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Home Case Index All Cases Central Excise Central Excise + AT Central Excise - 2025 (6) TMI AT This

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2025 (6) TMI 437 - AT - Central Excise


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal question considered by the Tribunal was whether the valuation of High Carbon Ferro Manganese lumps cleared by the appellant for captive consumption to a sister unit should be determined under Rule 8 of the Central Excise Valuation (Determination of Price of Excisable Goods) Rules, 2000 ("Valuation Rules") or under Rules 4 and 5 of the same Rules, given that a portion of the goods was also sold to independent buyers in the open market. Specifically, the Tribunal examined:

  • Whether the valuation for duty purposes of goods cleared for captive consumption to a related unit should be based on cost of production as per Rule 8 and relevant cost accounting standards (CAS-4), or on transaction value as per Rules 4 and 5, which require reference to prices of goods sold to unrelated buyers.
  • The applicability and binding nature of CBEC Circular No. 692/8/2003-CX dated 13.02.2003, which prescribes valuation methodology for captively consumed goods.
  • The relevance and effect of prior Tribunal and Supreme Court decisions on the valuation methodology in such circumstances.
  • Whether the Revenue's demand for differential duty on account of alleged undervaluation, based on application of Rules 4 and 5 instead of Rule 8, was sustainable.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue: Appropriate Valuation Method for Captively Consumed Goods

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

The valuation of excisable goods is governed by the Central Excise Valuation (Determination of Price of Excisable Goods) Rules, 2000. Rule 8 specifically deals with valuation of goods cleared for captive consumption, prescribing cost of production as the basis. Rules 4 and 5 pertain to valuation based on transaction value, especially when goods are sold to related and unrelated buyers.

CBEC Circular No. 692/8/2003-CX dated 13.02.2003 clarified that cost of production for captively consumed goods must be determined strictly in accordance with Cost Accounting Standard 4 (CAS-4), developed by the Institute of Cost & Works Accountants of India (ICWAI). This Circular superseded earlier instructions and mandated adherence to CAS-4 principles for valuation under Rule 8.

Precedents include:

  • The Tribunal's decision in the case of M/s. National Aluminium Company Ltd., where it was held that valuation for captively consumed goods should follow CAS-4 under Rule 8, as per the 2003 Circular.
  • The Supreme Court's affirmation of the above approach in the case of M/s. OCL India Ltd., which upheld the Tribunal's reliance on the Circular and CAS-4 for valuation.
  • Judgments emphasizing that Revenue is bound by its own circulars and that assessees can claim benefit of later beneficial circulars modifying earlier instructions.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The Tribunal examined the facts that the appellant cleared a majority of goods to its sister unit for captive consumption and only a small quantity was sold to independent buyers. It noted that the appellant valued the goods under Rule 8, applying CAS-4 principles as mandated by the 2003 Circular, and paid duty accordingly.

The Tribunal observed that the Revenue's contention to apply Rules 4 and 5, which require valuation based on prices of sales to unrelated buyers, was misplaced in the context of captive consumption. The Tribunal distinguished the Revenue's reliance on a Larger Bench decision in Ispat Industries, noting that in that case, goods were transferred to another plant not for captive consumption, whereas here, the goods were captively consumed by the sister unit in manufacturing excisable goods.

Further, the Tribunal emphasized that the 2003 Circular specifically modified earlier circulars and is binding on the Revenue, as upheld by the Supreme Court. The Tribunal also referred to the principle that assessees are entitled to claim benefit of later beneficial circulars and that Revenue cannot apply earlier instructions without regard to subsequent modifications.

Key Evidence and Findings:

  • The appellant's adoption of CAS-4 for cost of production valuation under Rule 8 as per the 2003 Circular.
  • The existence of earlier Tribunal and Supreme Court decisions affirming the correctness of this approach.
  • The distinction in facts from cases relied upon by Revenue, particularly regarding the nature of goods transfer (captive consumption vs. non-captive).
  • The Revenue's own dropping of similar charges for later periods, recognizing the correctness of valuation under Rule 8.

Application of Law to Facts:

The Tribunal applied the legal framework and precedents to the facts, concluding that the appellant's valuation under Rule 8 using CAS-4 was correct and in compliance with binding circulars and judicial decisions. The Revenue's demand based on Rules 4 and 5 was therefore unsustainable.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

The Tribunal carefully considered the Revenue's argument that valuation should be on the basis of prices to unrelated buyers under Rules 4 and 5. It rejected this on factual grounds (majority clearance was captive consumption) and legal grounds (binding nature of the 2003 Circular and precedents). The Tribunal also addressed the Revenue's attempt to distinguish earlier decisions by emphasizing factual differences and the binding effect of the Circular.

Conclusions:

The Tribunal concluded that the appellant correctly paid duty on the captively consumed goods under Rule 8 of the Valuation Rules, applying CAS-4 as per the 2003 Circular. The Revenue's demand for additional duty based on alleged undervaluation applying Rules 4 and 5 was set aside.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Tribunal held:

"The appellant has correctly paid the duty on the goods in question, which has been captively consumed by the sister unit for manufacturing of excisable goods in terms of CBEC Circular No.692/8/2003-CX dated 13.02.2003. On merit, the appellant has rightly paid the duty as per CAS-4 in terms of Rule 8 of the Valuation Rules."

"Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules, is not applicable in the facts and circumstances of the case."

"The Circular clarified the position that the cost of production of captively consumed goods will be done strictly in accordance with CAS-4."

"Revenue had no independently sustainable claim. Its claim is based entirely on circulars issued from time to time. That too, on incorrect costing principles. It would be wholly incorrect to apply old circulars without considering the modifications brought about by the latest circular, particularly when it is well settled that assessees are not bound by any circular, though at liberty to seek the benefit of circulars and a Court has to allow such a claim while Revenue is bound by its own circulars."

Core principles established include:

  • Valuation of captively consumed excisable goods must be done under Rule 8 of the Valuation Rules, applying cost accounting standards (CAS-4), as mandated by the 2003 Circular.
  • Where goods are cleared mainly for captive consumption, the transaction value-based valuation under Rules 4 and 5 does not apply, even if some quantity is sold to unrelated buyers.
  • Revenue is bound by its own circulars and cannot apply outdated valuation instructions ignoring subsequent modifications beneficial to the assessee.
  • Assessees are entitled to claim benefit of later beneficial circulars modifying earlier instructions.
  • Judicial precedents affirm the above principles and bind the Revenue and adjudicating authorities.

Final determinations:

  • The demand of duty confirmed against the appellant on account of alleged undervaluation was set aside.
  • The appellant's valuation under Rule 8 applying CAS-4 was upheld as correct.
  • The impugned order confirming demand and penalty was quashed.
  • The appeal was allowed with consequential relief.

 

 

 

 

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