Full Judgment Text
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NON-REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5183 OF 2004
Commissioner of Central Excise, Delhi-III …Appellant
Versus
M/s Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. …Respondent
J U D G M E N T
Madan B. Lokur, J.
1. The question for consideration is whether the Customs, Excise
and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (the Tribunal) was right in holding
that the High Powered Committee (HPC) constituted under the
provisions of Rule 28-C of the Haryana General Sales Tax Rules 1975
(the Rules) had merely deferred payment of sales tax by the
respondent/assessee and had not granted it any tax concession. In
our opinion, the question must be answered in the negative and in
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Meenakshi Kohli
Date: 2014.09.04
10:55:27 IST
Reason:
favour of the Revenue.
The facts
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2. The assessee is a prestigious unit manufacturing and selling
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vehicles in the State of Haryana. On 4 October, 2002 the Revenue
issued a show cause notice to the respondent/assessee on the
ground, inter alia, that on the sale of its vehicles for the quarters
ending September and December 2001 and March and June, 2002
the assessee had retained 50% of the sales tax collected by it from its
customers. The retention allegedly was on the strength of an
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entitlement certificate dated 1 August, 2001 issued by the Deputy
Excise and Taxation Commissioner in Haryana under the provisions
of Rule 28-C of the Rules.
3. Rule 28-C of the Rules reads as follows:-
Rule 28-C
“Tax concessions, class of industries, period and
other conditions. (Section 25A)
(1)Concessions of tax payable under the Acts shall
be available to an eligible industrial unit in the
manner, for the period and at the scale given
hereinafter.
(2)A Unit availing tax concession under this rule
shall not be entitled to any other tax concession
under Section 13-B or Section 25-A of the Act.
(3)(c) “eligible industrial unit” means
(1)x x x
Note:- The eligibility of units in pipeline shall be
determined by High Powered Committee in case of
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prestigious units and by Higher Level Screening
Committees in other cases. The decision of High
Powered Committee/Higher Level Screening
Committee shall be final.
(4)xxx xxx xxx
(5)(a) Subject to other provisions of this rule, an
eligible industrial unit (except a prestigious unit)
holding a valid entitlement certificate shall be
entitled to the concession of deferment of payment
of sales tax including central sales tax and
conversion of the same to capital subsidy,
computer on the sale of goods (including
by-products and waste) manufactured by the unit
of arising from the process of manufacturer and
declared in the sales tax returns filed by the unit,
without taking into account the rebate admissible
under Section 15A or the rules framed under the
Act, at the scale, subject to the time limit and the
extent related to the fixed capital investment (FCI)
and the unit shall be required to pay only the
balance of tax after deducting the rebate and the
capital subsidy plus any purchase tax payable at
its hands but no refunds of any amount of tax
paid shall accrue to the unit by operation of these
provisions.
Explanation I-xxx xxx xxx
Illustration – xxx xxx xxx
(b) Decision about the grant of tax concession to
prestigious unit shall be taken by the High
Powered Committee on the basis of factors like
employments generation, likely revenue, growth of
ancillaries, impact on overall industrial growth
etc. A prestigious unit shall not be, as a matter of
right, entitled to benefits available to other units.”
4. The Note below sub-rule (3) provides that the eligibility of a
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prestigious unit to a tax concession shall be determined by a High
Powered Committee (HPC). There is no dispute that the assessee is a
prestigious unit; that its case was considered by the HPC for the grant
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of a tax concession; that the HPC took the following decision on 14
June, 2001:-
“The relevant facts narrated in the agenda and the
report of sub committee held on 29.03.2001 under the
Chairmanship of Sh. A.N. Mathur, IAS, was also put
up before the committee. After due deliberation the
committee approved that MUL be given incentive of
first expansion where the company will pay 50% of the
tax collected and retain 50%. This would be net of tax
on purchases. Maximum benefit permissible on
account of first expansion i.e. Rs. 564.35 crores would
remain the ceiling. The period of benefit would be
extended to 14 years within the existing ceiling of Rs.
564.35 crores and in lieu thereof MUL would waive its
claim for tax incentive for all subsequent expansions
i.e. for IInd, IIIrd. The incentive would be given only in
respect of vehicles rolled out of production capacity of
70,000 vehicles added as a result of first expansion
and not to the production augmented by capacity
addition of 30,000 vehicles as a result of second
expansion.
The MUL will start availing the benefit of sales tax
concession from the date of entitlement as per Rule
28C. The Entitlement Certificate will be issued by the
DETC concerned and MUL will submit the requisite
documents for the issuance of entitlement certificate
to the DETC concerned.”
5. The show cause notice alleged that on a reading of the above
decision, Rule 28-C and the entitlement certificate issued to the
assessee, a tax concession of Rs. 564.35 crores could be availed of by
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the assessee between 1 August, 2001 and 31 July, 2015. The
assessee could collect sales tax from its customers but was required
to deposit only 50% thereof with the exchequer while retaining the
balance 50% by way of a tax concession. It was alleged that the
retained sales tax was neither actually paid nor actually payable to
the State Government. Under these circumstances, the sales tax
retained by the assessee constituted a part of the “transaction value”
of the vehicles sold by the assessee to the customers in terms of the
definition of that expression in Section 4(3)(d) of the Central Excise
Act, 1944 (hereinafter referred to as the Excise Act).
6. The definition of “Transaction Value” in Section 4(3)(d) of the
Excise Act reads as follows:-
“Transaction Value” means the price actually paid or
payable for the goods, when sold, and includes in
addition to the amount charged as price, any amount
that the buyer is liable to pay to, or on behalf of, the
assessee, by reason of, or in connection with the sale,
whether payable at the time of the sale or at any other
time, including, but not limited to, any amount
charged for, or to make provision for, advertising or
publicity, marketing and selling organization
expenses, storage, outward handling, servicing,
warranty, commission or any other matter; but does
not include the amount of duty of excise, sales tax and
other taxes, if any, actually paid or actually payable on
such goods.
7. Based on the above, it was alleged in the show cause notice that
the assessee had collected and retained about Rs. 22.44 crores from
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its customers as sales tax. Accordingly, the assessee was liable to pay
excise duty on the assessable value of the vehicles which included the
amount of about Rs. 22.44 crores. The assessee was accordingly
asked to show cause why central excise duty be not levied on the
assessable value of the vehicles under Section 11A of the Excise Act
and why penalty be not imposed upon the assessee.
8. The assessee submitted a detailed (undated) reply to the show
cause notice. The reply was considered by the Revenue and the
assessee was also given a personal hearing. Thereafter, on a
consideration of the facts of the case, the adjudicating authority took
the view that the amount of sales tax retained by the assessee formed
a part of the transaction value of the vehicles in terms of Section 4(3)
(d) of the Excise Act. It was also held that since the assessee had
violated certain provisions of the Central Excise Rules of 2001 and
2002 it was also liable to a penalty.
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9. Accordingly, on 22 May, 2003 the adjudicating authority
determined an amount of about Rs. 7.21 crores as central excise duty
payable by the assessee on the transaction value and also imposed a
penalty of Rs. 1 crore on the assessee.
Decision of the Tribunal
10. Feeling aggrieved, the assessee preferred an appeal before the
Tribunal. The appeal was taken up for consideration by the Tribunal
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and by an order dated 16 January, 2004, the appeal was allowed.
11. The assessee contended before the Tribunal that it is not as if it
was exempted from payment of sales tax to the extent of 50%
collected from the customers but that the payment of sales tax was
deferred in the case of the assessee. Reliance in this regard was
placed by the assessee on Section 25A of the Haryana General Sales
Tax Act, 1973 (the Act).
12. Section 25A of the Act reads as follows:-
“Section 25A . Deferment of tax .- Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in this Act, the
State Government, if satisfied that it is necessary and
expedient so to do in the interest of industrial
development of the State, may defer the payment of
tax by such class of industries, for such period, either
prospectively or retrospectively, and such to such
conditions, as may be prescribed.”
13. It was further contended by the assessee that Rule 28-C was
required to be read along with Section 25A of Act and in terms of
sub-rule 5(a) of Rule 28-C read with the entitlement certificate
granted to the assessee, payment of sales tax was deferred and
permitted to be converted into capital subsidy to the extent mentioned
in the entitlement certificate.
14. It was also argued that the deferment of sales tax in the case of
the assessee was not a concession as contemplated under Section
13B of the Act. Consequently, since 50% of the sales tax collected by
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the assessee from its customers was to be adjusted against the
subsidy granted by the State Government, that amount could not be
included in the transaction value of the goods.
15. The Tribunal accepted the contentions of the assessee and held
that Rule 28-C prescribed a procedure relating to deferment of tax
under Section 25A of the Act and, therefore, what was granted to the
assessee was a deferment of payment of sales tax and not a sales tax
concession. The deferment was for a period of 14 years during which
period the amount was adjusted against capital subsidy due to the
assessee, subject to a maximum limit of Rs.564.35 crores. Instead of
the assessee depositing the amount in the Treasury and the State
Government giving the amount back to the assessee towards capital
subsidy the amount was adjusted and therefore it could not be
argued that the assessee was claiming abatement in respect of sales
tax not actually paid or payable.
16. The Tribunal accordingly set aside the order passed by the
adjudicating authority and held that the assessee was justified in
claiming abatement of the sales tax element retained by it on the sale
of vehicles.
Discussion
17. Aggrieved by the order passed by the Tribunal, the Revenue is in
appeal before us. The submissions made by the assessee before the
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Tribunal were reiterated before us. On the other hand, the Revenue
contended that the case of the assessee was governed by Rule 28-C(5)
(b) and not Rule 28-C(5)(a); that the decision of the HPC did not
support the case of the assessee; that the entitlement certificate did
not defer any payment of sales tax.
18. A bare reading of Rule 28-C(5)(a) shows that it is clearly
inapplicable in the case of the assessee. That sub-rule ex facie
excludes a prestigious unit from its ken [“(except a prestigious unit)”]
There is no dispute that the assessee is a prestigious unit and
therefore Rule 28-C(5)(a) is not at all applicable and the Tribunal was
completely in error in relying upon this sub-rule. What is applicable
to the present case is Rule 28-C(5)(b) which mentions that the grant
of a tax concession to a prestigious unit will be decided by the HPC.
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19. The HPC in its decision taken on 14 June, 2001 permitted the
assessee to retain 50% of the sales tax collected from the customers
for a period of 14 years subject to a ceiling of Rs.564.35 crores. There
is no mention in the decision of the HPC about adjustment of this
amount against any scheme or any capital subsidy. On the contrary,
the decision of the HPC is relatable to Rule 28-C (5)(b) which refers to
“grant of tax concession to prestigious units” and for the
implementation of this decision, an entitlement certificate would be
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issued to the assessee. The Revenue is right in its contention that the
decision of the HPC clearly does not support the case of the assessee.
20. Pursuant to the decision of the HPC, the assessee was issued an
entitlement certificate in Form ST 72B of the Rules. The entitlement
certificate reads as follows:-
Form ST 72B
[See Rule 28C(3)(d), (8)(a)(c)]
ENTITLEMENT CERTIFICATE under Rule 28C of the Haryana
General Sales Tax Rules, 1975
It is hereby certified that the industrial unit in the name and
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style of M/s Maruti Udyog Limited, Gurgaon (Place) office address 11
Floor, Jeewan Parkash, 25 Kasturba Gandhi Marg, New Delhi-1
holding registration certificate No.1818132 under the Haryana
General Sales Tax Act, 1973, with date of validity from 25.01.1993 is
entitled to tax concession in accordance with the provisons of Rule
28C, for the period from 01.08.2001 to 31.07.2015
2. Subject to the provisions of Rule 28C, this certificate is
valid for the period from 01.08.2001 to 31.07.2015.
| From the date<br>of issue of<br>entitlement<br>Certificate | Quantity of tax<br>concession<br>authority | Signature of<br>the issuing of<br>the certificate | Signature,<br>name and<br>status of the<br>holder |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01.08.2001 to<br>31.07.2015 | 564.35 Crores |
3. This certificate is entered at Serial No. 5 of page 5 of the
register in form ST 74-B.
4. This certificate shall be deemed to have been cancelled from
date on which the benefit of tax concession expires.
5. In case of cancellation/withdrawal of the entitlement
certificate, the unit shall be liable to make payment of the tax
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concession availed by it in accordance with clause (d) of sub-rule (13)
of Rule 28C.
6. Class of good/products manufacture: “Vehicles”.
7. Subject to condition that incentive would be given only in
respect of vehicles rolled out of production capacity of 70,000 vehicles
added as a result of first expansion and not to the production
augmented by capacity addition of 30,000 vehicles as a result of
second expansion.
Deputy Excise and Taxation
Commissioner,
Name J.S. Ahlawat
Di
strict Gurgaon (East)
Dy. Excise of Taxation
Commissioner
GURGAON
Date of issue 01.08.2001
Place Gurgaon
21. A bare reading of the entitlement certificate also does not give
any indication of deferment of tax or capital subsidy. On the contrary,
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it only refers to a “tax concession” for the period from 1 August,
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2001 to 31 July, 2015 and the quantum of tax concession is
mentioned as Rs.564.35 crores. The entitlement certificate issued to
the assessee is clearly in line with the decision of the HPC and also
does not support the case of the assessee.
22. However, to buttress his case, learned counsel for the assessee
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referred to a representation made by the assessee to the
Commissioner, Commercial Sales Tax Department in the State
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Government on 15 September, 2001 and the response received by it
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on or about 22 October, 2001. The response received by the
assessee clarified that the amount allowed to be retained by the
assessee on the basis of the entitlement certificate would be
retainable as capital subsidy and not as an exemption from sales tax.
This response was sent by the Joint Director (legal) from the office of
the Prohibition, Excise & Taxation Commissioner of the State
Government.
23. We are not able to appreciate the authority of the Joint Director
to issue such a response which is clearly not supported by the
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decision of the HPC taken on 14 June, 2001 nor is it in consonance
with the entitlement certificate issued to the assessee nor is it in
consonance with Rule 28-C(5)(b). As mentioned above there is
nothing in the decision of the HPC or the entitlement certificate to
indicate that 50% of the sales tax retained by the assessee on the sale
of its vehicles was liable to be adjusted against any capital subsidy
entitlement of the assessee.
24. Learned Additional Solicitor General contended that Section 13B
of the Act which relates to the power to exempt certain class of
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industries from payment of tax is also relevant. We are not inclined
to consider this submission since the very basis on which the
Tribunal has proceeded namely the application of Rule 28-C(5)(a) is
not only incorrect but the Tribunal has overlooked the decision of the
HPC and the entitlement certificate apart from overlooking Rule
28-C(5)(b).
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25. Finally, our attention was drawn to a circular dated 30 June,
2000 issued by the Central Board of Excise and Customs. This
circular was issued in view of the coming into force of Section 4 of the
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Excise Act (as amended) from 1 July, 2000.
26. The circular brought to the notice of all concerned that in view of
the amended Section 4 of the Excise Act, any amount actually paid or
actually payable by way of excise, sales tax and other taxes shall be
excluded from the transaction value. It was made clear that if tax is
paid at a concessional rate, that amount may be deducted from the
transaction value. But, where the tax is not paid at the time of the
transaction, but is paid subsequently, as for example, sales tax
payable under a deferment scheme, then too the benefit of exclusion
would be allowed since the amount would be actually payable. The
relevant paragraphs of the circular, namely, paragraphs 10 and 11
read as follows:-
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“10. As regards exclusion of taxes while working out
assessable value, the definition of transaction value
itself mentions that whatever amount is actually paid
or actually payable to the Government or the relevant
statutory authority by way of excise, sale tax and other
taxes, such amount shall be excluded from the
transaction value. In other words, if any excise duty
or other tax is paid at a concessional rate for a
particular transaction, the amount of excise duty or
tax actually paid at the concessional rate shall only be
allowed to be deducted from price. The assessee
cannot claim that the excise duty or tax payable at the
“normal rate” should be allowed to be deducted. The
words “actually paid” have, therefore, been used to the
definition of transaction value to reflect the legislative
intention as explained above.
11. The words “actually payable” in the context of the
amount of duty of excise, sales tax and other taxes
would normally come into play only in those situations
where the amount of excise, sales tax or other taxes is
not paid at the time of transaction but paid
subsequently, for example, sales tax payable under a
deferment scheme.”
27. Insofar as the present case is concerned, there is no doubt that
50% of the sales tax collected was retained by the assessee and was
not actually paid to the exchequer nor was it actually payable since
the HPC permitted the assessee to retain that amount.
28. Therefore, whichever way the issue is looked at, the fact remains
that the assessee retained with it 50% of the sales tax collected from
its customers and it was neither actually paid to the exchequer nor
was it actually payable to the exchequer. That being the position, the
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transaction value was required to be calculated by including the
amount of about Rs. 22.44 crores retained by the assessee.
29. In our opinion, the Tribunal misdirected itself in law on several
counts and erroneously decided the appeal in favour of the assessee
and, therefore, the order of the Tribunal is set aside.
30. It was eventually submitted by learned counsel for the assessee
that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case penalty ought
not to be imposed upon the assessee particularly since the assessee
bona fide believed on the basis of the correspondence entered into
with the Revenue that the 50% sales tax retained by it was adjustable
against capital subsidy and also that there was at least the decision of
the Tribunal in its favour in regard to the entitlement of the assessee.
We agree with learned counsel only to the extent that since the
assessee had succeeded before the Tribunal, it would not be
appropriate to saddle it with any penalty.
Conclusion
31. Accordingly, while we restore the order of the adjudicating
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authority dated 22 May, 2003 and set aside the order of the
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Tribunal dated 16 January, 2004, we set aside the penalty imposed
on the assessee.
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32. The appeal is allowed to the above extent. There will be no order
as to costs.
….……………………..J
(Madan B. Lokur)
…………………………J
(Kurian Joseph)
New Delhi;
September 3, 2014
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ITEM NO.1A COURT NO.11 SECTION III
(For Judgment)
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
Civil Appeal No(s). 5183/2004
COMMNR. OF CENTRAL EXCISE, DELHI Appellant(s)
VERSUS
M/S. MARUTI SUZUKI INDIA LTD. Respondent(s)
Date : 03/09/2014 This appeal was called on for pronouncement of
judgment today.
For Appellant(s) Mr. N.K. Kaul, ASG
Mr. K. Radhakrishnan, Sr. Adv.
Mr. R.K. Verma, Adv.
Mr. Rupesh Kumar, Adv.
Mr. B. Krishna Prasad, Adv.
Ms. Aakanksha Kaul, Adv.
Ms. Silpa Nair, Adv.
Ms. Sanyat Lodha, Adv.
For Respondent(s) Mr. V. Lakshmi Kumaran, Adv.
Mr. Alok Yadav, Adv.
Mr. Anand K., Adv.
Mr. Rajesh Kumar, Adv.
Hon'ble Mr. Justice Madan B. Lokur pronounced the judgment of
the Bench comprising His Lordship and Hon'ble Mr. Justice Kurian
Joseph.
The order of the adjudicating authority dated 22.05.2003 is
restored and the order of the Tribunal dated 16.01.2004 is set
aside and the penalty imposed on the assessee is also set aside.
The appeal is allowed to the extent indicated in terms of the
signed non-reportable judgment.
(R.NATARAJAN) (SAROJ SAINI)
Court Master Court Master
(Signed non-reportable judgment is placed on the file)