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Commissioner of Central Excise Vs. Quick Service

Commissioner of Central Excise vs Quick Service

Disposition Appeal dismissed Court Mumbai Decided Aug 30, 2007
~1 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/368325

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Citation
Court
Mumbai High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Central Excise Appeal No. 235 of 2006
Subject
Service Tax
Disposition
Appeal dismissed

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

- Section 34: [D.K. Deshmukh, S.J. Vazifdar & J.P. Devadhar, JJ] Court fee on Petition under Section 34 of the Act Bombay Court Fees Act (36 of 1959), Schedule I, Article 3, Schedule II, Article 1(f)(iii) Held, According to Article 3 of Schedule I, on any plaint, application or petition or memorandum of appeal for...

Key legal issue
Service Tax
Outcome / disposition
Appeal dismissed
Acts & sections
Finance Act, 1994 - Sections 76 and 80

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Commissioner of Central Excise

Advocate S.V. Bharucha and ;L.B. Pante, Advs.

Respondent

Quick Service

Legal References

Acts
Finance Act, 1994 - Sections 76 and 80
Reported In
2008[10]STR235

Excerpt

.....reference in any other enactment to the provisions so repealed shall, unless a different intention appears, be construed as references to the provisions so re-enacted. in the present case, it is common ground that the former enactment is the 1940 act, the new enactment is the 1996 act and any other enactment is the bombay court fees act, the only provision of the 1940 act referred to in article 3 of schedule 1 of the bombay court fees act is the provisions of section 33 of the 1940act and bare comparison of that provision with the provisions of sub-section (1) of section 34 of the 1996 act shows that the provision of section 33 of 1940 act is repealed and re-enacted in sub-section (1) of section 34 of the 1996 act with slight modification. therefore, reference to the provisions of section 33 of the 1940 act in article 3 of schedule-i of the bombay court fees act has to be construed, in view of the provisions of section 8 of the general clauses act, as reference to the provisions of section 34 of the 1996 act. so far as an appeal filed under section 37 of the 1996 act is concerned, perusal of section 37 shows that an appeal is provided to the appellate court against an order setting aside an arbitral award or refusing to set aside an arbitral award under section 34. thus, as the provisions of article 3 of schedule-i do not apply to an application or petition filed under section 34 of the 1996 act, they will also not apply to the memorandum of appeal filed to set aside or modify an award made by the arbitrator under the 1996 act. in other words nothing contained in article 3 of schedule-i of the bombay court fees act applies to an application, petition or memorandum of appeal to set aside or modify any award made under the 1996 act as it does not apply to an application or petition or memorandum of appeal to set aside or modify an award made under the arbitration act, 1940. perusal of the provisions of section 8 of the general clauses act shows that references in.....order1. the question of law is framed at paragraph no. 4 in the appeal memo. the main issue is as to whether the tribunal can impose penalty under section 76 of the finance act, 1994. after considering the provisions of sections 80 read with 76, we have held that there is discretion in the tribunal to interfere with the penalty imposed. in the instant case, in our opinion, no question of law would arise. hence appeal is dismissed.

Full Judgment

ORDER

1. The question of law is framed at paragraph No. 4 in the appeal memo. The main issue is as to whether the Tribunal can impose penalty under Section 76 of the Finance Act, 1994. After considering the provisions of Sections 80 read with 76, we have held that there is discretion in the Tribunal to interfere with the penalty imposed. In the instant case, in our opinion, no question of law would arise. Hence appeal is dismissed.

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