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Home Case Index All Cases Central Excise Central Excise + AT Central Excise - 2019 (6) TMI AT This

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2019 (6) TMI 504 - AT - Central Excise


Issues:
1. Determination of place of removal for excise duty liability.
2. Inclusion of erection, installation, and painting charges in the assessable value for payment of central excise duty.

Analysis:
1. The case involved an appeal against an Order-in-Original regarding the liability of central excise duty on the fabrication and supply of mobile towers. The Department contended that the sale of goods occurred at the site of installation, not the factory gate, leading to the inclusion of various charges like transportation, erection, and painting in the assessable value. The appellant argued that the liability for excise duty arises at the factory gate, as the towers are cleared in dismantled form. The Tribunal analyzed sample contracts and relevant legal provisions to determine the place of removal. It concluded that the liability for excise duty crystallizes at the factory gate, and the place of removal is the site of installation, requiring the inclusion of transportation costs in the assessable value.

2. The Tribunal further deliberated on whether erection, installation, and painting charges should be added to the supply cost for the payment of duty. The Department had included these charges, considering the place of removal as the site of the towers. However, the Tribunal disagreed, stating that the goods should be assessed in the form cleared from the factory, i.e., in dismantled form. Therefore, it ruled that the installation, erection, and painting costs incurred at the site, where the towers become immovable property, should not be added to the assessable value. The Tribunal emphasized that the excise duty liability is on the goods as cleared from the factory gate, and rejected the inclusion of these additional charges in the duty calculation.

3. In conclusion, the Tribunal set aside the demand made by including erection, installation, and painting costs in the assessable value. It directed the original authority to consider the terms of specific contracts to determine the includibility of transportation costs based on whether the contract was FOR site or factory gate clearance. Additionally, the Tribunal clarified that when the place of removal is the customer's site, the appellant is entitled to CENVAT Credit of Service Tax paid on transportation costs.

 

 

 

 

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