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2024 (7) TMI 298 - HC - VAT and Sales Tax


Issues:
Challenge to restriction of credit under KVAT Act for stock-transfer of timber from one branch to another.

Analysis:
The petitioner, a registered dealer under the KVAT Act and CST Act, imported and sold Pincoda Timber. The petitioner transferred timber from Feroke to Pollachi, and the advance tax credit was restricted to any amount paid in excess of 4% under Circular No. 50/2006. The petitioner challenged this restriction under Section 13 of the KVAT Act, contending that the tax paid was advance tax, not input tax credit. The officer justified the restriction under Section 13, leading to the petitioner's writ petition.

The petitioner argued that the tax paid under Circular No. 50/2006 was advance tax collected to prevent tax evasion, not a tax on sale/purchase. The Circular specified tax rates for different goods at Border Check Posts. The Court noted that the tax collected was only an advance tax, adjustable against actual tax payable during assessment. As there was no taxable transaction, the goods were only stock-transferred, not sold. Section 13 of the KVAT Act dealt with input tax credit for exports or inter-State sales, not advance tax.

The Court examined Circular No. 50/2006 and Section 13 of the KVAT Act, concluding that the tax paid under the Circular did not qualify as input tax. Therefore, the officer's reliance on Section 13 to deny credit for the entire tax paid on stock-transferred goods was deemed incorrect. The Court held that the petitioner was entitled to credit for the full amount paid under Circular No. 50/2006 for the stock-transferred goods to Pollachi.

In the final decision, the Court allowed the writ petition, declaring that the petitioner should receive credit for the entire amount paid under Circular No. 50/2006 for the stock-transferred goods. The Court directed the competent officer to issue fresh orders considering the judgment's declaration.

 

 

 

 

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