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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 1409 - AT - Service Tax


ISSUES:

    Whether a subcontractor providing taxable services to a main contractor of a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) unit is entitled to exemption under Notification No. 9/2009-ST (and analogous notifications) for services rendered in relation to authorized operations in the SEZ.Whether the exemption under the relevant SEZ service tax notifications requires the service provider to render services directly to the SEZ unit or developer, or whether services provided through a subcontractor arrangement also qualify.Whether procedural irregularities or minor infringements affect the entitlement to exemption under the SEZ service tax notifications.The applicability and interpretation of Section 26 of the Special Economic Zone Act, 2005, in relation to overriding other laws on taxation of services consumed within the SEZ.

RULINGS / HOLDINGS:

    Subcontractors providing taxable services to a main contractor authorized by a SEZ unit are entitled to the benefit of Notification No. 9/2009-ST as the service is rendered "in relation to the authorised operations in SEZ" and consumed within the SEZ, irrespective of the subcontractor not providing services directly to the SEZ unit. The court held that "the benefit of exemption notification is available to the appellant" despite the subcontractor status.The exemption under SEZ service tax notifications does not mandate direct provision of services to the SEZ unit or developer; services rendered through a subcontractor to the main contractor, when consumed within the SEZ and related to authorized operations, satisfy the exemption criteria. The court noted that "the only criteria is that the service which is provided, should be in relation to the authorised operations in SEZ and received by a developer or unit of SEZ."Minor procedural infringements do not justify denial of substantial benefits of exemption under the SEZ notifications; the impugned order was set aside on this ground, holding that "substantial benefits of exemption notification cannot be denied merely on small infringement of procedural requirement."Section 26 of the SEZ Act overrides other laws and exempts services or taxes if the services are consumed within the SEZ, supporting the exemption claim for services rendered in the SEZ irrespective of the service provider's contractual relationship.

RATIONALE:

    The court relied on the statutory framework of the Finance Act, 1994, and the SEZ Act, 2005, particularly Notification No. 9/2009-ST and Notification No. 04/2004-ST, which exempt taxable services provided to SEZ developers or units for consumption within the SEZ.Precedents from this Tribunal and other judicial authorities were extensively considered, including decisions affirming that subcontractors are not excluded from exemption if services are rendered for authorized SEZ operations and consumed within the SEZ. Notably, decisions such as those reported in 2024 (18) CENTAX-276 (Tri-Ahm.), 2024 (12) TMI 279-Cestat Ahm., and others were cited to establish consistency in this interpretation.The court distinguished prior views that denied exemption to subcontractors by emphasizing the substance over form, focusing on the consumption of services within the SEZ and authorization by the SEZ unit or developer rather than the contractual chain.The interpretation aligns with the overriding provision of Section 26 of the SEZ Act, which exempts services consumed within the SEZ from other laws, thereby reinforcing the exemption irrespective of the service provider's status as subcontractor or main contractor.No dissenting or concurring opinions were recorded; the Tribunal's approach reflects a doctrinal shift favoring a purposive interpretation of exemption notifications to promote SEZ operations without undue tax burden on subcontractors.

 

 

 

 

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