Rule 6(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004: Jurisprudential Evolution and Contemporary Scope

Rule 6(3) of the CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004: Jurisprudential Evolution and Contemporary Scope

1. Introduction

The CENVAT Credit Rules, 2004 (hereinafter “CCR 2004”) constitute the backbone of India’s value-added indirect tax regime that operated prior to the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax. Within the scheme, Rule 6 prescribes the consequences that flow where common inputs or input services are employed for the manufacture of both dutiable and exempted final products, or for the provision of taxable and exempted services. Sub-rule (3) embodies a compensatory payment mechanism for assessees who elect not to maintain separate accounts. Over the last two decades, Rule 6(3) has spawned extensive litigation, raising fundamental questions regarding its raison d’être, its substantive or procedural character, and its interaction with other fiscal doctrines such as the “no credit for exempted activity” principle. This article critically analyses the evolution and current scope of Rule 6(3), drawing upon leading judicial authorities and statutory amendments.

2. Statutory Framework

2.1 Rule 6(1) & 6(2): Negative Credit and Separate Accounts

Rule 6(1) denies CENVAT credit on inputs or input services used exclusively in exempted goods/services, save in specified circumstances (e.g. exports). Rule 6(2) obliges a manufacturer or service provider dealing in both dutiable and exempted outputs to maintain separate accounts for receipt and consumption of inputs / input services, so that credit is taken only to the extent relatable to dutiable / taxable outputs.

2.2 Rule 6(3): The Compensatory Payment Option

Where separate accounts are not maintained, Rule 6(3) (as it successively stood) required the assessee to adopt one of the following options:

  • Option (i) – Pay an amount equal to a prescribed percentage of the value of exempted goods/services (10 %, later 8 %, and after 1-4-2011, 6 % for goods and 7 % for services).
  • Option (ii) – Pay an amount determined under the formula introduced through Rule 6(3A) (proportionate credit reversal).

Rule 6(3) is explicitly cast in a non obstante form, overriding sub-rules (1) and (2). The legislative object is to provide a surrogate for strict correlation when the assessee foregoes the rigour of separate accounting.

2.3 Rule 6(6): Statutory Exclusions

Certain clearances, such as exports under bond, supplies to units in SEZ/EOU, and removals against specified exemption notifications, are carved out from Rule 6(1)–(3) by virtue of Rule 6(6). The significance of this carve-out has been repeatedly emphasised in litigation concerning by-products (bagasse, dross) and trading turnovers.

3. Substantive or Procedural? — The Foods, Fats & Fertilisers Debate

In Foods, Fats & Fertilisers Ltd. v. CCE[1], the CESTAT characterised Rule 6(3) and 6(3A) as procedural, drawing a distinction between “eligibility” (governed by Rule 3) and the “obligations” for credit management (governed by Rule 6). The Tribunal relied upon the Supreme Court’s ratio in Ashok Leyland to hold that procedural prescriptions can have retrospective application in terrorem. However, subsequent High Court pronouncements nuance this view:

  • The Gujarat High Court in Dashion Ltd.[2] ruled that Rule 6(3) is inapplicable where the assessee’s output is entirely dutiable; the provision is contingent upon the coexistence of dutiable and exempted outputs. This implicitly treats Rule 6(3) as substantive, for its very trigger depends on the nature of outputs.
  • The Bombay High Court in ONGC Ltd.[3] observed that while Rule 6(1) is mandatory, the menu of options under Rule 6(3)/(3A) grants a statutory election, suggesting a hybrid character—substantive in setting the liability, procedural in prescribing the modality.

4. Core Jurisprudential Themes

4.1 Credit Reversal versus Percentage-Based Payment

A long-standing controversy was whether mere reversal of proportionate credit suffices, or whether the assessee must additionally discharge the percentage amount under Rule 6(3)(b). The Larger Bench in Life Long Appliances[4] concluded that if credit attributable to exempted goods is reversed pre-removal, Rule 6(3)(b) is inapplicable. The decision distilled the Supreme Court’s dicta in Chandrapur Magnet Wires and Bombay Dyeing that “reversal is as good as non-availment.”

4.2 Trading Activity as “Exempted Service”

Prior to 1-4-2011, “trading” was not expressly defined as a service, which led to divergent views. In Aksh Optifibre[5], the CESTAT held that Rule 6 was inapplicable because trading was neither a service nor an exempted service. Post-amendment, Rule 2(e) read with Explanation 3 to Rule 2(l) classified trading as an exempted service, bringing it within Rule 6(3). Subsequent cases such as Bharat Resins[6] and Dream Associates[7] confirm that, where common services feed into trading turnovers, the assessee must either reverse proportionate credit (Rule 6(3A)) or pay 6 % of the trading value, unless no common credit is taken.

4.3 By-Products, Waste and Residues

Whether the emergence of non-dutiable by-products (bagasse, aluminium dross, skimmings) attracts Rule 6(3) has been contentious. The Supreme Court in DSCL Sugar[8] held that bagasse is not “manufactured goods”, therefore not excisable; nonetheless, the Department sought to invoke Rule 6(3). The CESTAT in Sahakar Nagawade SSK[9] quashed the demand, reasoning that once bagasse is outside excise, it cannot be branded “exempted goods” for Rule 6(3). A parallel line of authority concerning aluminium dross (Bharat Aluminium[10]) mirrors this logic. The upshot is that Rule 6(3) presupposes the existence of “exempted goods/services” capable of manufacture; mere refuse does not qualify.

4.4 Financial Services — Interest Income

Banking entities earn interest which, until 17-3-2012, was not an “exempted service”. In Nicholas Piramal (Co-operative Bank)[11] the Tribunal held that Rule 6(3) demands for 2008-09 premised on interest income were unsustainable, fortified by TRU Circular dated 16-3-2012 that interest is to be excluded from the Rule 6 computation for earlier periods.

4.5 Scope of “Total Credit” under Rule 6(3A)

After the 2016 amendment, only common input-service credit enters the numerator of the Rule 6(3A) formula. The CESTAT in Thyssenkrupp Industrial Solutions[12] and Honda Cars[13] clarified that including credit exclusively used in dutiable goods would artificially inflate the reversal and defeat the legislative intent—a view expressly endorsed by TRU Circular dated 29-2-2016.

5. Retroactivity, Circulars and Administrative Guidance

The Ministry’s amendments have frequently been labelled “clarificatory”, aiming to codify extant principles without enlarging liability. Courts tend to uphold retrospective applicability where the change narrows or clarifies an obligation (e.g. 2016 simplification of Rule 6(3A)), but resist retroactivity that creates a new charge (e.g. attempts to apply post-2011 trading amendments to prior periods, rejected in Aksh Optifibre).

6. Critical Appraisal

  • Rule 6(3) embodies a proxy value-based charge, intended to neutralise the revenue loss from inputs feeding exempt outputs. However, the fixed-percentage method often yields anomalous results, either over-recovering or under-recovering tax relative to actual credit.
  • Judicial insistence on permitting proportionate reversal (or demonstrating de facto non- availment) promotes the VAT principle that tax must accrue only on value addition.
  • Carve-outs under Rule 6(6) reflect the policy of export and SEZ neutrality. Yet, departmental reluctance to acknowledge these exclusions (e.g. EOU clearances in Aroma Chemicals[14]) signals a need for clearer administrative training.
  • Post-GST, analogous debates persist under Section 17(2) of the CGST Act, 2017, indicating that the lessons of Rule 6(3) remain instructive for credit separation jurisprudence.

7. Conclusion

The judicial trajectory of Rule 6(3) underscores a delicate balance between administrative convenience and fiscal neutrality. Courts have progressively aligned the provision with the foundational VAT doctrine—credit denial only to the extent of exempted turnover, no more and no less. The future of indirect-tax credit management, whether under the waning central-excise regime or within the GST framework, must internalise these principles to avoid cascading, foster compliance certainty, and obviate repetitive litigation.

Footnotes

  1. Foods, Fats & Fertilisers Ltd. v. CCE, Guntur, 2009 (CESTAT).
  2. CCE v. Dashion Ltd., 2016 SCC OnLine Guj 3210.
  3. ONGC Ltd. v. CCE, Mumbai, 2013 (Bombay HC).
  4. Life Long Appliances Ltd. v. CCE, 2008 (CESTAT LB).
  5. Aksh Optifibre Ltd. v. CCE, Jaipur-I, 2017 (CESTAT).
  6. Bharat Resins Ltd. v. CCE, Surat-I, 2022 (CESTAT).
  7. Dream Associates v. ST, Ahmedabad, 2024 (CESTAT).
  8. Union of India v. DSCL Sugar Ltd., (2015) 322 ELT 769 (SC).
  9. Sahakar Maharshi Shivajirao Nagawade SSK Ltd. v. CCE, Nashik, 2023 (CESTAT).
  10. CCE, Raipur v. Bharat Aluminium Co. Ltd., 2015 (CESTAT).
  11. Pune v. Nicholas Piramal, 2015 (CESTAT).
  12. Thyssenkrupp Industrial Solutions India (P) Ltd. v. CC, Mumbai, 2022 (CESTAT).
  13. Honda Cars India Ltd. v. CCE, 2021 (CESTAT-Del.).
  14. Aroma Chemicals v. CCE (Appeals-I), Meerut, 2017 (CESTAT).
  15. Coca Cola India (P) Ltd. v. CCE, Pune-III, 2010 SCC OnLine CESTAT 2436 (on input-service breadth, relevant for common credit identification).