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2025 (5) TMI 1018 - AT - Service Tax


ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

1. Whether the appellant, a public sector unit engaged in development of townships, was liable to pay Service Tax on the activity of construction of residential complexes for employees of the Government of India.

2. Whether the refund claim filed by the appellant for Service Tax paid during 01.10.2007 to 30.06.2011 was barred by limitation under Section 11B of the Central Excise Act, 1944.

3. Whether the provisions of Section 11B of the Central Excise Act, 1944, prescribing a one-year limitation period for refund claims, apply to cases where Service Tax was paid by mistake or under a mistaken notion of liability.

4. Whether the appeal before the Commissioner (Appeals) was dismissed on a legally sustainable ground, given that the ground cited was not part of the original adjudication or show cause notice.

ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Liability to pay Service Tax on construction of residential complexes for Government employees

The appellant initially treated their services as 'construction of residential complex service' and paid Service Tax accordingly from 01.10.2007 to 30.06.2011. Subsequently, they received a clarification from the Department of Revenue, Tax Research Unit (TRU) dated 14.05.2010, which clarified that no Service Tax was payable on construction of residential complexes intended for use by Government employees. This led the appellant to cease payment of Service Tax from 18.08.2011 onwards.

The Court noted the appellant's submission that the tax paid was not a legitimate tax liability but was paid under a mistaken notion, given the later clarification. This distinction is critical for the applicability of limitation provisions under Section 11B.

Issue 2: Applicability of limitation under Section 11B to refund claims filed beyond one year

The appellant filed a refund claim on 16.09.2011 for the period 01.10.2007 to 30.06.2011. The adjudicating authority rejected this claim by an order dated 17.02.2012, citing that the refund was time-barred as it was filed beyond the one-year period prescribed under Section 11B of the Central Excise Act, 1944. However, the appellant challenged the validity of this order, asserting that they were not properly served with the order, as no documentary proof of delivery was produced by the Revenue.

Further, the appellant filed a second refund claim on 22.08.2013, which was also rejected on limitation grounds. The Commissioner (Appeals) dismissed the subsequent appeal on a ground unrelated to limitation, namely that the appellant was not registered under the category of 'residential complex service', a ground not raised earlier.

Issue 3: Whether Section 11B limitation applies to mistaken payments of Service Tax

The Court extensively analyzed precedents addressing whether limitation under Section 11B applies to refund claims arising from mistaken payment of Service Tax. The appellant relied on the following key decisions:

  • M/s. OIL India Ltd. v. Commissioner of Central Excise and Service Tax, Dibrugarh, wherein the Tribunal held that refund claims for tax paid mistakenly are not subject to the limitation under Section 11B.
  • Venkatraman Guhaprasad v. Commissioner of G.S.T. & C.Ex., Chennai, where the Tribunal similarly held that limitation under Section 11B does not apply to mistaken payments.
  • Commissioner v. KVR Construction, where the Supreme Court upheld the Karnataka High Court's decision that limitation under Section 11B is not attracted in cases of mistaken tax payments.

The Court referred to a detailed order by a Third Member of the Tribunal in the OIL India Ltd. case, which resolved a difference of opinion and conclusively held: "The limitation prescribed under section 11B of the Excise Act would not be applicable if an amount is paid under a mistaken notion as it was not required to be paid towards any duty/tax."

The Court also noted that the Commissioner (Appeals) erred in dismissing the appeal on a new ground unrelated to the limitation issue or the original adjudication, which was not legally sustainable.

Issue 4: Procedural propriety and treatment of competing arguments

The Court observed that although the Revenue claimed that the refund claim was rejected by an order dated 17.02.2012 sent by Speed Post, no documentary evidence was produced to prove delivery. The appellant's RTI application and the subsequent reply indicated that the appellant was unaware of the rejection order until much later, and the order copy was not enclosed with the RTI response.

The Court found that the Commissioner (Appeals) improperly introduced a new ground for rejection that was not part of the original adjudication or show cause notice, violating principles of natural justice and procedural fairness.

SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"The limitation prescribed under section 11B of the Excise Act would not be applicable if an amount is paid under a mistaken notion as it was not required to be paid towards any duty/tax."

The Court established the core principle that refund claims for Service Tax paid mistakenly are not subject to the one-year limitation period under Section 11B of the Central Excise Act, 1944. This principle aligns with the decisions of the Tribunal and the Supreme Court, reinforcing that limitation applies only to legitimate tax payments and not to mistaken payments.

The Court held that the appellant's refund claim was valid despite being filed beyond the statutory one-year period, as the tax paid was under a mistaken belief of liability.

The Court further held that the Commissioner (Appeals) erred in dismissing the appeal on a ground not raised earlier, which cannot be legally sustained.

Consequently, the Court set aside the impugned order of the Commissioner (Appeals) and remanded the matter to the adjudicating authority to process the refund claim afresh and pass a reasoned order within three months.

 

 

 

 

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