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1984 (3) TMI 415 - AT - Central Excise
Issues:
Valuation of goods under Notification No. 120/75-C.E. - Deductibility of packing charges from invoice price - Interpretation of exemption notification. Analysis: The appeal before the Appellate Tribunal CEGAT NEW DELHI challenged an order passed by the Appellate Collector of Central Excise, Madras, regarding the valuation of goods manufactured by the appellants falling under item 68 of the Central Excise Tariff. The appellants had opted for valuation under Notification No. 120/75-C.E., dated 30-4-1975, which allowed manufacturers to determine duty based on invoice price, excluding duty and local taxes. The notification provided an alternative mode of valuation compared to Section 4(a) of the Central Excises & Salt Act, 1944. The appellants argued that packing charges should be deducted from the invoice price as they were post-manufacturing expenses. However, the Tribunal noted that the notification was optional, and an assessee could choose to be governed by its provisions or Section 4(a) of the Act. The Tribunal emphasized that the notification only permitted the exclusion of duty and local taxes from the invoice price, not other elements like packing charges. The Tribunal rejected the appellants' contention that post-manufacturing expenses should be considered for deduction under the exemption notification. It clarified that the scope of the notification was limited to the invoice price basis, excluding only excise duty and local taxes. The Tribunal highlighted that the two valuation modes were parallel and mutually exclusive, and once an assessee chose the exemption notification, they could not expand its scope by claiming additional deductions. The Tribunal emphasized that the exemption notification did not allow for the deductibility of elements beyond excise duty and local taxes from the invoice price. The respondent's representative argued that even if the appellants' submissions were accepted, recent Supreme Court judgment held that secondary packing charges could not be excluded from the assessable value. The Tribunal concluded that the appeal failed based on the interpretation and application of Notification No. 120/75-C.E., dated 30-4-1975. Ultimately, the Tribunal found no merit in the appeal and dismissed it, upholding the decision regarding the valuation of goods under the exemption notification.
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