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2015 (7) TMI 582 - AT - Central Excise


Issues:
1. Excess CENVAT Credit availed by the Appellant.
2. Denial of CENVAT Credit and imposition of interest.
3. Imposition of penalties on the Appellant and other individuals.

Analysis:

Issue 1: Excess CENVAT Credit availed by the Appellant
The case involved M/s Heranba Industries Ltd. availing excess CENVAT Credit, leading to a demand of Rs. 1,27,73,273.00. The Appellant had reversed a portion of the credit and paid a significant amount before the Show Cause Notice was issued. The Tribunal found that the Appellant had not produced original documents despite a remand order, justifying the demand for the balance amount of Rs. 13,71,459.00. The Appellant's argument of no suppression of facts was countered by the lack of original document submission, leading to the Tribunal upholding the demand.

Issue 2: Denial of CENVAT Credit and imposition of interest
Regarding the denial of CENVAT Credit and imposition of interest, the Appellant argued that they had utilized the credit and paid interest accordingly. However, the Tribunal noted that the Appellant's minimum balance in the CENVAT Credit account was Rs. 5,09,640.00, indicating credit utilization. The Tribunal found the demand for interest justified as the Appellant had utilized the credit, distinguishing the case from precedents where credit was not utilized.

Issue 3: Imposition of penalties on the Appellant and other individuals
The Tribunal analyzed the imposition of penalties under Section 11AC of the Central Excise Act, 1944. While the Appellant had paid the denied CENVAT Credit before the Show Cause Notice, the Tribunal observed that the excess credit was due to clerical errors and heavy workload, not intentional evasion. The penalty under Section 11AC was not deemed warranted as there was no intent to evade tax. Instead, a penalty under Rule 15(1) of CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004, was imposed for the excess availment of credit. Penalties on other individuals were set aside due to lack of evidence of deliberate involvement in the excess credit availing.

In conclusion, the Tribunal upheld the disallowance of CENVAT Credit with interest, reduced the penalty on the Appellant, and set aside penalties on other individuals. The judgment provided detailed reasoning for each issue, considering factual verification, intent to evade tax, and individual involvement in the excess credit availment.

 

 

 

 

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