Case Law
Subject : Tax Law - Indirect Tax
New Delhi - The Customs Excise & Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT) has delivered a significant ruling, quashing a service tax demand on Tower Vision India Private Limited for services provided and consumed entirely within the erstwhile state of Jammu & Kashmir. The bench, comprising Judicial Member S. S. Garg and Technical Member P. Anjani Kumar, held that the Place of Provision of Services (POPS) Rules, 2012, cannot be used to impose tax on services rendered in a territory explicitly excluded from the purview of the governing statute.
The appellant, Tower Vision India Private Limited, is engaged in providing Passive Infrastructure Support Services to telecom operators. The dispute arose over services rendered by its Jammu & Kashmir branch to clients located within J&K. The Commissioner of Central Excise, Goods & Service Tax, Gurugram, confirmed a demand for service tax, Swachh Bharat Cess, and Krishi Kalyan Cess, arguing that both the service provider and recipients held centralized registrations in taxable territories (Gurugram and other states), bringing the transaction under the tax net as per the POPS Rules.
The Revenue's Position: The tax department contended that the location of both the appellant and its clients should be determined by their centralized registration addresses, which were in taxable territories. Relying on the POPS Rules, particularly Rules 2, 5, 8, and 14, the department argued that the "place of provision of service" was within India's taxable territory, not J&K, making the services liable for tax.
The Appellant's Counter: Tower Vision India argued that the entire demand was fundamentally flawed. Their counsel emphasized that the undisputed fact was that the services were physically provided and consumed within J&K. They pointed to Section 64 of the Finance Act, 1994 , which explicitly states that its provisions (Chapter V, concerning service tax) extend to "the whole of India except the State of Jammu and Kashmir." Consequently, J&K was a "non-taxable territory" as defined under Section 65B(52) of the Act. They asserted that rules like the POPS Rules cannot override the express provisions of the parent Act. The appellant also argued that the demand was time-barred, as they had transparently disclosed these transactions as "exempted services" in their ST-3 returns.
The CESTAT bench sided firmly with the appellant, establishing a clear hierarchy between statutory provisions and subordinate rules. The Tribunal noted the undisputed fact that the services were rendered and consumed in J&K.
In its reasoning, the Tribunal held: > "We find that the provision of Chapter V of the Finance Act do not extend to J&K once the provisions of Finance Act are not applicable in the State of J&K then service tax cannot be demanded by resorting to POPS Rules which cannot override the statutory provisions."
The bench reinforced its decision by citing a series of judicial precedents from various High Courts and Tribunal benches, including * M/s Alstom India Limited (Guj. HC) and * Encardio-Rite Electronics Pvt. Ltd. (CESTAT, Allahabad) , which consistently held that services rendered in J&K are beyond the scope of service tax.
The Tribunal also rejected the department's invocation of the extended period of limitation, finding no evidence of suppression of facts. It observed: > "...the invocation of extended period is not justified as the appellant has been filing its ST-3 Returns regularly and disclosed the said transaction in the service tax Returns filed for the period under dispute as 'exempted service'."
Setting aside the impugned order, CESTAT allowed the appeal with consequential relief. The judgment reaffirms the crucial legal principle that subordinate legislation (rules) cannot expand the scope of a tax beyond what is permitted by the parent Act. For businesses operating in regions with special status, this decision clarifies that the physical location of service provision and consumption is paramount, and administrative conveniences like centralized registration cannot be used to create a tax liability where none exists under the statute.
#ServiceTax #CESTAT #TaxLaw
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