LAWS(CE)-2007-6-217

BHARAT BOX FACTORY LTD. Vs. CCE

Decided On June 12, 2007
Bharat Box Factory Ltd. Appellant
V/S
CCE Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) THE appellants have challenged the order of the Commissioner (Appeals) dated 19.01.2006 dismissing the appeals and upholding the order of the adjudicating authority rejecting the refund claim of the appellants on account of Education Cess levied under the Finance Act, 2004.

(2.) THE claim of the appellants for refund of Education Cess was based on the Notification bearing no. 56/2002 dated 14.11.2002, which provided for exemption to the goods specified in the First Schedule and the Second Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (other than the goods specified in Annexure I to the Notification), from so much of the duty of excise or additional duty of excise, as the case may be, leviable thereon under any of the three Acts, namely, The Central Excise Act, 1944; The Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance) Act, 1957; and The Additional Duties of Excise (Textiles and Textile Articles) Act, 1978, as was equivalent to the amount of duty paid by the manufacturer of goods, other than the amount of duty paid by utilization of CENVAT Credit. Under this Notification, it was, inter alia, provided by paragraph 1A that the exemption contained therein shall be available subject to the condition that the manufacturer first utilizes whole of the CENVAT Credit available to him on the last day of the month under consideration for payment of duty on goods cleared during such months and paid only the balance amount in cash. Paragraph 2 of the said Notification laid down the manner in which the said exemption was to be given effect to. Accordingly, a manufacturer was required to submit a statement of the duty paid, other than the amount of duty paid by utilization of CENVAT Credit, to the Assistant Commissioner by the 7th of the next month, in which the duty had been paid. This obviously means that the statement of only the duty paid in cash (or from the PLA) was to be submitted. Thereupon, it was to be verified by the Assistant Commissioner or the Deputy Commissioner, and the amount of duty paid in cash was to be refunded to the manufacturer by the 15th day of the said next month. In the event of likelihood of delay in the verification of the statement, refund was to be made on a provisional basis by 15th day of the next month to the month under consideration. Paragraph 2A of the Notification gave an option to the manufacturer to take credit of the amount of duty paid during the month under consideration, other than by way of utilization of CENVAT Credit, in his account current, maintained in terms of Part V of the Excise Manual. When such option was exercised by the manufacturer, the credit of duty paid in cash during the month under consideration, could be given by the manufacturer in his account current by the 7th day of the next month to the month under consideration, who upon verification was required to determine the amount correctly refundable to the manufacturer and intimate the same to the manufacturer by 15th day of the next month to the month under consideration. Any excess credit taken, was required to be reversed within 5 days of the intimation to the manufacturer. If the credit was irregularly taken or excess credit is availed and not reversed, it became recoverable as if it was a recovery of duty of excise erroneously refunded.

(3.) IT is not disputed that the appellants paid the excise and additional duties under the said three Acts in cash after having exhausted payments made from the CENVAT account, in respect of which the exemption did not extend. The appellants having paid the duties under the said three Acts and also the Education Cess payable at 2% in respect thereof under Section 93 of the Finance Act, 2004, claimed refunds of the duties and the Education Cess, which was also in the nature of excise duty, as provided by Section 93 of the Finance Act, 2004. As noticed above, since the Finance Act, 2004 was not mentioned in the exemption Notification and only the aforesaid three Acts were referred, the Revenue, while upholding the claim for the refund of duties paid in cash under the said three Acts, denied the refund of the Education Cess, which was also in the nature of the excise duty, paid at 2% of the aggregate of the duties which were paid under the said three Acts, on the ground that the Finance Act, 2004 was not specified in the Notification.