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2025 (5) TMI 1895 - AT - Service Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal are:

1. Whether the services provided by the appellant to the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) relating to construction, refurbishment, and related works at various sports complexes and public facilities fall within the ambit of "Commercial or Industrial Construction Services" (CCIS) and are therefore taxable under the Finance Act, 1994.

2. Whether the activities carried out by the appellant are exempt from service tax on the ground that they pertain to government/public welfare projects and not commercial or industrial constructions.

3. Whether the laying of water supply pipelines at the Saket Sports Complex is taxable as a commercial construction service or exempt as a public utility service.

4. Whether the construction of temporary parking at Vivek Vihar constitutes a taxable commercial construction service or a non-taxable public utility service.

5. Whether the extended period of limitation invoked by the department for demanding service tax is justified based on the facts and submissions.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis

1. Taxability of Services Rendered in Sports Complexes under Commercial or Industrial Construction Services (CCIS)

Legal Framework and Precedents: The definition of CCIS under Section 65(25b) of the Finance Act, 1994, includes construction, completion, finishing, repair, alteration, renovation, or restoration of buildings or civil structures primarily used for commerce or industry. However, it excludes certain constructions such as roads, airports, railways, bridges, dams, and similar public infrastructure. The Tribunal relied on judicial precedents including the decision in B.G. Shirke Construction Technology Pvt. Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Central Excise, Pune-III, and the Principal Bench decision in Shiv Naresh Sports Pvt. Ltd. & Others vs. Commissioner of Service Tax, which held that construction services provided for government-owned sports facilities used for non-commercial purposes are not taxable under CCIS.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal examined the nature of the appellant's work, which included refurbishment of training venues at Siri Fort and Saket Sports Complexes, and upgradation of the Yamuna Sports Complex. It noted that these facilities are government-owned and maintained for public use and welfare. The Tribunal referred to the Rajasthan High Court's interpretation of "public utility" and "public facility," emphasizing that public sports stadia are facilities intended for public benefit and welfare, not commercial or industrial use. The mere charging of nominal fees for usage does not convert these into commercial constructions.

Key Evidence and Findings: The appellant submitted award letters, agreements, and payment details indicating the nature of work done. The department's contention that the nominal fees charged by DDA rendered the services commercial was rejected based on legal precedents and the public utility nature of the facilities.

Application of Law to Facts: Applying the definition of CCIS and the exclusion of public utility constructions, the Tribunal found that the appellant's services in refurbishing and upgrading the sports complexes do not fall within taxable commercial or industrial construction services.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The department argued that the sports complexes were not open to the general public and were accessible only to members, implying commercial use. The Tribunal rejected this, relying on judicial rulings that public welfare constructions remain non-taxable despite nominal fees or restricted access. The appellant's argument that these are government welfare projects was accepted.

Conclusion: The Tribunal concluded that the refurbishment and renovation works at the sports complexes are not taxable under CCIS.

2. Taxability of Laying Water Supply Line at Saket Sports Complex

Legal Framework and Precedents: The Tribunal referred to decisions including Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. Ltd., Nagarjuna Construction Co. Ltd., and Indian Hume Pipe Co. Ltd., which established that laying pipelines for water supply projects are construction services but not taxable if they are not commercial constructions.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the water supply line laying is a public utility service and not a commercial or industrial construction. Despite the appellant's denial of having carried out this work, the department's reliance on information provided by the appellant's representative was noted. However, the Tribunal did not find this activity taxable.

Key Evidence and Findings: The appellant had submitted information and documents earlier acknowledging the work. The department's demand was based on this data. The Tribunal held that the nature of the work itself is non-taxable.

Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal applied the legal principle that pipelines for public water supply are excluded from taxable commercial construction services.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The appellant's contention that they did not perform this work was not accepted as sufficient to overturn the established legal position. The Tribunal focused on the nature of the work rather than disputes over execution.

Conclusion: The laying of water supply line at Saket Sports Complex is not liable to service tax.

3. Taxability of Construction of Temporary Parking at Vivek Vihar

Legal Framework and Precedents: The Tribunal considered the legislative intent and judicial interpretations that public utility services and facilities provided by government agencies are not taxable under CCIS.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal held that the construction of temporary parking was for public utility and provided to a government agency (DDA). It was not intended for commercial purposes. Therefore, it does not attract service tax.

Key Evidence and Findings: The appellant's submissions and the nature of the facility as a public utility were considered.

Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal applied the exclusion of public utility constructions from taxable commercial construction services.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The department did not provide compelling evidence to classify this as commercial construction.

Conclusion: The temporary parking construction is not taxable under CCIS.

4. Extended Period of Limitation and Onus of Proof

Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 73(1) of the Finance Act allows for demand of service tax within an extended period under certain circumstances. The onus of proving the tax liability lies with the revenue.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the department's demand was based on information and documents provided by the appellant itself. However, the appellant contended that the onus was on the department to prove the provision of taxable services. The Tribunal emphasized that the nature of the services is determinative for taxability.

Key Evidence and Findings: The appellant had submitted agreements and payment details, but later disowned some information. The department did not produce independent evidence to establish taxable services beyond the appellant's own submissions.

Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal found that the demand was not sustainable as the services rendered were not taxable under the law, regardless of the extended period invoked.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The appellant's argument about the burden of proof and the nature of services was accepted over the department's reliance on appellant's own submissions.

Conclusion: The invocation of extended limitation period and demand for service tax were not justified.

Significant Holdings

"Merely because some amount is charged for using the facility, it cannot become a commercial or industrial construction."

"The work carried out by the appellant in the Siri Fort Sports Complex, Saket Sports complex and Yamuna Sports complex is non-commercial construction for use by the general public."

"The services provided for the sports facilities owned by State would not be chargeable to tax under commercial or industrial construction service."

"Laying of pipelines for water supply projects would come under the 'construction service' and since only commercial construction is liable to service tax and the pipelines for water supply are not commercial activities, the same would not be taxable."

"The temporary parking was also provided to DDA, a governmental agency for a public utility service. Hence, the same is also not leviable to service tax."

The Tribunal conclusively held that the services rendered by the appellant to the DDA for refurbishment, renovation, laying of water supply lines, and construction of temporary parking at government-owned sports complexes and facilities do not fall within the taxable ambit of commercial or industrial construction services under the Finance Act, 1994. The demand of service tax, interest, and penalties was set aside accordingly.

 

 

 

 

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