Tribunal grants stay, waives pre-deposit, finds strong case. Commissioner lacks evidence for extended period claim. The Tribunal allowed the stay petition, waiving the pre-deposit condition of duty, interest, and penalty, and stayed their recovery in accordance with ...
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Tribunal grants stay, waives pre-deposit, finds strong case. Commissioner lacks evidence for extended period claim.
The Tribunal allowed the stay petition, waiving the pre-deposit condition of duty, interest, and penalty, and stayed their recovery in accordance with Section 35F of the Central Excise Act, 1944. The Tribunal found the Appellants had a strong arguable case, emphasizing the rectification of the default before the show cause notice was issued, indicating no intention to evade duty payment. The Commissioner's justification for invoking the extended period lacked sufficient evidence of suppression or willful misstatement by the Appellants.
Issues: Stay application against Order-in-Original confirming Central Excise duty demand, interest, and penalty.
Analysis: 1. The Appellants challenged the Order-in-Original confirming a demand of Rs. 2,06,33,144 under Section 11A of the Central Excise Act, 1944, without utilizing Cenvat Credit, along with interest and penalty. The stay petition sought to stay the operation of the impugned order, waive pre-deposit of penalty, grant a personal hearing, and requested appropriate orders. 2. The Appellants, engaged in manufacturing castings, faced an audit revealing a duty liability for December 2007. A portion of the duty remained unpaid beyond the due date, with a small amount paid later. The Appellants argued that the shortfall was due to an accounting error and cited precedents to support their case. 3. The Commissioner invoked Rule 8(3A) to demand payment without utilizing Cenvat Credit, along with interest and penalty. The Appellants contended the default was unintentional, rectified promptly, and did not involve willful suppression or misstatement. 4. The Tribunal considered the submissions and noted the minor default amount compared to the total duty, indicating inadvertence. Citing relevant case law, the Tribunal found the Appellants had a strong arguable case and waived the pre-deposit condition due to undue financial hardship. 5. The Tribunal emphasized that the default had been rectified before the show cause notice was issued, indicating no intention to evade duty payment. The Commissioner's justification for invoking the extended period lacked sufficient evidence of suppression or willful misstatement by the Appellants. 6. Ultimately, the Tribunal allowed the stay petition, waived the pre-deposit condition of duty, interest, and penalty, and stayed their recovery in accordance with Section 35F of the Central Excise Act, 1944.
Full Summary is available for active users!
Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.