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2025 (5) TMI 1529 - AT - Central Excise


The core legal questions considered in this appeal revolve around the validity and admissibility of electronic evidence obtained during a search, the sufficiency of evidence to establish clandestine removal of goods without payment of excise duty, and the consequent demand of excise duty, interest, and penalty. Specifically, the issues include:

1. Whether the data retrieved from pen drives found during the search, which were not seized under a proper seizure memo and lacked certification as per statutory requirements, can be admitted as evidence under the provisions of the Central Excise Act, 1944.

2. Whether the Department has produced cogent and tangible evidence to substantiate the allegation of clandestine manufacture and removal of goods without payment of excise duty.

3. The applicability and compliance with procedural safeguards under Section 36(B) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, and the corresponding provisions of the Indian Evidence Act, 1972, regarding electronic evidence.

4. The legitimacy of the demand of excise duty, interest, and penalty based solely on the electronic data and statements without corroborative material evidence such as raw material purchases, electricity consumption, labor deployment, or transportation records.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis

1. Admissibility of Electronic Evidence from Pen Drives

The legal framework governing the admissibility of electronic evidence in excise matters is primarily Section 36(B) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, which prescribes strict conditions for accepting computer printouts as evidence. Subsection (2) mandates that the computer producing the printout must have been regularly used for storing or processing relevant information during the material period, that the computer was operating properly, and that the information contained in the printout was supplied in the ordinary course of business. Additionally, subsection (4) requires a certificate identifying the documents and describing the manner of production to accompany such evidence.

The Court observed that the pen drives were found in the worker's quarters, not from the office or computers regularly used by the Appellant for business purposes. Crucially, these pen drives were never seized under a proper seizure memo, no seal was affixed or maintained, and no certificate as mandated by Section 36(B) was obtained. The printouts were extracted at the DGCEI office without specifying the computer used for retrieval, further compromising the chain of custody and authenticity.

The Court emphasized that the Department failed to comply with the procedural safeguards under Section 36(B), which is a settled principle for the admissibility of electronic evidence. The absence of a certificate from a responsible person of the Appellant company vitiated the credibility of the computer printouts. The Court also referred to the Supreme Court decision which requires compliance with Section 65B of the Indian Evidence Act, 1972, for electronic evidence admissibility, noting that the provisions of Section 65B and Section 36(B) are pari materia.

Consequently, the Court held that the data retrieved from the pen drives could not be accepted as tangible evidence. It further found that the search and seizure proceedings violated Section 100 of the Criminal Procedure Code read with Section 18 of the Central Excise Act due to non-compliance with the statutory requirements for electronic evidence.

2. Sufficiency of Evidence to Prove Clandestine Removal

The Department's allegation of clandestine manufacture and removal of goods was based solely on the data from the pen drives and statements recorded during the investigation. The Court noted that the Commissioner (Appeals) upheld the demand primarily relying on the confessional statement of the company's director without independent corroboration.

The Court referred to established legal precedents which require positive, tangible, and incontrovertible evidence to prove clandestine removal. Such evidence includes purchase of excess raw materials, consumption of electricity beyond normal limits, employment of additional labor, seizure of cash, transportation records, and other material indicia of clandestine activity. The Department failed to produce any bills, invoices, or documentary proof of raw material purchases or other corroborative evidence.

The Court cited authoritative judgments which hold that the onus lies on the Revenue to bring forth clinching evidence and that mere assumptions or presumptions are insufficient to sustain a charge of clandestine removal. The absence of any direct or affirmative evidence rendered the Department's case incomplete and unreliable.

3. Application of Law to Facts and Treatment of Competing Arguments

The Appellant contended that the pen drives were not seized properly, the data was not certified as required, and the Department failed to explain why only partial data (first quarter of 2017-18) was considered. Further, the Appellant argued that the demand was based on private records without corroboration, which is impermissible.

The Department maintained that the demand was justified based on the data and statements obtained. However, the Court found that the Department's reliance on uncertified electronic data and statements without supporting documentary evidence was legally untenable.

By analyzing the procedural lapses and evidentiary deficiencies, the Court concluded that the Department's demand was not sustainable. The Court also underscored the importance of procedural compliance in search and seizure operations and the necessity of adhering to statutory safeguards for electronic evidence.

4. Interest and Penalty

The Court noted the Appellant's submission that if the demand is not sustainable, interest and penalty cannot be levied. Given the Court's conclusion that the demand itself is unsustainable, the ancillary imposition of interest and penalty also fails.

Significant Holdings

"It is a settled principal of law that evidences available in electronic modes are accepted only when conditions laid down under Section 36(B) of the Central Excise Act, 1944 are fulfilled."

"In the present case, pen drives were not resumed from office of the Appellant but from the worker's quarters and also there is no certificate taken by the Department as provided in sub clause (2) of Section 36(B) of the Central Excise Act, 1944. In the above scenario, the data retrieved from the pen drives cannot be accepted as tangible evidence."

"No certificate from the responsible person of the Appellant was obtained by the Department, the credibility of the computer printout gets vitiated."

"Charges of clandestine removal based on such unauthenticated data is not sustainable and are therefore, set aside."

"The charges of clandestine removal of the goods cannot be upheld merely on assumptions and presumptions, but has to be proved with positive evidence such as purchase of excess raw materials, consumption of excess electricity, employment of extra labour, seizure of cash, transportation of clandestinely removed goods etc."

"The onus of proof of bringing clinching evidence is on the Revenue."

"The evidences brought into the record by the Department are incomplete, inconsistent and are not a reliable piece of evidence to prove charges of clandestine removal."

"When no demand is sustainable no interest and penalty is leviable."

The Court set aside the impugned orders confirming the demand, interest, and penalty, holding that the Department failed to comply with statutory evidentiary requirements and did not produce cogent evidence to prove clandestine removal of goods. Both appeals were allowed with consequential relief in accordance with law.

 

 

 

 

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