Services provided to Foreign Principals for marketing their products in India qualify as an export of service
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Services provided to Foreign Principals for marketing their products in India qualify as an export of service
We are sharing with you an important judgment of the Hon’ble CESTAT, Delhi in the case of Microsoft Corporation (I) (P) Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Service Tax, New Delhi [2014-TIOL-1964-CESTAT-DEL] on the following issue:
Accordingly, a Service tax demand of Rs. 256 Crore was confirmed on September 23, 2008. The Hon’ble CESTAT, Delhi on appeal filed by the Appellant ordered a pre-deposit of Rs. 70 Crores [2009-TIOL-1325-CESTAT-DEL]. On further appeal filed by the Appellant on pre-deposit of Rs. 70 Crores, the Hon’ble Delhi High Court did not find it a fit case for interference [2009-TIOL-601-HC-DEL-ST] and the matter went back to the Hon’ble CESTAT, Delhi for deciding the case.
- State of Kerala and Others Vs. The Cochin Coal Company Ltd. [(1961) 12 STC 1 (SC)] (“Cochin case”);
- Burmah Shell Oil Storage and Distributing Co, of India Ltd. and Other Vs. Commercial Tax Officers and Others [(1960) 11 STC 764 (SC)] (“Burmah case”); and
- All India Federation of Tax Practitioners Case [2007 (7) STR 625 (SC)] (“AIFTP case”).
- The marketing operations done by the Appellant in India cannot be said to be at the behest of any Indian customer. The Services being provided may or may not result in any sales of the product on Indian soil. As such, the Services are being provided by the Appellant to MO to be used by them at Singapore, may be for the purpose of the sale of their product in India, have to be held as export of service;
- The Services provided by the Appellant were delivered outside India and as such were used there and thus, are covered by the provisions of the Export Rules and are not liable to Service tax;
- In the case of Larsen & Toubro [2013-TIOL-1458-CESTAT-DEL], it is held that a majority decision is Larger Bench decision having the same binding criteria as that of Larger Bench and, therefore, the majority decision in the case of Paul Merchants Ltd. Vs. CCE Chandigarh [2012-TIOL-1877-CESTAT-DEL] is required to be followed;
- Similar stand also taken in Gap International Sourcing (India) Pvt. Ltd. .[2014-TIOL-465-CESTAT-DEL], Vodafone Essar Cellular Ltd. [2013-TIOL-566-CESTAT-MUM], Bayer Material Science Pvt. Ltd. [2014-TIOL-1084-CESTAT-MUM] and no contrary decision has been brought to notice by the Department;
- The Board Circular No. 111/05/2009-ST dated February 24, 2009 also clarifies that the relevant factor for Rule 3(1)(iii) of the Export Rules is the ‘the location of the service recipient’ and not the ‘place of performance’. The phrase 'used outside India' is to be interpreted to mean that the benefit of the services should accrue outside India;
- The decisions in Cochin case as also in Burmah case explaining the meaning of export is not relevant in as much as the same deals with the export of goods and not export of services;
- The principal of equivalence between the taxation of goods and taxation of services as also the principal of destination based consumption tax as laid down by the Hon’ble Supreme Court in AIFTP case were in the context of Constitutional Authority of levy of Service tax on certain services and the issue of export of services in terms of the Export Rules was not the subject matter of said decision.
Bimal Jain
FCA, FCS, LLB, B.Com (Hons.)
Flat No. 34B, Ground Floor, Pocket-1,
Mayur Vihar, Phase–I, Delhi – 110091
Desktel: +91-11-22757595/42427056
Mobile: +91 9810604563
Email: bimaljain@hotmail.com
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