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Indirect Tax Laws




                    Notes          13.  More than .....................................items are covered under the new Indian VAT regime out
                                       of which 46 natural and unprocessed local products will be exempt from VAT.
                                   14.  The .....................................commodities are listed in the respective schedule with the rates.

                                   15.  VAT is not cascading or additive though the ..................................... on the goods sold is
                                       collected at each stage.

                                     


                                     Caselet     Banco Products (India) Ltd. v. CCEx., Vadodara-I 2009
                                                 (235) ELT 636 (Tri-LB)

                                           he appellant was using plastic crates as a material handling device within  their
                                           factory premises. Such plastic crates were used for internal transportation of the
                                     Traw material from stores to processing machine, semi-finished  goods from one
                                     machine to other machine and finished goods to their storage area. The appellant contended
                                     that the plastic crates were eligible capital goods for the purposes of CENVAT credit and
                                     alternatively as input.
                                     The Tribunal first analyzed the definition of "accessories to the main machine" in order to
                                     decide whether plastic crates got covered in the definition of the capital goods as per rule
                                     2(b) of the erstwhile CENVAT Credit Rules, 2002 [now rule 2(a)(A)(iii) of the CENVAT
                                     Credit Rules, 2004]. After meticulous consideration of various relevant judgments, the
                                     Tribunal observed that the only criteria for an object to be held as an accessory is that a
                                     particular item should be capable of being used with a machine and should advance the
                                     effectiveness of working of that machine.
                                     The plastic crates in question were used for  transportation of the raw  material to  the
                                     processing machine and all the finished goods from the machine to storage area. If instead
                                     of using plastic crates manual transportation of the inputs or  semi-finished goods had
                                     been opted for, practically, it would have hampered the continuous working of the machine
                                     on account of delays in the delivery of the raw material/semi-finished goods etc. Hence,
                                     viewed and judged in the light of the interpretation of the term "accessory" by various
                                     Courts, the Tribunal concluded that the plastic crates could be held as accessory. Hence,
                                     plastic crates would be eligible for CENVAT credit as capital goods.

                                     While dealing with the expression "in the manufacture of the goods" in the definition of
                                     inputs under rule 2(g) of the erstwhile CENVAT Credit Rules, 2002 [now rule 2(k) of the
                                     CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004], the Apex Court, in the case of Collr. of C.E. v. M/s. Rajasthan
                                     State Chemical  Works 1991  (55)  E.L.T.  444,  had  observed  that  the  said  expression
                                     encompassed all processes which were directly related to the actual production. The process
                                     of handling/lifting/pumping/transfer/transportation of the raw material was also a
                                     process in relation to manufacture, if integrally connected with further operation leading
                                     to manufacture of the goods.

                                     By applying the ratio as enacted by the Supreme Court to the issue in dispute, the Tribunal
                                     held that process started with the issuance of the inputs from the stores and their further
                                     transportation to the production platform was only a part of the process of manufacture
                                     integrally related to the final production. In absence of the delivery of the raw material to
                                     the manufacturing platform, the process could not start. Such delivery of the goods included
                                     transportation of the goods by plastic crates. Similarly, finished products were required to

                                                                                                         Contd....



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