Supreme Court Clarifies "Sole Consideration" Criterion for Excise Valuation under Section 4(1)(a)

Supreme Court Clarifies "Sole Consideration" Criterion for Excise Valuation under Section 4(1)(a)

1. Introduction

This commentary examines the Supreme Court of India’s Judgment in Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd. v. Commissioner of Central Excise Nashik Commissionerate (2025 INSC 84), delivered on January 20, 2025. The central issue involved the valuation of petroleum products under Section 4 of the Central Excise Act, 1944, particularly when goods are not sold entirely for a price that is the “sole consideration.” The Judgment also addresses whether an “extended period of limitation” under the proviso to Section 11A(1) of the Act and a penalty under Section 11AC could be validly invoked by the Department of Central Excise.

Multiple appeals were consolidated for hearing. Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd. (BPCL), Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. (IOCL), Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd. (HPCL), and the erstwhile Indo-Burma Petroleum Company Ltd. (later merged into IOCL) — collectively known here as the Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) — challenged the approach taken by the Revenue authorities in issuing show-cause notices demanding duty differentials. The Revenue also filed appeals against certain appellate orders rendered in favor of OMCs. Ultimately, the Supreme Court clarified the legal position regarding the “price as the sole consideration” requirement under Section 4(1)(a) and the conditions necessary to invoke the extended limitation and penalties.

2. Summary of the Judgment

In the principal appeal (Civil Appeal No. 5642 of 2009), BPCL contended that the sale price agreed under an inter-company Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)—the Import Parity Price (IPP)—should be taken as the transaction value for excise duty. The Supreme Court disagreed, concluding that the IPP was not the sole consideration for the sale because the MOU was structured primarily to ensure uninterrupted, nationwide supply of petroleum products among OMCs. Under Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, where the price is not the sole consideration, it cannot serve as the “transaction value.” The Court therefore ruled that the extended period of limitation also lacked justification because the Revenue was aware of the MOU and its full implications; thus, allegations of suppression or willful misstatement did not stand. BPCL’s appeal was allowed, and the Supreme Court set aside the orders of the lower fora.

For the remaining appeals (filed both by the Revenue and by other OMCs), the Supreme Court remanded the cases to the Customs, Excise & Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT) for a fresh adjudication in line with its findings that the MOU’s primary purpose was to facilitate uninterrupted supply and that price alone was not the sole consideration.

3. Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited

The Judgment refers to:

  • Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd. v. Commissioner of Central Excise (2005): The Tribunal had previously ruled in favor of the OMCs, and the Supreme Court summarily dismissed the Revenue’s appeal. However, the present Supreme Court bench clarified that the Tribunal in the earlier decision did not undertake a detailed analysis of whether the price constituted the sole consideration under Section 4(1)(a).
  • CCE v. Grasim Industries Ltd. (2018) 7 SCC 733, CCE v. Ispat Industries Ltd. (2016) 1 SCC 631, and CCE v. CERA Boards and Doors (2020) 9 SCC 662: These decisions explain the shift from “normal value” to “transaction value” under the amended Section 4 of the Central Excise Act. They support the principle that different prices for identical goods can be adopted if each price truly reflects the sole consideration, and where buyer and seller are not related and the price is the only consideration for the sale.
  • D.J. Malpani v. CCE (2019) 9 SCC 120: Cited to emphasize a strict reading of valuation provisions and the factors that can or cannot be added to the transaction value.
  • Commissioner of Central Excise, Hyderabad v. Detergents India Ltd. (2015) 7 SCC 198: Invoked to illustrate that sales at different prices may be permissible—provided the fundamental requirement under Section 4(1)(a) (that the price is the sole consideration unencumbered by extraneous elements) is satisfied.
  • Kunhayammed & Ors v. State of Kerala & Anr. (2000) 6 SCC 359: Cited on the principles of merger and how summary dismissal by the Supreme Court may or may not merge the judgment of the lower court on all points of law (i.e., whether all issues were conclusively decided).

3.2 Legal Reasoning

The Court undertook a meticulous reading of Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act, 1944, which requires that:

  • The goods must be sold by the assessee for delivery at the time and place of removal.
  • The assessee and the buyer must not be related.
  • The price must be the sole consideration for the sale (“price is the sole consideration”).

The crux of the ruling lies in whether the IPP reflected in the MOU was the sole consideration paid by one OMC when purchasing from another. The Supreme Court held that it was not. Recitals in the MOU and clauses dealing with collaborative logistics, avoidance of supply disruptions, and product sharing revealed that the arrangement was primarily geared toward ensuring nationwide availability of petroleum products. Thus, there was a strong non-monetary component to the transaction—namely, the mutual advantage in preventing supply disruptions. Consequently, under Section 4(1)(a), the IPP could not form the transaction value for the purposes of levying excise duty.

On the issue of limitation, the Court carefully parsed the findings regarding the alleged “suppression” of the MOU. The Board’s own circulars and references in prior Tribunal judgments showed that the Revenue knew about the MOU well before issuing show-cause notices. Therefore, the extended period of five years was unjustified, as the mandatory conditions of “collusion, fraud, or willful misstatement” were not satisfied. The Court also overturned the imposition of a penalty under Section 11AC, explaining that it hinged on the same requirement for willful suppression or fraud, which the Department failed to establish.

3.3 Impact

This Judgment has several significant implications for Central Excise law and, more broadly, for the interpretation of “transaction value” under Section 4:

  1. Strict Interpretation of “Sole Consideration”: Tax authorities and courts must conduct a careful factual inquiry into whether the invoiced price truly reflects the entire consideration. Mere existence of an invoice price will not automatically qualify as transaction value if another commercial or non-commercial benefit flows from the arrangement.
  2. Extended Limitation: The Court’s discussion clarifies that the Department cannot invoke the extended period by merely alleging incomplete disclosure; there must be demonstrable willful suppression, misstatement, or fraud with the intent to evade duty.
  3. Penalty under Section 11AC: Penalties require proof of fraud, suppression, or intent to evade duty. Good-faith reliance on an arrangement (especially one involving Public Sector Undertakings upon Government direction) will likely preclude the imposition of such penalties.
  4. Remand for Fact-Specific Inquiries: Where conducive, the Court has mandated a remand to the Tribunal for a fresh fact-specific determination on whether the arrangement in each case truly fails or meets the “sole consideration” criterion.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

a) “Transaction Value” Under the Central Excise Act: Before July 2000, central excise duty was often determined under the concept of “normal value.” With statutory amendments, the law shifted to “transaction value”: the price actually paid or payable for each removal, provided the buyer-seller relationship is not influencing the price, and the price is the sole consideration. In simple terms, if Company A sells goods to Company B for ₹100, and there are no other benefits or hidden considerations, then ₹100 is the “transaction value.” If, however, Company A sells for ₹90 plus obtains another advantage (e.g., reciprocal access to warehousing or guaranteed distribution benefits), the effective consideration is not just the ₹90 in the invoice.

b) “Extended Period of Limitation” and “Suppression of Facts”: Normally, the Department can reassess or issue a show-cause notice seeking duty within one year of the “relevant date.” If the Department alleges fraud, collusion, or suppression of facts with intent to evade duty, the statutory provision extends the assessment window to five years. This stringent measure, however, requires clear proof of deliberate wrongdoing. Routine commercial arrangements, especially among public sector entities acting under a policy directive, do not automatically meet this threshold.

c) “Price Not the Sole Consideration”: If a sale transaction is motivated by additional factors—like ensuring nationwide supply coverage or fulfilling a government-mandated distribution system—then the nominal price on the invoice may not be the only component of consideration. Therefore, the standard transaction value method under Section 4(1)(a) becomes unavailable.

5. Conclusion

The Supreme Court’s Judgment underscores the need for a rigorous factual examination to determine whether invoiced prices reflect the entire commercial quid pro quo in a sale. The Court held that, because the OMCs’ MOU aimed primarily at national supply security, the IPP agreed upon did not represent the sole consideration. Accordingly, Section 4(1)(a) of the Central Excise Act was not fulfilled. Furthermore, the extended limitation and penalty provisions were held inapplicable absent any proven willful concealment or fraudulent intent.

This ruling harmonizes with existing legal principles requiring that “transaction value” under the Central Excise Act must be the full and exclusive consideration. Businesses and legal practitioners should ensure that, if there are ancillary obligations or reciprocal benefits, those transactions might not qualify for valuation under Section 4(1)(a) alone. The Judgment ultimately grants clarity and consistency in applying the law to similar supply arrangements and underscores the higher burden of proof required to invoke the extended period of limitation and penal provisions.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court Of India

Judge(s)

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE ABHAY S. OKA HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE UJJAL BHUYAN

Advocates

PARIJAT SINHAGURMEET SINGH MAKKER

Comments