services are bundled, the main service of ocean transportation is not taxable either before or after 01.07.2012 in view of the statutory provisions and CBIC circulars. The Appellant operates as a principal and not as an intermediary, as it purchases cargo space in bulk on its own account and bears the risk of non-utilization of unsold space, unlike an agent who would merely facilitate transactions - The buying and selling of cargo space on a principal-to-principal basis does not amount to rendering a service and any profit earned through such transactions is not leviable to Service Tax - The impugned Order-in-Original is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Limitation period for claiming rebate on specified services used for export of goods – Appellant claims refund of service tax paid on job work service used for export of goods by filing refund claim within the financial year but beyond one year from the date of Let Export Order (LEO) – Whether the claim for rebate of service tax paid on specified services used for export of goods is required to be filed strictly within one year from the date of LEO as specified in condition 3(g) of Notification No. 41/2012-ST or whether the limitation period can be computed from the end of quarter or with reference to dat... [Read more]
Service Tax - Limitation period for claiming rebate on specified services used for export of goods – Appellant claims refund of service tax paid on job work service used for export of goods by filing refund claim within the financial year but beyond one year from the date of Let Export Order (LEO) – Whether the claim for rebate of service tax paid on specified services used for export of goods is required to be filed strictly within one year from the date of LEO as specified in condition 3(g) of Notification No. 41/2012-ST or whether the limitation period can be computed from the end of quarter or with reference to date of FIRCs as per the residuary clause in explanation (f) of section 11B – HELD - The claim for rebate of service tax must be filed strictly within one year from the date of LEO, where the date of export is reckoned from the date on which the proper officer of Customs makes an order permitting clearance and loading of goods for exportation under Section 51 of the Customs Act. The notification is self-contained and contains an express provision regulating the grant of rebate with specific conditions that must be strictly followed. The condition relating to limitation is not a procedural requirement but has bearing on substantive rights of limitation. As the Notification itself prescribes a different provision for computing the limitation aspect and does not incorporate section 11B, the provisions of section 11B and the residuary clause in explanation (f) thereof do not apply. Any notification, being an exception to the general rule, must be strictly construed and if it prescribes any time limit, it must be complied with – The claims filed beyond one year from the date of LEO are hit by the time bar and are not admissible - The impugned order is upheld and the appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Customs - Validity of Pre-Shipment Inspection Certificate obtained from non-notified area of the operation of empaneled agency, Confiscation of Goods - Appellant imported Heavy Melting Scrap and filed B/E with a Pre-Shipment Inspection Certificate issued by M/s Asia Inspection Agency Ltd showing place of inspection as Port Louis, Mauritius. However, Mauritius was not a notified area of operation for the said agency as per DGFT Public Notice. The Department treated the PSIC as invalid and seized the goods as prohibited goods under Section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962, and imposed confiscation, redemption fine, and penalt... [Read more]
Customs - Validity of Pre-Shipment Inspection Certificate obtained from non-notified area of the operation of empaneled agency, Confiscation of Goods - Appellant imported Heavy Melting Scrap and filed B/E with a Pre-Shipment Inspection Certificate issued by M/s Asia Inspection Agency Ltd showing place of inspection as Port Louis, Mauritius. However, Mauritius was not a notified area of operation for the said agency as per DGFT Public Notice. The Department treated the PSIC as invalid and seized the goods as prohibited goods under Section 111(d) of the Customs Act, 1962, and imposed confiscation, redemption fine, and penalties under Sections 112 and 114AA - Whether non-compliance with the condition of authorized area of operation of a PSIA constitutes improper import liable to confiscation – HELD - Though the PSIA was not authorized to operate in Mauritius, the only lapse was territorial authorization and not the agency's empanelment itself. When the local empanelled agency re-inspected the goods in India as permitted under DGFT Policy and found no objectionable material, war material, or excess radiation levels, this constitutes substantial compliance with DGFT Policy - The principle established in Commissioner of Customs vs. Senor Metals Pvt Ltd holds that Section 111(d) permits confiscation only of goods imported contrary to prohibition, and non-compliance with conditions of import policy entails hundred percent inspection but does not tantamount to improper import. When nothing incriminating is found in the consignment after inspection, confiscation and imposition of penalties are not sustainable in law. The impugned order imposing fine, redemption fine, and penalties is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise – Activity of conversion of raw materials into semi-finished - Manufacturing activity on job work basis, Applicability of service tax under Business Auxiliary Service - The appellant converts raw materials into semi-finished automotive springs based on drawings and specifications provided by the principal manufacturer, utilizing its own land, machinery, and manpower. The goods are cleared to the principal manufacturer without payment of excise duty - Whether the activity undertaken by the appellant on job work basis constitutes manufacture of excisable goods or rendering of BAS, and whether the appellant i... [Read more]
Central Excise – Activity of conversion of raw materials into semi-finished - Manufacturing activity on job work basis, Applicability of service tax under Business Auxiliary Service - The appellant converts raw materials into semi-finished automotive springs based on drawings and specifications provided by the principal manufacturer, utilizing its own land, machinery, and manpower. The goods are cleared to the principal manufacturer without payment of excise duty - Whether the activity undertaken by the appellant on job work basis constitutes manufacture of excisable goods or rendering of BAS, and whether the appellant is liable to reverse cenvat credit under Rule 6(3)(i) read with Rule 14 of Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 – HELD - The activity undertaken by the appellant amounts to manufacture of excisable goods and does not fall within the purview of BAS. The conversion of raw materials into semi-finished springs results in a new product with its own distinct name, purpose, and use. The processes undertaken are incidental and ancillary to the completion of the manufactured product, which is deemed to be manufacture under the inclusion clause of section 2(f) of the Central Excise Act, 1944. Since the activity constitutes manufacture of excisable goods, it cannot be brought under the purview of service tax under the category of BAS - The exemption under Notification No. 08/2005-ST applies only when the activity qualifies as BAS, which is not the case here. Therefore, the basic ground of the show cause notice that the appellant was providing exempted service and hence Rule 6 was invokable does not sustain – The non-payment of excise duty on the said excisable goods is not the issue in the present appeal and apparently, appellant have not paid excise duty under the impression that in terms of Rule 4(5)(a) or for that matter Notification No. 214/86, such goods when cleared from the premises of the job worker to the principal manufacturer, no Central Excise duty is required to be paid. Therefore, despite not having followed the provisions of the Notification No.214/86 or any other similar notifications, in the given factual matrix, there was no need to pay any Central Excise duty at the time of clearance of goods from job worker to principal manufacturer - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Clubbing of Job Worker Turnover for SSI exemption vide Notification No.8/2003-CE dtd.01.03.2003 - Department clubbed the value of goods manufactured by job workers with the appellant-manufacturer's turnover, making it ineligible for exemption as the aggregate exceeds the threshold – Appellant contests that job workers are independent manufacturers and their turnover cannot be clubbed - Whether the value of goods manufactured by job workers on behalf of the principal manufacturer needs to be clubbed with the turnover of the principal manufacturer for determining exemption notification eligibility – HELD... [Read more]
Central Excise - Clubbing of Job Worker Turnover for SSI exemption vide Notification No.8/2003-CE dtd.01.03.2003 - Department clubbed the value of goods manufactured by job workers with the appellant-manufacturer's turnover, making it ineligible for exemption as the aggregate exceeds the threshold – Appellant contests that job workers are independent manufacturers and their turnover cannot be clubbed - Whether the value of goods manufactured by job workers on behalf of the principal manufacturer needs to be clubbed with the turnover of the principal manufacturer for determining exemption notification eligibility – HELD - The purpose of restricting exemption under the Notification No.8/2003-CE dt.01.03.2003 is to prevent units from exploiting provisions by getting goods manufactured through multiple job workers while exercising de facto control over manufacturing. The factual matrix clearly demonstrates a principal manufacturer and job worker relationship rather than principal to principal transaction. The basic packaging materials are supplied by the principal, goods are branded with the principal's brand name, job workers are contractually restricted from independent marketing, and filled bottles are returned to the principal for sale - The governing notification's conditions explicitly require aggregation of clearances when excisable goods are manufactured by a manufacturer from one or more factories or by one or more manufacturers from a factory. Since goods are manufactured on behalf of the principal manufacturer as evidenced by the franchise agreement terms, the turnover must be clubbed with that of the principal manufacturer for determining exemption eligibility. The impugned orders are upheld, with extended period of limitation and penalty being sustainable – The appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Construction of Roads as Sub-contractor – Appellant received consideration for services from three entities for construction of roads as a sub-contractor to the principal contractor of the Public Works Department - Whether services rendered by appellant for construction of roads as a sub-contractor to another contractor are exempt from service tax under Notification No. 25/2012-ST dated 20.6.2012 - HELD - The contracts of the appellant with the three entities were for construction of roads as sub-contractor. The Commissioner (Appeals) denied the benefit of the exemption on the ground that there were inaccur... [Read more]
Service Tax - Construction of Roads as Sub-contractor – Appellant received consideration for services from three entities for construction of roads as a sub-contractor to the principal contractor of the Public Works Department - Whether services rendered by appellant for construction of roads as a sub-contractor to another contractor are exempt from service tax under Notification No. 25/2012-ST dated 20.6.2012 - HELD - The contracts of the appellant with the three entities were for construction of roads as sub-contractor. The Commissioner (Appeals) denied the benefit of the exemption on the ground that there were inaccuracies in the agreements supplied by the appellant - The inaccuracies or missing details in agreements or the presence of GSTIN in reconstructed agreements do not negate the nature of the services. The evidence on record demonstrates that the contracts were indeed for construction of roads which are exempted under Serial No. 13(a) for the main contractor, and as the appellant was a sub-contractor providing works contract services to another contractor providing exempted services, it qualifies for exemption under Serial No. 29(h). Accordingly, the demand of service tax on construction of roads as sub-contractor is set aside – The appeal is allowedrnrnService Tax Exemption – Construction of Individual Houses – Appellant received consideration for construction of individual houses. Respondent included this amount in the service tax demand contending that the appellant had not submitted documents proving ownership of land, blueprints of houses, or complete addresses of properties – Whether submission of land ownership documents, blueprints, and complete addresses in contracts is essential to claim exemption for construction of individual houses under Notification No. 25/2012-ST – HELD – The submission of documents of ownership of land, blueprints of construction, or indication of complete addresses in the contracts is not essential to avail the benefit of the exemption notification. The exemption for construction of individual houses under Serial No. 14(b) of the notification is available based on the nature of service provided and not on the procedural formality of documentary evidence regarding land ownership or architectural details. The appellant has undisputedly received consideration for constructing individual houses, and the nature of the service itself qualifies for exemption irrespective of missing documentary formalities – The demand of service tax on construction of individual houses is set aside.rnrnService Tax Exemption – Bank Interest – Appellant received bank interest during the relevant financial year, which was included in the service tax demand by the respondent –Whether bank interest received by the appellant constitutes consideration for a service and is liable to service tax – HELD – The interest received from the bank cannot be said to be a consideration for any service. Bank interest is a return on capital and not a service charge. Therefore, such receipts fall outside the purview of service tax. The respondent's inclusion of bank interest in the taxable service receipts is erroneous as it does not constitute consideration for any service – Demand of service tax on bank interest is set aside.rnrnService Tax Exemption – Small Service Providers – Whether the exemption for small service providers under Notification No. 33/2012-ST applies when the taxable value of services in any financial year is within the prescribed limit, notwithstanding the total turnover – HELD - The exemption under Notification No. 33/2012-ST for services up to ten lakhs in any financial year applies when the taxable value of services does not exceed the stipulated limit, provided the finding that other receipts are not exigible to service tax is established. Since other receipts previously included as taxable are actually not liable to service tax, those receipts cannot be counted towards the turnover limit. The actual taxable receipts for vehicles and machinery and HR PWD services, when other wrongly-included receipts are excluded, fall within the limit of ten lakhs in each respective financial year and are therefore entitled to exemption – The benefit of exemption under Notification No. 33/2012-ST is extended to the receipts for vehicles and machinery and HR PWD, and the corresponding demand is set aside. [Read less]
Service Tax – Classification, Scope of Appellate Authority – Providing of Social Compliance Audit services involving audit of factory premises of vendors or clients – Issue of notice proposing recovery of service tax by classifying the services as "Business Auxiliary Service" - The Adjudicating Authority confirmed the demand under the same classification. However, on appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) set aside the classification as "Business Auxiliary Service" but confirmed the service tax demand under a new and different taxable entry of "Business Support Service" which was not proposed in the original show cause n... [Read more]
Service Tax – Classification, Scope of Appellate Authority – Providing of Social Compliance Audit services involving audit of factory premises of vendors or clients – Issue of notice proposing recovery of service tax by classifying the services as "Business Auxiliary Service" - The Adjudicating Authority confirmed the demand under the same classification. However, on appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) set aside the classification as "Business Auxiliary Service" but confirmed the service tax demand under a new and different taxable entry of "Business Support Service" which was not proposed in the original show cause notice - Whether the Appellate authority can confirm the service tax demand under a different taxable service head than the original Show cause notice and Adjudication order – HELD - When the learned Commissioner (Appeals) has analyzed the facts and concluded that the activities undertaken by the appellant shall not be categorized under the taxable entry of "Business Auxiliary Service", the scope of the appellate authority is confined only to allow the appeal filed by the appellant, instead of confirming the service tax demand under an altogether different taxable service head. The principle of law established through Supreme Court judgments provides that no new case can be set up or decided contrary to the show cause notice without issuing a fresh show cause notice to the assessee. The impugned order confirming the adjudged demands on a new taxable service head cannot be sustained – the impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed in favour of the appellant [Read less]
Service Tax - Export of Services – Place of Performance vs. Location of Recipient –Supply of marketing and administrative support services to foreign parent company, receiving payment in convertible foreign exchange – Appellant entered into agreements with its overseas parent entity for providing marketing and administrative support services on a principal-to-principal basis - Revenue alleged that since the services were rendered within Indian territory, they could not qualify as export of services and sought to levy service tax – HELD - The place of performance of contract is irrelevant in determining export of se... [Read more]
Service Tax - Export of Services – Place of Performance vs. Location of Recipient –Supply of marketing and administrative support services to foreign parent company, receiving payment in convertible foreign exchange – Appellant entered into agreements with its overseas parent entity for providing marketing and administrative support services on a principal-to-principal basis - Revenue alleged that since the services were rendered within Indian territory, they could not qualify as export of services and sought to levy service tax – HELD - The place of performance of contract is irrelevant in determining export of services; what matters is the location of the service recipient. The recipient entity is the person legally obliged to make payment and accordingly determines the service recipient location. Since the overseas parent was the recipient of services and payment was received in convertible foreign currency, all conditions prescribed under both the positive list regime (Rule 3 of Export of Service Rules, 2005) and the negative list regime (Rule 6A of Service Tax Rules, 1994 and Rule 3 of Place of Provision of Service Rules, 2012) stood satisfied - The relevant factor for export of services is the location of service receiver and not the place where services are performed. The services qualify as export of services on which no service tax was payable by the service provider - The demand of service tax is set aside.rnrnCENVAT Credit – Denial of credit on ground of non-production of documents - Extended period of limitation – HELD - The Revenue authority denied CENVAT credit claimed by the appellant during the financial year by invoking extended period of limitation on the ground that the appellant failed to produce supporting documents. Since the appellant had disclosed the availment of CENVAT credit in the periodically filed statutory returns, the extended period of limitation cannot be invoked. The appellant had submitted original copies of invoices on which credit was availed during the audit proceedings and also in the periodical refund claims filed. The production of original invoices with refund claims amounted to full disclosure and substantiation of the credit claimed. The denial of CENVAT credit without any factual or legal basis is unsustainable and accordingly set aside.rnrnLimitation – Extended Period – Appellant challenged the demand raised by invoking the extended period of limitation under the proviso to Section 73(1) of the Finance Act – HELD - The underlying dispute pertained to an interpretational issue concerning whether services rendered in India to a foreign recipient constitute export of services or not. The revenue authority failed to demonstrate any positive act of suppression on the part of the appellant while invoking the extended period of limitation - Since the appellant was regularly filing statutory returns disclosing the relevant transactions, no extended period could be invoked.rnrnPenalty for delay in Registration – Export of Services – The revenue authority imposed penalty under Section 77(1)(a) of the Finance Act for delay in taking registration, claiming the service provider failed to register within the prescribed period – HELD - Notwithstanding the services qualifying as export of services and being exempt from service tax, the service provider is required by law to obtain registration and file returns disclosing the details of exempted services rendered. There was a delay in taking registration after commencement of service provision. The appellant is liable for penalty under Section 77(1)(a) for the delay in registration - The penalty imposed under the section 77(1)(a) is restricted to Rs.10,000/-. The appeal filed by the appellant is disposed of. [Read less]
GST - Sections 54, 140, 142 of the CGST Act, 2017 - Refund of Transitional Input Tax Credit under Section 54(3) - Upon migration to the GST regime effective from 01.07.2017, the petitioner carried forward this accumulated credit through Form GST TRAN-1, which stood reflected in the Electronic Credit Ledger. Subsequently, the petitioner accumulated Input Tax Credit on account of inverted duty structure – The petitioner filed application for refund under Section 54(3) of the CGST Acts. The tax authority sanctioned only part refund and rejected the balance claim on the ground that it represented Transitional Credit not refu... [Read more]
GST - Sections 54, 140, 142 of the CGST Act, 2017 - Refund of Transitional Input Tax Credit under Section 54(3) - Upon migration to the GST regime effective from 01.07.2017, the petitioner carried forward this accumulated credit through Form GST TRAN-1, which stood reflected in the Electronic Credit Ledger. Subsequently, the petitioner accumulated Input Tax Credit on account of inverted duty structure – The petitioner filed application for refund under Section 54(3) of the CGST Acts. The tax authority sanctioned only part refund and rejected the balance claim on the ground that it represented Transitional Credit not refundable under Section 54(3) - Whether a registered person who has carried forward the Transitional Input Tax Credit through Form GST TRAN-1 under Section 140 of the CGST Acts can claim refund of such transitional credit under Section 54(3) of the Act on account of accumulation arising from an inverted duty structure – HELD - The statutory framework governing transitional provisions, comprising of Sections 139 to 142 of the CGST Act, constitutes a complete code regulating migration from the erstwhile indirect tax regime to the GST regime. Section 140 was enacted as a beneficial provision to preserve accumulated credit and enable its utilization towards discharge of future GST liabilities. However, the legislature has consciously drawn a distinction between carry forward of ITC and refund of such credit. These are mutually exclusive remedies - A taxpayer can either seek a refund under the existing laws to be paid in cash under Section 142(3) of the CGST Act or choose to transit the credit. If the accumulated credit is carried forward, the statutory bar under the second proviso to Section 142(3) of the Act gets triggered, making refund impermissible. Taxpayers migrating to the GST regime cannot pursue both avenues concurrently or interchangeably - Merely because transitional credit is reflected in the Electronic Credit Ledger and is capable of utilization towards discharge of output tax liability under Section 49(4) of the Act does not mean such credit becomes refundable under Section 54(3). The Sections 49 and 54 operate in entirely different fields and serve distinct legislative purposes - The plain language of Section 54(3) contemplates accumulation of Input Tax Credit generated under the GST regime and does not extend to credit which merely migrated into the GST regime through the transitional mechanism; permitting refund of transitional credit under Section 54(3) would render the second Proviso to Section 142(3) of the GST Acts wholly redundant and defeat the legislative object underlying the transitional provisions – Further, the CBIC Circular No. 37/11/2018-GST clarifies that once the credit of the erstwhile regime is transitioned under the GST, no refund of such credit is granted or allowed – The prayer for refund is rejected. The prayer for re-crediting the rejected amount to the Electronic Credit Ledger is allowed - The writ petition is partly allowed [Read less]
Central Excise – Duty Exemption to Hot Rolled Patta Patti - Whether exemption from central excise duty in terms of Notification No. 12/2012-CE dated 17.03.2012 is available for hot rolled patta patti which has not undergone any process after hot rolling but before cold rolling, or whether the exemption notification requires that some process other than cold rolling must be undertaken on the goods to qualify for exemption – HELD - The exemption under Sr. No. 203 of Notification No. 12/2012-CE dated 17.03.2012 is available for hot rolled patta patti. The Instruction F. No. 96/85/2015-CX.I dated 07.12.2015 clarifies that ... [Read more]
Central Excise – Duty Exemption to Hot Rolled Patta Patti - Whether exemption from central excise duty in terms of Notification No. 12/2012-CE dated 17.03.2012 is available for hot rolled patta patti which has not undergone any process after hot rolling but before cold rolling, or whether the exemption notification requires that some process other than cold rolling must be undertaken on the goods to qualify for exemption – HELD - The exemption under Sr. No. 203 of Notification No. 12/2012-CE dated 17.03.2012 is available for hot rolled patta patti. The Instruction F. No. 96/85/2015-CX.I dated 07.12.2015 clarifies that all processes prior to the cold rolling stage are eligible for exemption from duty. The expression "pattis and pattas" in general trade parlance includes stainless steel flats, and therefore the benefit of exemption is available to the process of hot rolling of stainless steel flats. The hot rolling process takes place prior to the cold rolling process, and therefore hot rolled pattas and pattis are clearly covered under the exemption notification - The Board's clarification was worded with no room for doubt and field officers are bound by such clarifications. Where the appellant is legally eligible for the exemption notification, there is no question of penalty being imposed - The order passed by the learned Commissioner (Appeals) setting aside the demand of central excise duty and penalty, is upheld – Revenue appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Classification of composite cargo handling and transportation services, Liability to pay service tax under reverse charge mechanism - Whether a composite cargo handling service contract that includes transportation as an ancillary activity can be vivisected into separate goods transport agency service and cargo handling service to impose service tax liability on the service recipient under RCM - HELD - Revenue cannot split cargo handling services into transport services and other services by vivisecting a composite contract entered between service provider and service recipient. The definition of goods transp... [Read more]
Service Tax - Classification of composite cargo handling and transportation services, Liability to pay service tax under reverse charge mechanism - Whether a composite cargo handling service contract that includes transportation as an ancillary activity can be vivisected into separate goods transport agency service and cargo handling service to impose service tax liability on the service recipient under RCM - HELD - Revenue cannot split cargo handling services into transport services and other services by vivisecting a composite contract entered between service provider and service recipient. The definition of goods transport agency service under Section 65(50b) of the Finance Act, 1994 mandatorily requires that the service provider issues a consignment note - In the present case, the contractors issued only consolidated monthly invoices without any consignment note, which is a mandatory requirement for classification of service as goods transport agency service. When transportation is an ancillary or integral component of a composite cargo handling service contract, it cannot be separated and classified as a distinct GTA service. The agreement between the parties explicitly stated that the service was for cargo handling, and the service recipients were ultimately billed for the entire transaction as cargo handling services. No consignment note being issued, the service cannot be classified under GTA service category - The service tax demands confirmed by the lower authority are set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Clandestine Removal of Excisable Goods - Evidentiary Requirements - Whether clandestine removal of excisable goods can be established solely on the basis of statement of an employee who is not the author of seized private records and without corroborative evidence from raw material suppliers, recipients of goods, transporters, or voluntary admission from the partners – HELD - In cases of clandestine manufacture and clearance, revenue must establish tangible evidence encompassing various activities in the chain of events including unaccounted raw material purchase in excess of statutory records, actual re... [Read more]
Central Excise - Clandestine Removal of Excisable Goods - Evidentiary Requirements - Whether clandestine removal of excisable goods can be established solely on the basis of statement of an employee who is not the author of seized private records and without corroborative evidence from raw material suppliers, recipients of goods, transporters, or voluntary admission from the partners – HELD - In cases of clandestine manufacture and clearance, revenue must establish tangible evidence encompassing various activities in the chain of events including unaccounted raw material purchase in excess of statutory records, actual removal of finished goods without duty payment, discovery of such goods outside factory, instances of sale to identified parties, receipt of sale proceeds, disproportionate electricity consumption, statements of buyers with details of illicit transactions, and proof of transportation. The tribunal observed that serious charges of clandestine removal cannot be alleged merely on assumptions, presumptions or wild inferences but require corroborative evidence. In the present case, revenue relied solely on the statement of person who was not the author of the seized private records, without recording statements of actual authors despite issuing summons. There was no investigation at the recipient end despite names of four buyers appearing in the challan books, no evidence regarding transportation of goods, no voluntary admission from the partner despite several summons, and no explanation of how the value of clandestinely cleared goods was arrived at - The Department failed to adduce any positive evidence for alleging unaccounted manufacture and clandestine clearance - The order confirming the excise duty demand along with interest and penalties is set aside – The appeals are allowed [Read less]
Customs - Exemption from Basic Customs Duty and IGST for diagnostic kits - Distinction between ELFA and ELISA technologies – Appellant imported varieties of diagnostic test kits based on Enzyme-Linked Fluorescent Assay (ELFA) technology and declared them as Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) kits claiming concessional duty rate under Notification No. 50/2017-Customs dated 30.06.2017 and corresponding IGST notification – Issue of Notice proposing rejection and reassessment of Bills of Entry, demanding differential duty and proposing confiscation and penalties - Whether diagnostic kits based on ELFA technology, wh... [Read more]
Customs - Exemption from Basic Customs Duty and IGST for diagnostic kits - Distinction between ELFA and ELISA technologies – Appellant imported varieties of diagnostic test kits based on Enzyme-Linked Fluorescent Assay (ELFA) technology and declared them as Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) kits claiming concessional duty rate under Notification No. 50/2017-Customs dated 30.06.2017 and corresponding IGST notification – Issue of Notice proposing rejection and reassessment of Bills of Entry, demanding differential duty and proposing confiscation and penalties - Whether diagnostic kits based on ELFA technology, which admittedly operate on enzyme-linked immunoassay principle with fluorescence-based detection instead of chromogenic detection, qualify for exemption from Basic Customs Duty and concessional IGST as specified for ELISA kits – HELD – The ELFA technology is not a distinct diagnostic methodology but an advanced technological variant that fundamentally operates on the ELISA principle itself. The foundational principle of both technologies remains enzyme-linked immunoassay based on antigen-antibody interaction. The distinction lies only in the mode of signal detection at the terminal stage - The statutory clarifications issued by the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization and National Institute of Biologicals conclusively clarified that ELISA and ELFA are one and the same. The principle established in Supreme Court judgments recognizes that interpretation of tariff entries and exemption notifications must evolve with technological developments. Exemption entries concerning scientific instruments, medical diagnostics and biotechnology products cannot be interpreted rigidly in a manner that fossilizes scientific understanding to the stage existing when the notification was drafted - The genus-species principle provides that once exemption is granted to a genus, its various forms and varieties ordinarily remain covered unless specifically excluded. Further, the exemption relates to diagnostic kits used in detection of infectious diseases and viruses, and the evident legislative object is to facilitate affordable healthcare and encourage availability of advanced diagnostic technologies. The benefit of the exemption notification cannot be denied merely because technology has progressed from colorimetric detection to fluorescence-based detection, as such denial would defeat the very object underlying the notification – Further, the CBIC Circular No. 10/2022-Customs dated 25.07.2022 supports the rationale that advancement in detection technology does not result in emergence of an altogether distinct diagnostic methodology when the foundational scientific principle remains the same - The demand of differential duty, interest, confiscation, redemption fine and penalties do not survive. The appeal is allowed - Invocation of extended period – HELD - The imported goods were ‘VIDAS diagnostic kits’ and that the identity and nature of the goods were fully available to the Department. The dispute essentially concerns the eligibility of ELFA-based kits to the exemption available to ELISA kits under the relevant Notification. The Appellant's consistent stand has been that ELFA technology operates on the ELISA principle and, therefore, the imported kits were eligible for exemption. Such understanding cannot be said to be lacking in bona fides, particularly when the issue itself required examination by specialized expert bodies such as National Institute of Biologicals (NIB) and CDSCO - Merely because the Appellant described the goods as "ELISA Kits" in the B/E while claiming exemption, it cannot automatically lead to the conclusion that there existed any deliberate intention to evade payment of duty. The present case is essentially one involving interpretation of the scope of the Exemption Notification in the context of evolving diagnostic technologies. It is well settled that where the dispute pertains to interpretation of exemption entries and all material particulars regarding the goods imported are available with the Department, the extended period cannot be invoked - Applicability of interest and penalty provisions in respect of IGST levied under Section 3(7) of the Customs Tariff Act – HELD - The relevant period in the present case is February 2018 to December 2022. During substantial part of this period, Section 3(12) of the Customs Tariff Act had not specifically incorporated the provisions relating to interest, penalty and confiscation from the Customs Act insofar as IGST was concerned. Accordingly, the interest and penalty provisions regarding IGST levied during the relevant period are not applicable. [Read less]
Service Tax liability on revenue sharing arrangement – Appellant entered into agreements with restaurant and food court operators whereby the owner provided premises, uninterrupted power supply etc. and the consideration was structured as a revenue sharing arrangement - Whether the activity of providing premises and ancillary services to business operators under a revenue sharing arrangement constitutes taxable Business Support Service attracting service tax liability – HELD - The Business Support Service is a generic service involving support or assistance to the principal business of the service receiver, whereas in ... [Read more]
Service Tax liability on revenue sharing arrangement – Appellant entered into agreements with restaurant and food court operators whereby the owner provided premises, uninterrupted power supply etc. and the consideration was structured as a revenue sharing arrangement - Whether the activity of providing premises and ancillary services to business operators under a revenue sharing arrangement constitutes taxable Business Support Service attracting service tax liability – HELD - The Business Support Service is a generic service involving support or assistance to the principal business of the service receiver, whereas in the present case the licensee independently undertakes the principal activity of conducting the business. Further, the revenue sharing structure indicates that both parties act on a principal-to-principal basis participating in the business and sharing income rather than one party providing service to another - The dispute involved in the present case is covered by Tribunal’s Majority Order in appellant own case - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Demand based on data obtained from Income Tax Department, Invocation of extended period of limitation - Whether the extended period of limitation prescribed under Section 73(2) of the Finance Act, 1994 is invocable when the assessee had entertained a bona fide belief regarding non-taxability of services and all transactions were transparently recorded in books of accounts without any evidence of suppression, misstatement or fraudulent intent to evade taxes – HELD - The principle established in precedent decisions recognizes that where activities are fully reflected in balance sheets and income tax returns w... [Read more]
Service Tax - Demand based on data obtained from Income Tax Department, Invocation of extended period of limitation - Whether the extended period of limitation prescribed under Section 73(2) of the Finance Act, 1994 is invocable when the assessee had entertained a bona fide belief regarding non-taxability of services and all transactions were transparently recorded in books of accounts without any evidence of suppression, misstatement or fraudulent intent to evade taxes – HELD - The principle established in precedent decisions recognizes that where activities are fully reflected in balance sheets and income tax returns which are public documents accessible to revenue authorities, and the demand is based on data obtained from income tax department records, no suppression of facts can be attributed to the assessee. The burden of prima facie proving fraud, willful misstatement or suppression of facts lies on the revenue, which has not been discharged herein. The appellant entertained a bona fide belief regarding non-taxability of the services, particularly given the scope and nature of activities undertaken which did not fall within the generally understood activities of a cable operator. The mere failure to provide certain information or declaration would not amount to suppression with intent to evade payment of taxes sufficient to justify invocation of extended period of limitation - The demand for the period from 2013-14 to 2015-16 is set aside as barred by limitation. The demand for the period from 01-04-2016 to 30-06-2017 is confirmed as falling within the normal period. All penalties imposed under Sections 78, 77(1)(a), 77(2) and 70 of the Finance Act, 1994 are set aside – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]
GST - Service of Notice/Order through Common Portal - Section 169 of the CGST Act, 2017 – Petitioner failed to verify the portal regularly and comes to know of the demand only when its bank account is attached - Whether service of notice/order through uploading on the common portal constitutes valid service – HELD – The service of notice or order through any one of the modes specified under Section 169 constitutes sufficient compliance with statutory mandate for communication, and uploading on the common portal is a valid and recognized mode of service. When the orders are statutorily required to be uploaded on the p... [Read more]
GST - Service of Notice/Order through Common Portal - Section 169 of the CGST Act, 2017 – Petitioner failed to verify the portal regularly and comes to know of the demand only when its bank account is attached - Whether service of notice/order through uploading on the common portal constitutes valid service – HELD – The service of notice or order through any one of the modes specified under Section 169 constitutes sufficient compliance with statutory mandate for communication, and uploading on the common portal is a valid and recognized mode of service. When the orders are statutorily required to be uploaded on the portal periodically and the assessee is a registered taxpayer, it is inconceivable that there was lack of knowledge of such order. Further, the petitioner's admission that the notice was uploaded on the GST portal coupled with the failure to verify it properly does not absolve it of responsibility – Further, the detailed order of the adjudicating authority that the petitioner had actually appeared and participated in the proceedings by submitting written replies regarding the discrepancy, thereby belying its claim of complete ignorance. Since the petitioner admittedly failed to file appeal within the period stipulated and provided no plausible explanation for the delay, the extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 cannot be exercised to circumvent this alternative remedy - The impugned order is upheld and the writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
Tamil Nadu Value Added Tax Act, 2006 - Limitation period for passing assessment order under Section 27, Validity of revival of stale proceeding - A show cause notice for assessment year 2009-2010 was issued on 10.02.2014, to which the assessee replied on 28.03.2014 requesting the respondent to await the order of the High Court in related writ petitions for assessment years 2006-2007, 2007-2008 and 2008-2009. The High Court disposed of the related writ petitions on 29.10.2014, after which a denovo assessment order was passed on 30.09.2015. Subsequently, the assessee filed appeals before the Joint Commissioner and the Sales ... [Read more]
Tamil Nadu Value Added Tax Act, 2006 - Limitation period for passing assessment order under Section 27, Validity of revival of stale proceeding - A show cause notice for assessment year 2009-2010 was issued on 10.02.2014, to which the assessee replied on 28.03.2014 requesting the respondent to await the order of the High Court in related writ petitions for assessment years 2006-2007, 2007-2008 and 2008-2009. The High Court disposed of the related writ petitions on 29.10.2014, after which a denovo assessment order was passed on 30.09.2015. Subsequently, the assessee filed appeals before the Joint Commissioner and the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal. The respondent issued an impugned show cause notice on 22.04.2024, which was after the statutory limitation period of six years under Section 27 had expired on 14.03.2017 - Whether the respondent can issue a show cause notice and pass an assessment order for the assessment year 2009-2010 after the statutory limitation period prescribed under Section 27 of the TNVAT Act, 2006 has expired – HELD - The respondent cannot revive a stale proceeding by issuing a fresh show cause notice after the limitation period has expired. The statutory limitation of six years under Section 27 commences from the date of the original assessment order dated 15.03.2011 and expired on 14.03.2017. Although the assessee requested the respondent to keep the proceedings in abeyance pending the High Court's order, this request does not suspend or extend the statutory limitation period. The respondent was entitled to proceed with the adjudication of the SCN even while appeals were pending before the Appellate authorities. Nothing precluded the respondent from passing the order within the prescribed limitation period. The benefit of limitation must enure to the assessee, and a stale proceeding cannot be revived merely because the assessee had sought deferment of adjudication. The fact that the assessee is not required to maintain books of accounts beyond six years further supports this conclusion. The Rule prescribing maintenance of records for six years cannot be applied rigidly when there is a statutory embargo to proceed further - The impugned show cause notice is quashed and the writ petition is allowed [Read less]
GST - Power to Withhold Refund under Section 54(11) of the CGST Act, 2017 – Refund claim of amount recovered during DGGI search operation – Appellate Authority allowed refund by holding that the collection was made during the course of inspection in contravention of CBIC Instruction No.01/2022-23 - Rejection of refund application on the ground that the appellate order had not attained finality as the State could file appeal before the Appellate Tribunal and therefore, consideration of refund application at that stage would be premature and may adversely affect the interest of revenue - Whether the Deputy Commissioner c... [Read more]
GST - Power to Withhold Refund under Section 54(11) of the CGST Act, 2017 – Refund claim of amount recovered during DGGI search operation – Appellate Authority allowed refund by holding that the collection was made during the course of inspection in contravention of CBIC Instruction No.01/2022-23 - Rejection of refund application on the ground that the appellate order had not attained finality as the State could file appeal before the Appellate Tribunal and therefore, consideration of refund application at that stage would be premature and may adversely affect the interest of revenue - Whether the Deputy Commissioner can refuse to consider a refund application by invoking the power under Section 54(11) of the CGST Act to withhold refund on the ground that an appeal by the State to the Appellate Tribunal is contemplated but not yet filed – HELD - The power to withhold refund under Section 54(11) of the CGST Act is strictly circumscribed and can be exercised only when an order giving rise to refund is the subject-matter of an appeal or further proceeding that is already pending, and the Commissioner has formed an opinion that grant of such refund is likely to adversely affect the revenue on account of malfeasance or fraud committed. The statute mandates recording of reasons for withholding refund in Form GST RFD-07 in consonance with Rule 92(2) of the CGST Rules - Mere quoting of Section 54(11) without establishing the existence of pending proceedings does not empower the authority to withhold refund. A contemplated or prospective action by the State to file an appeal cannot be the basis for refusing to consider a refund application that has flowed from an appellate order. The authority must respect the appellate order till it is reversed, varied or modified by a competent authority or Court. Prior to filing of appeal before the Appellate Tribunal, the authority does not have the jurisdiction to assume power to withhold refund - In the instant case, the Dy. Commissioner lacked jurisdiction to invoke Section 54(11). The reason assigned in the impugned order that consideration of refund application is premature before lapse of six months period is not a valid ground under the statute and constitutes arbitrary and irrational exercise of power – The impugned order is set aside and the matter is remitted to the Dy Commissioner for fresh consideration of the refund application – The writ petition is allowed [Read less]
GST – Entitlement to Input Tax Credit on account of Retrospective Amendment to Section 16(5) of the CGST Act, 2017 – Applicability to assessment concluded prior to Amendment – Denial of input tax credit on the ground that returns were filed beyond the due date. Subsequently, the Finance Act, 2024 inserted section 16(5) of the CGST Act, 2017, which retrospectively regularizes input tax credit for financial years 2017-18 to 2020-21 if returns are filed up to 30th November, 2021 - Respondent issued a fresh order maintaining the denial of input tax credit despite the insertion of the new clause - Whether the petitioner i... [Read more]
GST – Entitlement to Input Tax Credit on account of Retrospective Amendment to Section 16(5) of the CGST Act, 2017 – Applicability to assessment concluded prior to Amendment – Denial of input tax credit on the ground that returns were filed beyond the due date. Subsequently, the Finance Act, 2024 inserted section 16(5) of the CGST Act, 2017, which retrospectively regularizes input tax credit for financial years 2017-18 to 2020-21 if returns are filed up to 30th November, 2021 - Respondent issued a fresh order maintaining the denial of input tax credit despite the insertion of the new clause - Whether the petitioner is entitled to benefit of retrospective amendment – HELD - By virtue of the inserted clause in Section 16, the petitioner cannot be denied the benefit of such amendment. The amendment is curative and retrospective in nature from 01.07.2017. The ratio laid down in Hiranmoy Dutta is squarely applicable, whereby once returns are filed by 30th November, 2021, input tax credit for the relevant period stands regularized. The impugned order is quashed and set aside, and the matter is remitted to the Joint Commissioner for re-adjudication in light of section 16(5) – Ordered accordingly [Read less]
Service Tax - Penalty under Section 78 - Mandatory Nature when Extended Period Invoked - Adjudicating authority invoked the extended period under proviso to Section 73(1) on account of suppression of facts but imposed penalty under Section 78 only to the extent of short-declared tax and not equal to the entire service tax confirmed - Whether penalty under Section 78 of the Finance Act, 1994 is mandatory and must be imposed once the extended period under Section 73 is invoked on ground of suppression of facts with intent to evade payment of tax – HELD - The penalty under Section 78 is not automatically mandatory equal to ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Penalty under Section 78 - Mandatory Nature when Extended Period Invoked - Adjudicating authority invoked the extended period under proviso to Section 73(1) on account of suppression of facts but imposed penalty under Section 78 only to the extent of short-declared tax and not equal to the entire service tax confirmed - Whether penalty under Section 78 of the Finance Act, 1994 is mandatory and must be imposed once the extended period under Section 73 is invoked on ground of suppression of facts with intent to evade payment of tax – HELD - The penalty under Section 78 is not automatically mandatory equal to the entire demand once extended period is invoked, and the adjudicating authority has correctly exercised discretion in imposing lesser penalty based on the specific factual circumstances of the case. The dispute arose out of classification and adjustment of tax paid under different taxable heads rather than deliberate tax evasion. Since the respondent-assessee had rendered taxable services under multiple categories with short payment under one category being simultaneously neutralized by excess payment under another category. No revenue loss occurred to the Government since excess tax already paid under one taxable category substantially neutralized the short payment under another category, and once tax reached the exchequer, the allegation of deliberate suppression loses considerable force - The respondent had already discharged the entire differential tax liability together with interest and penalty in terms of Section 73 even before issuance of SCN, demonstrating conduct that does not support an allegation of deliberate tax evasion - The adjudicating authority has correctly distinguished between classification and payment adjustment issues on one hand and independent statutory non-compliance on the other, and has rightly applied CBEC Circular clarifying that adjustment of excess service tax paid under one taxable category against liability arising under another taxable category is permissible - The impugned Order-in-Original is upheld and the appeal filed by the Department seeking enhancement of penalty is rejected [Read less]
Service Tax - Demand invoking extended period - Assessee had recorded all transactions in books of accounts, reported CENVAT Credit in statutory returns, and provided all necessary documents to the Department. The inquiry was conducted based on records submitted by the assessee, with the only discrepancy being difference in presentation or reconciliation of figures - Whether the extended period of limitation is invokable when all transactions were duly recorded in books of accounts, all CENVAT Credits were duly reported in statutory returns, and entire data was available with the department, with merely a difference in pre... [Read more]
Service Tax - Demand invoking extended period - Assessee had recorded all transactions in books of accounts, reported CENVAT Credit in statutory returns, and provided all necessary documents to the Department. The inquiry was conducted based on records submitted by the assessee, with the only discrepancy being difference in presentation or reconciliation of figures - Whether the extended period of limitation is invokable when all transactions were duly recorded in books of accounts, all CENVAT Credits were duly reported in statutory returns, and entire data was available with the department, with merely a difference in presentation or reconciliation of figures – HELD - Mere difference in presentation or reconciliation of figures does not constitute suppression of facts or willful misstatement with an intent to evade payment of service tax. The Department cannot invoke extended period when all transactions were transparently recorded in statutory books of accounts, all credits were properly disclosed in statutory returns filed with the department, and the entire data was available with the department. The ingredients of suppression, willful misstatement, or fraud are absent when the assessee has maintained complete transparency and provided all requisite documents during proceedings. Accordingly, the Department cannot resort to extended period of limitation merely on the basis of reconciliation differences. The demand raised under extended period is ex-facie barred by limitation and set aside - The impugned order is set aside and the Order-In-Original dropping the proceedings is upheld. The appeal filed by the assessee is allowed [Read less]
Customs AAR – Scope of expression "consumables" – Import of Reference Listed Drugs (RLDs), Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), impurities, chemicals, reagents, enzyme powders, pre-filled syringes, packaging materials, vials, canisters and similar items - Applicability of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs dated 24.10.2025 to various goods proposed to be imported for use in research and development activities undertaken at DSIR-recognized facilities - Whether goods imported and utilized during the research and development stage prior to manufacture of the Exhibit Batch (also referred to as confidence building batch ... [Read more]
Customs AAR – Scope of expression "consumables" – Import of Reference Listed Drugs (RLDs), Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), impurities, chemicals, reagents, enzyme powders, pre-filled syringes, packaging materials, vials, canisters and similar items - Applicability of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs dated 24.10.2025 to various goods proposed to be imported for use in research and development activities undertaken at DSIR-recognized facilities - Whether goods imported and utilized during the research and development stage prior to manufacture of the Exhibit Batch (also referred to as confidence building batch or scale-up batch) are eligible for the benefit of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs - HELD – Firstly, the applicant's DSIR-recognized Research and Development Centres situated at Pune and Aurangabad satisfy the institutional eligibility requirement prescribed under Notification No. 45/2025-Customs dated 24.10.2025 and qualify as eligible research institutions for the purposes of the said notification – The goods which are wholly or substantially consumed, exhausted or expended during the course of research, testing, experimentation or development activities may appropriately be regarded as consumables. The goods such as Reference Listed Drugs (RLDs), Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), impurities, chemicals, reagents, enzyme powders and other similar materials which are consumed or substantially utilized in research, testing, analytical evaluation, formulation development, validation and stability studies, would generally fall within the scope of the term "consumables" for the purposes of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs – The subject goods, which are consumed or substantially utilized in formulation development, analytical evaluation, testing, validation, stability studies and other research activities undertaken by the applicant's DSIR-recognized R&D Centres, are covered within the scope of the expression "consumables" under Sl. No. 70 of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs and are eligible for the benefit of notification, subject to fulfilment of the conditions prescribed therein – Ordered accordingly - Whether goods imported for manufacture of the Exhibit Batch are eligible for the benefit of the notification – HELD – The benefit of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs is available only in respect of imports made by the eligible DSIR-recognized research institution for its research activities. The goods imported by the DSIR-recognized R&D Centres and thereafter transferred, supplied or moved to a manufacturing facility for manufacture of an Exhibit Batch are not eligible for the benefit of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs, as such transfer is contrary to Condition No. 24(A)(2), which prohibits transfer or sale of the imported goods for a period of five years from the date of importation – Further, the goods imported directly by a manufacturing facility for manufacture of an Exhibit Batch are not eligible for the benefit of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs, since the importing entity is not a DSIR-recognized research institution as required under the notification. [Read less]
Customs AAR - Scope of Product Under Consideration (PUC) - Whether the imported Laser Engraving Machine are liable to Anti-dumping duty under Notification No. 15/2023 Customs (ADD) dated 22nd December 2023 – HELD – In terms of Notification No. 15/2023-Customs (ADD) dated 22.12.2023, Anti-dumping duty is imposable only on Industrial Laser Machines, in fully assembled, SKD or CKD form, used for cutting, marking or welding operations - The mere classification of the imported Laser Engraving Machines under CTH 84561100 does not automatically render them liable to Anti-Dumping Duty unless they satisfy the technical, functio... [Read more]
Customs AAR - Scope of Product Under Consideration (PUC) - Whether the imported Laser Engraving Machine are liable to Anti-dumping duty under Notification No. 15/2023 Customs (ADD) dated 22nd December 2023 – HELD – In terms of Notification No. 15/2023-Customs (ADD) dated 22.12.2023, Anti-dumping duty is imposable only on Industrial Laser Machines, in fully assembled, SKD or CKD form, used for cutting, marking or welding operations - The mere classification of the imported Laser Engraving Machines under CTH 84561100 does not automatically render them liable to Anti-Dumping Duty unless they satisfy the technical, functional and commercial characteristics of Product Under Consideration (PUC) covered by the notification – The imported goods in the present case are compact DIY laser engraving machines intended for artistic, decorative, personalization and small commercial applications. The subject products are commercially distinct, technically distinct, functionally distinct and technologically distinct from the industrial laser cutting, marking and welding systems contemplated under Notification No. 15/2023-Customs (ADD). Therefore, although classifiable under CTH 84561100, the imported laser engraving machines fall outside the intended scope of the Product Under Consideration covered under Notification No. 15/2023-Customs (ADD) dated 22.12.2023 – The ADD as per Notification No. 15/2023-Customs (ADD) dated 22.12.2023 will not be imposable on the import of the subject products i.e. Laser Engraving Machines – Ordered accordingly [Read less]
Service Tax - Limitation Period for Service of Show-cause Notice - Department issued Show-cause notice demanding service tax based on differential amounts noted in VAT Return and ST-3 Return. The Show-cause notice, though signed on 31.12.2020, was actually served on 15.01.2021, which is beyond five years from the date of filing of Return on 24.10.2015 - Whether a Show-cause notice served beyond the period of limitation, covering a demand for service tax pertaining to April 2015 to September 2015, is sustainable in law – HELD - The Show-cause notice covering the first period, that contains the disputed demand, was served ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Limitation Period for Service of Show-cause Notice - Department issued Show-cause notice demanding service tax based on differential amounts noted in VAT Return and ST-3 Return. The Show-cause notice, though signed on 31.12.2020, was actually served on 15.01.2021, which is beyond five years from the date of filing of Return on 24.10.2015 - Whether a Show-cause notice served beyond the period of limitation, covering a demand for service tax pertaining to April 2015 to September 2015, is sustainable in law – HELD - The Show-cause notice covering the first period, that contains the disputed demand, was served much after five years of filing of Return on 24.10.2015 including the period covered upto 31.12.2021 in the Ordinance issued to address Covid Pandemic situation, is to be treated as issued beyond the period of limitation and the demand in question is not sustainable for the fact that it is barred by time - The service of notice beyond the statutory period of limitation renders the show-cause notice void, and consequently, all proceedings flowing from such invalid notice must fall - The order passed by the Commissioner (Appeals) is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax – Limitation and Condonation of Delay – Whether dismissal of appeal solely on account of non-filing of condonation of delay application is sustainable in law when the Order-in-Original contains an unambiguous misstatement of the statutory limitation period – HELD - While a preamble or administrative note in an adjudication order cannot override the statutory limitation prescribed by the parent Act. When such a misstatement induces a party to act or refrain from acting in a particular manner, the doctrine of legitimate expectation and estoppel against the Revenue assumes significance. It is the well-establ... [Read more]
Service Tax – Limitation and Condonation of Delay – Whether dismissal of appeal solely on account of non-filing of condonation of delay application is sustainable in law when the Order-in-Original contains an unambiguous misstatement of the statutory limitation period – HELD - While a preamble or administrative note in an adjudication order cannot override the statutory limitation prescribed by the parent Act. When such a misstatement induces a party to act or refrain from acting in a particular manner, the doctrine of legitimate expectation and estoppel against the Revenue assumes significance. It is the well-established principle that a party should not be made to suffer for the mistake of the authority, particularly where the mistake relates to the exercise of a statutory remedy because such mistake misleads the party into believing that a legally necessary step was in fact unnecessary. The mechanical application of the principle that limitation cannot be waived, without examination of the reasons underlying the procedural omission, is not a proper exercise of quasi-judicial discretion. Where the delay itself is traceable to a positive misstatement of law in the order under challenge, the appellate authority is duty-bound to afford the appellant an opportunity to regularise the procedural defect, as summary dismissal results in grave injustice and amounts to denial of the right of appeal – The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is restored before the Commissioner (Appeals) with directions to consider the condonation of delay application in light of the fact that the delay was directly induced by an incorrect statement of law in the Order-in-Original – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
Service Tax - Liability of Sub-contractor for Maintenance, Management and Repair Services – Appellant engaged as a sub-contractor by a system integrator to carry out maintenance, management and repair services of leased lines and related equipment claims no service tax liability as the services were rendered at the behest of the system integrator who has already discharged the service tax liability – Demand invoking the extended period of limitation for demanding service tax is therefore not sustainable - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked to demand service tax from a sub-contractor when the main ... [Read more]
Service Tax - Liability of Sub-contractor for Maintenance, Management and Repair Services – Appellant engaged as a sub-contractor by a system integrator to carry out maintenance, management and repair services of leased lines and related equipment claims no service tax liability as the services were rendered at the behest of the system integrator who has already discharged the service tax liability – Demand invoking the extended period of limitation for demanding service tax is therefore not sustainable - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked to demand service tax from a sub-contractor when the main contractor has already paid service tax – HELD - On reading of Section 65(64) with Section 65(105) (zzg) of the Finance Act, as it stood from July 2004 to March 2008, it is clear that the Appellant is engaged in taxable services falling within the definition of "Management, Maintenance and Repair Services" and cannot be considered merely as a sub-contractor. The Tribunal has rightly held that non-payment of service tax for the maintenance, management and repair services came to light only during the course of internal audit by the Department, thereby establishing suppression. The extended period of limitation for demanding service tax is therefore sustainable, and the waiver of penalty by the appellate authority in exercise of its discretionary power on the ground of reasonable cause does not exonerate the service provider from the substantive tax liability - The plea of revenue neutrality is factually incorrect as a part of receipt is for services rendered on Maintenance, Management and leased lines – Further, the payment of service tax by the main contractor does not absolve the sub-contractor of independent tax liability – The Tribunal order is confirmed and the appeal is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax – Eligibility of exemption to Works Contract Services for construction of roads and drainage provided to Government Departments and local authorities, Demand based solely on Form 26AS statement – The Appellant, engaged in providing works contract services for construction of roads and drainage to various government departments and local bodies, received payments reflected in Form 26AS. A SCN was issued demanding service tax on the gross receipts along with penalties for non-registration, non-filing of returns, and suppression of facts - Whether the works contract services provided for construction of roads ... [Read more]
Service Tax – Eligibility of exemption to Works Contract Services for construction of roads and drainage provided to Government Departments and local authorities, Demand based solely on Form 26AS statement – The Appellant, engaged in providing works contract services for construction of roads and drainage to various government departments and local bodies, received payments reflected in Form 26AS. A SCN was issued demanding service tax on the gross receipts along with penalties for non-registration, non-filing of returns, and suppression of facts - Whether the works contract services provided for construction of roads and drainage to Government departments and local authorities are exempt from Service Tax under Serial No. 13(a) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST dated 20.06.2012 – HELD - The services provided by the appellant are exempt from the levy of Service Tax under Serial No. 13(a) of Notification No. 25/2012-ST dated 20.06.2012, which covers services provided by way of construction, erection, commissioning, installation, fitting out, repair, maintenance, renovation, or alteration of structures - The demand of service tax has been made on the basis of Form 26AS statement on which TDS has been deducted under Section 194-C of the Income Tax Act. The authorities below confirmed the demand merely on the basis of the gross value of service received for the work orders but failed to substantiate and examine whether such services were taxable or exempt. While the burden of proof lies with the assessee to demonstrate eligibility for exemption through clear and sufficient documentation, the fundamental requirement is that the authorities must first examine and determine whether the services are taxable or exempt before demanding tax. The demand cannot be sustained when the authorities themselves acknowledge that the services in dispute are in relation to construction of roads but proceed to deny the benefit of exemption without proper examination of the applicability of the exemption notification. The SCN and subsequent orders suffer from legal infirmities as they proceed on an incorrect premise - The impugned order and the Order-In-Original are set aside. The demand of service tax including interest and penalties is set aside – The appeal is allowed [Read less]
While Sec.74(5) permits voluntary payment before issuance of notice, such payment must be genuinely voluntary. A payment made through Form GST DRC-03 during search proceedings cannot be presumed to be voluntary merely by reason of such deposit.
GST - Provisional Attachment of Bank Account under Section 83 of the CGST Act, 2017 – Whether the attachment order passed in mechanical manner without formation of requisite opinion by the competent authority is valid and sustainable in law – HELD – The Section 83 being draconian in nature requires strict compliance with statutory conditions which include formation of an opinion by the competent authority that it is necessary to protect the interest of government revenue, issuance of written order for attachment, and observance of rules regarding manner of attachment. The court relies on the principle established in ... [Read more]
GST - Provisional Attachment of Bank Account under Section 83 of the CGST Act, 2017 – Whether the attachment order passed in mechanical manner without formation of requisite opinion by the competent authority is valid and sustainable in law – HELD – The Section 83 being draconian in nature requires strict compliance with statutory conditions which include formation of an opinion by the competent authority that it is necessary to protect the interest of government revenue, issuance of written order for attachment, and observance of rules regarding manner of attachment. The court relies on the principle established in Radha Krishan Industries case that when exercise of power is challenged, validity depends on strict and punctilious observance of statutory preconditions. The impugned attachment order merely states that attachment is directed to protect revenue interest without demonstrating formation of any opinion, thereby falling short of mandatory procedure. Accordingly, the attachment order is set aside and the bank is directed to de-freeze the petitioner's bank account – Writ petition is allowed [Read less]
Central Excise - Reversal of amount equal to 6% of the value of exempted goods cleared in terms of Notification No.30/2004-CE - Rule 6(3) of CCR, 2004 – Appellant availed CENVAT credit on inputs used in the manufacture of exempted goods in May 2017 and reversed an amount equal to 6 percent of the value of such exempted goods in terms of Rule 6(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 – Denial of benefit of exemption notification and demand of duty at the merit rate of 12.5 percent ad valorem, along with interest and penalty - Whether the appellant who avails exemption under Notification No. 30/2004-CE, which contains a cond... [Read more]
Central Excise - Reversal of amount equal to 6% of the value of exempted goods cleared in terms of Notification No.30/2004-CE - Rule 6(3) of CCR, 2004 – Appellant availed CENVAT credit on inputs used in the manufacture of exempted goods in May 2017 and reversed an amount equal to 6 percent of the value of such exempted goods in terms of Rule 6(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 – Denial of benefit of exemption notification and demand of duty at the merit rate of 12.5 percent ad valorem, along with interest and penalty - Whether the appellant who avails exemption under Notification No. 30/2004-CE, which contains a condition that no CENVAT credit on inputs shall be taken, can claim the exemption benefit if the manufacturer initially takes CENVAT credit on inputs but subsequently reverses the credit equal to 6 percent of the value of exempted goods in terms of Rule 6(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 – HELD - The payment of an amount under Rule 6(3) is deemed to be CENVAT credit not taken for the purpose of an exemption notification - Though sub-rule (3D) was inserted with effect from 01.04.2011, it is clarificatory in nature and has retrospective effect. The reversal of 6 percent of the value of exempted goods in terms of Rule 6(3)(i) is one of the mechanisms to expunge the CENVAT credit availed by the assessee. Therefore, even after taking the credit, if the assessee reverses an amount as provided in Rule 6(3), it amounts to non-availment of CENVAT credit and the condition of the notification stands complied - The revenue authorities who themselves had initially directed the appellant to reverse the CENVAT credit at 6 percent, and subsequently initiating proceedings based on a change in interpretation is contrary to settled legal position that extended period of limitation cannot be invoked for change in opinion. The appellant is legally entitled to the exemption notification - The impugned order set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]
Sabka Vishwas Legacy Dispute Resolution Scheme, 2019 – Delayed Payment – Lapse of Benefit – The appellant fails to deposit the amount within the stipulated time and despite extension granted due to COVID Pandemic, makes the payment much later than the prescribed deadline - Whether the benefit of the scheme can be extended to the appellant despite non-compliance with the stipulated payment deadline due to COVID Pandemic conditions – HELD - The Section 127(5) of the Sabka Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme Rules, 2019 is clear and unambiguous in providing that if the declarant does not pay the amount within t... [Read more]
Sabka Vishwas Legacy Dispute Resolution Scheme, 2019 – Delayed Payment – Lapse of Benefit – The appellant fails to deposit the amount within the stipulated time and despite extension granted due to COVID Pandemic, makes the payment much later than the prescribed deadline - Whether the benefit of the scheme can be extended to the appellant despite non-compliance with the stipulated payment deadline due to COVID Pandemic conditions – HELD - The Section 127(5) of the Sabka Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme Rules, 2019 is clear and unambiguous in providing that if the declarant does not pay the amount within the stipulated time, the declaration stands lapsed due to any reason, without exception. When statutory words are clear, plain and unambiguous conveying only one meaning, courts are bound to give effect to that meaning irrespective of consequences or hardship. Since the scheme is a beneficial legislation meant for defaulting taxpayers, ambiguity if any must be construed against the assessee - The payment deadline of thirty days from issuance of SVLDRS-3 form was mandatory and non-compliance within the extended period of thirty June, 2020 results in automatic lapse of scheme benefits. However, regarding penalty imposition, there exists no mala fide intent on the appellant's part to default or deliberately delay payment when the appellant had voluntarily applied under the amnesty scheme. The demand for service tax and interest is upheld but the imposition of penalty is set aside - The order confirming penalty is set aside while confirming the demand for tax and interest is confirmed – The appeal is partly allowed [Read less]
Tamil Nadu VAT Act, 2006 – Classification of Capital Goods – Applicability of Tax Rate – The Appellant challenged an assessment order imposing tax at 14.5% on inter-state sales of moulds and dies effected without C-Forms, contending that these goods qualified as capital goods attracting a 5% tax rate under the TNVAT Act - Whether moulds and dies can be classified as capital goods for the purpose of determining the applicable tax rate under Section 8(2) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, read with the TNVAT Act – HELD - For goods to be treated as capital goods under Section 2(11) of the TNVAT Act, two conditions mu... [Read more]
Tamil Nadu VAT Act, 2006 – Classification of Capital Goods – Applicability of Tax Rate – The Appellant challenged an assessment order imposing tax at 14.5% on inter-state sales of moulds and dies effected without C-Forms, contending that these goods qualified as capital goods attracting a 5% tax rate under the TNVAT Act - Whether moulds and dies can be classified as capital goods for the purpose of determining the applicable tax rate under Section 8(2) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, read with the TNVAT Act – HELD - For goods to be treated as capital goods under Section 2(11) of the TNVAT Act, two conditions must be cumulatively satisfied: first, the goods should fall within clauses (a) to (g) of the definition of capital goods, and second, the goods should be used in the State for the purpose of manufacture, processing, packing or storing of goods in the course of business. Although moulds and dies are specifically mentioned in clause (d) of Section 2(11), the admitted position that these goods were not used within the State for the purpose of manufacture renders the second condition unfulfilled. Both conditions are mandatory and cannot be treated as alternative requirements. Since the goods did not satisfy the essential condition of being used in the State, they could not be classified as capital goods – The Department was justified in applying the residuary entry (entry 69) of part-C of the First Schedule - The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
Tamil Nadu VAT Act, 2006 - Revision of Assessment Order - Non-consideration of Reply to Show Cause Notice - Whether an assessment order passed without considering and applying the assessee's reply to the show cause notice can be sustained in law – HELD - The impugned assessment order cannot be sustained as the assessing officer failed to consider the reply dated 15.03.2021 filed by the assessee to the show cause notice. The record itself indicates that the dealer did not raise any objection, and the assessee had expressly dealt with the issues relating to interstate purchases and UPS sales in the reply. The principle of ... [Read more]
Tamil Nadu VAT Act, 2006 - Revision of Assessment Order - Non-consideration of Reply to Show Cause Notice - Whether an assessment order passed without considering and applying the assessee's reply to the show cause notice can be sustained in law – HELD - The impugned assessment order cannot be sustained as the assessing officer failed to consider the reply dated 15.03.2021 filed by the assessee to the show cause notice. The record itself indicates that the dealer did not raise any objection, and the assessee had expressly dealt with the issues relating to interstate purchases and UPS sales in the reply. The principle of natural justice requires that the assessing officer must consider the submissions and evidence placed on record by the assessee before arriving at a conclusion. The failure to consider the assessee's reply is a substantial procedural defect that vitiates the assessment order, rendering it arbitrary and illegal - The impugned order is set aside and the matter is remanded for reconsideration. The assessing officer shall provide a reasonable opportunity to the petitioner – The writ petition is disposed of [Read less]
Service Tax - Eligibility for benefit under Sabka Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme – Tax liability quantification before cut-off date – Declaration under SVLDRS scheme claiming benefit on the basis of tax liability admitted during investigation proceedings - Whether the admission of tax liability by an assessee during investigation or inquiry proceedings, prior to the issuance of show-cause notice and final adjudication, amounts to quantification of duty within the meaning of the scheme and thereby renders the assessee eligible to claim benefit thereunder when the final quantified liability is determined afte... [Read more]
Service Tax - Eligibility for benefit under Sabka Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme – Tax liability quantification before cut-off date – Declaration under SVLDRS scheme claiming benefit on the basis of tax liability admitted during investigation proceedings - Whether the admission of tax liability by an assessee during investigation or inquiry proceedings, prior to the issuance of show-cause notice and final adjudication, amounts to quantification of duty within the meaning of the scheme and thereby renders the assessee eligible to claim benefit thereunder when the final quantified liability is determined after the statutory cut-off date of 30.06.2019 – HELD - The mere admission or acceptance of a portion of tax liability during investigation or inquiry does not constitute quantification for the purpose of establishing eligibility under the scheme. The definition of "quantified" under the statute means a written communication of the amount of duty payable under the indirect tax enactment, which must be the final determined amount as ascertained through the complete investigation, audit, or inquiry process - The intention of the legislature is unambiguous and specific i.e. benefit extends only to those persons whose total tax liability is fully determined before the cut-off date. If partial admissions during investigation were to constitute quantification, the statutory exclusion clause under Section 125(1)(e) would be rendered nugatory, as any assessee accepting a lesser liability during investigation could claim eligibility despite the actual liability being determined at a higher rate upon completion of proceedings. The pendency of investigation or inquiry which results in final quantification after the cut-off date disentitles the assessee from claiming the benefit. Furthermore, since the petitioner was found ineligible under the scheme, the procedural requirement to constitute a Designated Committee and afford an opportunity of hearing does not arise, as such procedural safeguards apply only after an eligible declarant is accepted into the scheme – The rejection of the declaration form by the competent authority is upheld. The writ petition is dismissed [Read less]
Service Tax - Construction Services - Residential Complex - Service tax liability on construction of individual residential houses - Whether construction of individual residential houses in tsunami affected areas undertaken for welfare organizations constitute "construction of complex" service under Section 65(91a) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The construction of individual residential houses does not attract service tax as such construction cannot be classified as "residential complex" under the statutory definition which mandates that a complex must comprise building or buildings having more than twelve residentia... [Read more]
Service Tax - Construction Services - Residential Complex - Service tax liability on construction of individual residential houses - Whether construction of individual residential houses in tsunami affected areas undertaken for welfare organizations constitute "construction of complex" service under Section 65(91a) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The construction of individual residential houses does not attract service tax as such construction cannot be classified as "residential complex" under the statutory definition which mandates that a complex must comprise building or buildings having more than twelve residential units with common areas and specified facilities. The definition is cumulative in nature and individual houses clearly fail to satisfy the primary requirement of having more than twelve residential units. Relying on the coordinate bench decisions in similar matters and the Supreme Court's pronouncement in CCE v. Larsen and Toubro that post 01-06-2007 only services simpliciter could be taxed, the Tribunal holds that for the period up to 31-03-2012, construction services rendered on individual residential units fall outside the ambit of taxable service under Section 65(105)(zzzh) - The demand confirmed in the impugned orders is set aside – The appeal is allowed - Construction Services - Police Quarters - Service tax liability on construction of police quarters - Whether construction of residential units (police quarters) rendered to Tamil Nadu Police Housing Corporation qualifies for exemption from service tax under the Mega Exemption Notification No.25/2012-ST - HELD – The construction services of residential units rendered to government organizations like the police corporation are not exigible to service tax, following the Tribunal's earlier decisions in similar cases which have held that such construction services for Government organizations do not attract service tax liability. The Commissioner (Appeals) has also allowed the appeal in the assessee's favour in a related matter. Given the similarity in facts and circumstances, the tribunal holds that the construction services rendered to the police corporation are not exigible to service tax and sets aside the demand - Construction Services - Commercial and Industrial Purpose - Service tax liability on construction of hospitals and municipal buildings - Whether construction services for hospitals and municipal corporation buildings can be classified as "commercial and industrial construction services" under Section 65(25b) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The demand of service tax on construction services rendered cannot be sustained when the revenue has failed to discharge its burden of proving that the buildings were constructed for commercial purposes with intent of making profit. The Board Circular No.80/10/2004 clarified that the leviability of service tax depends primarily upon the use of the building or civil structure and requires proving that the building was being used for purposes of making profit. The onus lies on the department to establish that the building was being used or to be used for commercial purposes, and mere assumption is insufficient. The Municipal Corporation construction was abandoned at the basement level due to a court order of stay and remained incomplete, and the department has not provided any evidence from approved building plans establishing commercial purpose. Appeals allowed - Service Tax - Extended Period of Limitation – HELD - The mere non-payment of tax without any element of intent or suppression is not sufficient to attract the extended period of limitation. For invoking extended period of limitation there must be an active and deliberate act on the part of the assessee to evade payment of tax. In the present case, the show cause notice contains no evidence of any positive or deliberate act of wilful suppression or misstatement of facts, and the statement recorded only indicates that the assessee was explained the tax implications and agreed to comply, thereby attributing ignorance rather than intent to evade. The burden of proving mala fides lies on the person alleging it, and such allegations require proof of a high order of credibility. Applying these principles, the tribunal holds that the invocation of extended period of limitation is wholly unwarranted - Renting of Immovable Property - Liability of Individual - Service tax demand on renting of immovable property - Whether service tax liability can be imposed on an individual for renting immovable property when the property actually belongs to another person who has let it out - HELD - The service tax demand on renting of immovable property cannot be made on an individual when the uncontroverted fact on record shows that the property belonged to a third person and the demand seeks only to recover rent received by the individual. Furthermore, when the leviability of service tax on such activity was susceptible to interpretational disputes and was the subject matter of litigation, resulting in the levy being effectuated through retrospective amendment, the demand is wholly barred by limitation. [Read less]
Customs - Duty drawback application - Deemed date of application - Rule 6 of Customs, Central Excise, Duties and Service Tax Drawback Rules 1995 - Whether the date of the initial informal application or the date of subsequent formal submission with complete documentation constitutes the valid date of drawback application under Rule 6 of the Drawback Rules, when the initial application lacks required documents due to genuine circumstances but is subsequently completed as directed by the Department – HELD - The initial letters constitute the valid date of refund application, not the subsequent letters. When the petitioner ... [Read more]
Customs - Duty drawback application - Deemed date of application - Rule 6 of Customs, Central Excise, Duties and Service Tax Drawback Rules 1995 - Whether the date of the initial informal application or the date of subsequent formal submission with complete documentation constitutes the valid date of drawback application under Rule 6 of the Drawback Rules, when the initial application lacks required documents due to genuine circumstances but is subsequently completed as directed by the Department – HELD - The initial letters constitute the valid date of refund application, not the subsequent letters. When the petitioner submits an initial application disclosing the essential claim for refund but lacks certain documents due to genuine circumstances arising from ports being situated in different areas, and thereafter produces all relevant documents as sought by the department, the subsequent submissions are merely covering letters enclosing additional particulars to enable processing of the original refund application - Respondents ought not to take the date of formal submission with complete documentation as the application date when the initial application clearly disclosed the claim and the delay in producing documents was caused by departmental direction seeking proper documentation. The administrative authorities must consider the substance and intent of an application rather than rigidly adhering to formal procedural defects when the applicant has acted in good faith and complied with subsequent directions - The impugned order is set aside and the matter is remanded to the original authority with directions to decide the applications filed by the petitioner – The petition is disposed of [Read less]
Central Excise - Compounded Levy Scheme – Continuation of proceedings after omission of clauses – Petitioner covered under the Compounded Levy Scheme under Section 3A of the Central Excise Act, 1944 read with Rule 96ZQ of the Central Excise Rules, 1944. The assessee claimed abatement of compounded levy for the period when its processing equipment was sealed and closed for a continuous period of not less than seven days, but the claim was rejected - Proceedings under Section 3A of the Act and Rule 96ZQ of the Rules, which were omitted with effect from 11th May, 2001 and 1st March, 2001 respectively - Whether proceedings... [Read more]
Central Excise - Compounded Levy Scheme – Continuation of proceedings after omission of clauses – Petitioner covered under the Compounded Levy Scheme under Section 3A of the Central Excise Act, 1944 read with Rule 96ZQ of the Central Excise Rules, 1944. The assessee claimed abatement of compounded levy for the period when its processing equipment was sealed and closed for a continuous period of not less than seven days, but the claim was rejected - Proceedings under Section 3A of the Act and Rule 96ZQ of the Rules, which were omitted with effect from 11th May, 2001 and 1st March, 2001 respectively - Whether proceedings initiated or pending under Section 3A of the CEA, 1944 and Rule 96ZQ of the CER, 1944 could be continued or concluded after the omission of these provisions with effect from 1st March, 2001 and 11th May, 2001 respectively, without any saving clause – HELD - The omission of statutory provisions amounts to repeal of an enactment and does not fall within the protection of Section 6 of the General Clauses Act, 1897, which applies only to repeals and not to omissions. After the omission of Rules 96ZQ, 96ZP and 96ZO with effect from 1st March, 2001 no proceedings could have been initiated thereunder, and after the omission of Section 3A with effect from 11th May, 2001 without any saving clause, no pending proceeding under the said Rules which had not been concluded before the omission came into effect could be concluded thereafter - The Section 3A of the Act is the charging provision and Rule 96ZQ is merely a machinery provision, and when the charging section itself is deleted without any saving clause, no recovery under the said section can be made by resorting to Rule 96ZQ. The respondent authorities, having initiated and continued proceedings under these provisions after their omission, acted without any authority of law and their actions were ultra vires and without jurisdiction - No proceedings could have been initiated or continued against the petitioner invoking Section 3A of the Act, 1944 read with Rule 96ZQ of the Rules, 1944 after the same had been omitted and repealed in the absence of any saving clause with effect from March 2001. The petition stands allowed [Read less]
GST - Sections 73 and 74 of the CGST Act, 2017 - Maintainability of writ petition challenging Show Cause Notice issued under extended period of limitation – Petitioner was issued Show Cause Notices dated 13.07.2024 under Section 74 for tax periods 2017-2018, 2018-2019, and 2019-2020 based on alleged suppression of facts and failure to cooperate during inspection and produce necessary documents - Whether the SCNs issued under Section 74 are maintainable – HELD - The impugned Show Cause Notices were issued well before the expiry of limitation prescribed under Section 74 and were preceded by an Intimation in GST DRC-01A d... [Read more]
GST - Sections 73 and 74 of the CGST Act, 2017 - Maintainability of writ petition challenging Show Cause Notice issued under extended period of limitation – Petitioner was issued Show Cause Notices dated 13.07.2024 under Section 74 for tax periods 2017-2018, 2018-2019, and 2019-2020 based on alleged suppression of facts and failure to cooperate during inspection and produce necessary documents - Whether the SCNs issued under Section 74 are maintainable – HELD - The impugned Show Cause Notices were issued well before the expiry of limitation prescribed under Section 74 and were preceded by an Intimation in GST DRC-01A dated 11.06.2024. The failure of the petitioner to reply to the intimation for tax periods 2018-2019 and 2019-2020 itself invites invocation of Section 74 machinery in view of the definition of suppression in Explanation-2 to Section 74, which came to be deleted only later by virtue of Finance (No.2) Act, 2024 (15/2024) dated 16.08.2024 - Even if Section 74 was wrongly invoked, it is incumbent upon the petitioner to establish its case by filing a detailed reply in Form GST DRC-06. The disputed questions of facts cannot be decided in a summary proceeding under Article 226. Furthermore, each tax year is an independent block and if ingredients exist to invoke extended period of limitation, such proceedings can be initiated under Section 74 and cannot be scuttled under Article 226 – The challenge to the impugned Show Cause Notices is rejected. However, liberty is given to the Petitioner to file a reply to the respective Show Cause Notices – The writ petitions are dismissed [Read less]
GST - Invocation of extended period of limitation under Section 74 of CGST Act, 2017; requirement of "reasons to believe" versus "where it appears"; procedural compliance in assessment proceedings - Tax liability for discrepancies between GSTR-3B versus GSTR-2A, GSTR-7 versus GSTR-3B, and GSTR-9 versus Form 26AS - Whether the authorities can invoke the machinery under Section 74 of the Act by using the expression "where it appears" without furnishing explicit reasons to believe in fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts - HELD - Since the records before the authorities revealed short-payments of tax as compared... [Read more]
GST - Invocation of extended period of limitation under Section 74 of CGST Act, 2017; requirement of "reasons to believe" versus "where it appears"; procedural compliance in assessment proceedings - Tax liability for discrepancies between GSTR-3B versus GSTR-2A, GSTR-7 versus GSTR-3B, and GSTR-9 versus Form 26AS - Whether the authorities can invoke the machinery under Section 74 of the Act by using the expression "where it appears" without furnishing explicit reasons to believe in fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts - HELD - Since the records before the authorities revealed short-payments of tax as compared to the amounts mentioned in Form 26AS and GSTR-7, the authorities are entitled to invoke the machinery under Section 74 of the CGST Act as the expression used therein is "where it appears" and not "reasons to believe". The SCNs clearly referred to Section 74 and the expression "willful suppression of facts" was used in both notices - The statutory language "where it appears" provides a broader scope for invocation compared to the stricter "reasons to believe" standard applicable under the Income Tax Act. However, the revenue abstract to the notice for the tax period 2020-2021 erroneously recorded the exempted turnover as the tax liability instead of the actual tax liability, and the impugned order inadvertently recorded the exempted turnover from an incorrect tax period, resulting in an erroneous calculation of total tax liability. Additionally, the petitioner's reply to the show cause notice was insufficient and did not effectively address the allegations raised - The matters are remanded back to the respondents to pass fresh orders on merits after affording opportunity of personal hearing to the petitioner, who shall file detailed replies and necessary documents to defend their case – The petitions are disposed of [Read less]
GST - Failure to declare value of outward supply in GSTR-3B despite correctly declaring the same in GSTR-1 - Penalty under Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017 - Invocation of Section 73 for Identical Default in Succeeding Period - Whether penalty under Section 74 can be invoked for the earlier period when the respondent has invoked the machinery under Section 73 for the identical default in the succeeding period – HELD - The deliberations preceding the incorporation of Section 128A into the Act by the GST Council indicate that there were several glitches resulting in non-filing of returns on time - The Amnesty scheme under ... [Read more]
GST - Failure to declare value of outward supply in GSTR-3B despite correctly declaring the same in GSTR-1 - Penalty under Section 74 of the CGST Act, 2017 - Invocation of Section 73 for Identical Default in Succeeding Period - Whether penalty under Section 74 can be invoked for the earlier period when the respondent has invoked the machinery under Section 73 for the identical default in the succeeding period – HELD - The deliberations preceding the incorporation of Section 128A into the Act by the GST Council indicate that there were several glitches resulting in non-filing of returns on time - The Amnesty scheme under Section 128A, inserted by Finance Act No. 2 of 2024, is available only for cases where Section 73 machinery was invoked and not for Section 74. The case of the appellant qualifies for examination under Section 73 rather than Section 74 since the appellant had correctly declared the value of outward supplies in GSTR-1 and the liability arose from short payment of tax compared to the declared liability. The principle that once tax payable towards outward supplies is declared in GSTR-1, mere failure to make corresponding declaration in GSTR-3B would not by itself amount to suppression of facts to evade tax within the meaning of Section 74 is recognize. The fact that the respondent has treated the identical default in the succeeding period under Section 73 indicates differential treatment for the same nature of default - The impugned order imposing penalty under Section 74 is quashed, and the case is remitted back to the respondent to redo the exercise afresh - The writ petition is partly allowed [Read less]
GST – Availment of Input Tax Credit based on overruled Judicial Decision - Invocation of Section 74 of CGST Act, 2017 for wrongly availed ITC based on a judicial decision that was subsequently reversed by the Supreme Court – Petitioner, engaged in renting and leasing of immovable properties, availed input tax credit on works contract services and construction materials on the basis of the Orissa High Court's decision in Safari Retreats Pvt. Ltd. The Petitioner initially sought approval from the respondent for claiming input tax credit of a certain amount but proceeded to avail a significantly higher amount without obta... [Read more]
GST – Availment of Input Tax Credit based on overruled Judicial Decision - Invocation of Section 74 of CGST Act, 2017 for wrongly availed ITC based on a judicial decision that was subsequently reversed by the Supreme Court – Petitioner, engaged in renting and leasing of immovable properties, availed input tax credit on works contract services and construction materials on the basis of the Orissa High Court's decision in Safari Retreats Pvt. Ltd. The Petitioner initially sought approval from the respondent for claiming input tax credit of a certain amount but proceeded to avail a significantly higher amount without obtaining formal concurrence from the respondent. Subsequently, the Orissa High Court's decision was reversed by the Supreme Court, following which the respondent issued SCN under Section 74 of the CGST Act for wrongly availed input tax credit - Whether the respondent was justified in invoking Section 74 of the CGST Act for determining wrongly availed input tax credit when the appellant had acted in reliance upon a judicial decision that was later reversed by the Supreme Court – Petitioner’s contention that having intimated the department regarding the availment of the said input tax credit, the respondent was not justified in invoking Section 74 - HELD – The Section 17(5)(c) and (d) of the CGST Act contains a prohibition and prohibits a person for availing of Input Tax Credit on works contract services supplied for the construction of an immovable property. The restrictions contained in Sections 17(5)(c) and (d) of the CGST Act are clear statutory prohibitions blocking input tax credit on works contract services and construction materials for immovable property. While the petitioner relied upon the Orissa High Court's decision, the very foundation and basis for availing the input tax credit was removed when the Supreme Court reversed that decision – Mere communication to the respondent without formal approval or concurrence from the authority cannot entitle the appellant to bonafide believe that it was entitled to avail the blocked credit. The communication was not responded to by the respondent, which does not grant any legal sanctity to the availment. Additionally, the petitioner initially sought approval for a limited amount but without obtaining concurrence proceeded to avail a significantly larger amount of input tax credit, which establishes that no case has been made out against invoking the extended period of limitation. Even otherwise, the credit that was wrongly availed by the petitioner was beyond the period of limitation. Therefore, the invocation of the extended period of limitation is justified – The writ petition is dismissed - The invocation of Section 74 for multiple tax periods – HELD - As far as the challenge to the impugned proceedings for multiple tax periods is concerned, the issue now stands covered against the petitioner in terms of the decision of the Karnataka High Court in M/s Chimney Hills Education Society vs. Additional Commissioner of Central Tax and Another. Therefore, no further views are expressed. [Read less]
GST - Jurisdictional facts and foundational prerequisites for Invocation of Extended Period of Limitation in GST proceedings - The Proper Officers had invoked the extended period of limitation of five years under Section 74 without explicitly specifying or providing material evidence of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to evade tax as required under the statute - Whether the Proper Officer can validly invoke the extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the CGST Act without establishing jurisdictional or foundational facts of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts with intent to evad... [Read more]
GST - Jurisdictional facts and foundational prerequisites for Invocation of Extended Period of Limitation in GST proceedings - The Proper Officers had invoked the extended period of limitation of five years under Section 74 without explicitly specifying or providing material evidence of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to evade tax as required under the statute - Whether the Proper Officer can validly invoke the extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the CGST Act without establishing jurisdictional or foundational facts of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts with intent to evade tax, and whether such jurisdictional facts must be recorded and communicated to the assessee in the Show Cause Notice – HELD - The expression "where it appears" in Section 73 and Section 74 of the CGST Act imports only a prima facie view and not conclusive proof, requiring a lesser degree of probability than proof, but this does not eliminate the necessity of jurisdictional facts. The existence of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to evade tax constitutes mandatory jurisdictional or foundational facts that must be established before invoking the extended period of limitation. These jurisdictional facts are sine qua non for the Proper Officer to assume jurisdiction to issue a SCN under Section 74 - The satisfaction of the Proper Officer must be based on objective material and relevant facts, and such satisfaction should be explicitly expressed and recorded on the face of the Notice. Mere impression, appearance, or assumption in the mind of the Proper Officer regarding the commission of these offences is insufficient. The Proper Officer cannot invoke Section 74 arbitrarily or without rendering a finding that the alleged short-payment of tax was occasioned by fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to evade tax - The SCN must put the assessee to notice of the specific allegations of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to provide him with a reasonable opportunity to meet the case and defend himself, as failure to do so violates the principles of natural justice - The GST Council's amendment to Section 67 of the Second Draft GST Model Law during the 8th GST Council Meeting, by inserting the phrase "where it appears to the Proper Officer" was based on an erroneous assumption regarding due process of law. The deliberations show that the GST Council was under the mistaken impression that the original draft did not provide adequate due process, when in fact the original draft prescribed a higher threshold for invoking the extended period of limitation. This amendment inadvertently diluted the safeguards originally contemplated. The Rules and procedures framed under the GST Act, particularly Rule 142 and the pre-notice intimation requirements in Form DRC-01A, provide necessary safeguards that must be strictly adhered to before invoking Section 74 - Where the Proper Officer fails to specify the requisite ingredients or foundational facts in the SCN, the notice becomes arbitrary and liable to be quashed. The burden of establishing the jurisdictional facts rests on the revenue, and mere allegation or assumption cannot substitute for concrete material evidence of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts - The Show Cause Notices issued by the Proper Officers invoking Section 74 without explicitly specifying jurisdictional facts of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to evade tax, or without providing adequate material evidence of such facts, are quashed as being without jurisdiction and violative of the principles of natural justice. The Proper Officer is required to spell out the specific allegations and provide concrete material evidence supporting the invocation of Section 74 in the Show Cause Notice itself. The extended period of limitation cannot be invoked on mere appearance or assumption – Ordered accordingly [Read less]
GST - Adjustment of IGST paid on inter-state supply subsequently held to be intra-State supply, Adjustment of wrongfully paid IGST against CGST/SGST liability – Petitioner paid IGST on transactions with vendors initially considered to be inter-State supplies but subsequently realized that the invoices should have been raised on the vendors' unit located in the same State, thereby making these intra-state supplies liable to CGST/SGST instead. The authorities issued an adjudication demanding payment of tax along with interest and penalty, dismissed the appeal on grounds of limitation, and issued a demand notice without con... [Read more]
GST - Adjustment of IGST paid on inter-state supply subsequently held to be intra-State supply, Adjustment of wrongfully paid IGST against CGST/SGST liability – Petitioner paid IGST on transactions with vendors initially considered to be inter-State supplies but subsequently realized that the invoices should have been raised on the vendors' unit located in the same State, thereby making these intra-state supplies liable to CGST/SGST instead. The authorities issued an adjudication demanding payment of tax along with interest and penalty, dismissed the appeal on grounds of limitation, and issued a demand notice without considering adjustment of the wrongfully paid IGST against the CGST/SGST liability - Whether a registered person is entitled to adjustment of IGST against the CGST/SGST liability – HELD – The Section 77(2) of the CGST Act, 2017 when read in conjunction with Rule 92 of the CGST Rules, 2017 stipulates that a registered person who has paid IGST on a transaction considered to be inter-State supply but subsequently held to be intra-state supply shall not be required to pay any interest or tax. The Rule 92 contemplates adjustment of an amount to which an assessee is entitled by issuing an order in Part A of Form GST DRC-07 giving details of the adjustment as against a refund. The respondent authorities have failed to apply this legal principle and have incorrectly raised a demand with interest and penalty - The original authority must reconsider the matter in light of these provisions and issue an order in the prescribed form considering the adjustment mechanism instead of closing the proceedings. The petition is allowed in part by quashing the adjudication order, the order-in-original and the demand in form GST DRC-13 and the matter is restored to the first respondent to reconsider and pass fresh orders in light of the aforesaid legal proposition – The petition is partly allowed [Read less]
Customs AAR - Classification of Unassembled Elevator Components – Import of traction machine, control panel, car frame, door mechanism, safety gear, etc. - The applicant contended that the imported components constitute the essential character of a complete elevator and therefore merit classification under tariff item 84281011 (lifts of a kind used in buildings) by application of Rule 2(a) of the General Rules for Interpretation of the Import Tariff – HELD - When goods presented in unassembled or disassembled form do not possess the essential character of a complete finished article, they cannot be classified as comple... [Read more]
Customs AAR - Classification of Unassembled Elevator Components – Import of traction machine, control panel, car frame, door mechanism, safety gear, etc. - The applicant contended that the imported components constitute the essential character of a complete elevator and therefore merit classification under tariff item 84281011 (lifts of a kind used in buildings) by application of Rule 2(a) of the General Rules for Interpretation of the Import Tariff – HELD - When goods presented in unassembled or disassembled form do not possess the essential character of a complete finished article, they cannot be classified as complete goods under Rule 2(a) of General Rule of Interpretation. Rule 2(a) applies only when incomplete or unfinished goods presented in unassembled or disassembled form possess the essential character of the complete or finished article. The Rule contemplates assembly operations only such as fixing devices (screws, nuts, bolts), riveting or welding without subjecting components to further working operations - The guiderails, brackets, fishplates, entrance jamb frame and car enclosure are not merely auxiliary but fundamental to elevator operation. The imported goods alone, valued at 49 percent of the total, cannot perform vertical transportation independently without these essential installation and structural components which constitute 51 percent of the total value. If essential components are not imported but manufactured or procured locally, it would be difficult to maintain that essential characteristics of the complete article have been achieved. The imported goods do not constitute a complete elevator in CKD form nor possess the essential character of a complete elevator, and therefore cannot be classified under tariff item 84281011. The individual components must be classified separately according to their respective nature and function under appropriate headings including 4016, 7326, 8423, 8431, 8483, 8531, 8537 and 8544 of the Customs Tariff Act – Ordered accordingly [Read less]
Customs - Misclassification of Aluminium Products – Reclassification from Profiles to Tubes - When imported goods are declared as aluminium profiles under CTH 7604 but examination reveals they are aluminium tubes mixed with profiles, reclassification to CTH 7608 for tubes is justified – HELD – The samples are drawn during examination and catalogues filed by the importer clearly indicate the presence of rectangular tubes with specific section numbers having hollow cross-sections with uniform dimensions, such goods are rightly classifiable as aluminium tubes and pipes under CTH 7608 2000 rather than aluminium profiles ... [Read more]
Customs - Misclassification of Aluminium Products – Reclassification from Profiles to Tubes - When imported goods are declared as aluminium profiles under CTH 7604 but examination reveals they are aluminium tubes mixed with profiles, reclassification to CTH 7608 for tubes is justified – HELD – The samples are drawn during examination and catalogues filed by the importer clearly indicate the presence of rectangular tubes with specific section numbers having hollow cross-sections with uniform dimensions, such goods are rightly classifiable as aluminium tubes and pipes under CTH 7608 2000 rather than aluminium profiles under CTH 7604 2990. The examination report and visual inspection conducted in the presence of witnesses and the importer's representative establish the true nature of the goods. Therefore, differential duty demand on account of reclassification for the consignment where detailed examination was conducted and samples were drawn stands upheld – Further, since the goods were mis-declared both on account of classification and valuation, the confiscation of goods is upheld though redemption fine is reduced to a reasonable amount under section 125 of the Customs Act, 1962 – The appeal is partly allowed - Undervaluation Based on Recovered Parallel Invoices – HELD - When investigations unearth parallel invoices for the same quantity and description of imported goods showing higher value than the declared value, the revenue authority is justified in rejecting the declared value and enhancing it based on recovered invoices - The difference between the declared value and the actual value as per recovered invoices constitutes sufficient evidence of misrepresentation, thereby justifying the differential duty demand on account of valuation along with interest - Invocation of Extended Period for Past Imports – Impermissibility of Multiple Show Cause Notices Based on Same Investigations – HELD - When show cause notices have already been issued invoking extended period of limitation based on investigations, the authority cannot issue another show cause notice based on the same investigations and documents recovered for a previous show cause notice without independent evidence proving that the past consignments were also misclassified or undervalued. Once the facts are known to the authorities at the time of first show cause notice, issuing subsequent show cause notices based on the same facts and documents cannot be justified as suppression of facts. Therefore, the demand of differential duty for past imports where extended period was invoked through an earlier show cause notice, cannot be sustained, and such demand is set aside except to the extent of duty payable on freight charges for the normal period - Reclassification Without Examination and Sampling in Subsequent Consignments – HELD - The subsequent consignments are sought to be reclassified on the same basis as an intercepted consignment without conducting detailed examination, drawing samples, or specifying which particular items are to be reclassified, the reclassification cannot be sustained. In the absence of physical examination, representative sampling, or documentary evidence specific to each consignment showing that the goods imported were tubes instead of profiles as declared, merely assuming similar misclassification based on the pattern found in one consignment is insufficient. Therefore, the demand for differential duty on account of reclassification for subsequent B/E is set aside along with redemption fine and all related penalties - Penalty on Third Party – HELD - A third party who is the General Manager of the foreign supplier cannot be held liable for penalty under the Customs Act for facilitating transfer of differential amounts between the importer and supplier, as such person is not engaged in violation of Customs Act provisions but merely acting in capacity of a representative of the supplier. The General Manager of the foreign supplier, though involved in collecting and forwarding differential amounts based on parallel invoices, cannot be construed as the person violating the provisions of the Customs Act, as the violation pertains to the importer's misclassification and undervaluation. Therefore, penalty imposed on such third party is set aside as there exists no justification for imposing customs penalties on a person who is not the party to the customs transaction or directly engaged in the import declaration. [Read less]
Central Excise - Deductibility of Stowing Excise Duty from Transaction Value of coal for computing excise duty - The appellant collected Stowing Excise Duty from its customers. Revenue contended that Stowing Excise Duty is includable in the assessable value of coal cleared, thereby attracting additional excise duty - Whether Stowing Excise Duty constitutes a "tax" under Section 4(3)(d) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 and therefore is deductible from the transaction value, or whether it is exigible to excise duty – HELD - The Stowing Excise Duty is a duty of excise itself and is deductible under the exclusion of "other ta... [Read more]
Central Excise - Deductibility of Stowing Excise Duty from Transaction Value of coal for computing excise duty - The appellant collected Stowing Excise Duty from its customers. Revenue contended that Stowing Excise Duty is includable in the assessable value of coal cleared, thereby attracting additional excise duty - Whether Stowing Excise Duty constitutes a "tax" under Section 4(3)(d) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 and therefore is deductible from the transaction value, or whether it is exigible to excise duty – HELD - The Stowing Excise Duty is a duty of excise itself and is deductible under the exclusion of "other taxes" provided under Section 4(3)(d) of the Act. Since Stowing Excise Duty is already a duty component, it cannot be subjected to further excise duty - No additional duty is imposed on Stowing Excise Duty as it constitutes a valid deduction from the transaction value – The appeal is disposed of - Deductibility of Royalty from Transaction Value of coal for computing excise duty - Revenue contended that Royalty should be included in the assessable value, thereby attracting additional excise duty - Whether Royalty is in the nature of a "tax" under Section 4(3)(d) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 and therefore deductible from the transaction value, or whether it is exigible to excise duty – HELD - Royalty is not in the nature of tax. Since Royalty does not fall within the exclusion of "other taxes" under Section 4(3)(d) of the CEA Act, it is not deductible from the transaction value and is therefore exigible to excise duty - Demand of duty on account of Royalty is confirmed for the period falling within the normal period of limitation, but no interest is imposed on such demand based on the Supreme Court precedent in Mineral Area Development Authority. [Read less]
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