Home Case Index All Cases Central Excise Central Excise + AT Central Excise - 2005 (3) TMI AT This
Forgot password New User/ Regiser ⇒ Register to get Live Demo
2005 (3) TMI 499 - AT - Central Excise
Issues:
Refund claim rejection on grounds of unjust enrichment. Analysis: The appellants' refund claim of Rs. 1,88,884 was rejected due to unjust enrichment by the original authority and confirmed by the appellate authority. The appellants, manufacturers of 'Carrier Breach Block assembly,' participated in a tender where they quoted a price inclusive of excise duty, even though they were under SSI exemption with nil duty. The order for supply was received, and due to various extensions granted by the buyer, the duty structure changed, and SSI exemption was withdrawn. The appellants made efforts for exemption reintroduction, but the buyer refused to pay any additional amount beyond the quoted price. The appellants, unaware of the re-introduced exemption, paid duty and filed a refund claim, which was rejected, stating the price included duty passed on to the buyer, leading to unjust enrichment. The appellants argued that the quoted price did not include excise duty when the item was exempt, and they made efforts for exemption reintroduction. They contended that the duty was paid due to a lack of awareness of the re-introduced exemption and that the price did not pass on the duty burden to the buyer. They cited a Tribunal case where a firm price unaffected by duty variations did not lead to unjust enrichment. The appellants maintained that the duty was paid only for the transporter and not shown in commercial invoices, thus justifying their refund claim. The Tribunal analyzed the circumstances and found that the quoted price did not include duty when it was nil, and the appellants made considerable efforts for exemption reintroduction, which was successful. Despite paying duty, the buyer refused to pay more than the quoted price when no duty was leviable. The Tribunal concluded that the duty was not passed on to the buyer, considering the peculiar circumstances, and granted the refund, setting aside the previous order. The Tribunal ruled in favor of the appellants, allowing the appeal with consequential relief.
|