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2025 (5) TMI 69 - AT - Service Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in these appeals include:

1. Whether service tax is payable on various charges such as terminal charges, packing charges, unloading charges, overtime charges, demurrage charges, and charges related to abandoned cargo collected by the appellant under the categories of Airport Service, Cargo Handling Service, and Storage and Warehousing Service.

2. Whether the appellant's activities as a custodian under the Customs Act, 1962, particularly with respect to export cargo, attract service tax under the Finance Act, 1994, given the statutory exclusions.

3. Whether the show-cause notices issued by the Department specifying the demand for service tax without clearly identifying the category of service are valid and sustainable.

4. The applicability of service tax on unaccompanied passenger baggage and abandoned cargo.

5. Whether interest and penalty under the Finance Act, 1994 can be imposed on the appellant, particularly considering the absence of mala fide intention or suppression of facts.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis

1. Validity of Show-Cause Notices and Specification of Service Category

Legal Framework and Precedents: The appellant contended that the show-cause notices failed to specify the category of service on which service tax was being demanded, rendering the notices and consequent orders unsustainable. Reliance was placed on Supreme Court and Tribunal decisions emphasizing the necessity of clear categorization in show-cause notices for valid adjudication.

Court's Reasoning: The Tribunal acknowledged the appellant's preliminary objection regarding the lack of specification in the first show-cause notice dated 14.09.2004. However, the Tribunal allowed the second show-cause notice dated 23.10.2009 to be challenged only within the normal limitation period, rejecting demands beyond that period due to prior invocation of suppression in the earlier notice.

Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal accepted that the second show-cause notice could not be sustained beyond the normal period, but did not wholly invalidate the notices for lack of specification. The Tribunal implicitly recognized that while specificity is important, the failure to specify service category in the first notice did not wholly vitiate the demand.

Conclusion: The Tribunal partially upheld the appellant's objection to limitation but did not set aside the demands solely on the ground of non-specification of service category.

2. Liability to Service Tax on Charges Related to Export Cargo under Cargo Handling Service and Storage and Warehousing Service

Legal Framework: Section 65(23) of the Finance Act, 1994 defines "Cargo Handling Service" and explicitly excludes handling of export cargo and passenger baggage from the taxable service. Section 65(102) defines "storage and warehousing" services. The appellant was appointed as a custodian under Section 45 of the Customs Act, 1962, with statutory responsibilities limited to custody and not warehousing under Section 58 of the Customs Act.

Relevant Circular: Circular F. No. B/1/2002-TRU dated 01.08.2002 clarifies that terminal charges form part of storage and processing charges but explicitly excludes services related to export cargo and passenger baggage from the tax net.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the adjudicating authorities erred in classifying the appellant's services as storage and warehousing services and confirming the demand of service tax on terminal and other charges related to export cargo. The Tribunal emphasized that the appellant's role as a custodian under the Customs Act did not extend to warehousing activities and that the statutory exclusion of export cargo handling under Section 65(23) was unambiguous. Reliance on the Board's Circular to justify the demand was held to be misplaced since the circular's reference to terminal charges pertained to storage and processing charges unrelated to the appellant's export cargo services.

Key Findings: The Tribunal found no justification for confirming the demand of service tax under storage and warehousing services for export cargo-related charges.

Application of Law to Facts: The appellant's activities were limited to cargo handling of export goods, which is excluded from service tax liability under the statutory provisions and clarifications. The Tribunal applied the exclusion strictly, rejecting the Department's broader classification.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Department's reliance on the Board's circular and the classification of terminal charges as storage and processing charges was rejected as irrelevant to the appellant's specific services.

Conclusion: No service tax liability arises on terminal charges and other related charges collected from export cargo under the appellant's services.

3. Service Tax on Unaccompanied Passenger Baggage

Legal Framework and Circulars: Section 65(23) excludes passenger baggage from cargo handling services liable to service tax. The Board's Circular clarifies that unaccompanied baggage of a passenger is also excluded from service tax.

Court's Reasoning: The Tribunal accepted the appellant's contention that the charges collected on unaccompanied baggage are not liable to service tax. It distinguished import baggage charges from passenger baggage and held that the demand on unaccompanied baggage was unsustainable.

Conclusion: Service tax demand on unaccompanied passenger baggage was set aside in line with statutory exclusions and Board's clarifications.

4. Service Tax on Charges Related to Abandoned Cargo

Legal Framework and Circulars: The Board's Circular clarifies that no cargo handling service is rendered in the case of auctioned abandoned cargo, and hence, service tax is not leviable on sale proceeds or related charges.

Court's Interpretation: The Tribunal held that the appellant's claim that charges collected on abandoned cargo were proceeds from sale and not for any service rendered was consistent with the circular's clarification. The demand for service tax on such charges was therefore not sustainable.

Conclusion: No service tax liability arises on charges related to abandoned cargo under the appellant's services.

5. Liability to Interest and Penalty under Finance Act, 1994

Arguments: The appellant contended that there was no mala fide intention or suppression of facts, and being a public sector undertaking, penalty and interest should not be imposed. The appellant also argued that mere non-payment of service tax cannot be equated with deliberate evasion.

Court's Treatment: The Tribunal did not explicitly delve into the imposition of interest and penalty in the impugned orders after setting aside the demands for service tax. The setting aside of the tax demand effectively negated the basis for interest and penalty.

Conclusion: Interest and penalty demands could not be sustained in the absence of confirmed service tax liability and mala fide intention.

Significant Holdings

"As seen from the definition provided at Section 65(23), it categorically excludes handling of export cargo and there is no dispute that all the above charges are collected from customers of export cargo."

"The adjudicating authorities in the impugned order ignoring these facts blindly confirms the demand based on the Board's Circular which only clarifies that the terminal charges form part of storage and processing charges which has no relevance to the services provided by the appellant with regard to export Cargo, hence we do not find any justification in confirming the demand under 'storage and warehousing services'."

"Passenger baggage has been excluded from the levy of service tax. In this regard a point has been raised as to whether unaccompanied baggage of a passenger attracts service tax under the category of passenger baggage. It is clarified that unaccompanied baggage of a passenger will not be leviable to service tax."

"A clarification has been sought as to whether service tax is payable on abandoned cargo which are auctioned by the CFS as no service is rendered to any person. In the case of auctioned goods, the proceeds of the auction goes first to the cost of auction, then towards customs duties and then to the custodian of the goods. It is clarified that no cargo handling service can be said to have been rendered in such cases, therefore service tax is not leviable."

"In view of the above, the impugned orders are set aside and both the appeals are allowed."

Core principles established include:

  • Strict adherence to statutory exclusions under Section 65(23) of the Finance Act, 1994, particularly the exclusion of export cargo handling and passenger baggage from service tax liability.
  • The role of a custodian under the Customs Act, 1962, with limited statutory responsibilities, does not attract service tax under storage and warehousing services unless warehousing activities under Section 58 are undertaken.
  • Service tax cannot be imposed on unaccompanied passenger baggage or abandoned cargo where no service is rendered as clarified by the Board's circulars.
  • Show-cause notices lacking specification of service category may be challenged on limitation grounds but do not automatically invalidate demands.
  • Interest and penalty under the Finance Act, 1994 require confirmed tax liability and mala fide intention for imposition.

Final determinations on each issue were in favor of the appellant, setting aside the service tax demands on export cargo-related charges, unaccompanied baggage, and abandoned cargo, and disallowing interest and penalty. The appeals were allowed accordingly.

 

 

 

 

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