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2025 (5) TMI 1831 - AT - Service Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

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

(a) Whether the demand of service tax on the income declared by the appellants before the Income Tax Department, without corroborative evidence identifying the income as consideration for taxable services, is sustainable.

(b) Whether a statement made by a director regarding income received from construction services can, by itself, constitute sufficient evidence to impose service tax liability.

(c) Whether the Income Tax return or income disclosed under survey can be used as the sole basis for determining service tax liability without an independent inquiry or identification of the nature of taxable services and the service recipients.

(d) The applicability and scope of provisions under the Finance Act, 1994, particularly Section 72, in cases where the assessee has filed returns and disclosed contracts, but the revenue alleges additional income as taxable service consideration.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue (a) and (b): Sustainability of service tax demand based on income declared to Income Tax Department and director's statement

The Tribunal examined the legal framework governing service tax demands, emphasizing the necessity of establishing that the income declared before the Income Tax Department is indeed consideration for taxable services. The relevant legal provisions include the Finance Act, 1994, governing service tax, and procedural safeguards under the Central Excise Act, 1944, including Section 14 for recording statements.

The Tribunal noted that the demand was premised primarily on the director's statement that the amount disclosed before the Income Tax Department was received from construction services. However, the Tribunal held that such a statement alone cannot constitute conclusive evidence of taxable service provision unless supported by documentary or other corroborative evidence. The Department failed to produce any independent evidence linking the declared income to taxable services.

The Tribunal drew upon the principle established by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in K.T.M.S. Mohd. & Others v. Union of India, AIR 1992 SC 1831, which mandates that tax authorities must conduct an independent inquiry before incorporating demands made under one statute (Central Excise Act) into another (Income Tax Act). The Court emphasized that the two statutes operate in different fields and that a demand under one cannot be mechanically adopted by the other without independent verification.

Applying this principle, the Tribunal held that the service tax demand based solely on the income declared under survey to the Income Tax Department could not be sustained, as there was no independent enquiry or evidence to establish that the income was consideration for taxable services.

Issue (c): Use of Income Tax returns or income disclosed under survey as basis for service tax demand without independent inquiry

The Tribunal reiterated that income voluntarily disclosed before the Income Tax authorities cannot be automatically equated with taxable service consideration. The precedent from Kipps Education Centre, Bathinda v. CCE, Chandigarh, 2009(13) S.T.R. 422 (Tri. Del.), was cited, where it was held that income disclosed before Income Tax authorities cannot be added to taxable value without evidence proving it relates to taxable services.

The Tribunal further referred to its own consistent jurisprudence, including Commissioner of Income Tax Trichy v. Amman Steel and Allied Industries, 2015 (330) ELT 130 (Madras), reinforcing the need for independent inquiry and evidence beyond mere disclosure to Income Tax authorities.

Issue (d): Applicability of Section 72 of the Finance Act, 1994, in the context of filed returns and disclosed contracts

The Tribunal analyzed the scope of Section 72, which empowers the Assessing Officer to determine taxable value on best judgment if the assessee fails to file returns or assess tax correctly. However, in the present case, the appellants had filed returns under Section 70 and submitted details of contracts liable to service tax.

The Tribunal relied on the decision in Deltax Enterprises v. Commissioner of Central Excise, Delhi, 2018 (10) G.S.T.L. 392 (Tri. Del.), which held that Section 72 cannot be invoked solely on the basis of income tax returns without identifying specific taxable services or service recipients. The Tribunal emphasized that the minimum requirement to fasten service tax liability is to identify the nature of taxable service and the recipient thereof. Summary assumptions or imposition of tax on unidentified services or recipients are impermissible.

In the present appeals, since the appellants had disclosed all relevant contracts and filed returns, the application of Section 72 on the basis of income disclosed under survey was held to be untenable.

Treatment of competing arguments

The Department argued that the income declared before the Income Tax Department and the director's statements were sufficient to establish the service tax liability. However, the Tribunal rejected this argument, holding that without corroborative evidence and independent inquiry, such declarations cannot form the basis of a tax demand.

The appellants contended that the demand lacked evidentiary basis and was contrary to settled legal principles requiring independent verification and identification of taxable services. The Tribunal accepted this contention, supported by binding precedents and statutory interpretation.

Conclusions

The Tribunal concluded that the impugned order confirming the service tax demand and penalties was unsustainable. The demand was set aside, and the appeals were allowed, thereby absolving the appellants from the contested service tax liability.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Tribunal's crucial legal reasoning includes the following verbatim excerpt from the Supreme Court decision in K.T.M.S. Mohd. & Others v. Union of India:

"Determination of tax under the Income-tax Act cannot be made, as it not incumbent on the income-tax authorities to take into consideration only the materials made available by the Central Excise Department, but the authorities are bound to make an independent enquiry, before passing any order, which enquiry has not happened in the present case. There is no provision to simply incorporate the demand made in the show cause notice issued under the Central Excise Laws for the purpose of computation of tax under the Income Tax Laws. The provisions under the two laws, viz., the Central Excise Act and the Income-tax Act, operate in two different fields. Without there being an independent enquiry by the concerned taxing authorities the demand made under the provisions of Central Excise Act cannot be incorporated as such, more so when the notice of demand has been modified by the adjudicating authority."

The Tribunal also established the core principle that "income voluntarily disclosed before the income tax authorities could not be added to the taxable value unless there is evidence to prove the same," and that "the minimum requirement to tax an assessee for service tax is to identify the nature of their taxable service along with the recipient of such service."

Final determinations on each issue are:

(a) The service tax demand based solely on income declared before the Income Tax Department without corroborative evidence is unsustainable.

(b) A director's statement alone is insufficient proof of taxable service provision.

(c) Independent inquiry and evidence are mandatory before imposing service tax liability based on income tax disclosures.

(d) Section 72 of the Finance Act, 1994, cannot be invoked in the present case as the appellants filed returns and disclosed contracts; hence, summary assumptions of additional taxable income are impermissible.

 

 

 

 

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