Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, PUNE ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DAI ICHI KARKARIA LTD. ETC. ETC
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/08/1999
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, R.C.Lahoti, N.Santosh Gegde,
JUDGMENT:
Bharucha, J.
It is convenient to set out, at the outset, the
question involved in these appeals.
The manufacturer purchases raw material. He uses the
raw material in the manufacture of an intermediate product.
He then uses the intermediate product in the manufacture of
a final product. The raw material and the intermediate
product are liable to excise duty and they are specified
goods for the purposes of the MODVAT scheme. The assessable
value of the intermediate product for the purposes of excise
duty has, it is agreed in the instant case, to be determined
on the basis of its cost. In determining the assessable
value of the intermediate product the cost of the raw
material has to be taken into account. The question is: is
part of the cost of the raw material the price paid by the
manufacturer to its seller, as contended by the Revenue, or
is it the price of the raw material less the excise duty
thereon, which has been paid by the seller and for which the
manufacturer is entitled to credit under the MODVAT scheme,
to be utilised against the payment of excise duty on
products manufactured by him, including the intermediate
product, as contended by the manufacturer.
The Central Excise and Gold Control Appellate Tribunal
decided the question in favour of the
respondent-manufacturers and the Revenue is in appeal. The
reasoning of the Tribunal is unclear and has not been relied
upon by learned counsel for the manufacturers. Broadly put,
the logic of its decision is this: since the manufacturer
gets credit for the amount of the excise duty that has been
paid on the raw material, the amount of such excise duty
cannot be said to form a part of the cost that is incurred
by the manufacturer in procuring it.
It was argued on behalf of the manufacturers that the
Revenue itself had taken a stand that supported the
manufacturers and that, therefore, it could not now urge to
the contrary. The learned Attorney General, however,
pointed out, with the reference to documents, that the stand
of the Revenue had been different at different times. The
divergent stand of the Revenue at different times only
serves to illustrate the difficulty in answering the
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question.
In the first appeal the manufacturer, M/s. Dai Ichi
Karkaria Ltd., purchases a raw material known as lab for
short, it uses the lab in the manufacture of an
intermediate product, surface active agent or surfactant.
It uses the surfactant in the manufacture of a final
product, emulsifer. The other respondent manufacturers
purchase other raw materials, manufacture other intermediate
products and use them in manufacturing other final products.
We are here concerned with the assessment for the purposes
of excise duty of the intermediate product. For the sake of
convenience, therefore, we shall refer to the intermediate
product as the excisable product.
To understand the contentions in the appeal, it is
necessary to set out the provisions of Section 4 of the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (the Act) and some
provisions of the Central Excise (Valuation) Rules, 1975.
Section 4. Valuation of excisable goods for purposes
of charging of duty of excise - (1) Where under this Act,
the duty of excise is chargeable on any excisable goods with
reference to value, such value shall, subject to the other
provisions of this section, be deemed to be -
(a) the normal price thereof, that is to say, the
price at which such goods are ordinarily sold by the
assessee to a buyer in the course of wholesale trade for
delivery at the time and place of removal, where the buyer
is not a related person and the price is the sole
consideration for the sale:
Provided that -
(i) where, in accordance with the normal practice of
the wholesale trade in such goods, such goods are sold by
the assessee at different prices to different classes of
buyers (not being related persons) each such price shall,
subject to the existence of the other circumstances
specified in clause (a). be deemed to be the normal price
of such goods in relation to each such class of buyers;
(ii) where such goods are sold by the assessee in the
course of wholesale trade for delivery at the time and place
of removal at the price fixed under any law for the time
being in force or at a price, being the maximum, fixed under
any such law, then, notwithstanding anything contained in
clause (iii) of this proviso, the price or the maximum
price, as the case may be, so fixed, shall, in relation to
the goods so sold, be deemed to be the normal price
thereof;
(iii) where the assessee so arranges that the goods
are generally not sold by him in the course of wholesale
trade except to or through a related person, the normal
price of the goods sold by the assessee to or through such
related persoan shall be deemed to be the price at which
they are ordinarily sold by the related person in the course
of wholesale trade at the time of removal, to dealers (not
being related persons) or where such goods are not sold to
such dealers, to dealers (being related persons), who sell
such goods in retail
(b) where the normal price of such goods is not
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ascertainable for the reason, that such goods are not sold
or for any other reason, the nearest ascertainable
equivalent thereof determined in such manner as may be
prescribed.
(2) Where, in relation to any excisable goods the
price thereof for delivery at the place of removal is not
known and the value thereof is determined with reference to
the price for delivery at a place other than the place of
removal, the cost of transportation from the place of
removal to the place of delivery shall be excluded from such
price.
(3) The provisions of this section shall not apply in
respect of any excisable goods for which a tariff value has
been fixed under sub-section (2) of Section 3.
(4) For the purposes of this Section, -
(a) Assessee means the person who is liable to pay
the duty of excise under this Act and includes his agent;
(b) place of removal means -
(i) a factory or any other place or premises of
production or manufacture of the excisable goods; or
(ii) a warehouse or any other place or premises
wherein the excisable goods have been permitted to be
deposited without payment of duty.
from where such goods are removed;
(c) related person means a person who is so
associated with the assessee that they have interest,
directly or indirectly, in the business of each other and
includes a holding company, a subsidiary company, a relative
and a distributor of the assessee, and any sub-distributor
of such distributor.
Explanation - In this clause holding company,
subsidiary company and relative have the same meanings
as in the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956);
(d) value, in relation to any excisable goods, -
(i) where the goods are delivered at the time of
removal in a packed condition, includes the cost of such
packing except the cost of the packing which is of a durable
nature and is returnable by the buyer to the assessee.
Explanation - In this sub-clause, packing means the
wrapper, container, bobbin, pirn, spool, reel or warp beam
or any other thing in which or on which the excisable goods
are wrapped, contained or wound;
(ii) does not include the amount of the duty of
excise, sales tax and other taxes, if any, payable on such
goods and, subject to such rules as may be made, the trade
discount (such discount not being refundable on any account
whatsoever) allowed in accordance with the normal practice
of the wholesale trade at the time of removal in respect of
such goods sold or contracted for sale.
Explanation - For the purposes of this sub-clause, the
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amount of the duty of excise payable on any excisable goods
shall be the sum total of -
(a) the effective duty of excise payable on such goods
under this Act; and
(b) the aggregate of the effective duties of excise
payable under other Central Acts, if any, providing for the
levy of duties of excise on such goods.
And the effective duty of excise on such goods under
each Act referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) shall be -
(i) in a case where a notification or order providing
for any exemption (not being an exemption for giving credit
with respect to, [or reduction of duty of excise under such
Act on such goods equal to, any duty of excise under such
Act, or the additional duty under Section 3 of the Customs
Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975), already paid] on the raw
material or component parts used in the production or
manufacture of such goods) from the duty of excise under
such Act is for the time being in force, the duty of excise
computed with reference to the rate specified in such Act,
in respect of such goods as reduced so as to give full and
complete effect to such exemption; and
(ii) in any other case, the duty of excise computed
with reference to the rate specified in such Act in respect
of such goods.]
(e) wholesale trade means sales to dealers,
industrial consumers, Government, local authorities and
other buyers, who or which purchase their requirements
otherwise than in retail.]
Value by reason of rule 2(c) of the Valuation Rules
means the value under Section 4 of the Act. Rules 3 and 6
of the Valuation Rules read thus:
Rule 3. The value of any exciseable goods shall, for
the purposes of clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section 4
of the Act, be determined by the proper officer in
accordance with these rules.
Rule 6. If the value of the excisable goods under
assessment cannot be determined under rule 4 or rule 5, and
-
(a) where such goods are sold by the assessee in
retail, the value shall be based on the retial price of such
goods reduced by such amount as is necessary and reasonable
in the opinion of the proper officer to arrive at the price
at which the assessee would have sold such goods in the
course of wholesale trade to a person other than a related
person :
[Provided that in determining the amount of reduction,
due regard shall be had to the nature of the excisable
goods, the trade practice in that commodity and other
relevant factors;]
(b) where the excisable goods are not sold by the
assessee but are used or consumed by him or on his behalf in
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the production or manufacture of other articles, the value
shall be based -
(i) on the value of the comparable goods produced or
manufactured by the assessee or by any other assessee:
Provided that in determining the value under this sub-
clause, the proper officer shall make such adjustments as
appear to him reasonable, taking into consideration all
relevant factors and, in particular, the difference, if any,
in the material characteristics of the goods to be assessed
and of the comparable goods;
(ii) If the value cannot be determined under sub-
clause (I), on the cost of production or manufacture
including profits, if any, which the assessee would have
normally earned on the sale of such goods;
(c) where the assessee so arranges that the excisable
goods are generally not sold by him in the course of
wholesale trade except to or through a related person and
the value cannot be determined under clause (iii) of the
proviso to clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the
Act, the value of the goods so sold shall be determined.
(i) in a case where the assessee sells the goods to a
related person who sells such goods in retail, in the manner
specified in clause (a) of this rule;
(ii) in a case where a related person does not sell
the goods but uses or consumes such goods in the production
or manufacture of other articles, in the manner specified in
clause (b) of this rule;
(iii) in a case where a related person sells the goods
in the course of wholesale trade to buyers, other than
dealers and related persons, and the class to which such
buyers belong is known at the time of removal, on the basis
of the price at which the goods are ordinarily sold by the
related person to such class of buyers.
The learned Attorney General submitted that, by reason
of the Explanation to Section 4(4)(d)(ii) of the Act, the
credit under the MODVAT scheme taken by the manufacturer,
equal to the excise duty paid on the raw material, was not
to be taken into account to reduce the price paid by the
manufacturer to the seller of the raw material; in other
words, the price paid by the manufacturer to the seller of
the raw material was part of its cost to the manufacturer
and it had to be taken into account in computing the
assessable value of the excisable product.
To examine the correctness of the submission, an
analysis of Section 4 of the Act and the Valuation Rules, to
the extent relevant, has to be made. Section 4 deals with
the valuation of excisable goods which are chargeable to
excise duty with reference to their value. The valuation is
to be based ordinarily on the price thereof, that is to say,
the price at which the excisable goods are ordinarily sold
by the manufacturer to a buyer. It is only when the
valuation cannot be so made that the closest equivalent
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thereof has to be determined, in the manner prescribed under
the Valuation Rules. Value for the purposes of the
Valuation Rules means the value under Section 4 of the Act.
It is to be determined, ordinarily, under Rules 4 and 5.
Rule 6 comes into play when the valuation of the excisable
goods under assessment cannot be so determined. When the
excisable goods are not sold by the assessee but are used or
consumed by him in the manufacture of other products, as
here, the value is to be based upon the value of comparable
goods manufactured by the manufacturer, and, if that cannot
be done, on the cost of production or manufacture including
profits, if any, which the assessee would have normally
earned on the sale of such goods It is common ground that
the value of the excisable goods in the instant case has to
be determined on the cost of their manufacture, including
profits. Sub-section (4) of Section 4 defines certain words
for the purposes of this section. It defines Value in
relation to any excisable goods. It says, so far is
relevant here, that the value of excisable goods does not
include the amount of the duty of excise payable on such
goods. The Explanation thereto says that, for the purposes
of the sub-clause, the amount of excise duty payable on
excisable goods is the sum total of the effective excise
duty payable thereon under the Act plus the aggregate of the
effective excise duties payable thereon under other Central
excise statutes. By reason of clause (i) of the
Explanation, where there is an exemption notification or
order giving an exemption in respect of the excisable goods
it shall be given effect to and the excise duty leviable
under the concerned Central excise statute shall be reduced
to the extent of such exemption, provided such notification
or order is not one for giving credit with respect to, or
reduction of duty of excise under such Act on such goods
equal to any duty of excise under such Act, or the
additional duty under Section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act,
1975, already paid on the raw material or component parts
used in the production or manufacture of such goods.
It is, therefore, only a notification or order
relating to the excisable goods that gives an exemption
equal to the excise duty already paid on raw material used
therein that is not to be taken into account for the
purposes of computing the effective duty on the excisable
product. We are not here concerned with a notification or
order; the MODVAT scheme is a part of the Central Excise
Rules. Secondly, it is nobodys case that the credit that
each of the respondent-manufacturers takes on its excisable
product is equal to the excise duty paid on the raw material
used therein. The Explanation to Section 4(4)(d)(ii)
cannot, therefore, assist the Revenues case.
The learned Attorney General drew our attention to the
judgment of this Court in M/s. Kirloskar Brothers Ltd.
,Dewas (M.P.) Vs. Union of India & Ors., [1992 (2) SCC
658], and Collector of Central Excise, Bangalore Vs. Mysore
Paper Mills Ltd., [1997 (7) SCC 64]. Neither of these
judgments dealt with the Explanation to Section 4(4)(d)(ii)
of the Act or the provisions of the MODVAT scheme. They
are, therefore, of little assistance.
The learned Attorney General brought to our attention
the judgment of the Tribunal in Collector of C.Ex. vs.
Incab Industries, [1990 (45) ELT 342], adopting it as a part
of his argument. The Tribunal read the Rules pertaining to
the MODVAT scheme and found it to be clear that the
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manufacturer is allowed to utilise the duty paid on inputs
by deducting the same from the duty payable on the final
product but subject to following the procedure under the
Rules. It added, It is no doubt true that it will result
in reduction in the cost of final product to the extent of
the credit but it does not automatically reduce the
assessable value which is to be determined in accordance
with Section 4. Assessable value is to be determined in
accordance with Section 4 of the Act only and MODVAT credit
has no direct impact on the assessable value. We shall
examine the Rules pertaining to the MODVAT scheme ourselves
but we note the finding of the Tribunal that MODVAT credit
results in the reduction of the cost of the excisable
product to the extent of the credit.
The learned Attorney General cited the judgment of a
learned Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court in Super
Cassettes Industries Ltd. vs. Union of India, [1997 (94)
ELT 302]. The learned Judge found no warrant for the view
that MODVAT credit once availed of by making the necessary
entries was irrevocable. He held that there could be no
final credit until the inputs were used and excise duty on
the final product was paid or the inputs were otherwise
disposed of.
Before we look at the Rules relating to the MODVAT
scheme we must set out the submissions of the learned
Attorney General in this regard. He submitted that the raw
material suffered excise duty legally and factually. If
there had been no MODVAT scheme excise duty on the raw
material would be included in the cost of production of the
excisable product. The MODVAT scheme did not alter this
fundamental position. By virtue of it the cost of the raw
material was not reduced. The MODVAT scheme resulted in
reducing the excise duty on the excisable product. It was a
separate and special facility that had the effect of
reducing the excise duty incidence on the excisable product
and had no bearing in determining the cost of its
production. The credit of excise duty on the raw material
in the register maintained for MODVAT purposes was only a
book entry which might be utilised later for payment of
excise duty on the excisable product. In other words, it
matured when the excisable product was removed from the
factory and the stage for payment of excise duty thereon was
reached. Actually, credit was taken, that is, availed of or
utilised, at the time of the removal of the excisable
product. Consequently, the cost of production of the
excisable product was not reduced by the amount of the
MODVAT credit on the raw material. The credit was a
contingent credit. It might be disallowed under certain
circumstances. It could not be withdrawn like a credit
amount in a bank account. The manufacturer did not have any
indefeasible right or title to it. The rules pertaining to
the MODVAT scheme made it clear that MODVAT credit was in
the nature of a set off or an adjustment.
There is no doubt that, were it not for the MODVAT
scheme and the credit available on the excise duty paid on
the raw material thereunder, the excise duty paid on the raw
material would be a factor in determining the cost of the
excisable product. The question is : does the MODVAT
scheme make a difference?
The Central Excise Rules, in Chapter V AA, deal with
The credit of duty paid on excisable goods used as inputs.
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The relevant Rules are Rule 57A to Rule 57J. Sub rule (1)
of Rule 57A reads thus :
(1) The provisions of this section shall apply to
such finished excisable goods (hereinafter referred to as
the final products), as the Central Government may, by
notification in the Official Gazette, specify in this
behalf, for the purpose of allowing credit of any duty of
excise or the additional duty under Section 3 of the Customs
Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975), as may be specified in the
said notification (hereinafter referred to as the specified
duty) paid on the goods used in or in relation to the
manufacture of the said final products [whether directly or
indirectly and whether contained in the final product or
not] (hereinafter referred to as the input) and for
utilising the credit so allowed towards payment of duty of
excise leviable on the final products, whether under the Act
or under any other Act, as may be specified in the said
notification, subject to the provisions of this section and
the conditions and restrictions that may be specified in the
notification :
Provided that the Central Government may specify the
goods or classes of goods in respect of which the credit of
specified duty may be restricted."
Rule 57C states that no credit of duty paid on a final
product may be allowed if the final product is exempt from
the whole of the excise duty leviable thereon or is
chargeable to a nil rate of duty. Rule 57D says that the
credit of duty allowed in respect of any inputs shall not be
denied or varied on the ground that part of the inputs is
contained in any waste, refuse, or by-product arising from
the manufacture of the final product or on the ground that
any intermediate product has come into existence during the
course of the production of the final product. Rule 57E
says that if the duty paid on any inputs on which credit has
been allowed is varied subsequently, the credit allowed
shall be varied accordingly by adjustment of the credit
account or, if adjustment is not possible for any reason, by
cash recovery from or, as the case may be, by refund to the
manufacturer availing of the credit. Rule 57F(1) reads thus
: The inputs in respect of which a credit of duty has been
allowed under rule 57A -
(i) may be used in, or in relation to, the manufacture
of final products for which such inputs have been brought
into the factory; or
(ii) shall be removed, after intimating the Assistant
Commissioner of Central Excise having jurisdiction over
factory and obtaining a dated acknowledgement of the same
from the factory for home consumption or for export under
bond.
Provided that where the inputs are removed from the
factory for homes consumption on payment of duty of excise,
such duty excise shall be the amount of credit that has been
availed in respect of such inputs under rule 57A.
Rule 57G provides that the manufacturer intending to
take credit of duty paid on inputs must file a declaration
with the concerned excise officer indicating what the final
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products are that are manufactured in its factory and the
inputs intended to be used therein and obtain an
acknowledgement thereof. The manufacturer, having filed the
declaration and obtained the acknowledgement, can take
credit for the duty on the inputs received by him. Rule 57I
provides for the recovery of credit wrongly availed of or
utilised in an irregular manner. The manufacturer is then
required to show cause why he should not be disallowed such
credit, or, if it has utilised it, why its value should not
be recovered from him. After considering the reply, the
concerned excise officer is empowered to make the
appropriate order in such terms.
It is clear from these Rules, as we read them, that a
manufacturer obtains credit for the excise duty paid on raw
material to be used by him in the production of an excisable
product immediately it makes the requisite declaration and
obtains an acknowledgement thereof. It is entitled to use
the credit at any time thereafter when making payment of
excise duty on the excisable product. There is no provision
in the Rules which provides for a reversal of the credit by
the excise authorities except where it has been illegally or
irregularly taken, in which event it stands cancelled or, if
utilised, has to be paid for. We are here really concerned
with credit that has been validly taken, and its benefit is
available to the manufacturer without any limitation in time
or otherwise unless the manufacturer itself chooses not to
use the raw material in its excisable product. The credit
is, therefore, indefeasible. It should also be noted that
there is no co-relation of the raw material and the final
product; that is to say, it is not as if credit can be
taken only on a final product that is manufactured out of
the particular raw material to which the credit is related.
The credit may be taken against the excise duty on a final
product manufactured on the very day that it becomes
available.
It is, therefore, that in the case of Eicher Motors
Ltd. vs. Union of India [1999(106) ELT 3] this Court said
that a credit under the MODVAT scheme was as good as tax
paid.
With this in mind, we must now determine whether the
excise duty paid on the raw material should form part of the
cost of the excisable product for the purposes of Section
4(1)(b) of the Act read with Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules?
Learned counsel for the respondents drew our attention
to the judgment of this Court in Challapalli Sugars Ltd.
vs. Commissioner of Income-Tax, A.P., [1975 (98) ITR 167].
The Court was concerned with written down value. The
written down value had to be taken into consideration
while considering the question of deduction on account of
depreciation and development rebate under the Income Tax
Act. Written down value depended upon the actual cost
of the assets to the assessee. The expression actual cost
had not been defined in the Income Tax Act, 1922 and the
question was whether the interest paid before the
commencement of production on the amount borrowed for the
acquisition and installation of the plant and machinery
could be considered to be a part of the actual cost of the
assets to the assessee. As the expression actual cost had
not been defined, this Court was of the view that it should
be construed in the sense which no commercial man would
misunderstand. For this purpose, it would be necessary to
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ascertain the connotation of the above expression in
accordance with the normal rules of accountancy prevailing
in commerce and industry. Having considered authoritative
books in this regard, this Court said that the accepted
accountancy rule for determining the cost of fixed assets
was to include all expenditure necessary to bring such
assets into existence and to put them in working condition.
That rule of accountancy had to be adopted for determining
the actual cost of the assets in the absence of any
statutory definition or other indication to the contrary.
The learned Attorney General submitted that judgments
relating to the Income Tax Act or other statutes had no
relevance while considering a provision in an excise
statute. There can be no doubt about the correctness of
this proposition, but the Challapalli Sugars Ltd. judgment
is one in which the meaning of actual cost, not defined
under the Income Tax Act, 1922, was considered. For
ascertaining what actual cost was in the circumstances,
this Court referred to accepted accountancy rules and said
that they should be adopted and that the expression actual
value should be construed in a sense which commercial men
would understand. The judgment in Challapalli Sugars Ltd.
is relevant to the instant case where we have to put a
meaning to the word cost which is not defined in the Act.
The meaning we give should be such as accords with the
meaning that a man of business put upon it, and for so doing
established accountancy practice would be relevant.
Learned counsel for the Respondents made reference to
the Guidance Note on accounting treatment for MODVAT as on
16th March, 1995 issued by the Institute of Chartered
Accountants of India. The Guidance Note deals (in paragraph
6) with Accounting treatment in case of inputs used in for
relation to manufacture of final products. It states :
In the light of the above, it may be stated that MODVAT is
a procedure whereby the manufacturer can utilise credit for
specified duty on inputs against duty payable on final
products. Duty credit taken on inputs is of the nature of
set-off available against the payment of excise duty on the
final products. There are two alternative methods of
treatment of MODVAT credit in accounts :
(a) Specified duty paid on inputs may be debited to a
separate account, e.g., MODVAT Credit Receivable (Inputs)
Account. As and when MODVAT credit is actually utilised
against payment of excise duty on final products,
appropriate accounting entries will be required to adjust
the excise duty paid out of MODVAT Credit Receivable
(Inputs) Account to the account maintained for
payment/provision for excise duty on final product. In this
case, the purchase cost of the inputs would be net of the
specified duty on inputs. Therefore, the inputs consumed
and the inventory of inputs would be valued on the basis of
purchase cost net of the specified duty on inputs. The
debit balance in MODVAT Credit Receivable (Inputs) Account
should be shown on the assets side under the head
advances.
(b) In the second alternative, the cost of inputs may
be recorded at the total amount paid to the supplier
inclusive of the specified duty on inputs. To the extent
the MODVAT credit is utilised for payment of excise duty on
final products, the amount could be credited to a separate
account, e.g., MODVAT Credit Availed Account. Out of the
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MODVAT Credit Availed Account, the amount of MODVAT credit
availed in respect of consumption of inputs would be reduced
from the total cost of inputs consumed. The balance amount
standing to the credit of MODVAT Credit Availed Account
representing MODVAT credit in respect of input not consumed
but lying in stock could be shown in the balance sheet as
deduction from the value of inventory.
(Emphasis supplied) The learned Attorney General
referred to an extract from a compendium of Guidance Notes
of the said Institute as revised upto 31st March, 1990. It
states : Where excise duty is paid on excisable goods and
such goods are subsequently utilised in the manufacturing
process the duty paid on such goods become a manufacturing
cost and must be included in the valuation of work in
progress or finished goods arising from the subsequent
processing of such goods. It is not clear whether this
Guidance Note was issued in relation to excise duty paid on
an input under the MODVAT scheme.
We think it is appropriate that the cost of the
excisable product for the purposes of assessment of excise
duty under Section 4(1)(b) of the Act read with Rule 6 of
the Valuation Rules should be reckoned as it would be
reckoned by a man of commerce. We think that such realism
must inform the meaning that the Courts give to words of a
commercial nature, like cost, which are not defined in the
statutes which use them. A man of commerce would, in our
view, look at the matter thus : I paid Rs.100/- to the
seller of the raw material as the price thereof. The seller
of the raw material had paid Rs.10/- as the excise duty
thereon. Consequent upon purchasing the raw material and by
virtue of the MODVAT scheme, I have become entitled to the
credit of Rs.10/- with the excise authorities and can
utilise this credit when I pay excise duty on my finished
product. The real cost of the raw material (exclusive of
freight, insurance and the like) to me is, therefore,
Rs.90/-. In reckoning the cost of the final product I would
include Rs.90/- on this account. This, in real terms, is
the cost of the raw material (exclusive of freight,
insurance and the like) and it is this, in our view, which
should properly be included in computing the cost of the
excisable product.
The view we take about the cost of the raw material is
borne out by the Guidance Note of the Indian Institute of
Chartered Accountants, and there can be no doubt that this
Institute is an authoritative body in the matter of laying
down accountancy standards.
To answer the question involved in these appeals, in
determining the cost of an excisable product covered by the
MODVAT scheme under Section 4(1)(b) of the Act read with
Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules the excise duty paid on raw
material also covered by the MODVAT scheme is not to be
included.
The appeals are dismissed.
Refunds, if any, shall be made subject to the law.
No order as to costs.
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