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Home Case Index All Cases Service Tax Service Tax + AT Service Tax - 2025 (7) TMI AT This

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2025 (7) TMI 699 - AT - Service Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal are:

- Whether the activity of evacuation of ash from ash ponds, including nuisance-free transportation and disposal of ash by the appellant, falls under the category of "cleaning services" liable to service tax under the Finance Act, effective from 16.06.2005.

- Whether the appellant's service of cleaning ash ponds in power plants is taxable as "cleaning activity services" under Section 65(24b) of the Finance Act and the relevant Board notifications.

- Whether the impugned order confirming service tax demand on the appellant for the period from 16.06.2005 to September 2006 is sustainable in law.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue: Classification of evacuation and transportation of ash as "cleaning services" liable to service tax

Relevant legal framework and precedents:

The definition of "cleaning activity" under Section 65(24b) of the Finance Act (Service Tax law) is pivotal. It defines cleaning activity as "cleaning, including specialised cleaning services such as disinfecting, exterminating or sterilizing of objects or premises of Commercial or industrial buildings and premises thereof; or Factory, plant or machinery, tank or reservoir of such commercial or industrial buildings and premises thereof," but excludes services related to agriculture, horticulture, animal husbandry or dairying.

The Board's Notification F. No. B1/6/2005-TRU dated 27/07/2005 further clarifies the scope of cleaning services.

Several precedents from the CESTAT Kolkata bench were relied upon, notably:

  • R.K. Transport Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of C.Ex. & S.Tax, where it was held that evacuation of ash and its transportation does not constitute cleaning services.
  • Purba Medinipur Jilla Parishad v. Commissioner of Central Excise, Haldia, which held that removal of fly ash from ash ponds is not a cleaning activity as per Section 65(24b).
  • Commissioner of Central Excise & Service Tax-Ranchi v. M/s. Hindustan Steel Works Construction Ltd, which similarly held that removal of fly ash is not a cleaning service.
  • M/s. Calcutta Industrial Supply Corporation v. Commissioner of Service Tax, Kolkata, which distinguished transportation and disposal of ash from cleaning of premises.

Court's interpretation and reasoning:

The Tribunal analyzed the nature of the appellant's activity, which involved excavation of ash from ash ponds, loading, nuisance-free transportation, and disposal in defined areas provided by the power plants. The Tribunal observed that:

  • The activity is essentially removal and transportation of fly ash, which is a by-product of coal combustion in thermal power plants.
  • Fly ash is not waste in the ordinary sense but a saleable commodity used in manufacturing bricks, ceramic tiles, mineral wool, etc.
  • The activity is not aimed at cleaning the premises or the pond to free it from contamination or dirt, but rather to excavate and transport a useful material as per contractual obligations.
  • The definition of cleaning activity under Section 65(24b) focuses on cleaning of commercial or industrial buildings, premises, factories, plants, machinery, tanks or reservoirs thereof, which does not extend to excavation and transportation of ash.
  • The appellant's contract was for transportation and disposal of ash, not for cleaning the premises or the ash pond itself.

Key evidence and findings:

Documents such as the contract letters and tenders awarded by power plants like Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC) and Bokaro Steel Plant were examined, showing the appellant was engaged specifically for excavation, transportation, and disposal, not cleaning.

Prior Tribunal decisions were cited extensively, establishing that similar activities were held not to be cleaning services.

Application of law to facts:

Applying the statutory definition and precedents, the Tribunal concluded that the appellant's activity does not meet the criteria for cleaning services liable to service tax. The activity is more akin to transportation and disposal of a saleable by-product rather than cleaning of premises or industrial equipment.

Treatment of competing arguments:

The Revenue contended that the activity falls under cleaning services and thus service tax was payable. However, the Tribunal rejected this view based on the legislative definition, the nature of the activity, and consistent precedents.

The appellant relied on binding precedents and the statutory definition to argue that no service tax liability arises under cleaning services.

The Tribunal found the appellant's arguments more persuasive and legally sound.

Conclusions:

The Tribunal held that the activity of evacuation of ash from ash ponds and its transportation and disposal does not constitute cleaning services under Section 65(24b) of the Finance Act.

The demand for service tax on the appellant's activity under cleaning services was therefore unsustainable.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Tribunal's crucial legal reasoning includes the following verbatim excerpts:

"We find that the issue is no more res integra and has been decided by the Tribunal in the case of Commr. of Central Excise & Service Tax-Ranchi Vs. M/s. Hindustan Steel Works Construction Ltd ... The definition of cleaning service under Section 65(24b) ... does not include removal of fly ash from ash ponds."

"Fly ash is a saleable goods which is further used in manufacture of bricks etc. and hence it is not waste, which is being removed from the pond. It has specific utility and capable of being sold in the market."

"The appellant is engaged for transportation and disposal of Ash in the abandoned mines. The letter does not show that the appellant was engaged for cleaning of the premises. Therefore, the demand of Service Tax under the category of cleaning service is not justified."

"The activity of excavation and transportation of fly ash from the pond, for channelling the slurry waterflow cannot be termed as 'cleaning activity' in terms of Section 65(24B) of the Finance Act."

"We hold that the activities of 'Evacuation of Ash from ash ponds and nuisance-free transportation and disposal of the ash' in Thermal Power Stations is not liable to service tax under the category of 'Cleaning Services'. Accordingly, we set aside the demands of service tax along with interest and penalty confirmed in the impugned orders."

Core principles established:

  • Cleaning services under Section 65(24b) are confined to cleaning of commercial or industrial buildings, premises, factories, plants, machinery, tanks or reservoirs thereof, and do not extend to excavation and transportation of by-products like fly ash.
  • Removal and transportation of fly ash, which is a saleable commodity, does not constitute cleaning activity liable to service tax.
  • Service tax demands based on classification of such activities as cleaning services are unsustainable in law.

Final determinations:

The Tribunal set aside the impugned order confirming service tax demand on the appellant for the period from 16.06.2005 to September 2006. The appeal was allowed with consequential relief, holding that the appellant's activity does not fall under the category of "cleaning services" liable to service tax.

 

 

 

 

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