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[Cites 31, Cited by 35]

Custom, Excise & Service Tax Tribunal

M/S.Kumar Arch Tech Pvt.Ltd vs Cce, Jaipur-Ii on 22 February, 2013

        

 
IN THE CUSTOMS, EXCISE AND SERVICE TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL, NEW DELHI, PRINCIPAL BENCH,  NEW DELHI.

     

     Date of Hearing:23.11.2012

     Date of Decision:22.02.2013

                                    

1.
Whether Press Reporters may be allowed to see the Order for publication as per Rule 27 of the CESTAT (Procedure) Rules, 1982.



2
Whether it should be released under Rule 27 of the CESTAT (Procedure) Rules, 1982 for publication in any authoritative report or not? 



3
Whether Their Lordships wish to see the fair copy of the Order?



4
Whether Order is to be circulated to the Departmental authorities?





			Excise Appeal No.E/618/2010



(Arising out of Order-in-Appeal No.449(KKG)CE/JPR-II/2009 dated13.11.2009 passed by the Commissioner of Central Excise (Appeals-II), Jaipur).

 

M/s.Kumar Arch Tech pvt.Ltd. 					       Appellant

							Vs.



CCE, Jaipur-II							   Respondent	 						 

Appearance: Shri Prakash Shah, Advocate & Mrs. Sukriti Das, Advocate

		 for the appellant. 

	           Shri  I. Beg, DR  for the respondent.  

	

Coram : Honble Smt. Archana Wadhwa, Member (Judicial)

               Honble Shri Rakesh Kumar, Member (Technical)

	    Honble Shri Mathew John, Member (Technical)

		



		Final Order  No. 55629/2013 /Dated:22.02.13



Per Rakesh Kumar:

	The appellant are a 100% EOU. In addition to clearances for export out of India, they also make clearances into DTA on which central excise duty is paid in accordance with the provisions of proviso to Section 3(1) of Central Excise Act, 1944. In accordance with the proviso to Section 3(1) of Central Excise Act, the goods manufactured by 100% EOU and cleared into DTA attract central excise duty and the amount of central excise duty chargeable shall be equal to the aggregate of the duties of customs, which would be leviable under Customs Act, 1962 or any other law for the time being in force on like goods produced or manufactured outside India, if imported into India, and where the said duties of customs are chargeable by reference to their value, the value of such excisable goods shall, notwithstanding anything contained in any other provision of the Central Excise Act, be determined  in accordance with the provision of the Customs Act, 1962 and the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. Under Section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962, except as otherwise provided in this Act or any other law for the time being in force, the duties of customs shall be levied  at such rates as may be specified under Customs Tariff Act or any other law for the time being in force on the goods imported into India or exported  from India. The Customs Tariff Act, 1975 specifies the various duties of customs leviable on the goods imported into India. Under Section 2 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975, the basic customs duties are leviable at the rate specified in the first and second schedule to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. Under Section 3(1), any goods imported into India, in addition to the basic customs duties chargeable under Section 2, would also attract additional customs duty in an amount equal to the excise duty for the time being leviable on like articles if produced or manufactured in India and under Section 3(2)  if this duty is at advoleram rate, the same shall be calculated on the amount equal to the value of the imported articles determined under Section 14(1) of the Customs Act, 1962 or the Tariff value fixed under Section 14(2), as the case may be, plus any customs duty chargeable under Section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 and any sum chargeable on that article under any law for the time being in force as an addition to and in the same manner, as duty of customs but not including the duty referred to in sub-section (1), (3) and (5) of Section 3 and safeguard duty, counterveiling duty and anti-dumping duty referred to in Section 8B/8C, Section 9 and Section 9A respectively of the Customs Tariff Act. There are other Additional customs duties under sub-section (3) & (5)  of Section 3 and Section 3 A attracted in  some cases, but we are not concerned with the same in this case. 

1.1	By Section 91 read with Section 93, 94 and 95 of Finance Act, 2004, the central Government levied education cess as surcharge at the rate of 2% of the aggregate duties of central excise on the excisable goods/aggregate duties of customs on the imported goods/service tax on taxable services levied and collected under Section 66 of the Finance Act, 1944. By Section 136 read with Section 138, 139 and 140 of the Finance Act, 2007, Central Government levied secondary and higher education cess (hereinafter referred to a S&H cess) @1% in the same manner. In case of excisable goods, the education cess and S&H is  to be charged on the aggregate of all duties of excise (including special excise duty or any other duty of excise but excluding education cess on excisable goods), which are levied and collected by Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) under the provisions of Central Excise Act, 1944 or any other law for the time being in force. In case of imported goods, the education cess and S&H cess is to be calculated on the aggregate of duties of customs which are levied and collected by the Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) under Section 12 of Customs Act,1962 and any sum chargeable on such goods under any other law for the time being in force as an addition to, and in same manner as duty of customs but not including (a)safeguard duty referred to in Sections 8 B/8C of Customs Tariff Act, 1975, (b) counterveiling duty referred to in Section 9of Customs Tariff Act, 1975, (c) anti-dumping duty referred to in Section 9A of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 and (d)the education cess on imported goods.

1.2	The dispute in the present case is as to how the education cess on the excise duty chargeable on the goods cleared by 100% EOU into DTA is to be calculated. According to the Department, first, central excise duty chargeable on the DTA clearance of a 100%  EOU is to be calculated by totalling  (a) basic customs duty chargeable on the goods as if imported into India, (b) additional customs duty equal to the central excise duty under section 3(1) read with 3(2) of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 plus education cess and S&H cess under Section 93 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 of Finance Act, 2007 @ 2% and 1%,  chargeable on the like goods manufactured in India and (c) education cess and S&H cess @ 2% and 1% respectively on the total of basic customs duty and additional customs duty calculated as above, under Section 94 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 139 of Finance Act, 2007 and then on this total, education cess and S&H cess @ of 2% and 1% respectively shall be payable again under Section 93 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 of Finance Act, 2007. According to the appellant, however, since the education cess and S&H cess being charged as surcharge are basically central excise duty and since while calculating the aggregate of  duties of customs, education cess and S&H cess @2% and 1% respectively has already been added to the total of basic customs duty and Additional customs duty, there is no need to charge the education cess and S&H cess once again on the central excise duty calculated in the above manner.

2.	This matter had been heard by Division Bench on 17.2.2011 and by order dated 27.7.11, the Division Bench referred the following questions of law to the Larger Bench for decision:-

	Whether education cess and S&H cess are chargeable  on DTA clearance made by 100% EOU even if such cesses were  added while calculating the aggregate duties of customs payable under the Customs Act or any other law in force at the time imported or like goods. 

3.       Heard both sides.

4.	Shri Prakash Shah, Advocate and Ms. Sukriti Das, Advocate, the learned Counsels  for the appellant, pleaded that the issue involved in this matter stands decided by a detailed judgement of a Coordinate Bench of the Tribunal in the case of Sarla Performance Fibers Ltd.Vs. CCE, Vapi reported in 2010 (253) ELT 203 (Tri-Ahmd.) wherein the Tribunal held that once the aggregate of customs duties has been worked out in which the education cess had also been added, the question of arriving at quantum of excise duty by adding education cess once again does not arise, that this order of the Tribunal had been passed  in pursuance of the order dated 28.8.2008 of Honble Gujarat High Court reported in 2009(233) ELT 43 (BOM)  after issue of a general notice enabling any person, who may be adversely affected, being given  an opportunity of being hard, that the judgement of the Tribunal in the case of Sarla Polyester reported in 2008 (226) ELT 238 referred to in the referring benchs order is in the same matter in which the judgement in the case of Sarla Performance Fibers Ltd. Vs. CCE reported in 2010 (253) ELT 203  has been passed, as the name of the appellant had been changed from M/s. Sarla Polyester Ltd. to M/s. Sarla Performance  Fibers Ltd. and in earlier judgement reported in 2008 (226) ELT 238, on appeal being filed before the Honble Bombay High Court, the Honble High Court had set aside the order and had remanded the matter for de novo consideration in accordance with the law after issue of a general notice enabling any personal adversely affected being given an opportunity of being heard, that the education cess and S&H cess having been levied as surcharge is not a separate levy distinct from the central excise duty and the judgement of the Honble Himachal Pradesh High Court in the case of Indo Farm Tractors & Motors Ltd. Vs. Union of India reported in 2008 (228) ELT 184 (HP) referred to in the referral order is contrary to the ratio of Apex Courts judgement in the case of Sarojini Tea Co. Pvt. Ltd. Vs. CC, Dibrugarh reported in 1992 (2 ) SCC 156 wherein Apex Court has held that expression surcharge in the context of taxation means an additional imposition, which results in enhancement of tax and the nature of the additional imposition is the same as the tax on which it is imposed as a surcharge, that in view of this, once education cess and S&H cess  is added to the sum of the basic customs duty and an Additional customs duty, the question of charging education cess and S&H cess once again does not arise because once it is enhanced, it is part of the relevant type of duty, that the proviso to Section 3(1) of the Central Excise Act treats the goods manufactured and cleared from a 100% EOU into DTA at par with the imported goods for the purpose of determining the quantum of duty and therefore, there is no question of adding education cess and S&H once again when the education cess and S&H has already been added to the aggregate of duties of customs i.e. basic customs duty plus additional customs duty, that when Section 93 and section 94 of the Finance Act, 2004 and similarly Section 138 and 139 of the Finance Act, 2007 specifically provide for exclusion of education cess and S&H cess respectively from the aggregate of the excise duty or customs duty,  in respect of excisable goods and imported goods respectively, there is no justification for charging education cess and S&H cess once again on the aggregate of duties of customs which had already included education cess and S&H cess and that in view of the above submissions, the view expressed by coordinate bench in the Sarla Performance Fibers Ltd. 2010 (253) ELT 203  is the correct view.

5.	Shri I. Beg, ld. Departmental Representative, pleaded that the education cess levied under Section 91 of the Finance Act, 2004 and S&H cess levied under Section 136 of the  Finance Act, 2007 are levies separate and distinct from the central excise duty/customs duty,  that in this regard he relies upon the judgement of the Apex Court in the case of Union of India Vs. Modi Rubber Ltd. and Others reported in 1986 (25) ELT 849(SC), wherein the Apex Court held that expression duty of excise cannot be given large amplitude to include special excise duty or additional excise duty, and that the aggregate of the duties of customs leviable under Customs Act, 1962 or any law for the time being in force including the education cess on the imported goods, is the measure of central excise duty leviable on the goods cleared by a 100% EOU into DTA and on this excise duty, the education cess and S&H leviable on the excisable goods would be chargeable once again. Citing the judgement of Larger Bench of the Tribunal in the case of Vikram Ispat Vs. CCE, he emphasized that the proviso to Section 3(1) of Central Excise Act, 1944 prescribes only a measure of the central excise duty chargeable on the DTA clearances made by a 100% EOU and nature of the duty levied on the goods manufactured  and  cleared by a 100% EOU into DTA is excise duty and nothing else, that it is well settled  law that method adopted by the law makers in recovery of tax cannot alter its character and that since the aggregate of duties of customs on import of the like goods into India is the measure of the excise duty chargeable on the goods cleared by 100% EOU into DTA, on this aggregate of duties of customs, education cess and S&H cess  would be chargeable once again, even though the aggregate of duties of customs also include the education cess and S&H cess. He, therefore, pleaded that the judgement of the Tribunal in the case of Sarla Performance Fibers Ltd. (supra) is not correct. 

5.	We have considered the submissions from both the sides and perused the records. The issue for determination is as to whether education cess and S&H Cess is to be levied again in respect of DTA clearances of a 100% EOU on the aggregate of the duties of customs which already includes the education cess and S&H cess. To illustrate, according to the appellant, the duty payable on the DTA clearances  made by a 100% EOU  is as under:-

	Basic customs duty 		              =		2.5%

	Addl. Customs duty  U/s 3(1)read        =	         16% on (transaction value

	with Sec.3(2) of Customs Tariff Act,                       plus basic custom duty) 

            1975                                                             

             (equal to central excise duty

            leviable on like goods produced

           or manufactured in India)

	Education cess under Sec.93	             =	        2% of Addl. customs duty

	of Finance Act, 2004        



      S&H Education cess under	             =                1% of Addl. Customs duty 

	Sec.138 of Finance Act, 2007						

     -------------------------------------
	Aggregate of above duties of customs =         say X

	Education cess &			 =	3% of X

	S& H education cess chargeable

	Under Sec.94 of Finance Act,2004

	And Sec.139 of Finance Act, 2007		 

							----------------------------------

	Total						X + 3% of X = Y



According to the appellant, central excise duty payable on the DTA clearances is Y and on this no further education cess and S&H cess under Sec.93 of Finance Act, 2004 and Sec.138 of Finance Act, 2007 is payable. However, according to the department, since aggregate of duties of customs including education cess and S&H cess thereon is the measure of the excise duty payable on the goods, the appellant would be liable to pay education cess and S&H education cess once again on the amount Y as mentioned above, under Section 93 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 of Finance Act, 2007.

6. Education cess in respect of excisable goods and imported goods is levied under Section 91 read with Section 93 and 94 of the Finance Act, 2004. These sections are reproduced below:-

91. Education Cess  (1) Without prejudice to the provisions of sub-section (11) of Section 2, there shall be levied and collected, in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter as surcharge for purposes of the Union, a cess to be called the Education Cess, to fulfill the commitment of the Government to provide and finance universalized quality basic education.

(2) The Central Government may, after due appropriation made by Parliament by law in this behalf, utilize, such sums of money of the Education Cess levied under sub-section (11) of Section 2 and this Chapter for the purposes specified in sub-section (1), as it may consider necessary.

93.?Education Cess on excisable goods.  (1) The Education Cess levied under section 91, in the case of goods specified in the First Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of 1986), being goods manufactured or produced, shall be a duty of excise (in this section referred to as the Education Cess on excisable goods), at the rate of two per cent., calculated on the aggregate of all duties of excise (including special duty of excise or any other duty of excise but excluding Education Cess on excisable goods) which are levied and collected by the Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue), under the provisions of the Central Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) or under any other law for the time being in force.

(2)?The Education Cess on excisable goods shall be in addition to any other duties of excise chargeable on such goods, under the Central Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) or any other law for the time being in force.

(3)?The provisions of the Central Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) and the rules made thereunder, including those relating to refunds and exemptions from duties and imposition of penalty shall, as far as may be, apply in relation to the levy and collection of the Education Cess on excisable goods as they apply in relation to the levy and collection of the duties of excise on such goods under the Central Excise Act, 1944 or the rules, as the case may be.

94.?Education Cess on imported goods.  (1) The Education Cess levied under section 91, in the case of goods specified in the First Schedule to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975), being goods imported into India, shall be a duty of customs (in this section referred to as the Education Cess on imported goods), at the rate of two per cent., calculated on the aggregate of duties of customs which are levied and collected by the Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue), under section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962) and any sum chargeable on such goods under any other law for the time being in force, as an addition to, and in the same manner as, a duty of customs, but not including 

(a) the safeguard duty referred to in sections 8B and 8C of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975);

(b) the countervailing duty referred to in section 9 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975);

(c) the anti-dumping duty referred to in section 9A of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975); and

(d) the Education Cess on imported goods.

(2)?The Education Cess on imported goods shall be in addition to any other duties of customs chargeable on such goods, under the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962) or any other law for the time being in force.

(3)?The provisions of the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962) and the rules and regulations made thereunder, including those relating to refunds and exemptions from duties and imposition of penalty shall, as far as may be, apply in relation to the levy and collection of the Education Cess on imported goods as they apply in relation to the levy and collection of the duties of customs on such goods under the Customs Act, 1962 or the rules or the regulations, as the case may be.

6.1 There are identical provisions (Section 136 read with Section 138 & 139) in Finance Act, 2007 regarding levy of Secondary and Higher Education Cess.

7. From perusal of the above provisions, it will be seen that education cess and S&H Cess are cess levied by the Union Government as a surcharge. This surcharge in case of excisable goods attracting central excise duty is charged on the aggregate of all duties of excise including special excise duty or any other duty of excise but excluding education cess on exicable goods, which are levied and collected by Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) under the provisions of Central Excise Act, 1944 or any other law for the time being in force. Similarly, the education cess and S&H Cess on imported goods is levied as surcharge on aggregate of duties of customs which are levied and collected by the Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue) under Section 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 and any sum chargeable on such goods under any other law for the time being in force as an addition to, and in the same manner as a duty of custom but not including (a) safeguard duty referred to in Section 8B/8C of Customs Tariff Act, 1975, (b) countervailing duty referred to in section 9 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (c) Anti-dumping duty referred to in Section 9A of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 and (d) Education Cess on imported goods. Both the Section 93 as well as 94 of the Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 and 139 of the Finance Act, 2007 provide that education cess S&H cess on excisable goods or imported gods shall be in addition to any other duties of Excise/customs chargeable on such goods under the Customs Act, 1962/Central Excise Act, 1944 or any other law for the time being in force. However, it is also clear that there is no intention to charge cess on cess, as the aggregate of duties of excise or the duties of customs on which the cess as excisable goods or imported goods is to be charged, is not to include the cess on excisable goods and cess on imported goods respectively. There would be no cess on cess if the measures for the central excise duty and customs duty are independent and there is no overlapping. However, this does not happen in all the cases and on one such instance when this does not happen is the excise duty payable on the goods cleared by 100% EOU into DTA. In terms of proviso to Section 3(1) of Central Excise Act, 1944, the central excise duty chargeable on the DTA clearance of 100% EOU is an amount equal to the aggregate of duties of customs which would be leviable under the Customs Act, 1962 or any other law for the time being in force on like goods produced or manufactured outside India if imported into India and where the said duties of customs are chargeable at an adv. Rate the value of such excisable goods shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of Customs Act, 1962 and the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. The proviso to Section 3(1) is reproduced below:-

Section 3(1) SECTION 3. Duties specified in the [[First Schedule and the Second Schedule] to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985] to be levied.  (1) [There shall be levied and collected in such manner as may be prescribed, -
(a) [a duty of excise to be called the Central Value Added Tax (CENVAT)] on all excisable goods [(excluding goods produced or manufactured in special economic zones)] which are produced or manufactured in India as, and at the rates, set forth in the First Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of 1986);]
(b) special duty of excise, in addition to the duty of excise specified in clause (a) above, on excisable goods [(excluding goods produced or manufactured in special economic zones)] specified in the Second Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of 1986) which are produced or manufactured in India, as, and at the rates, set forth in the said Second Schedule.] [Provided that the duties of excise which shall be levied and collected on any [excisable goods which are produced or manufactured, -

*???*?[(i) * ]???*???*???*???*???

by?(ii) a hundred per cent export-oriented undertaking and [brought to any other place in India], shall be an amount equal to] the aggregate of the duties of customs which would be leviable [under the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962) or any other law for the time being in force], on like goods produced or manufactured outside India if imported into India, and where the said duties of customs are chargeable by reference to their value; the value of such excisable goods shall, notwithstanding anything contained in any other provision of this Act, be determined in accordance with the provisions of the Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962) and the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975). 7.1 Thus, the measure of central excise duty payable on the DTA clearance of a 100% EOU is the aggregate of duties of Customs chargeable under Customs Act, 1962 and any other law for the time being in force on import of like goods into India and if the rate of duties of ad-velorem, the value for this purpose is to be determined under the provisions of Customs Act, 1962 and Customs Tariff Act, 1975. Here the question arises as to whether the duty of customs leviable under any other law for the time being in force would also include the education cess and S&H Cess on imported goods levied as a duty of customs. According to the department, the proviso to Section 3(1) of the Central Excise Act, 1949 provides only the measure of the excise duty chargeable on the DTA clearance of a 100% EOU and this measure is the aggregate of the duties of customs chargeable on import of like goods into India under the provisions of Customs Act, 1962 or any other law for the time being in force and accordingly, the aggregate of duties of customs would also include the education cess levied as customs duty under Section 94 of the Finance Act, 2004 and S&H Cess levied as customs duty under Section 139 of the Finance Act, 2007 and since this aggregate is the central excise duty payable on the DTA clearances, on this aggregate the education cess and S&H cess on excisable goods would be chargeable once again under the provisions of Section 93 of the Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 of the Finance Act, 2007.

7.2 The plea of the appellant on the other hand is that  (a) proviso to Section 3 (1) is a legal fiction under which the goods manufactured by 100% EOU and cleared into DTA are to be treated as the goods imported into India and since on the aggregate of duties of customs, education cess and S&H Cess leviable on imported goods @ 2% and 1% respectively have already been added, there is no need to add the education cess and S&H Cess once again, and (b) the Education cess and S&H Cess being charged as surcharge in terms of Section 91 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 136 of the Finance Act, 2007, in view of the Apex Courts judgement in the case of Sarojini Tea Co. Pvt Ltd. reported in 1992 (2) SCC 156, the same have treated as mere enhancement of the tax on the tax on which the same are levied and not a different tax and therefore once the aggregate of duties of customs i.e. basic customs duty plus additional customs duty has been enhanced by 2% and 1% , there is no need to charge education cess and S&H cess once again.

7.3 The Coordinate Bench in the case of Sarla Performance Fibers Ltd. reported in 2009 (253) ELT 203 (Tribunal-Ahmd.) accepting the above mentioned contentions of the appellant has held that education cess is not chargeable once again on aggregate of duties of customs, which also include the education cess on the total of the basic customs duty and additional customs duty.

8. We do not agree with the Appellants plea that the education cess and S&H cess being levied as surcharge is not a separate levy, as from the wordings of Section 91 of the Finance Act, 2004 and Sec. 136 of the Finance Act, 2007, it is clear that what has been levied is a cess to be called education cess and S&H cess to fulfill the commitment of the Central Government to provide and finance universalized quality basic education and Secondary and Higher education cess and this cess is to be levied as to be as surcharge. Thus, the character of this levy is cess and the mode of the levy is surcharge and merely because it is levied as surcharge to finance the Governments commitment to provide universalized quality basic education and Secondary and Higher education, it cannot be said to be a mere surcharge having the same character as the tax on which it is charged. The education cess and S&H cess could as well have been levied as a percentage of the value of the goods. In fact cess is a term generally used for taxation for some special administrative purpose. In addition to the education cess and S&H cess, there are a number of other cess, which are levied by different ministries and a number of them are collected by the Department of Revenue as duty of excise. Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 also treat education cess and S&H cess as levies distinct and different from the excise duties. Honble Gauhati High Court in case of CCE, Shillong Vs. Dharampal Satyapal Ltd. reported in 2012 (275) ELT 71 (Gauhati) has held that exemption notification No.32/99-CE does not cover education cess and levy of education cess is completely independent of the levy of excise duty. Therefore, we are of the view that just because the education cess and S&H cess are levied as surcharge on the aggregate of excise duties or customs duties, levied and collected by the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue), this cannot be treated as mere addition to the excise duty or customs duty. In our view, therefore, the education cess and S&H cess have to be treated as different and distinct levies from the excise duties and customs duties on which the same are charged.

9. We also find it difficult to accept the other plea of the appellant that proviso to Section 3(1) is a legal fiction under which the goods manufactured by a 100% EOU and cleared into DTA are to be treated as goods imported into India. On perusal of the proviso, we find that what this proviso provides is a measure of central excise duty leviable on the DTA clearance of 100% EOU and this measure is the aggregate of the duties of customs on the import of like goods into India and if the rate of duty is ad-velorem, duty is to be calculated on the value determined under the provisions of Customs Act, 1962 and Customs Tariff Act, 1975. In fact a larger bench of the Tribunal in the case of Vikram Ispat reported in 2000 (120) ELT 800 (Tribunal-LB) has held that the duty chargeable on the DTA clearance of a 100% EOU is a central excise duty and the method adopted by the law makers in recovering this duty cannot be alter its character and what the proviso to Section 3(1) of Central Excise Act, provides is only the measure of the central excise duty leviable on the DTA clearances of a 100% EOU. Therefore, in our view, it would not be correct to treat the clearance of the goods manufactured by 100% EOU into DTA as deemed imports into India.

10. However, we are not in agreement with the stand of the Revenue for another reason. The charging provisions of education cess and S&H cess are Section 91 of the Finance Act, 2004 and Section 136 of the Finance Act, 2007 respectively according to which, this levy is a cess levied as surcharge to enable the Central Government to finance its commitment to provide universalized quality basic education and secondary and higher education. Surcharge on a tax means additional tax on that tax. As discussed above, though education cess and S&H cess being cess to enable the Government to finance its expenditure on providing basic education and secondary and higher education, is a levy different and distinct from the tax on which it is levied as surcharge, the mode or measure of this levy is surcharge at the rate of 2% and 1% on the existing levies i.e. the taxes being collected by the Government as 

(a) Central excise duties under Central Excise Act, 1944 or any other law in force;

(b) customs duties under Customs Act, 1962 read with Customs Tariff Act, 1975 or any other law in force and

(c) Service tax levied under Section 66 of the Finance Act, 1994.

Since the cess levied as surcharge under Section 91 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 136 of Finance Act, 2007 has to be on the existing levies, the existing levies, obviously, would not include this cess. For this reason only, section 93 & 94 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 and 139 of Finance Act, 2007 while defining the measure of education cess and S&H cess in respect of excisable goods and imported goods respectively, specifically provide that the aggregate of duties of excise or aggregate of duties of customs levied by the Central Government in the Ministry of Finance (Deptt. of Revenue), on which this cess is to be levied as surcharge, would not include the education cess and S&H cess. Thus, the intention of the legislature was never to charge education cess on education cess. In fact this is not permissible from very mode of this levy as prescribed in Section 91 of the Finance Act, 2004 and Section 136 of the Finance Act, 2007, as when a new tax is introduced as surcharge on the existing levies, the base on which the new levy as surcharge is to be calculated will include only the existing levies, not the new levy. If the Revenues stand is accepted, and on the sum of Basic customs duty and Addl. Customs duty, first cess on imported goods under Section 94 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 139 of Finance Act, 2007 is charged as duty of customs and on the aggregate of duties of customs, cess on excisable goods, under Section 93 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 of Finance Act, 2007 is charged, it would amount to charging education cess on education cess for which there is no sanction in law. Apex Court in case of Jain Brothers Vs. U.O.I. reported in (1970) 77 ITR 107 has held that there can be no objection for double taxation if the legislature has distinctly enacted it, but while interpreting general words of taxation, the same can not be so interpreted as to tax the subject twice over to the same tax. In our view, it is this principle which has to be kept in mind while calculating education cess and S&H cess on DTA clearances of a 100% EOU. Since the DTA clearance of a 100% EOU attract central excise duty and in terms of proviso to Section 3(1) of Central Excise Act, 1944, the measure of the excise duty leviable is aggregate of duties of customs charged on import of like goods into India under Customs Act, 1962 read with Indian Customs Tariff Act, 1975 or any other law for the time being in force, this aggregate of duties of customs on which education cess under Section 93 of Finance Act, 2004 and S&H cess under Section 138 of Finance Act, 2007 is to be charged, would not include education cess and S&H cess under Section 94 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 139 of Finance Act, 2007. In other words, the education cess and S&H cess would be chargeable only once under Section 93 of Finance Act, 2004 and Section 138 of Finance Act, 2007 on the sum of basic customs duty and Additional customs duty.

11. The point referred by the referring bench stands answered as above.


	[pronounced on 22.02.2013]

	 						( Archana Wadhwa )

							   Member (Judicial)





							    (Rakesh Kumar)									 Member (Technical)

	

                                                                            (Mathew John)		               

                                                                         Member (Technical)

Ckp.



	

          		





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