More Judgements

2026-VIL-597-GAU-CU  | High Court CUSTOMS

Customs Act, 1962 - Section 110 – Seizure of goods on reasonable belief – Customs authorities intercepted a vehicle carrying arecanuts without production of invoices, e-way bills or delivery challans at the time of interception – Whether the seizure of goods under Section 110 of the Customs Act was justified on the ground of reasonable belief that goods are of foreign origin and liable to confiscation – HELD - The exercise of power under Section 110 of the Customs Act by the Customs official was a bonafide exercise of power satisfying the criteria of reason to believe as the circumstances present at the time of sei... [Read more]

Customs Act, 1962 - Section 110 – Seizure of goods on reasonable belief – Customs authorities intercepted a vehicle carrying arecanuts without production of invoices, e-way bills or delivery challans at the time of interception – Whether the seizure of goods under Section 110 of the Customs Act was justified on the ground of reasonable belief that goods are of foreign origin and liable to confiscation – HELD - The exercise of power under Section 110 of the Customs Act by the Customs official was a bonafide exercise of power satisfying the criteria of reason to believe as the circumstances present at the time of seizure were such that a reasonable man would by probable reasoning conclude or infer regarding the nature of the goods concerned. The merit of seizure made by a proper officer under Section 110 must be scrutinized on the basis of materials that were before the officer at the time of seizure and not on subsequently submitted documents, as the expression reason to believe denotes a primary satisfaction on objective materials and does not require a detailed adjudicatory order at that stage – The material circumstances existing at the time of seizure including the large quantity of goods, complete absence of any supporting documents, assault by the driver and his subsequent absconding, and the known pattern of smuggling in the northeastern region all collectively provided sufficient objective material to justify the officer's reasonable belief that the goods were liable to confiscation - Further, subsequent affidavits filed after considerable time gap and documents later produced do not assist in validating the satisfaction of the "reason to believe" criteria at the time of seizure. The writ petition for release of the arecanuts stands dismissed, though the seized vehicle shall be released to its owner on suitable conditions and bond, and the petitioner would be at liberty to produce all documents during the confiscation proceeding under Section 124 of the Act – The Writ petition dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1077-CESTAT-KOL-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Confiscation of gold bars seized during inter-state transit and imposition of penalties - Whether gold bars that are duty paid, have GST compliance, and are supported by purchase invoices, stock registers, job work challans and banking records can be confiscated as smuggled goods, particularly when the purity matches legitimate procurement documents and no foreign origin marking exists on the gold – HELD - The appellants have successfully discharged their onus under Section 123 of the Customs Act, 1962 by producing comprehensive documentary evidence including purchase invoices, GST returns, purchase registers, ... [Read more]

Customs - Confiscation of gold bars seized during inter-state transit and imposition of penalties - Whether gold bars that are duty paid, have GST compliance, and are supported by purchase invoices, stock registers, job work challans and banking records can be confiscated as smuggled goods, particularly when the purity matches legitimate procurement documents and no foreign origin marking exists on the gold – HELD - The appellants have successfully discharged their onus under Section 123 of the Customs Act, 1962 by producing comprehensive documentary evidence including purchase invoices, GST returns, purchase registers, job work challans and banking transaction details corroborating lawful procurement and movement of the gold. The purity of gold at 99.6% as per test report aligns with the documented purity of 99.5% in tax invoices and cannot by itself be treated as valid ground to reject the claim of lawful procurement. The gold bears no foreign origin marking and constitutes a town seizure with full GST compliance and accounting records. The duty paid nature of the gold combined with GST filing and proper documentation establishes it is not of foreign origin or smuggled. The adjudicating authority erred in discarding the documentary evidence produced by the appellants without proper consideration. No penalties can be imposed once confiscation is not justified - The impugned order of confiscation is set aside and the authorities are directed to release the gold to the appellants – The appeals are allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1070-CESTAT-CHE-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Invocation of Extended Period of Limitation - Suppression of Facts with Intent to Evade Tax - Revenue authority invoked the extended period of limitation to raise service tax demands alleging short payment, non-payment and short reversal of cenvat credit for various periods, contending that the bank had suppressed facts with intent to evade tax - Whether the Revenue is justified in invoking the extended period of limitation under the proviso to Section 73(1) of the Finance Act, 1994 against a PSU/Scheduled bank when all transactions are duly recorded in statutory books and no deliberate suppression or intent ... [Read more]

Service Tax - Invocation of Extended Period of Limitation - Suppression of Facts with Intent to Evade Tax - Revenue authority invoked the extended period of limitation to raise service tax demands alleging short payment, non-payment and short reversal of cenvat credit for various periods, contending that the bank had suppressed facts with intent to evade tax - Whether the Revenue is justified in invoking the extended period of limitation under the proviso to Section 73(1) of the Finance Act, 1994 against a PSU/Scheduled bank when all transactions are duly recorded in statutory books and no deliberate suppression or intent to evade tax is established – HELD - The admitted facts establish that the bank is a PSU/scheduled bank subject to continuous government and RBI supervision with no dispute that all transactions are duly recorded in statutory books in strict conformity with RBI guidelines and circulars. The revenue does not allege any mischief or deliberate omission by the bank. Since some issues involve pure interpretation of law and there exists no scope to allege suppression of facts with intent to evade tax, invocation of the extended period cannot sustain – The suppression requires more than mere omission or entertaining a different opinion by the revenue, and that in cases involving interpretation of law without deliberate concealment, the extended period cannot be invoked, as established in precedents dealing with suppression of facts and evidentiary standards in tax proceedings - The appeals filed by the assessee are allowed on the ground of limitation itself. The demands raised invoking the larger period are set aside – The appeals filed by appellant-assessee are allowed and the department appeals stand dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1072-CESTAT-KOL-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - CENVAT Credit on Capital Goods – Eligibility of CENVAT Credit on Tippers Received Prior to Notification dated 22.06.2010 - CENVAT Credit eligibility on tippers/capital goods received prior to statutory inclusion in the definition of capital goods - Tippers were formally included in the definition of eligible capital goods vide Notification No. 25/2010-C.E.(N.T.) dated 22.06.2010. Vehicle registration for the tippers was obtained after 22.06.2010, and the credit was utilized only from May 2011 onwards - Department denied CENVAT Credit on the ground that tippers were not eligible capital goods at the time of ... [Read more]

Service Tax - CENVAT Credit on Capital Goods – Eligibility of CENVAT Credit on Tippers Received Prior to Notification dated 22.06.2010 - CENVAT Credit eligibility on tippers/capital goods received prior to statutory inclusion in the definition of capital goods - Tippers were formally included in the definition of eligible capital goods vide Notification No. 25/2010-C.E.(N.T.) dated 22.06.2010. Vehicle registration for the tippers was obtained after 22.06.2010, and the credit was utilized only from May 2011 onwards - Department denied CENVAT Credit on the ground that tippers were not eligible capital goods at the time of their receipt and accounting in books - Whether CENVAT Credit can be denied on tippers received and accounted for prior to the date when tippers were formally included in the definition of capital goods, when the said tippers were not actually used for rendering output service until after the date of such inclusion and when the credit availment was disclosed in statutory returns and examined during Departmental audit – HELD - CENVAT Credit availed on the tippers cannot be denied on the ground that the vehicles were received prior to 22.06.2010. The vehicles cannot be put to use without registration under the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, and the registration of the tippers in question was obtained after 22.06.2010. The eligibility of CENVAT Credit on capital goods is required to be considered when the said goods are actually put to use for rendering the output service, not merely at the time of receipt. The insertion of tippers as eligible capital goods vide the notification dated 22.06.2010 is clarificatory in nature as evidenced by Board Instructions dated 23.10.2008, which recognized that vehicles supplied as tangible goods in rendering specified output services are in the nature of inputs – The CENVAT Credit on tippers and dumpers cannot be denied merely on account of procedural infractions or technical grounds when the assessee is otherwise entitled to the same and when duty has been paid on the vehicles and the same have been used in rendering the output service. Furthermore, the extended period of limitation could not be invoked as the credit availment was duly reflected in statutory ST-3 returns, the issue was examined during departmental audit conducted in 2012, and no fraud, collusion, wilful misstatement or suppression of facts with intent to evade payment of duty could be attributed to the appellant - The disallowance of CENVAT Credit and recovery thereof along with interest is set aside, and the penalty imposed under Section 78 of the Finance Act, 1994 is dropped - The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1069-CESTAT-KOL-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax liability on renting of immovable property, period of judicial uncertainty, applicability of extended period of limitation - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked for demanding service tax on renting of immovable property when the taxability of such service remained under judicial uncertainty throughout the relevant period – HELD - During the period from March 2008 to March 2011, the taxability of renting of immovable property was sub-judice before the Delhi High Court. The initial levy was struck down as ultra vires on April 18, 2009, thereafter retrospectively amended through the Finance ... [Read more]

Service Tax liability on renting of immovable property, period of judicial uncertainty, applicability of extended period of limitation - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked for demanding service tax on renting of immovable property when the taxability of such service remained under judicial uncertainty throughout the relevant period – HELD - During the period from March 2008 to March 2011, the taxability of renting of immovable property was sub-judice before the Delhi High Court. The initial levy was struck down as ultra vires on April 18, 2009, thereafter retrospectively amended through the Finance Act, 2010, and again stayed on May 18, 2010, with finality reached only on September 23, 2011. The suppression with willful intent to evade service tax cannot be fastened on the appellant as the appellant acted on bonafide belief about non-applicability of service tax and made no charges to the lessees. Being a public sector undertaking, the appellant cannot be said to have any intention to evade taxes - Since the show cause notice was issued on October 9, 2012, prior to the amendment of Section 73 on May 10, 2013, the old legal position applies where no demand can be sustained for the normal period if the extended period is found not invokable. The agreements show the entire factory premises including plant, godowns and land have been leased out, thus the appellant's argument that only land was leased is rejected. However, the absence of any allegation in the show cause notice regarding deliberate suppression, combined with the period of profound legal uncertainty, makes the case fall outside the conditions necessary for invoking the extended period - The entire confirmed demand is set aside on account of time-bar. The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-601-GAU  | High Court SGST

GST - Cancellation of GST Registration - Requirement of Speaking Order – Issue of Show Cause Notice for failure to furnish returns for a continuous period of six months but the SCN did not specify the exact period during which returns were not filed – The cancellation order was passed without petitioner furnishing any reply or appearing for personal hearing - Whether the cancellation of GST registration is valid when the cancellation order does not assign proper reasons – HELD – The statutory prescription to record reasons as mandated by Form GST REG-19 under Rule 22(3) of the CGST Rules, 2017 - The adjudicating au... [Read more]

GST - Cancellation of GST Registration - Requirement of Speaking Order – Issue of Show Cause Notice for failure to furnish returns for a continuous period of six months but the SCN did not specify the exact period during which returns were not filed – The cancellation order was passed without petitioner furnishing any reply or appearing for personal hearing - Whether the cancellation of GST registration is valid when the cancellation order does not assign proper reasons – HELD – The statutory prescription to record reasons as mandated by Form GST REG-19 under Rule 22(3) of the CGST Rules, 2017 - The adjudicating authority exercising statutory power of cancellation under the Act must record reasons for its decision as it is implicit in the principles of natural justice and fair play and forms part of fair procedure, particularly when the decision affects the rights of the person concerned. Recording of reasons is a check against arbitrary action and demonstrates conscious application of mind - The statute itself prescribes that reasons must be recorded in the decision through Form GST REG-19, and absence of reasons violates this statutory prescription and renders the order illegal. The fact that the assessee did not submit any reply or appear before the officer does not absolve the officer from the obligation of passing a speaking order, as any order bringing adverse consequences cannot be a mere paper formality - The impugned cancellation order is set aside and quashed and the matter is reverted to the stage of issuance of the show cause notice - The writ petition stands allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-603-MAD  | High Court SGST

GST - Refund claim - Bunching across tax periods - Whether bunching of refund claims across multiple tax periods is permissible under GST law – HELD - The CBIC Circular dated 31.03.2020 permits bunching of refund claims across tax periods. The said Circular was required to be taken into consideration while deciding the refund application. The respondent authority failed to consider the applicable Circular while issuing the impugned rejection order - The impugned order is set aside and the matter is remanded to the respondent for reconsideration – The writ petition is disposed of

2026-VIL-600-GAU  | High Court SGST

GST - Validity of Summary of Show Cause Notice as substitute for Show Cause Notice - Whether a Summary of Show Cause Notice in Form DRC-01 can constitute a valid Show Cause Notice as required under Section 73(1) of the CGST Act, 2017 – HELD - The Rule 142(1)(a) of the CGST Rules, 2017 merely contemplates a summary to accompany the Show Cause Notice, but the actual Show Cause Notice must be issued separately by the Proper Officer. The statement provided under Section 73(3) is distinct and cannot be equated with the Show Cause Notice under Section 73(1) - The Order in Original is set aside and quashed. The Summary of Show ... [Read more]

GST - Validity of Summary of Show Cause Notice as substitute for Show Cause Notice - Whether a Summary of Show Cause Notice in Form DRC-01 can constitute a valid Show Cause Notice as required under Section 73(1) of the CGST Act, 2017 – HELD - The Rule 142(1)(a) of the CGST Rules, 2017 merely contemplates a summary to accompany the Show Cause Notice, but the actual Show Cause Notice must be issued separately by the Proper Officer. The statement provided under Section 73(3) is distinct and cannot be equated with the Show Cause Notice under Section 73(1) - The Order in Original is set aside and quashed. The Summary of Show Cause Notice is not set aside, but the Respondent is directed to issue a fresh Show Cause Notice in compliance with Section 73(1) of the Act, properly detailing the cause of action and authenticated by the Proper Officer. The fresh Show Cause Notice shall date back to the date of issuance of the Summary, and the period from the date of Summary till the date of service of the present order is excluded from the period of limitation under Section 73(10) of the Act for passing the final order – The writ petition stands disposed of [Read less]

2026-VIL-596-TEL  | High Court VAT

Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 - Antedated assessment order passed beyond statutory limitation period and served after two and half years without proof of prior service of notices - Whether assessment order dated 28.03.2005 for assessment year 2001-02, served only on 10.08.2007, is valid when limitation period expired on 31.03.2005 and arrears notices were issued prior to service of assessment order – HELD - The assessment order is invalid and liable to be set aside as it was passed beyond the prescribed period of limitation of three years. The circumstances surrounding its issuance and service create serious... [Read more]

Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1957 - Antedated assessment order passed beyond statutory limitation period and served after two and half years without proof of prior service of notices - Whether assessment order dated 28.03.2005 for assessment year 2001-02, served only on 10.08.2007, is valid when limitation period expired on 31.03.2005 and arrears notices were issued prior to service of assessment order – HELD - The assessment order is invalid and liable to be set aside as it was passed beyond the prescribed period of limitation of three years. The circumstances surrounding its issuance and service create serious doubt regarding its authenticity. The assessment order was purportedly dated 28.03.2005, merely three days before the expiry of the limitation period, but was served only after two and a half years. The absence of any proof of service of the show-cause notice, final notice, or assessment order prior to the issuance of arrears notices further supports the inference that the assessment order was antedated. The arrears notices were issued on 10.07.2007 and 03.08.2007 before the assessment order was served on 10.08.2007, indicating that the entire exercise appears to have been undertaken only to circumvent the statutory limitation prescribed under the Act - The assessment proceedings are vitiated due to lack of proper service of notices and violation of statutory procedure - The impugned assessment order and the consequential arrears notices are quashed and the petition is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-604-MAD  | High Court SGST

GST - Waiver of interest and penalty - Whether an applicant can be denied waiver of interest and penalty under Section 128-A of the CGST Act, 2017 on the ground that the applicant availed input tax credit from non-existing taxpayers, cancelled dealers, and return defaulters, when the assessment proceedings were initiated under Section 73 instead of Section 74 – HELD - Where the authority relies on grounds pertaining to wrongful availment of input tax credit, such proceedings should have been initiated under Section 74, which deals with circumstances where a person has received an ineligible refund or availed credit not p... [Read more]

GST - Waiver of interest and penalty - Whether an applicant can be denied waiver of interest and penalty under Section 128-A of the CGST Act, 2017 on the ground that the applicant availed input tax credit from non-existing taxpayers, cancelled dealers, and return defaulters, when the assessment proceedings were initiated under Section 73 instead of Section 74 – HELD - Where the authority relies on grounds pertaining to wrongful availment of input tax credit, such proceedings should have been initiated under Section 74, which deals with circumstances where a person has received an ineligible refund or availed credit not permissible. Since the record demonstrates that proceedings were initiated under Section 73, which pertains to discrepancies in returns and tax payable, the rejection order based on ineligibility grounds falls outside the permissible scope of Section 128-A. The application was filed within the prescribed temporal limits of the Act and meets the conditions for waiver eligibility - The impugned rejection order is set aside and the respondents are directed to reconsider and pass fresh orders on the waiver application – The writ petition is disposed of [Read less]

2026-VIL-55-SC  | Supreme Court SGST

GST - Uploading of assessment order on electronic portal, Maintainability of petition on account of delay and laches - Whether a Special Leave Petition is maintainable when the petitioner has failed to avail the statutory appeal remedy and approached the High Court belatedly, after becoming aware of the assessment order – HELD - It is patently clear from the impugned assessment order that the factual matrix giving rise to the SCN has been elaborately discussed by the officer concerned. The petitioner had an open remedy available under Section 107 of the CGST Act, 2017, by way of an appeal against the assessment order. Th... [Read more]

GST - Uploading of assessment order on electronic portal, Maintainability of petition on account of delay and laches - Whether a Special Leave Petition is maintainable when the petitioner has failed to avail the statutory appeal remedy and approached the High Court belatedly, after becoming aware of the assessment order – HELD - It is patently clear from the impugned assessment order that the factual matrix giving rise to the SCN has been elaborately discussed by the officer concerned. The petitioner had an open remedy available under Section 107 of the CGST Act, 2017, by way of an appeal against the assessment order. The contention that the petitioner was unaware of the order because it was uploaded on the electronic portal is not convincing, as electronic communication cannot be overlooked. Furthermore, the petitioner himself admits that he became aware of the proceedings much earlier in 2024 and thereafter approached the High Court belatedly in 2025, by which time the remedy of appeal had become time-barred. The High Court had rightly declined to entertain the Writ Petition as a surrogate to appellate proceedings which the petitioner had not availed. The present case stands on a different factual matter from the similar issue pending consideration before the Court - The Special Leave Petition is dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1084-CESTAT-KOL-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Applicability of limitation period on refund of erroneously paid service tax under Reverse Charge – Movement of goods partly by road through a transport contractor and partly by rail - The service provider raised invoices charging service tax on the transport contractor, which were endorsed in favor of appellant – The Appellant, under the mistaken belief that Reverse Charge mechanism was applicable to rail transportation services, paid service tax on the same transportation services for which the service provider had already discharged service tax liability - Whether the appellant is entitled to claim ref... [Read more]

Service Tax - Applicability of limitation period on refund of erroneously paid service tax under Reverse Charge – Movement of goods partly by road through a transport contractor and partly by rail - The service provider raised invoices charging service tax on the transport contractor, which were endorsed in favor of appellant – The Appellant, under the mistaken belief that Reverse Charge mechanism was applicable to rail transportation services, paid service tax on the same transportation services for which the service provider had already discharged service tax liability - Whether the appellant is entitled to claim refund of service tax paid by it on transportation of goods by the service provider when the service provider had already paid service tax on the same services and the appellant also paid service tax under RCM – HELD - The fundamental principle is that service tax cannot be levied twice on the same activity. If service tax has been discharged on the same transportation activity by both the service provider and the appellant under RCM by mistake, then the service tax paid by the appellant is required to be refunded. The matter requires examination by the adjudicating authority to ascertain whether service tax has indeed been paid twice on the same services - When service tax has been paid erroneously under the RCM on services that were not payable by the service recipient, the limitation period prescribed under Section 11B of the Central Excise Act, 1944 does not apply to refund claims - The period of limitation cannot be invoked when amounts have been paid under a mistake of law and the revenue had no jurisdiction to collect or retain. Such payments are in the nature of mere deposits and not duty or amount payable in law - The matter is sent back to the adjudicating authority to examine whether service tax has been paid twice on the same transportation services and to pass an appropriate order in accordance with law. The limitation period is held to be inapplicable to the refund claims in question - The appeals are disposed of by way of remand [Read less]

2026-VIL-1074-CESTAT-KOL-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme – Denial of benefits on ground of non-filing of periodic returns and disallowance of CENVAT Credit – Whether adjudicating authority has properly examined the issues regarding availment of CENVAT Credit on the basis of cenvatable invoices and actual tax liability – HELD - The benefit of the Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme was denied to the assessee on the sole premise of non-filing of periodical Service Tax returns, whereby the amount paid by the assessee was not considered as payment of tax and CENVAT Credit availed was also denied. The assessee had pr... [Read more]

Service Tax - Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme – Denial of benefits on ground of non-filing of periodic returns and disallowance of CENVAT Credit – Whether adjudicating authority has properly examined the issues regarding availment of CENVAT Credit on the basis of cenvatable invoices and actual tax liability – HELD - The benefit of the Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme was denied to the assessee on the sole premise of non-filing of periodical Service Tax returns, whereby the amount paid by the assessee was not considered as payment of tax and CENVAT Credit availed was also denied. The assessee had produced all requisite records and documents before the adjudicating authority including cenvatable invoices, actual tax liability calculations, and supporting evidence regarding the CENVAT Credit claimed. The furnishing of periodic returns is not a condition precedent for taking CENVAT Credit, and the denial of such credit merely on the ground of non-furnishing of returns is not sustainable in law – Further, the adjudicating authority has not properly examined the issue of whether the amounts paid by the assessee constitute payment of tax or whether the CENVAT Credit was validly availed. In view of the fact that these critical issues were not examined on merits by the adjudicating authority by taking all the records placed by the assessee into account, the impugned order is set aside and matter is remanded back to the adjudicating authority to decide the issues on merits after considering all the records and evidence placed by the assessee and to pass a speaking order in accordance with law – The appeal is disposed of by way of remand [Read less]

2026-VIL-599-TEL  | High Court VAT

Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax, 1957 - Works Contract - Double taxation through inclusion of amounts already assessed in prior and subsequent assessment years in turnover computation - Whether the orders confirming assessment of the entire amount received during the assessment year as turnover, without deducting amounts already subjected to tax in preceding and subsequent years, amounts to double taxation and violates the principle against undue enrichment – HELD - The turnover under Section 2(s) of the APGST Act, 1957 means the amount payable based on invoices raised for works executed during that specific assessment ... [Read more]

Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax, 1957 - Works Contract - Double taxation through inclusion of amounts already assessed in prior and subsequent assessment years in turnover computation - Whether the orders confirming assessment of the entire amount received during the assessment year as turnover, without deducting amounts already subjected to tax in preceding and subsequent years, amounts to double taxation and violates the principle against undue enrichment – HELD - The turnover under Section 2(s) of the APGST Act, 1957 means the amount payable based on invoices raised for works executed during that specific assessment year - The authorities failed to properly verify and address the dealer's contention that amounts relating to work executed in other assessment years and already subjected to tax in those years should not be included in the turnover for the disputed assessment year. Including such amounts results in double taxation leading to undue enrichment which is impermissible - The expression "turnover" as defined in the statute, read with the provisions relating to works contracts, explicitly contemplates only amounts for works executed during the assessment year in question. The orders passed by the assessing authority, Appellate Commissioner, and Tribunal failed to specifically deal with this material contention despite categorical averments and supporting evidence produced by the dealer – The impugned orders are set aside and the matter is remitted to the assessing authority to verify the books of account and materials to determine whether the net turnover includes amounts already assessed in the previous year and subsequent year and pass a fresh order accordingly – The Tax Revision Case stands partly allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-595-TEL  | High Court SGST

GST – Limitation, Remedy of Rectification Application – Petitioner filed rectification application seeking rectification of original assessment order within the prescribed time limit, which remains pending for about one year before being rejected - Assessee filed an appeal before the Appellate Authority within three months from the date of rejection of the rectification application, though more than one and half years have elapsed from the date of the original assessment order - Whether an appeal filed after rejection of a rectification application, though within three months from such rejection, can be dismissed on th... [Read more]

GST – Limitation, Remedy of Rectification Application – Petitioner filed rectification application seeking rectification of original assessment order within the prescribed time limit, which remains pending for about one year before being rejected - Assessee filed an appeal before the Appellate Authority within three months from the date of rejection of the rectification application, though more than one and half years have elapsed from the date of the original assessment order - Whether an appeal filed after rejection of a rectification application, though within three months from such rejection, can be dismissed on the ground of limitation when the assessee has been genuinely pursuing the statutory remedies – HELD - When an assessee is genuinely pursuing remedies available under the statute by first filing a rectification application within the prescribed time and thereafter filing an appeal within three months from the rejection of such rectification application, the appeal should not be rejected on a hyper-technical aspect of limitation merely because more than one and half years have elapsed from the date of the original order. The appellate authority should take a pragmatic approach and either decide the appeal on merits or advise the assessee to amend the memorandum of appeal to cure any technical defects relating to limitation, rather than summarily dismissing the appeal on a technical ground when the assessee has been continuously pursuing available remedies - The order dismissing the appeal on the ground of being barred by limitation is set aside and the matter is remitted back to the Appellate Authority to decide the appeal on its merits – The writ petition is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1085-CESTAT-DEL-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs – Eligibility to exemption from Social Welfare Surcharge on camera modules for mobile phones under Notification No. 11/2018-Cus - The imported camera modules could only function as digital cameras after being assembled with other mobile phone components and lacked independent features such as internal storage device, output terminals, optical viewfinder, or liquid crystal display in their imported condition - Whether the appellant is eligible to claim exemption from payment of Social Welfare Surcharge under entry no. 30 of Notification No. 11/2018-Cus dated 02.02.2018 while importing camera modules for mobile pho... [Read more]

Customs – Eligibility to exemption from Social Welfare Surcharge on camera modules for mobile phones under Notification No. 11/2018-Cus - The imported camera modules could only function as digital cameras after being assembled with other mobile phone components and lacked independent features such as internal storage device, output terminals, optical viewfinder, or liquid crystal display in their imported condition - Whether the appellant is eligible to claim exemption from payment of Social Welfare Surcharge under entry no. 30 of Notification No. 11/2018-Cus dated 02.02.2018 while importing camera modules for mobile phones – HELD - The Notification No. 11/2018-Cus dated 02.02.2018 explicitly requires that goods must satisfy two conditions i.e. classification under tariff item 85258020, and second, the goods must answer the description of a "Digital Still Image Video Camera." While the classification condition is satisfied, the second condition is not fulfilled because camera modules are distinct products from digital still image video cameras. Although both may be classified under the same tariff heading, camera modules cannot independently perform the functions of a digital camera at the time of import. A camera module requires assembly with other mobile phone components to function as a digital camera, whereas a digital still image video camera is a standalone product with built-in storage, output terminals, viewfinders, and display features in its imported condition – The functionality similarity at a post-import stage cannot establish that goods satisfy the notification's description requirement at the point of importation. The exemption notifications must be interpreted strictly and the assessee bears the burden of establishing that goods satisfy all conditions specified in the notification. The exclusion of camera modules from the basic customs duty exemption under Notification No. 37/2018 indicates legislative intent to distinguish camera modules from complete digital cameras - The camera modules, being parts of mobile phones that only acquire digital camera functionality after assembly, do not satisfy the description requirement of the notification - the Order-in-Original upholding the demand for Social Welfare Surcharge is upheld. The penalty imposed under section 112(b)(ii) of the Customs Act, 1962 and confiscation of goods are held to be justified – The appeal is dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1083-CESTAT-BLR-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Sampling procedure for imported coal - Applicability of IS 436 standard – Import of coking coal and claiming exemption under Notification No.21/2002-CUS dated 01.03.2002 and Notification No.20/2006-Cus. dated 01.03.2006 - Revenue authority denied the benefit after testing the imported goods. The testing samples are drawn without following the prescribed IS 436 standard procedure, and subsequently, the test results from the load port and the Central Institute of Mining and Fuel Research do not match. The company requests re-testing by an independent laboratory after receiving the test report with a delay of eigh... [Read more]

Customs - Sampling procedure for imported coal - Applicability of IS 436 standard – Import of coking coal and claiming exemption under Notification No.21/2002-CUS dated 01.03.2002 and Notification No.20/2006-Cus. dated 01.03.2006 - Revenue authority denied the benefit after testing the imported goods. The testing samples are drawn without following the prescribed IS 436 standard procedure, and subsequently, the test results from the load port and the Central Institute of Mining and Fuel Research do not match. The company requests re-testing by an independent laboratory after receiving the test report with a delay of eight months, and also objects to the sampling procedure retroactively - Whether the Revenue is justified in denying the benefit of the exemption notification when the samples drawn for testing do not comply with the IS 436 standard procedure – HELD - As established by the Supreme Court's decision in the case of Tata Chemicals Ltd., the samples must be drawn in accordance with the IS 436 standard. If the method of testing is not mentioned in the tariff, the Indian Standard Institution's method applies to both Excise and Customs matters. There can be no estoppel against law and the Customs authorities cannot be absolved from following the prescribed procedure merely because a representative was present or because the objection was raised subsequently - Where a variation exists between test reports from different laboratories, the request for re-testing cannot be ignored as an afterthought merely because it was made after eight months, particularly when the original test report itself was communicated after such a delay - The appeal filed by the Revenue is dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1086-CESTAT-BLR-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax – Majority Order - Classification of Site Formation Services as Works Contract - Classification of services rendered in relation to development of residential layouts - Appellant undertook conversion of agricultural land to residential use, obtained statutory approvals, and executed extensive civil infrastructure works prior to selling developed sites to housing societies and individual buyers. The assessee had also paid VAT under a composition scheme under State VAT Act and had voluntarily obtained service tax registration under works contract category - Whether the services rendered by the appellant as to b... [Read more]

Service Tax – Majority Order - Classification of Site Formation Services as Works Contract - Classification of services rendered in relation to development of residential layouts - Appellant undertook conversion of agricultural land to residential use, obtained statutory approvals, and executed extensive civil infrastructure works prior to selling developed sites to housing societies and individual buyers. The assessee had also paid VAT under a composition scheme under State VAT Act and had voluntarily obtained service tax registration under works contract category - Whether the services rendered by the appellant as to be classifiable under ‘Site Formation and Clearance, Excavation, Earth Moving and Demolition Service’ as held by the Member (Technical) or whether the services rendered by the appellant as to be classifiable under ‘Works Contract’ as held by the Member (Judicial) - HELD - The activities undertaken by the assessee involve transfer of property in goods in the execution of the contract, encompassing construction, erection, completion, fitting out and alteration of immovable property, which are hallmarks of works contract as defined under Section 65(54) of the Finance Act, 1994. The court applied the principle laid down by the Supreme Court in Larsen and Toubro that in composite contracts involving both goods and services, the most specific description must be preferred over general description, and that service tax cannot be imposed on a portion of the total consideration. The assessee had paid VAT on composition basis under State law, which triggers the Board's Circular clarification that contracts treated as works contract for VAT purposes shall be treated as works contract for service tax purposes – It is observed that approximately 70 per cent of the total value comprises cost of materials and infrastructure facilities, demonstrating a composite nature of the contract. The site formation service under Section 65(97a) refers to preparatory activities antecedent to construction, while the present activities involve comprehensive construction and installation services that extend beyond mere site formation and clearance – All the activities carried out in respect of movable or immovable property wherein transfer of property is involved and the supply of goods on payment of VAT is involved would fall under the category of ‘Works Contract’ only. Applying the cited case-laws, the statutory provisions and the Board’s clarification, it is held that the services provided by the appellant falls within the classification of ‘Works Contract service’ only – Ordered accordingly [Read less]

2026-VIL-1076-CESTAT-BLR-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Preferential rate of duty on import of tin ingots under India-ASEAN PTA Rules and validity of Certificate of Origin – Appellant-importer of non-ferrous metals imported tin ingots from Singapore under eight bills of entry, claiming preferential rate of duty by relying on Country of Origin certificates issued by the competent Malaysian authority (MITI) in accordance with India-ASEAN PTA Rules and India-Malaysia PTA Rules. A show cause notice was issued alleging non-compliance with exemption notifications and claiming wrongful availment of preferential duty benefit - Whether the appellant is entitled to preferenti... [Read more]

Customs - Preferential rate of duty on import of tin ingots under India-ASEAN PTA Rules and validity of Certificate of Origin – Appellant-importer of non-ferrous metals imported tin ingots from Singapore under eight bills of entry, claiming preferential rate of duty by relying on Country of Origin certificates issued by the competent Malaysian authority (MITI) in accordance with India-ASEAN PTA Rules and India-Malaysia PTA Rules. A show cause notice was issued alleging non-compliance with exemption notifications and claiming wrongful availment of preferential duty benefit - Whether the appellant is entitled to preferential rate of duty on import of goods when valid Country of Origin certificates issued by the competent government authority of the exporting country are produced, and whether the customs authority can deny such benefit without strictly following the retroactive check procedure mandated under the Rules of origin – HELD - The Country of Origin certificates issued by the Government authority of the exporting country constitute the only documentary evidence of origin as prescribed in the India-ASEAN PTA Rules and India-Malaysia PTA Rules. Once such valid evidence is produced, it is sufficient to prove the origin of goods unless the same is discarded or revoked by the issuing authority during the retroactive check procedure. During the relevant period of import, there was no mandatory requirement on the importer to possess sufficient information regarding the manner in which the Regional Value Content criteria were satisfied, as such requirement was made mandatory only with effect from 27.03.2020 through insertion of Section 28DA of the Customs Act and the introduction of the Customs (Administration of Rules of Origin under Trade Agreements) Rules, 2020 - If there is reasonable doubt as to the authenticity of the document or accuracy of information regarding origin, a retroactive check can be requested, but this process including determination of whether goods are originating must be completed and communicated to the importer within six months of presentation of the certificate. The facts behind issuance of the certificate are matters within the knowledge and control of the exporting country's Government authority, and neither the importer nor the Customs authority is legally supposed to possess such information at the time of filing the B/E, provided the importer scrupulously complies by submitting the required documents including the valid certificate - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-598-KAR-ST  | High Court SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Banking services - Minimum Average Balance as Consideration – Petitioners-Banks provided various facilities and services to customers who maintained a Minimum Average Balance (MAB) in their accounts, without charging any monetary consideration for such services. When MAB was not maintained, Banks charged penalty/fees on which service tax was duly discharged - Authorities issued Show Cause Notices demanding service tax on the basis that the commitment of customers to maintain MAB constituted non-monetary consideration for the services provided by banks - Whether services provided by banks to customers mainta... [Read more]

Service Tax - Banking services - Minimum Average Balance as Consideration – Petitioners-Banks provided various facilities and services to customers who maintained a Minimum Average Balance (MAB) in their accounts, without charging any monetary consideration for such services. When MAB was not maintained, Banks charged penalty/fees on which service tax was duly discharged - Authorities issued Show Cause Notices demanding service tax on the basis that the commitment of customers to maintain MAB constituted non-monetary consideration for the services provided by banks - Whether services provided by banks to customers maintaining MAB, without any monetary or non-monetary consideration being charged, amount to taxable services under Section 65B(44) and Section 66E(e) of the Finance Act, 1994 and whether the customer's obligation to maintain MAB constitutes consideration for such services as defined under Section 67 of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - For a transaction to be taxable under service tax law, there must be an activity carried out by one person for another for consideration. The definition of consideration under both the Indian Contract Act, 1872 and the Finance Act, 1994 requires that consideration must necessarily accrue to and vest in the service provider. In the present case, the banks have not charged any consideration, monetary or non-monetary, and MAB maintenance is merely a contractual condition, not the consideration for the services. Applying the inversion test, when MAB is not maintained, the bank charges penalty but continues to provide the same services at the same rate, which demonstrates that MAB is merely a condition of contract and not a consideration for an independent service – The transaction comprises the maintenance of a deposit in a bank account and the levy of a penalty in the event of a breach, upon which the requisite Service Tax stands duly discharged. Consequently, the transaction does not give rise to any further taxable element or facet warranting examination through the prism of Service Tax - The Supreme Court judgments in Bhayana Builders (P) Ltd and in Edelweiss Financial Services Ltd cases establish that unless an amount is charged by the service provider to the service recipient, it does not enter into the equation for determining the value on which service tax is payable – Further, the CBIC Circular No.178/10/2022-GST dated 03.08.2022 explicitly states that there must be a necessary and sufficient nexus between the supply and the consideration, and an agreement to do or tolerate an act cannot be presumed to exist merely because there is a flow of money or commitment from one party to another. The respondents themselves had dropped identical proceedings against another bank by accepting substantially similar contentions. The impugned notices are contrary to the Circulars issued by the respondents themselves and the scheme and mandate of the Finance Act, 1994 provisions - The show cause notices demanding service tax and all further proceedings emanating therefrom are quashed. The writ petitions are allowed - Service Tax - Valuation of Services - Whether penal charges collected for non-maintenance of MAB can be treated as consideration for valuing services provided free of cost - HELD – The penal charges are distinct from consideration and are levied only to deter non-compliance with contractual terms, the penalty amount cannot be equated with the value of services as it represents compensation for breach and not quid pro quo for services provided when MAB is maintained, and the principle established by the Apex Court in Bhayana Builders case requires that consideration must be for the actual service provided with direct nexus between the supply and the consideration charged - Service Tax - Applicability of Board Circulars - Whether tax authorities are bound by circulars issued by the Board - HELD – The Circulars issued by the Board are binding on the Department and the Department cannot take a stand contrary to instructions issued by the Board, the Circulars dated 03.08.2022 and 28.02.2023 specifically clarify that an independent contract with express or implied agreement establishing necessary and sufficient nexus between supply and consideration is essential for taxability, and agreements cannot be presumed from mere flow of money, therefore show cause notices issued contrary to these circulars are without jurisdiction and authority of law - Service Tax - Jurisdiction of High Court under Article 226 - Whether writ petition is maintainable when alternative statutory remedy is available - HELD - when the respondents have acted beyond the scope of their jurisdiction by issuing show cause notices for services not falling within the taxable definition, the High Court can exercise writ jurisdiction as the issue involves a pure question of law without any disputed questions of fact, the pre-determined stand of the respondents makes alternative remedies futile, and the finding that the relevant jurisdictional facts are missing renders the proceedings ex facie illegal, therefore the High Court is entitled to entertain the petitions. 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2026-VIL-602-ALH  | High Court SGST

GST – Proceedings for delayed or non-deposit of GST amount - BNS, 2023 vs. CGST/SGST Act, 2017 - Invocation of General Penal provisions under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita without resort to special statute providing exhaustive mechanism – The applicant was accused of delayed/non-deposit of GST/TDS amount deducted from payments made in relation to execution of Gram Sabha development works - Whether the authorities can legally initiate criminal prosecution by invoking the penal provisions of Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita without invoking the penal provisions and mandatory statutory procedure prescribed under the GST Act, which is a ... [Read more]

GST – Proceedings for delayed or non-deposit of GST amount - BNS, 2023 vs. CGST/SGST Act, 2017 - Invocation of General Penal provisions under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita without resort to special statute providing exhaustive mechanism – The applicant was accused of delayed/non-deposit of GST/TDS amount deducted from payments made in relation to execution of Gram Sabha development works - Whether the authorities can legally initiate criminal prosecution by invoking the penal provisions of Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita without invoking the penal provisions and mandatory statutory procedure prescribed under the GST Act, which is a special statute providing a complete mechanism for adjudication, penalty and prosecution – HELD – The CGST/SGST Act, 2017 is a complete and self-contained special statute providing comprehensive machinery relating to deduction of tax, assessment, adjudication, penalty and prosecution. Sections 50, 51, 122, 126 and 138 of the GST Act unmistakably demonstrate that the legislature has consciously created a complete code to deal with all contingencies arising out of non-deduction, short deduction, delayed deposit or non-deposit of GST amount, including determination of liability, imposition of interest, levy of penalty, prosecution and compounding of offences. Once the field is specifically occupied by a special statute providing an exhaustive mechanism, resort to the provisions of general penal law can be justified only where the allegations independently disclose essential ingredients of distinct criminal offences such as dishonest misappropriation, forgery, fabrication of records, cheating or wrongful gain - In the present case, the allegation against the applicant is confined only to delayed/non-deposit of GST/TDS amount, with no allegation of embezzlement, dishonest misappropriation, siphoning of money, fabrication or manipulation of records, fake transactions, forged documents or wrongful gain. The material brought on record indicates that the amount allegedly not deposited was subsequently deposited in the government account. Thus, the allegations squarely fall within the statutory framework of the GST Act and not within the ambit of general penal provisions - Initiation of criminal prosecution under general penal law, without resorting to the statutory mechanism prescribed under the GST Act is legally unsustainable - The impugned charge sheet and cognizance/summoning order and proceedings are quashed. However, the order does not preclude authorities concerned to proceed against the applicant under the UPGST Act, 2017 – The application is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1075-CESTAT-DEL-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Duty of Customs Broker in verifying authenticity of duty credit scrips - Whether a customs broker who utilizes forged duty credit scrips without physical verification and without ascertaining authenticity from the licensing authority's records can be held liable for penalty under section 114 AA of the Customs Act, 1962, even in the absence of direct knowledge or intention to defraud – HELD - The regulations governing Customs brokers impose a mandatory duty upon them to exercise due diligence and verify the authenticity of documents before using them for customs clearance. The notification dated 11.09.2009 manda... [Read more]

Customs - Duty of Customs Broker in verifying authenticity of duty credit scrips - Whether a customs broker who utilizes forged duty credit scrips without physical verification and without ascertaining authenticity from the licensing authority's records can be held liable for penalty under section 114 AA of the Customs Act, 1962, even in the absence of direct knowledge or intention to defraud – HELD - The regulations governing Customs brokers impose a mandatory duty upon them to exercise due diligence and verify the authenticity of documents before using them for customs clearance. The notification dated 11.09.2009 mandates that duty credit scrips must be produced before the proper officer at the time of clearance for debit of duties. A customs broker occupies an important position as a link between customs authorities and importers, and considerable trust is reposed in them by both the government and trade. Any contravention of statutory obligations, even without intent, is sufficient to invite punishment as prescribed in the customs broker licensing regulations. In the present case, the broker's failure to obtain and verify physical copies of the scrips, combined with the failure to confirm the particulars from the licensing authority's website, constitutes negligence in discharge of statutory duty. Such negligence reflects an element of knowledge and conscious facilitation of forged documents, thereby invoking the penal provision. The conscious failure to exercise reasonable diligence required of a prudent customs broker, despite receiving scrips without physical documentation, amounts to violation of statutory obligations sufficient to sustain the penalty - The order imposing penalty is upheld and the appeal is dismissed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1073-CESTAT-ALH-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Demand Based on Profit & Loss Account and Form-26AS Statement – Appellant engaged in business of sale of goods and provision of interior designing services did not obtain Service Tax registration as taxable services remained below threshold limit in preceding years - Revenue raised demand invoking longer period of limitation based on figures shown in Income Tax Return and Form-26AS statement; Appellant contended that Form-26AS statement was prepared by Income Tax Department and not by taxpayers and contained errors, and that figures differed with turnover declared in Profit & Loss Account with no enquiry co... [Read more]

Service Tax - Demand Based on Profit & Loss Account and Form-26AS Statement – Appellant engaged in business of sale of goods and provision of interior designing services did not obtain Service Tax registration as taxable services remained below threshold limit in preceding years - Revenue raised demand invoking longer period of limitation based on figures shown in Income Tax Return and Form-26AS statement; Appellant contended that Form-26AS statement was prepared by Income Tax Department and not by taxpayers and contained errors, and that figures differed with turnover declared in Profit & Loss Account with no enquiry conducted to ascertain reasons for discrepancy – Whether the demand of Service Tax can be sustained when raised solely on the basis of Profit & Loss Account and Form-26AS statement without proper verification of discrepancies between the two documents – HELD - The entire case of demand has been built upon figures shown in Income Tax Return and Form-26AS statement which are prepared by Income Tax Department and not by taxpayers, thereby prone to errors; the figures shown in Form-26AS statement differ with turnover declared in Profit & Loss Account and the Department has not made any enquiry to ascertain the reason for such difference; reliance on Profit & Loss Account for confirmation of tax has been consistently held as improper and irrelevant in decisions of Madras High Court and the Tribunal - When the Revenue's entire case is based upon Profit & Loss Accounts read with Form-26AS and Service Tax is confirmed by invoking longer period of limitation without proper verification, such demand cannot be sustained on the ground of limitation itself – The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1082-CESTAT-BLR-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - Classification of animated films and television serials as software for Central Excise Duty purposes - Whether animated films and television serials in the form of CDs and Betacam SP Pal tapes, cleared in the DTA by a EOU constitute software liable to Central Excise duty or fall within the definition of information technology software exempt from such duty – HELD - The products constitute software under the statutory definition of information technology software, which encompasses any representation of instructions, data, sound or image recorded in machine-readable form and capable of being manipulated o... [Read more]

Central Excise - Classification of animated films and television serials as software for Central Excise Duty purposes - Whether animated films and television serials in the form of CDs and Betacam SP Pal tapes, cleared in the DTA by a EOU constitute software liable to Central Excise duty or fall within the definition of information technology software exempt from such duty – HELD - The products constitute software under the statutory definition of information technology software, which encompasses any representation of instructions, data, sound or image recorded in machine-readable form and capable of being manipulated or providing interactivity to a user by automatic data processing machine - The products cleared by the appellant in the form of CD are not a simple compact disc which when installed in the computer start functioning. On the other hand, they are CDs which can function only with the software which are supplied to the customers along with the CDs, therefore, they are rightly classifiable under CTH 8524.20 as ‘Software’ - The experts initially opined the products were not software but revised their opinion during cross-examination when considering the statutory definition, rendering the original basis of the show-cause notice invalid - The unit operates under the Software Technology Park scheme with a Letter of Permission for development and export of software, and since the exports are not disputed as software, the products cleared in the DTA must similarly be software as there is no evidence that domestic and export products differ - The Department itself demonstrated confusion by classifying the same goods under different tariff headings in successive show-cause notices, indicating failure to understand the product description in terms of the statutory definition. The animated advertisements, commercials, cartoons and serials in CD form, which function only with accompanying software tools such as Animo, US-Animation and 3D Studio Max, are rightly classifiable as software. The impugned order demanding central excise duty is set aside - The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1080-CESTAT-BLR-CU  | High Court CUSTOMS

Customs - Refund of Special Additional Duty of Customs when Sales Tax/VAT is Exempt – Import of goods under contract with Metro Rail Corporation – Appellant claimed refund of SAD of customs paid at the time of importation under Notification No. 102/2007 dated 14.09.2007. The importer contends that the goods were exempt from Sales Tax/VAT as the sale took place in the course of import under Section 5(2) of the CST, 1956 - Revenue rejected the refund claim on the ground that one of the mandatory conditions prescribed in the Notification, namely payment of appropriate Sales Tax/VAT on sale of imported goods, has not been ... [Read more]

Customs - Refund of Special Additional Duty of Customs when Sales Tax/VAT is Exempt – Import of goods under contract with Metro Rail Corporation – Appellant claimed refund of SAD of customs paid at the time of importation under Notification No. 102/2007 dated 14.09.2007. The importer contends that the goods were exempt from Sales Tax/VAT as the sale took place in the course of import under Section 5(2) of the CST, 1956 - Revenue rejected the refund claim on the ground that one of the mandatory conditions prescribed in the Notification, namely payment of appropriate Sales Tax/VAT on sale of imported goods, has not been fulfilled - Whether refund of SAD of customs is admissible under Notification No. 102/2007 dated 14.09.2007 when the imported goods are exempt from levy of Sales Tax/VAT – HELD - The Notification mandates that the importer shall pay "appropriate sales tax or value added tax as the case may be" on sale of imported goods. The term "appropriate" connotes the rate applicable to the transaction. When goods are legitimately exempt from Sales Tax or VAT under Constitutional provisions and statutory law, the appropriate rate of such tax becomes nil. Therefore, when the appropriate rate is nil, the appropriate Sales Tax or VAT paid is also nil, and this does not constitute non-compliance with the notification - So long as appropriate Sales Tax or VAT at the applicable rate is paid, refund of Special Additional Duty of customs is admissible, and where the appropriate rate is nil, the condition stands satisfied by payment of nil amount. The importer cannot be penalized for the goods being legitimately exempt from Sales Tax or VAT – The rejection of refund claim is set aside and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1078-CESTAT-BLR-CU  | CESTAT CUSTOMS

Customs - Classification of Reformate – Appellant imported Reformate classifying it under tariff item 2707 50 00, claiming concessional Customs duty rates. The Commissioner of Customs rejects this classification and reclassifies the product under tariff item 2710 12 19, confirming differential duty demands with interest and imposing a redemption fine - Whether Reformate is classifiable under Tariff item 2707 50 00 as claimed by the appellant-importer or under Tariff item 2710 12 19 as claimed by the Revenue – HELD – Heading 2707 covers not only distillates of coal tar or mineral tar but also similar products obtained... [Read more]

Customs - Classification of Reformate – Appellant imported Reformate classifying it under tariff item 2707 50 00, claiming concessional Customs duty rates. The Commissioner of Customs rejects this classification and reclassifies the product under tariff item 2710 12 19, confirming differential duty demands with interest and imposing a redemption fine - Whether Reformate is classifiable under Tariff item 2707 50 00 as claimed by the appellant-importer or under Tariff item 2710 12 19 as claimed by the Revenue – HELD – Heading 2707 covers not only distillates of coal tar or mineral tar but also similar products obtained by processing of petroleum, as clarified in the HSN Explanatory Notes. The expression "at 250°C" in the tariff description should be interpreted as "by 250°C" to align with the fractional distillation process, wherein a product begins distilling as temperature rises and continues distilling until the specified temperature is reached. The Department itself had interpreted "at 210°C" as "by 210°C" in the Show Cause Notice while classifying under 2710, and therefore cannot be permitted to take a contrary stand. Reformate, containing 80% or more aromatic content, cannot be classified under 2710 as a preparation since all preparations under that heading must contain at least 70% of petroleum oils from specified categories, which would necessarily result in non-aromatic constituents exceeding aromatic constituents. The definition of motor spirit under Supplementary Note (a) requires cumulative satisfaction of two conditions: flash point below 25°C and suitability for use as fuel in spark ignition engines. The expression "admixture with any other substance" refers to substances other than mineral oil, and Reformate added as blend stock in large proportion to gasoline cannot be treated as an admixture - The Supreme Court's dismissal of the Revenue's appeal against the Tribunal's earlier decision in an identical case creates binding precedent by virtue of merger doctrine. Since the products and subject matter are identical, the Revenue cannot maintain two conflicting positions on identical products imported during the disputed periods - The goods are classified under Tariff Item 2707 50 00. The impugned order is set aside, and the appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1079-CESTAT-BLR-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Commercial Training or Coaching Services - Exclusion under Section 65(27) of Finance Act, 1994 – Respondent conducts Maritime training academy imparting coaching and training in maritime courses and issues certificates recognized by the Director General of Shipping under the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958 - Whether services rendered by the academy fall under the category of 'Commercial Training or Coaching' Service or excluded from the definition under Section 65(27) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The services rendered by the respondent are excluded from the levy of service tax as the institute is approve... [Read more]

Service Tax - Commercial Training or Coaching Services - Exclusion under Section 65(27) of Finance Act, 1994 – Respondent conducts Maritime training academy imparting coaching and training in maritime courses and issues certificates recognized by the Director General of Shipping under the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958 - Whether services rendered by the academy fall under the category of 'Commercial Training or Coaching' Service or excluded from the definition under Section 65(27) of the Finance Act, 1994 – HELD - The services rendered by the respondent are excluded from the levy of service tax as the institute is approved by the Director General of Shipping for conduct of courses for aspiring seafarers, and the certificates issued are recognized by law through the Director General of Shipping who is the authority vested with the power to issue competency certificates under Section 78 of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958. The Tribunal in Cochin Shipyard Ltd. case, held that courses conducted come within the excluded category of the definition of commercial training or coaching centres. The courses are conducted as per the syllabus prescribed by the Director General of Shipping in line with requirements of the STCW code and are not mere internal coaching classes, hence the Respondent is not liable to pay service tax under the category of commercial training or coaching services - There is no finding on the second issue regarding legal services, which has been fairly admitted by the respondent. The respondent has agreed to discharge the service tax along with interest. Penalties are set aside – The appeal is partially allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1068-CESTAT-ALH-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Invocation of extended period of limitation based on suppression of facts - Demand raised solely on difference between Service Tax Return (ST-3) and Form 26AS without independent investigation - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked and service tax demand can be sustained when the entire demand is based solely on the difference between figures reflected in ST-3 returns and Form 26AS without any independent investigation by the department - HELD - The extended period of limitation cannot be invoked and the demand cannot be sustained on the basis of mere difference between ST-3 and Form 26AS ... [Read more]

Service Tax - Invocation of extended period of limitation based on suppression of facts - Demand raised solely on difference between Service Tax Return (ST-3) and Form 26AS without independent investigation - Whether the extended period of limitation can be invoked and service tax demand can be sustained when the entire demand is based solely on the difference between figures reflected in ST-3 returns and Form 26AS without any independent investigation by the department - HELD - The extended period of limitation cannot be invoked and the demand cannot be sustained on the basis of mere difference between ST-3 and Form 26AS without independent investigation. The service tax exigibility depends on four essential elements: service provider, service rendered, service recipient, and consideration thereof. Unless these elements are logically connected and established through independent investigation, demand based merely on figures reflected in statutory documents does not sustain. Form 26AS is maintained by the Income Tax department on cash/receipt basis for TDS purposes, whereas service tax is chargeable on mercantile basis on services actually provided. The Department is under an obligation to prove that the assessee rendered such and such services to such and such persons and received consideration towards such rendering - Demands cannot be sustained based on notional income or mere differences in statutory returns without examining the reasons for such differences or establishing whether the differential amount represents consideration for taxable services or is attributable to exempted/abated services. Furthermore, when an assessee is a registered service provider regularly filing returns and paying self-assessed tax, and the original authority acknowledges receipt of ST-3 returns and tax deposits, such conduct falsifies allegations of suppression. Suppression of facts requires proof of willful non-disclosure of correct information with intent to evade duty, which cannot be inferred merely from the department's inability to retrieve documents from its own portal. The department's failure to conduct independent investigation, combined with the assessee's regular filing of returns and tax payments, demonstrates that no malafide intention or positive act of concealment has been established on record - The extended period of limitation is held to have been wrongly invoked, and the demand of service tax along with consequential interest and penalties imposed is set aside - The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-1081-CESTAT-BLR-CE  | CESTAT CENTRAL EXCISE

Central Excise - CENVAT Credit on Erection and Commissioning Services – Appellant availed CENVAT credit on erection and commissioning charges paid to sub-contractors. The adjudicating authority disallowed the credit on the ground that erection and commissioning is a post-manufacturing activity and does not qualify as input service under Rule 2(l) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether CENVAT credit on erection and commissioning charges paid to sub-contractors is allowable when the assessee itself is a registered output service provider separately charging and collecting service tax on such services – HELD - The assesse... [Read more]

Central Excise - CENVAT Credit on Erection and Commissioning Services – Appellant availed CENVAT credit on erection and commissioning charges paid to sub-contractors. The adjudicating authority disallowed the credit on the ground that erection and commissioning is a post-manufacturing activity and does not qualify as input service under Rule 2(l) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 - Whether CENVAT credit on erection and commissioning charges paid to sub-contractors is allowable when the assessee itself is a registered output service provider separately charging and collecting service tax on such services – HELD - The assessee is an independent output service provider registered under the Service Tax Act and erection and commissioning is an independent service which the assessee provides separately with applicable output service tax charged on such services. For providing such output services, the assessee availed services of sub-contractors who raised invoices on the assessee. There exists direct nexus between the charges paid to sub-contractors and the assessee's business of providing erection and commissioning services. The eligibility for CENVAT credit under Rule 2(l) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 is established - CENVAT credit on erection and commissioning services is allowed - Since the confirmation of demand is unsustainable the levy of interest and imposition of penalty are also unsustainable - The impugned order is set aside and the appeal is allowed - CENVAT Credit on Management Consultant Services availed for identification of key market trends and developing business plans. Although the agreement was common for multiple group companies, a fixed percentage of the total contract fee was allocated to the assessee and a separate invoice was raised on the assessee for its share – Disallowance of credit on the ground that such services had no connection with manufacturing activity. The appellate authority additionally held that since services were used by the group company as a whole, CENVAT credit was not allowable - Whether CENVAT credit on management consultant services is allowable when the services relate to business activities such as identifying market trends and developing business plans, even though they do not have direct nexus with manufacturing – HELD – The CENVAT credit on management consultant services is allowable. Rule 2(l) does not require any direct nexus between the services and the manufactured product. The relevant criterion is whether the services are availed towards activities relating to business. Identifying key market trends and developing business plans are activities crucial to the business of the assessee and clearly establish the nexus with business activities. Additionally, the services qualify as market research activities which are specifically included in the definition of input service under Rule 2(l) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004. The services also fall under Section 65(105)(r) of the Finance Act, 1994. – the CENVAT credit on management consultant services is allowed - CENVAT Credit on Manpower Supply Services - Whether CENVAT credit on manpower supply services is allowable when the assessee demonstrates that contract labourers were engaged solely in manufacturing dutiable products and similar credit was allowed in subsequent periods – HELD - The manpower supply agency raises separate invoices for labourers supplied for dutiable and exempt products. The contract labourers in question were engaged solely in manufacturing dutiable products and accordingly, the assessee is eligible for full credit of the amount paid to the manpower supply agency. The fact that CENVAT credit on manpower supplied from the same agency was allowed for subsequent periods with an average quantum corresponding to the monthly average during the period in question establishes the eligibility for credit. The absence of corroborating evidence at the adjudication stage does not preclude credit when supported by subsequent period adjudication orders and invoices – CENVAT credit on manpower supply services is allowed - CENVAT Credit on Mediclaim and Accidental Insurance Policy – Whether CENVAT credit on mediclaim and accidental insurance policies for employees qualifies as input service under Rule 2(l) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 – HELD – The CENVAT credit on mediclaim and accidental insurance policies for employees qualifies as input service. A mediclaim policy for employees constitutes an input service under Rule 2(l) of CCR, 2004, both under the main limb and the inclusive limb of the definition. It is not necessary for the assessee to establish an integral connection between the service and business of manufacture for the service to be categorized as input service. The findings of the adjudicating authority based on the requirement of direct or indirect use in relation to manufacture are not sustainable – CENVAT credit on mediclaim and accidental insurance policies for employees is allowed. [Read less]

2026-VIL-1071-CESTAT-ALH-ST  | CESTAT SERVICE TAX

Service Tax - Classification of transport and handling services under Goods Transport Operator versus Goods Transport Agency services - Appellant engaged in transportation and handling of food grains and agricultural products under an agreement with the Regional Food Controller provided services for transportation, handling, loading, unloading, arrangement of labour, and placement of railway wagons - Whether services provided by the appellant fall under the category of Goods Transport Operator services covered by the negative list under Section 66D(p)(i) of the Finance Act, 1994, or are taxable as Cargo Handling services u... [Read more]

Service Tax - Classification of transport and handling services under Goods Transport Operator versus Goods Transport Agency services - Appellant engaged in transportation and handling of food grains and agricultural products under an agreement with the Regional Food Controller provided services for transportation, handling, loading, unloading, arrangement of labour, and placement of railway wagons - Whether services provided by the appellant fall under the category of Goods Transport Operator services covered by the negative list under Section 66D(p)(i) of the Finance Act, 1994, or are taxable as Cargo Handling services under Section 65B(51) of the Finance Act, 1994, thereby attracting service tax liability – HELD - The essential distinguishing feature between goods transport agency services and goods transport operator services lies in the issuance of a consignment note, which is mandatory for GTA services but was not issued in the present case - The agreement between the appellant and the service recipient expressly prohibited subletting or assigning the contract and required the appellant to submit registration certificates of trucks as security, indicating that the appellant maintained possession and control of the vehicles used for transportation. Although the agreement contemplated certain incidental activities such as arranging labour and placement of wagons, these cannot be bifurcated from transportation services and classified separately as cargo handling services since the impugned orders neither made such bifurcation nor specified different rates for handling versus transportation charges - The cargo handling services require two conditions to be satisfied: first, there must be cargo accepted by a transporter for carrying from one destination to another, and second, the service provider must independently be involved in loading-unloading or packing-unpacking - Since the appellant was contractually bound to provide transportation services as a handling and transport contractor without issuing consignment notes, the services cannot be classified as GTA services. Additionally, services of loading, unloading, and handling of agricultural products are expressly kept under the negative list as per Section 66D(p)(v) and are exempt under Notification No.25/2012-ST. The transportation undertaken by individuals owning and operating vehicles without issuance of consignment notes is not subject to service tax - The impugned order is set aside along with interest and penalties imposed on the appellant. The appeal is allowed [Read less]

2026-VIL-122-AAR  | Advance Ruling Authority SGST

GST – Maharashtra AAR - Sections 2(30), 2(69), 2(119) of the CGST Act, 2017 - and Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 28.06.2017, Entries 3 and 3A - Exemption of composite supply of goods and services to local authority in relation to municipal functions – Applicant is civil contractor executed an underground sewerage scheme comprising sewer networks, house connections, wet-wells, pump-houses, sewerage treatment plants, non-clog submersible pump-sets and allied electrical and mechanical equipment for a municipal corporation under a Central Government scheme - whether the activity undertaken by the applica... [Read more]

GST – Maharashtra AAR - Sections 2(30), 2(69), 2(119) of the CGST Act, 2017 - and Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 28.06.2017, Entries 3 and 3A - Exemption of composite supply of goods and services to local authority in relation to municipal functions – Applicant is civil contractor executed an underground sewerage scheme comprising sewer networks, house connections, wet-wells, pump-houses, sewerage treatment plants, non-clog submersible pump-sets and allied electrical and mechanical equipment for a municipal corporation under a Central Government scheme - whether the activity undertaken by the applicant amounts to supply of services or a composite supply of goods and services – HELD - Since the activity involved transfer of property in goods such as pipes, pumps, equipment and materials as part of the execution of construction of immovable property, the supply constituted a composite supply of goods and services in the nature of a works contract and not a pure service - The definition of composite supply encompasses goods and services naturally bundled and supplied in conjunction with each other in the ordinary course of business, and works contracts by their very nature necessarily involve such bundling. The quantitative threshold of 25 percent prescribed under Entry 3A operates at the level of the composite supply taken as a whole and not at the sub-unit level. On the material presently on record, the aggregate value of goods at 11.17 percent did not exceed the 25 percent ceiling prescribed, though the final entitlement remained liable to be tested on the actual ratio at the time of conclusion of the contract, as the ongoing nature of the contract made the ratio susceptible to change on account of price escalation, scope variation or other eventualities – Ordered accordingly - Whether the recipient is Government, Local Authority, Governmental Authority or Government Entity – HELD - The recipient, being a Nagar parishad, qualified as a local authority within the statutory definition encompassing Municipalities and possessed the classical attributes of a local authority. The recipient is a “Local Authority” within the meaning of Section 2(69) of the CGST Act, 2017 - Whether supply is being made in relation to any function entrusted to a Panchayat or a Municipality under the Constitution – HELD - The supply related to public health, sanitation conservancy and solid waste management, which constitutes a function enumerated in the Twelfth Schedule that may be entrusted to a municipality under Article 243W of the Constitution - Whether the applicant is eligible for exemption of services being provided by way of pure service or composite supply based on Entry 3A w.e.f. 25.01.2018 vide Notification No. 2/2018-CT(R) – HELD - the applicant is eligible for the benefit of exemption under Entry at Sr. No. 3A of Notification No. 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) dated 28.06.2017, as inserted by Notification No. 2/2018-Central Tax (Rate) dated 25.01.2018 and as further amended, in respect of the said composite supply, in respect of the composite supply of goods and services, subject to the condition that the value of goods supplied in the composite supply does not, at the time of conclusion of the contract, exceed 25 percent of the value of the composite supply, and in the event of such breach at the time of conclusion, the exemption would cease to be available and the department would be at liberty to take such consequential action as warranted in law – Ordered accordingly [Read less]

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