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2015 (8) TMI 746 - AT - Service TaxRefund claim for tax deposited erroneously - unjust enrichment - Commercial Training & Coaching Services - Exemption under Notification No.25/12-ST dated 20.6.2012 - whether the refund claim is hit by the bar of unjust enrichment - Held that - agreement stipulates the value inclusive of taxes. The invoices issued also indicate that amount collected is inclusive of service tax. Undeniably the presumption under section 12B is raised that the incidence of tax is passed on to the customer. In such circumstances the appellant has to establish by evidence that the service tax passed on was returned to the customer. In the absence of such evidence the presumption stands unrebutted. - fees stipulated in the agreement were inclusive of taxes and the invoices issued indicate that the amount includes service tax the refund claim is hit by the bar of unjust enrichment - Decided against assessee.
Issues:
Refund claim hit by unjust enrichment. Analysis: The appellant, engaged in educational services, erroneously paid service tax despite exemption, leading to a refund claim. Authorities rejected the claim citing unjust enrichment, alleging tax incidence passed on due to fee agreement wording. Appellant argued no tax passed on as service tax not separately charged. Appellant cited judgments supporting their claim and provided CA certificate and balance sheet. Departmental Representative relied on statutory presumption under Section 12B of Central Excise Act, 1944, and a Supreme Court decision. The main issue is whether the refund claim is affected by unjust enrichment. The appellate authority modified the original order, transferring the refund amount to the Consumer Welfare Fund due to the presumption that tax incidence was passed on. The doctrine of unjust enrichment aims to prevent double taxation and ensure relief is rightfully claimed. The appellant must prove bearing the tax burden and not passing it to consumers. In this case, services were tax-exempt, and the appellant paid tax erroneously. The disagreement arises from the fee agreement wording and whether tax was included in the fees charged. The appellant differentiated cases where tax was separately charged and where it was inclusive in fees. The appellant clarified invoices showing separate tax charges and those with inclusive tax, aiming to claim a refund only for the latter. However, the agreement and invoices indicated tax-inclusive amounts, triggering the statutory presumption of tax passing on to customers. The Chartered Accountant's Certificate and balance sheet were insufficient to rebut this presumption. The judgments cited by the appellant were distinguished based on the nature of invoicing and tax inclusion. The Tribunal's decision in Concrete Movers case emphasized that inclusive rates imply unjust enrichment. Invoices indicating inclusive tax amounts strengthen the presumption of tax passing on. The appellant failed to provide evidence of refunding tax to customers, leaving the presumption unrebutted. Ultimately, the refund claim was dismissed due to the inclusive tax nature of the fees stipulated in the agreement and invoices, aligning with the doctrine of unjust enrichment.
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