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2025 (6) TMI 356 - AT - Central ExciseValuation of the goods cleared/sold to the OMCs for the purpose of levy of excise duty - demand confirmed by invoking Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules 2000 read with Section 4(1)(b) of the Central Excise Act 1944 to determine the assessable value of petroleum products sold to OMCs - HELD THAT - In this case initially the show-cause notice has been issued to the appellant by invoking the provisions of Section 4(1)(b) of the Central Excise Act 1944 read with Rule 4 of Central Excise Valuation (Determination of Price of Excisable Goods) Rules 2000. As per the observations made by the Hon ble Apex Court in CCE Hyderabad v. Associated Cement Companies Ltd. 2004 (12) TMI 95 - SUPREME COURT it is held that the transaction value in terms of Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act 1944 cannot be adopted and the price is not the sole consideration for sale. It is found that Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules is applicable in this case where there is no sale of goods involved and in the absence of any price per se the price of such goods sold nearest to the time of removal of goods under assessment is to be adopted. On the basis of this the demand has been confirmed in the impugned order but the Hon ble Apex Court observed that the price is not sole consideration for sale. Therefore where the price is not the sole consideration for sale Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules is applicable. Admittedly in this case Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules has not been invoked in the show-cause notice and the Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules is not applicable as per the observations of the Hon ble Apex Court while remanding the matter back to this Tribunal. As per the Affidavit the appellant did not receive any additional consideration in monetary terms or otherwise from the OMC in relation to the sale of such petroleum product and the Revenue has also not alleged in the show-cause notice that the appellant has received any amount in monetary terms or otherwise over and above the transaction value from the OMC in relation to the sale of the goods in question. Therefore Rule 6 is not applicable on merit in the facts and circumstances of the case. In that circumstances also the demand is not sustainable against the appellant as held by this Tribunal in the case of M/s Hindalco Industries Limited Vs. Commissioner of Central Excise Bhubaneswar II 2023 (5) TMI 720 - CESTAT KOLKATA wherein this Tribunal has observed The question of unjust enrichment has no relevance here. There is no refund considered here. The point that the duty paid in excess in certain months has been availed as credit by sister unit hence cannot be adjusted towards short payment also not tenable. The demand arose based on annual costing. Such cost price in terms of Rule 8 will apply to all clearances made during the relevant year. Admittedly duty already discharged has to be considered for arriving at overall short payment. Selectively applying the said cost price only for months when the clearances were below such cost price is not legally sustainable. Conclusion - i) As Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules is not invokable as observed by the Hon ble Apex Court therefore the demand proposed in the show-cause notice by invoking Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules is not sustainable. ii) As per the direction of the Hon ble Supreme Court Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules has not been invoked in the show-cause notice (which is the appropriate Rule) it is seen that the appellant has not received any amount in monetary terms or otherwise over and above of the transaction value in that circumstances Rule 6 is not applicable in the facts and circumstances of the case and iii) As in whole of the period in question the appellant has paid excess duty as demanded after adjustment in view of this no demand of duty is sustainable against the appellant. Consequently no interest is payable by the appellant and no penalty is imposable on the appellant. The impugned order is set aside - appeal allowed.
The core legal questions considered in this judgment are:
1. Whether the price fixed under the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) among Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs), based on Import Parity Price (IPP), can be adopted as the transaction value for levy of excise duty under Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, given that the price is not the sole consideration for sale. 2. Whether Rule 4 or Rule 6 of the Central Excise Valuation (Determination of Price of Excisable Goods) Rules, 2000 is applicable for determining the assessable value of petroleum products sold by the appellant to other OMCs. 3. Whether the demand for differential excise duty, calculated by adopting the dealer sale price instead of IPP, is sustainable. 4. Whether the interest and penalty imposed on the appellant are sustainable in light of the valuation dispute and prior judicial and administrative clarifications. 5. Whether the appellant had received any additional consideration over and above the IPP, which would attract valuation under Rule 6. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis Issue 1: Adoption of MoU Price (IPP) as Transaction Value under Section 4(1)(a) The legal framework involves Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act, which prescribes that where goods are sold by the assessee to an unrelated buyer and price is the sole consideration, the transaction value shall be the assessable value. The MoU fixed the sale price among OMCs based on IPP, although the goods were manufactured indigenously. The Supreme Court held that the price fixed under the MoU cannot be taken as transaction value because the price was not the sole consideration for sale. The arrangement ensured uninterrupted supply of petroleum products among OMCs, which was an additional consideration beyond mere price. The Court emphasized that the MoU's real consideration was supply continuity, not just price. The appellant contended that the transaction qualifies as a sale under Section 2(h) of the Central Excise Act, which defines sale as transfer of possession for cash or other valuable consideration. The Court agreed that a sale took place but rejected the adoption of the MoU price as the sole consideration. Issue 2: Applicability of Rule 4 vs. Rule 6 of Valuation Rules, 2000 Rule 4 applies where there is no sale or no price per se, and the value is determined by reference to the price of goods sold at a time nearest to removal. Rule 6 applies where goods are sold but price is not the sole consideration, and the assessable value is the transaction value plus the money value of any additional consideration flowing from the buyer. The SCN and impugned order invoked Rule 4 to determine the assessable value by adopting dealer sale price as the value for goods sold to OMCs. The appellant argued that Rule 4 is inapplicable because the Supreme Court held price is not the sole consideration, thus Rule 6 should apply. The Tribunal noted that Rule 6 was not invoked in the SCN or the original order, which is fatal to the demand, as the show cause notice is the foundation for levy and cannot be expanded post-facto. Precedents were cited where new grounds or valuation rules not mentioned in the SCN were held not invocable. On merits, the appellant submitted that no additional consideration in monetary terms was received, making Rule 6 inapplicable. Further, the additional consideration of uninterrupted supply is abstract and cannot be quantified monetarily, as per Explanation 1 and proviso to Rule 6. The Tribunal accepted that without quantifiable additional consideration, Rule 6 valuation fails. Issue 3: Sustainability of Demand Based on Dealer Price The Revenue sought to impose duty on the difference between dealer price and IPP for the period 01.11.2006 to 15.03.2007. The appellant demonstrated that over the entire financial year 2006-07, there were months when IPP exceeded dealer price, resulting in excess duty paid overall. Tribunal relied on precedents holding that when valuation is done on annual average costing (CAS-4), the net duty liability must consider both excess and short payments over the year. Selective demand for only months with short payment is not sustainable. Data submitted showed the appellant paid excess duty exceeding the demand amount, thus negating any shortfall. The Tribunal held the demand unsustainable on this basis. Issue 4: Interest and Penalty Liability The Supreme Court had held that extended period of limitation and penalty under Section 11AC were not invocable as Revenue was aware of the MoU. The appellant argued interest liability should commence only from the Supreme Court's remand order date (20.01.2025), relying on prior Supreme Court rulings where bona fide reliance on settled law precluded earlier interest. The Tribunal accepted that prior to the Supreme Court's remand order, the valuation issue was settled in favor of the appellant by Board instructions, Ministry of Finance responses, and Supreme Court rulings. Hence, no interest or penalty is sustainable for the earlier period. Issue 5: Receipt of Additional Consideration The appellant filed an affidavit stating no additional monetary or non-monetary consideration was received from OMCs beyond the IPP. Revenue did not allege otherwise in the SCN. The Tribunal found this undisputed and critical in ruling that Rule 6 valuation cannot be applied as there is no flowback of additional consideration. Conclusions on Issues 1. The price fixed under the MoU based on IPP is not the sole consideration for sale, thus transaction value under Section 4(1)(a) cannot be adopted. 2. Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules invoked in the SCN is inapplicable per the Supreme Court's findings; Rule 6 is the appropriate provision but was not invoked in the SCN, making the demand unsustainable on procedural grounds. 3. On merits, no additional consideration was received, and the abstract nature of supply continuity consideration precludes quantification under Rule 6, further negating demand validity. 4. Considering the entire financial year, the appellant paid excess duty beyond the demand amount, invalidating selective demand for shortfall. 5. Interest and penalty are not sustainable due to bona fide belief in the correctness of valuation method and prior authoritative clarifications. Significant Holdings "By no stretch of the imagination, it can be said that the price fixed under the MOU was the sole consideration for the sale by one OMC to the other. Hence, we concur with the conclusion in the impugned judgment that the price was not the sole consideration for sale." "Rule 4 of the Valuation Rules is applicable in this case where there is no sale of goods involved and in the absence of any price per se, the price of such goods sold nearest to the time of removal of goods under assessment is to be adopted. ... Where the price is not the sole consideration for sale, Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules is applicable." "The show cause notice is the foundation in the matter of levy and recovery of duty, penalty and interest. If there is no invocation of Rule 6 of the Valuation Rules in the show cause notice, it would not be open to the Commissioner to invoke the said rule." "Where the money value of the additional consideration is not capable of being derived, the valuation mechanism of Rule 6 fails and consequently, the demand has to be set aside." "When the Department arrived at cost on annual average basis the duty liability, excess or shortage has also to be determined on such basis. Selectively applying the said cost price only for months when the clearances were below such cost price is not legally sustainable." "As, in whole of the period in question, the appellant has paid excess duty as demanded after adjustment, in view of this, no demand of duty is sustainable against the appellant. Consequently, no interest is payable by the appellant and no penalty is imposable on the appellant." The Tribunal accordingly set aside the impugned order and allowed the appeal.
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