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2025 (6) TMI 1090 - AT - Service TaxNature of activity - sale or service - supply of license keys/codes for antivirus software constitutes a taxable service under section 65(105)(zzzze) of the Finance Act 1994 or amounts to a transfer of goods? - HELD THAT - It is seen that the order of the Tribunal in re Sakri IT Solutions Pvt Ltd v. The Additional Director General (Adjudication) 2024 (4) TMI 373 - CESTAT NEW DELHI had held that the supply of packed Antivirus Software to the end user by charging license fee would amount to a provision of service and would not be a sale. Conclusion - The transaction involving supply of antivirus software license keys/codes is not liable to service tax but is a sale of goods attracting VAT/sales tax. As the issue stands settled in their own dispute for the earlier period and with the present dispute having its origin in statement of demand consequent to the show cause notice issued therein the impugned order is set aside - Appeal allowed.
The core legal questions considered in this appeal revolve around the applicability of service tax under the Finance Act, 1994, specifically:
1. Whether the supply of license keys/codes for antivirus software constitutes a taxable service under section 65(105)(zzzze) of the Finance Act, 1994, or amounts to a transfer of goods, thereby attracting sales tax/VAT instead of service tax. 2. The interpretation of the End User Licence Agreement (EULA) terms and whether the rights granted therein amount to a "deemed sale" under Article 366(29A)(d) of the Constitution. 3. The relevance and binding effect of precedents, including the Tribunal's decision in Quick Heal Technologies Ltd and the Supreme Court's subsequent affirmations, on the present dispute. 4. The validity of the demand for recovery of service tax, interest, and penalty imposed under sections 73, 75, and 76 of the Finance Act, 1994, respectively, for the period October 2013 to March 2015. Issue-wise detailed analysis: Issue 1: Whether supply of antivirus software license keys/codes is a taxable service under section 65(105)(zzzze) or a sale of goods The legal framework includes section 65(105)(zzzze) of the Finance Act, 1994, defining "information technology software" service, and Article 366(29A)(d) of the Constitution, which defines "deemed sale" including transfer of the right to use goods. The Supreme Court's decision in Tata Consultancy Services v. State of Andhra Pradesh is pivotal, establishing that canned software supplied on physical media (e.g., CDs) qualifies as "goods" for sales tax purposes. The Tribunal in Quick Heal Technologies Ltd examined similar facts and held that the supply of antivirus software license keys/codes did not constitute a service liable to service tax but was a sale of goods. The Supreme Court upheld this view, emphasizing that the software in question was "canned software" and that the transaction resulted in a "deemed sale" under Article 366(29A)(d). The Court analyzed the nature of antivirus software, noting it operates autonomously once installed, without requiring user interactivity, distinguishing it from other software (e.g., ERP, MS Word) that necessitates continuous user input. This distinction was critical in rejecting the contention that the software qualifies as "information technology software" service. The CBEC Education Guide on Service Tax was also referenced, clarifying that a license to use software that does not transfer the right to use in the constitutional sense attracts service tax, but where the license terms do not restrict free enjoyment akin to ownership, the transaction is a deemed sale and not a service. Issue 2: Interpretation of the End User Licence Agreement and its impact on taxability The Court examined the End User Licence Agreement (EULA) executed by the appellant, which granted a non-exclusive, non-transferable right to use the software for a specified term, subject to conditions such as prohibition on copying, reverse engineering, sublicensing, and restrictions on use. The Tribunal and Supreme Court in Quick Heal emphasized that such license agreements, which do not interfere with the free enjoyment of the software by the licensee, amount to a transfer of the right to use goods and hence "deemed sale." The right to use granted under the EULA was held to be sufficient to attract sales tax/VAT rather than service tax. The Court highlighted that the licensee's entitlement to updates, technical support, and the right to use the software during the license term, coupled with the retention of ownership by the licensor, did not negate the "deemed sale" characterization. The conditions imposed were not such as to restrict free enjoyment to a degree that would convert the transaction into a service. The Court also noted that the transaction cannot be artificially bifurcated into sale and service components for tax purposes, reinforcing the principle that the substance of the transaction governs taxability. Issue 3: Effect of precedents and judicial pronouncements on the present case The Tribunal relied heavily on the Quick Heal Technologies Ltd decision and the Supreme Court's affirmations thereof. The Supreme Court's detailed analysis in those cases provided authoritative guidance on the distinction between sale of software as goods and provision of software services for tax purposes. The Court also referred to the Madras High Court's decision in Infotech Software Dealers Association, noting that it did not consider the binding Supreme Court precedent in Tata Consultancy Services, thereby limiting its applicability. The Supreme Court's elucidation of the essential requirements for "deemed sale" under Article 366(29A)(d) was applied, including the transfer of the right to use goods, existence of goods for use, and the nature of control vested in the licensee during the contract term. Issue 4: Validity of recovery demand under sections 73, 75, and 76 of the Finance Act, 1994 The demand for recovery of service tax, interest, and penalty was premised on the classification of the transaction as a taxable service. Given the settled legal position that the transaction constitutes a sale of goods, the demand was not sustainable. The Court noted that the impugned order originated from a show cause notice identical to one previously adjudicated and set aside by the Tribunal. Since the present dispute arises from the same factual matrix and legal principles, the earlier decision is binding and dispositive. Consequently, the Court set aside the impugned order confirming the demand, thereby quashing the recovery proceedings. Significant holdings include the following verbatim excerpts of crucial legal reasoning: "The Antivirus Software developed by the Appellant is complete in itself to prevent virus in the computer system. Once the computer system is booted, the Antivirus Software begins the function of detecting the virus, which continues till the time the computer system remains booted. The computer system only displays a message that viruses existed and that they have been detected and removed. No interactivity takes place nor there is any requirement of giving any command to the software to perform its function of detecting and removing virus from the computer system." "It is clear from the aforesaid decision of the Supreme Court in Tata Consultancy Services that intellectual property, once it is put on the media and marketed could become 'goods' and that a software may be intellectual property and such intellectual property contained in a medium is purchased and sold in various forms including CDs." "Thus, viewed from any angle, the transaction in the present Appeal results in the right to use the software and would amount to 'deemed sale'. It is, therefore, not possible to accept the contention of the learned Authorized Representative of the Department that the transaction would not be covered under subclause (d) of article 366(29A) of the Constitution." "Once a lump sum has been charged for the sale of CD (as in the case on hand) and sale tax has been paid thereon, the revenue thereafter cannot levy service tax on the entire sale consideration once again on the ground that the updates are being provided. We are of the view that the artificial segregation of the transaction, as in the case on hand, into two parts is not tenable in law." Core principles established: - Supply of antivirus software license keys/codes that accompany canned software constitutes a sale of goods, not a taxable service under the Finance Act. - The right granted under a license agreement that does not restrict free enjoyment akin to ownership amounts to a "deemed sale" under Article 366(29A)(d). - The nature of software (canned vs. uncanned), user interactivity, and the substance of the transaction determine the taxability as service or sale. - Artificial bifurcation of a single transaction into sale and service components to levy multiple taxes is impermissible. - Precedents of the Tribunal and Supreme Court on similar facts are binding and determinative. Final determinations: The Court set aside the impugned order confirming the demand for service tax, interest, and penalty under the Finance Act, 1994, holding that the transaction involving supply of antivirus software license keys/codes is not liable to service tax but is a sale of goods attracting VAT/sales tax. The appellant was thus relieved from the recovery proceedings initiated on the basis of the impugned order.
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