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2024 (5) TMI 3 - CESTAT CHENNAIReversal of CENVAT credit - Investment in shares - Nature of activity - Sale or service - Exempt service or not - Press mud is waste product like Bagasse or not - exigibility of goods/service tax - burden on Revenue to prove the case. Taxability - Press mud is waste product like Bagasse or not - exigibility of goods/service tax - burden on Revenue to prove the case - HELD THAT:- The impugned demand cannot sustain since Press mud is no different from Bagasse, which is also a waste product, which is also a result of the manufacturing process of a different product and, consequently, the impugned demand cannot sustain - Hon’ble Allahabad High court in the case of M/S BALRAMPUR CHINI MILLS LTD. THROUGH ITS GENERAL MANAGER VERSUS UNION OF INDIA, MINISTRY OF FINANCE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE [2019 (5) TMI 972 - ALLAHABAD HIGH COURT] has held that 'Rule 6 of the Cenvat Credit Rules would have no application for reversal of Cenvat Credit in relation to Bagasse.' - demand set aside. Reversal of CENVAT credit - Investment in shares - Exempt service or not - HELD THAT:- The appellant had invested in shares/securities that were giving dividend income but, however, we fail to understand as to what was ‘service’ element involved in such investment. The revenue has only fastened the liability on surmises and without there being any positive findings in this regard. It was for the revenue to prove that ‘investment’ itself was a service, in order to demand service tax. Rather, the first appellant authority himself has at paragraph No.14.01 observed that ''such investment would be an activity outside the definition of service, being a mere transaction in money'' but, however, has concluded in the same para that activity of investment in shares and derivative trade satisfy the definition exempted services under Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004. There are no logic in treating the mere ‘investment’ as an exempted service because, the revenue has not specifically alleged if there is any ‘service’ in the first place. Secondly, up to 01.07.2012, even if it is assumed to be an exempted service, then the same was not taxable. With the introduction of negative list w.e.f. 01.07.2012, S. 66B of the Finance Act empowers the levy of service tax on the value of all services other than those in the negative list, which are provided or agreed to be provided, by one person to another. Exempted service, although ‘exempted’, nevertheless should satisfy the ingredients of ‘service’ in the first place. In this case, by making an investment the appellant does not do any activity for another for a consideration. Further, specific exclusion from the definition of ‘service’ is given to transactions involving ‘transfer of title in goods or immovable property by the way of sale’, since trading in security involves transfer of title in goods, the activity of ‘trading in securities’ cannot therefore be said to be a service - the authorities below have grossly erred in demanding the tax on the ‘investment’ made, by treating the same as ‘service’ although exempted and consequently, the impugned order is set aside. Appeal allowed.
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