Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Monday, Apr 02, 2007
ePaper


Mentor
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Mentor - Taxation
Logistics - Insight
Web Extras - Roadways
Columns - At Your Service
Tax liability on freight charges

Kindly clarify whether exemption limit of service tax payable as per Notification No. 6/2005 dated March 1, 2005, is available to a tiny industrial factory (partnership) registered under the Factories Act and a tiny industrial factory owned by a proprietor not registered under the Factories Act on lorry freight charges paid.

We manufacture shell grit, which is poultry feed. Total freight charges paid by us on raw material purchases is around Rs 4.5 lakh per year. Our product is not excisable and we do not claim any Cenvat credit. If exemption is not available to us, why is it so, especially when all other categories of services enjoy the benefit of exemption?

Mr Mohan Taggarsi

As far as payment of service tax in respect of services taken from a Goods Transport Agency (GTA) is concerned, Rule 2(1)(d)(v) of Service Tax Rules, 1994 provides that where the consignee or consignor belongs to any of the following categories, then the person who pays the freight is liable to pay the service tax: i) factory under the Factories Act; ii) company under the Companies Act; iii) corporation established by or under any law; iv) society registered under Societies Registration Act or similar law; v) co-operative society established by or under any law; vi) dealer of excisable goods, registered under the Central Excise Act, 1944; or vii) any body corporate established, or a partnership firm registered, by or under any law.

Therefore, in respect of tiny industrial factory established as a partnership firm and also registered under the Factories Act, the liability to pay service tax will be on the partnership firm. On the other hand, if the factory is owned by a proprietor and not registered under the Factories Act, then the liability to pay service tax is on the GTA and not on the consignee or consignor.

Exemption available for small service providers in terms of Notification 6/2005 ST is not available when there is a liability to pay service tax in terms of the Service Tax Rules 2(1)(d)(v) referred to above. As such, in respect of the factory registered under the Factories Act, there will not be any exemption available in terms of Notification 6/2005 mentioned above for the freight charges paid while make use of GTA services.

You have stated that you pay freight charges to the extent of Rs 4.5 lakh per year and that your product is not excisable. In this context, you want to know when all other categories of services enjoy the benefit of exemption, why it is not available to you.

There cannot be any generalisation that all other categories of services enjoy the benefit of exemption. As per Notification 6/2005, where service tax is to be paid by a person as per the provisions of Section 68(2) of Finance Act, 1994, then exemption is not available. Section 68(2) read with Rule 2(1)(d) of the Service Tax Act, 1994 specifies certain categories of persons as liable to pay service tax. The shifting of the liability to pay tax in these cases to a person who uses the service rather than to the service provider is based on a policy decision of the Government. But there does not appear to be any logical reasoning why even in such cases, the benefit of Rs 4 lakh exemption should be denied and there is no explanation in this regard by the Government.

Send in your queries to MentorAtYourService@gmail.com

http://MentorQA.blogspot.com

S. Murugappan

More Stories on : Taxation | Insight | Roadways | At Your Service

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Tax liability on freight charges


A MAP for transfer pricing disputes
Your career is not a sprint but a marathon
MBA specialisation
Inflation insights
When copyright is wronged
Just Do IT
Number Crunch
Will loan taken from friend qualify for deduction?
Advertisers hit for a huge six
SEBI moots watchdog for investment advisors
Home life and work life are two sides of a coin
Check if you are skilled
Tourist income multiplier


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line