C forms can be issued for purchase of goods used in telecommunication even if such goods not resold


Andhra Pardesh High Court in a very important judgement namely Indus Towers Limited vs Commercial Tax officer has held that C forms can be issued for the purchase of goods used in the telecommunication network even if such goods are not resold.

The Hon'ble High Court held as under:



The concessional rate of tax of 2% is thus available either for re-sale, for use by the purchasing dealer in the manufacturing or processing of goods for sale or for use in the telecommunications network. There is no condition attached to the last limb of clause (b) of Section 8(3) that the purchasing dealer must either re-sell the goods as such or must use them in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale. There is no obligation to sell or re-sell and mere use in the telecommunications network is sufficient to bring the transaction within the fold of Section 8(1).

The benefit of the 2% rate of tax (set out in sub-section 1 of Section 8) is applicable once the goods purchased fall within the contours of sub-section 1 read with clause (b) of sub-section (3) of Section 8 and Form ‘C’ declarations are issued, provided the goods are used in the telecommunication network.



Purchase of goods by the petitioners from outside the State, comprising goods specified in the certificates of Registration under the CST Act granted to them, against issue of ‘C’ Forms and where the goods have been employed in erection and maintenance of cell phone towers which are integral to Telecommunication Network, fall within the ambit of Section 8(1) read with Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act and are entitled to be taxed accordingly. The fact that the goods purchased by the petitioners were neither sold nor used in the manufacture of goods for re-sale does not constitute violation of the ‘C’ Forms. Consequently, levy of penalty, on the factual parameters apparent on the record of these cases, is unsustainable.

Full Judgement is as follows:



* THE HONOURABLE SRI JUSTICE GODA RAGHURAM
                                                and
THE HONOURABLE SRI JUSTICE N. RAVI SHANKAR

+ W.P.Nos. 31462 & 31482/2011 and 8205/2012


% TUESDAY, THE TWELFTH DAY OF JUNE,
TWO THOUSAND AND TWELVE

# M/s Indus Towers Limited, rep by Sri P.Ramakanth,
   Deputy General Manager (F)
... PETITIONER
VERSUS

$  The Commercial Tax Officer,
    Begumpet Circle, Hyderabad and others.
  
... RESPONDENTS
! Counsel for the Petitioners  : Sri N. Venkat Raman, Senior Counsel
                                                assisted by Mr. Raghunandan, Adv.,
                                                Sri S. Dwarakanath.                                    
^ Counsel for the Respondents: Sri P. Balaji Varma, Special
  Standing Counsel for Commercial  
   Taxes
                                               

  IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE, ANDHRA PRADESH
AT HYDERABAD
(Special Original Jurisdiction)

TUESDAY, THE TWELFTH DAY OF JUNE,
TWO THOUSAND AND TWELVE

:: PRESENT ::
THE HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE GODA RAGHURAM
AND
THE HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE N. RAVI SHANKAR

Writ Petition Nos.31462 & 31482 of 2011 and 8205 of 2012

W.P.No. 31462 /2011 :

Between:
                            
M/s Indus Towers Limited, rep by Sri P.Ramakanth,
Deputy General Manager (F)
… Petitioner
And:

1) The Commercial Tax Officer,
    Begumpet Circle, Hyderabad

2) The Appellate Deputy Commissioner,
    Punjagutta Division, Hyderabad

3) Commissioner of Commercial Taxes,
    Hyderabad.
… Respondents

          The petitioner prays that this Hon’ble court may be pleased to issue a writ or order or direction more in the nature of Writ of Mandamus declaring the order of the 2nd respondent vide proceedings ADC Order No.2169 in appeal Nos. BV/94/2010-11 dated 07-10-2011 confirming the order of penalty dated 14-10-2011 passed by the 1st respondent for the year 2009-10/CST/Penalty as arbitrary, illegal and without jurisdiction and violative of Article 14 of Constitution of India and consequently set aside the same.

Counsel for petitioner:   Sri N. Venkat Raman, Senior Counsel
assisted by Mr. Raghunandan, Advocate

Counsel for respondents: Mr. P.Balaji Varma, Special Standing
                                      Counsel for Commercial Taxes

W.P.No. 31482 /2011 :

Between:

M/s Indus Towers Limited, rep by Sri P.Ramakanth,
Deputy General Manager (F)
… Petitioner
And:
1) The Commercial Tax Officer,
    Begumpet Circle, Hyderabad

2) The Appellate Deputy Commissioner,
    Punjagutta Division, Hyderabad

3) Commissioner of Commercial Taxes,
    Hyderabad.
… Respondents

The petitioner prays that this Hon’ble court may be pleased to issue a writ or order or direction more in the nature of Writ of Mandamus declaring the order of the 2nd respondent vide proceedings ADC Order No.2169 in appeal Nos. BV/70/2009-10 dated 07-10-2011 confirming the order of penalty dated 05-10-2009 passed by the 1st respondent for the year 2008-09/CST/Penalty as arbitrary, illegal and without jurisdiction and violative of Article 14 of Constitution of India and consequently set aside the same.

Counsel for petitioner:    Sri N.Venkat Raman Senior Counsel assisted
                                      By Mr. Raghunandan, Advocate

Counsel for respondents: Mr. P.Balaji Varma, Special Standing
                                      Counsel for Commercial Taxes

W.P.No. 8205/2012 :

M/s TVS Interconnect Systems Ltd., rep by its
Head-Legal Operations, Hyderabad.
… Petitioner
AND:

1. Assistant Commercial Tax Officer, Hyderabad
2. The Commercial Tax Officer, Hyderabad
… Respondents

The petitioner prays that the Hon’ble Court may be pleased to issue a writ of certiorari or any other appropriate writ or order or direction quashing the order of 1st respondent in Proceedings in AAO No. 8275, dated 29.2.2012 as without jurisdiction, barred by time, vitiated by violation of principles of natural justice.
Counsel for petitioner:   Mr. S.Dwarakanath,

Counsel for respondents: Mr. P.Balaji Varma, Special Standing
                                      Counsel for Commercial Taxes
 
      THE HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE GODA RAGHURAM
AND
THE HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE N. RAVI SHANKAR


W.P.Nos.31462 of 2011, 31482 of 2011 and
8205 of 2012

COMMON ORDER  : (per Justice Goda Raghuram)

         
          Heard Sri Venkat Raman, Senior Advocate, instructed by        Mr. R.Raghunandan, learned counsel for the petitioners (in W.P.Nos.31462 & 31482 of 2011); Mr. S.Dwarakanath, the learned counsel for the petitioner in W.P.No. 8205/11; and Sri P. Balaji Varma, the learned Special Standing Counsel for the Commercial Taxes Department – respondents.

          W.P.Nos. 31462/11 and 31482/11 question orders dated     07-10-2011of the Appellate Deputy Commissioner confirming penalty orders dated 14.10.2009 and 5.10.2009 passed by the 1st respondent (The Commercial Tax Officer, Begumpet Circle, Hyderabad), for assessment years 2009-10 and 2008-09, respectively. These writ petitions are by M/s Indus Towers Ltd.  W.P.No. 8205/12 by M/s TVS Interconnected Systems Ltd., assails the order of the 1st respondent (the Asst. Commercial Tax Officer, Srinagar Colony Circle, Hyderabad), dated 29.2.2012 imposing penalty for assessment years 2006-07 to 2009-10.  There is no appellate order in this writ petition.  The impugned orders impose penalty under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (the ‘CST Act’).

          The relevant facts are not in dispute and as the writ petitions present a challenge to orders of penalty, on identical grounds we have taken up the writ petitions for hearing together and having heard the respective parties, proceed to the common judgment.

          The relevant chronology of facts and events in W.P.No. 31462/11 are set out, as illustrative of the relevant facts and circumstances in the three writ petitions:

A)      The Appellate Deputy Commissioner on 7.10.2011 rejected the appeal and confirmed levy of penalty imposed by the Assessing Authority by the order dated 14.10.2010.  The penalty was imposed u/Sec. 10A r/w Sec. 10(d) of the CST Act.

B)      The petitioner (the dealer) is in the business of providing telecom infrastructure support services to several telecom operators (such as Airtel, Vodafone, Idea, Reliance, Aircel, BSNl, etc.) and is a registered dealer under the provisions of the AP Value Added Tax Act 2005 (‘the  2005 Act’) and the CST Act.

C)      The dealer builds, operates and maintains passive telecom infrastructure, also owned and controlled by it.   Towards these operations the dealer -
·        Rents/leases land on which to build the infrastructure;
·        Obtains the required statutory licenses for setting up the infrastructure, including the following elements:
          (i)      A tower;
          (ii)     A shelter/room;
          (iii)    Battery set and power plant;
          (iv)    Diesel generation set;
          (v)     Servo and static stabilizers and line conditioning  
equipment;
          (vi)    Air conditioners;
          (vii)   Incoming EB connection;
          (viii) Site electrical system; Surge protection system; and                           Lightning protection system
          (ix)    Civil construction
          (x)     Fire Alarm system.

         
D)      Service is provided by the dealer to several telecom operators by enabling operation of their cellular and microwave antennas, which are mounted on towers installed by the dealer.

E)       For establishing and maintaining the infrastructure the dealer purchases towers, shelters, generators, air conditioners, batteries and other equipment.   The purchases on occasion, are inter-State.

F)       The dealer claims that in view of provisions of Sections 8(1) and 8(3)(b) of the CST Act r/w Rule-13 of the CST (R and T) Rules 1957, it is entitled to purchase equipment for its business, in the course of inter-State trade at the concessional rate of tax of 2% from the selling dealer, provided the dealer is registered under the CST Act and issues Form ‘C’ declaration to the selling dealer.  The dealer pleads that goods purchased by it against issue of Form ‘C’ declarations were for use as raw material, processing material, equipment/tools, stores, accessories, fuel or lubricants in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale or in the telecommunications network.

(G)     The dealer applied for registration under the CST Act in Form-A on 04.03.2008.  In Col.7 of the application described its business as a wholly telecommunication network service provider and in Col. 16, (which requires for details of goods ordinarily purchased by the dealer in the inter-State trade) mentioned that the goods falling therein were as per the list attached.  This list set out 30 items stating that these are the list of goods to be purchased for resale/use in telecommunication network.

(H)     Pursuant to the application, the dealer was issued a certificate of Registration in Form-D which reads:
          “ The business is:
            Wholly: TELECOMMUNICATION NTETWORK SERVICE
                              PROVIDER
            mainly:
            Partly:

            The class(es) of goods specified for the purpose; of sub-section (1) of Sec. 8 of the said Act is/are as follows and the sales of these goods in the course of inter-State to the dealer shall be taxable at the rate specified in that sub-section subject to the provision on sub-sec (4) of the said section: (As enclosed …    …)

            (a )       For resale : Fabrication and Structures made of Steel or other Material, UPS & POWER INVERTORS. Electrical Goods except Engines/Motors/Machinery. ”

(i)      On the basis of the certificate granted in Form ‘B’ the dealer purchased various goods specified in the Form ‘A’ list, at a concessional rate of tax against issue of Form ‘C’ declarations.

(J)      The 1st respondent issued a show cause notice dated 5.7.2011 proposing levy of penalty u/Sec.10 on the premise that the dealer has paid no tax on the resultant use of Form ‘C’ and had not utilized the goods for the purpose specified in Form ‘C’.  To the extent relevant and material the show cause notice reads :
            2009-10:
            They have purchased various items against “C” forms from different States amounting to Rs. 416,10,72,965/- as seen from the C Forms utilization statements submitted by them to CDSC.

            On verification from the return filed by the dealer, it is noticed that the dealer has not paid any tax on resultant use of ‘C’ Forms which is forbidden under CST Act [Sec.8(1), 3(b), 10(b)(d), 10A].   The dealer has not utilized the goods for the purposes specified in the Form C.

            They have not paid any tax on resultant goods so purchased under Form “C” either for resale or manufacture, the dealer is liable for penalty for misuse of “C” form as under for the year 2009-10 … … … ”


(K)     The dealer filed objections to the show cause notice on 15.7.2010 clearly asserting that the goods purchased against Form-C declarations had been used by it in Telecommunication Network;  that the registration certificate ought to be read along with the application for registration; and none of the ingredients requisite for invoking provisions of Sec. 10(d) were present.

(L)     By the order dated 14.10.2010 the 1st respondent confirmed the proposal in the show cause notice and levied penalty u/Sec.10(d) of the CST Act.   The reasons set out for the levy of penalty are (in brief) –
i)       The dealer though engaged in the business of leasing passive infrastructure such as telephone towers to telecom operators throughout India contends that the amounts received are to be treated as income from services;
ii)      The CST registration certificate issued to the dealer records that it is not entitled to purchase the goods listed therein for re-sale which involves fabrication and structures made of steel and other material, UPS and power invertors, electrical goods except engines/motors and machinery;
iii)     On the basis of the registration certificate issued under the CST Act, the dealer purchased several goods at concessional rates by issuing Form-C declaration but failed to disclose any taxable turnover either under the 2005 Act or the CST Act;
iv)      Though the dealer contends that the amounts received from telecom operators for leasing passive infrastructure is towards providing service and not for transfer of rights to use any goods, the annual report of the Company for the year 2008-09 records that the company is engaged in leasing passive infrastructure to telecom operators throughout India;
v)       Leasing of any goods is a sale transaction under the 2005 Act and amounts received thereby are taxable u/Sec. 4(8);
vi)      Though the registration certificate issued to the dealer under the CST Act mentions that the goods purchased by it are for re-sale, the dealer failed to disclose any taxable turnover in its returns;

          vii)     Clearly for the purpose of obtaining registration and Form-C from the Department, the dealer declared itself a dealer for re-sale of goods, but while filing returns under the 2005 Act it claimed the transaction as service, thus not liable to tax either under the 2005 Act or the CST Act;

          viii)    The dealer has thus misutilised the Form ‘C’ declarations issued by it and is liable to penalty under Section 10 A r/w 10(d) of the CST Act.  The dealer is liable to penalty when he furnishes a declaration which he knows or has reason to believe to be false [Cl.(1) of Sec.10];  where a person being a registered dealer falsely represents to purchase any class of goods that goods of such class are covered by the certificate of Registration, the same constitutes an offence [Cl.(b)];  where any person purchases goods for any of the purposes specified in [Clauses (b), (c) and (d) of sub-sec. (3) or sub-sec. (6) of Sec. 8] and fails, without reasonable excuse, to make use of the goods for any such purpose the same constitutes an offence; and such offences are liable for penalty in lieu of prosecution u/Sec. 10A; and

          ix)      Accordingly penalty is assessed at Rs.79,22,15,458/-.

(M)     Aggrieved, the dealer preferred an appeal to the Appellate Deputy Commissioner.  The appeal was rejected on 7.10.2010.  The core reason recorded by the Appellate Authority for rejecting the appeal is revealing.  After observing that the crucial point (in issue) is whether the purchases made by the appellant (the dealer) can be considered as “for use in the telecommunications network”, the appellate authority states :
There is no dispute with regard to the fact that the appellant is not a Telecom service provider, but is only engaged in construction of towers equipped with generators and other equipment that are provided to actual Telecom service providers/operators though they have wrongly represented themselves as Telecommunication Net Work Service Provider in form ‘A’ while filing the application for registration under the CST Act.  In order to be a Telecom service provider, a person or a dealer has to possess a license issued by the Department of Telecommunication, Ministry of Telecommunication, Government of India.   The appellant could not produce any evidence as being in possession of such a licence.  When the appellant constructs Towers equipped with Generators and Telecom equipment and does not use themselves such equipment as a Telecom service provider but only allows other Telecom service providers to utilize such infrastructure, the appellant cannot be treated as Telecom service provider.  When the appellant is not a Telecom service provider or Telecom operator duly licensed by the Department of Telecommunication, Government of India, the question of the disputed purchases being used in the Telecommunications net work does not arise.  The business of the appellant is that they construct Towers equipped with Generators, Telecom equipment etc. and allows the same to be used by the actual Telecom service providers or operators.  The towers constructed by the appellant in themselves cannot be regarded as Telecommunication Network as the appellant is not a Telecommunication service provider using such Towers and equipment.  In the registration certificate issued to the appellant under the CST Act, certain goods were mentioned which were eligible to be purchased in the course of inter-State trade and commerce for the purpose of re-sale.  If there is  a sale or deemed sale of such towers constructed by the appellant by utilising the purchases made from outside the State against ‘C’ forms that is admitted by the appellant, then it can be said that the disputed purchases made by the appellant from outside the State of Andhra Pradesh against ‘C’ forms were used in manufacture of goods for sale.  But, when the appellant neither admitted nor disclosed any such sale or deemed sale of goods manufactured by them, then the disputed purchases made by the appellant do not fall under clause (b) of Section 8(3) of the CST Act.

          The provisions of the CST Act relevant for adjudication of the present lis are set out in Section 8, sub-section (1); 3(b) & (d) and sub-section (4).  These provisions read :
                   Section 8(1) :
Every dealer, who in the course of inter-State trade or commerce, sells to a registered dealer goods of the description referred to in sub-section (3), shall be liable to pay tax under this Act, which shall be [two per cent.] of his turnover or at the rate applicable to the sale or purchase of such goods inside the appropriate State under the sales tax law of that State, whichever is lower.
Provided that the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, reduce the rate of tax under this sub-section.

                   Section 8 (3) :            The good referred to in sub-section (1)
(a)              
Clause  (b)  : 
are goods of the class or classes specified in the certificate of registration of the registered dealer purchasing the goods as being intended for re-sale by him or subject to any rules made by the Central Government in this behalf, for use by him in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale or [in the tele-communications network or] in mining or in the generation or distribution of electricity or any other form of power;

Clause (d) :
are containers or other materials used for the packing of any goods or classes of goods specified in the certificate of registration referred to in clause (b) or for the packing of any containers or other materials specified in the certificate of registration referred to in clause (c).

Sub-section  (4 ) :

The provisions of sub-section (1) shall not apply to any sale in the course of inter-State trade or commerce unless the dealer selling the goods furnishes to the prescribed authority in the prescribed manner a declaration duly filled and signed by the registered dealer to whom the goods are sold containing the prescribed particulars in a prescribed form obtained from the prescribed authority.
Provided that the declaration is furnished within the prescribed time or within such further time as that authority may, for sufficient cause, permit.

On a true and fair construction and an interactive analyses of the adverted to provisions of Section 8 of the CST Act, the position is :
(a)     Section 8(1) renders every dealer (who in the course of inter-State trade or commerce sells to a registered dealer goods of the description referred to in sub-section (3)), liable to tax under the Act at 2% of the turnover or at the rate applicable to the sale or purchase of such goods inside the appropriate State under the sales tax law of that State, whichever is lower.  Admittedly, the rate of tax applicable to a dealer in respect of a transaction falling within sub-section 1 of Section 8 is 2% of the rate applicable for the sale or purchase of such goods within the appropriate State under the State sales tax law, whichever is lower;
(b)     Transactions falling outside sub-section 1 of Section 8 are governed by Section 8(2);
(c)      Sub-section 3 of Section 8 has three sub-clauses {(b), (c) and (d)} (after omission of clause (a) by Act 8 of 1963, with effect from 01-04-1963).
(d)     The seminal ingredient of Section 8 (3) (b) is that goods referred to in sub-section 1 are goods of the class or classes specified in the certificate of registration of the purchasing dealer intended for re-sale by him, or subject to any rules made by the Central Government in this behalf for use by him in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale or in the telecommunications network (the provision of clause (b) is annotated in the context of the present lis).
(e)     Sub-clause (d) of Section 8(3) applies the provisions of sub-section 1 to containers or other materials used for the packing of any goods or classes of goods specified in the certificate of registration referred to in clause (b).
(f)      Sub-section 4 enacts that the provisions of sub-section (1) shall not apply to any sale in the course of inter-State trade or commerce unless the dealer selling the goods furnishes to the prescribed authority in the prescribed manner a declaration duly filled and signed by the registered dealer to whom the goods are sold containing the prescribed particulars, in the prescribed form obtained from the prescribed authority.  The appropriate Form is Form – C.

The concessional rate of tax of 2% is thus available either for re-sale, for use by the purchasing dealer in the manufacturing or processing of goods for sale or for use in the telecommunications network.  There is no condition attached to the last limb of clause (b) of Section 8(3) that the purchasing dealer must either re-sell the goods as such or must use them in the manufacture or processing of goods for sale.  There is no obligation to sell or re-sell and mere use in the telecommunications network is sufficient to bring the transaction within the fold of Section 8(1).

The benefit of the 2% rate of tax (set out in sub-section 1 of Section 8) is applicable once the goods purchased fall within the contours of sub-section 1 read with clause (b) of sub-section (3) of Section 8 and Form ‘C’ declarations are issued, provided the goods are used in the telecommunication network.

The appellate authority strangely held that there is no dispute with regard to the fact that the appellant is not a telecom service provider.  This conclusion is fundamentally misconceived, is contrary to the invariable stand and pleadings of the petitioner and contrary to the facts on record.  The relevant facts in this behalf may be stated in brief :
(i)      On 04-03-2008, the petitioner applied for registration as a dealer under Section (7)(1)/7(2) of the CST Act, in Form – A.  In para – 7 of this application (in proforma) the petitioner described its business as wholly telecommunication network service provider.  Para – 16 of this Form requires details of goods ordinarily purchased by the dealer in inter-State trade to be set out.  In this para the petitioner stated that the details of goods are as per list attached.  Thirty items are set out in the list attached to Form ‘A’, as details of goods ordinarily purchased by the petitioner in inter-State trade.
(ii)     On 29-03-2008, the 1st respondent – the specified/notified authority [under Section 7(1) & (2) read with Rule 5 of the CST (Registration and Turnover) Rules, 1957] issued in Form ‘B’ the certificate of registration to the petitioner, clearly specifying the business to be wholly: TELECOMMUNICATION NETWORK SERVICE PROVIDER.  This certificate is stated to be valid from 01-03-2008 until cancelled. 
(iii)    In the above certificate of Registration, while stating that the classes of goods specified for the purpose of sub-section 1 of Section 8 are as set out and that the sale of these goods in the course of inter-State trade to the dealer shall be taxable at the rates specified in that sub-section subject to the provisions of sub-section (4), stated the purpose as being for use in manufacture or processing of goods for re-sale.  [emphasis is supplied].
(iv)            However, on 21-03-2011, a revised certificate of registration in Form ‘B’ was issued to the petitioner and with effect from 01-03-2008 until cancelled.  This certificate of Registration reiterates that the petitioner is registered as a dealer; that the business is wholly : Telecommunication Network Service Provider; that the classes of goods specified for the purpose of Section 8(1) are :  And the sales of these goods to the dealer in the course of inter-State trade shall be taxable at the rate specified in Section 8(1) subject to the provision of Section 8(4).
(a)             
(b)             
(c)              
(d)               For use in telecommunication network : As per list attached.
The list of goods to be purchased for re-sale, against Form – C as per Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act is appended to this certificate of Registration.

          The relevant policy formulations by the Department of Telecommunications (DOT) and recommendations and policy formulations of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) are :
(a)     On 08-04-2006, the DOT addressed TRAI for its views regarding bringing in appropriate legislation/amendment in the licensing agreements for ensuring effective sharing of new passive infrastructure (towers) by mobile service providers.  This letter (by the DOT) stated that with the exponential growth of mobile services in the country it is felt that mobile service providers should be sharing the new passive infrastructure especially towers while extending networks so as to bring down the cost of providing the services and to prevent deterioration of the skyline; that one of the ways of ensuring this is to bring in appropriate amendments to the licensing agreements so that new passive infrastructure like towers are effectively shared by mobile service providers.

(b)     On 11-04-2007 TRAI (in response to DOT’s letter dated 08-11-2006) forwarded its recommendations on infrastructure sharing.  In paragraph 5.1.1. TRAI recommended amendments in licensing provisions and need for policy intervention/legislation to encourage infrastructure sharing.  In paragraph 5.1.1.1(ii) TRAI recommended :
          Municipal bodies/Corporations/Cantonment authorities shall grant permission to any service provider/Infrastructure provider category I (IP I) to set up tower in such notified sites only when the service provider gives a commitment that the site would be shared by at least three service providers.

 (c)     Chapter – 2 of the TRAI recommendations (referred to supra) clarified passive infrastructure to mean : sharing of physical sites, buildings, shelters, towers/masts, power supply and battery backup, etc.

(d)     The DOT issued guidelines specifying that for an infrastructure provider category – 1 (IP – 1) no license is issued and the applicant company is only required to be registered; that a company registered as IP – 1 can provide assets such as Dark Fiber, Right of Way, Duct Space and Tower; that this area was opened to private sector with effect from 13-08-2000 and all Indian registered companies are eligible to apply.
(e)     Consistent with the above policy the petitioner applied and was granted a registration certificate No.177/2008 on 10-01-2008, certifying that it is registered as infrastructure provider category – 1 (IP-1) to establish and maintain the assets such as Dark Fibre, Right of Way, Duct Space and Tower for the purpose to grant on lease/rent/sale basis to licensees of telecom services licensed under Section 4 of the Indian Telecom Act, 1885 on mutually agreed terms and conditions.
(f)      On 12-04-2011, TRAI drew up a report comprising a fresh raft of recommendations on telecommunications infrastructure policy.  In para – 1.9 of this report TRAI observed that currently infrastructure provision is being made by infrastructure providers who are being registered by the DOT and telecom service providers who are licensees under Section – 4 of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 are divesting themselves of the task of infrastructure provision.  In para – 1.14 TRAI noted that telecom towers are an integral part of a wireless telecom infrastructure.
General analyses :

This Court’s BSNL Judgment :
The jurisdiction of revisional/appellate/assessing authorities under the AP VAT Act, 2005, to levy tax under Section 4(1) & (8), on sim cards – pre-paid and post-paid; re-charge coupons; value added services; telephone instruments, mobile hand-sets, modems and caller I.D. instruments; mobile telephone rentals; sharing of infrastructure; non-refundable deposits; refundable deposits, etc.; fell for consideration in the State of Andhra Pradesh vs. M/s. Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited[1][1].

On the sharing of infrastructure it was the case of the Revenue that other service providers are also allowed space on the tower of the owner service provider on a non-exclusive basis; the space provided is a pre-identified place on the tower where they have exclusive right over all other service providers including the passive service provider; except the beneficiary party, no one can either place equipment or have access to the designated space/place; other goods such as air conditioner, diesel generator, electrical wiring, power plant, etc., are commonly provided to all infrastructure sharing parties; since common assets are commonly leased to more than one beneficiary party, the consolidated rent/lease amount received represents the consolidated charge for lease of the said equipment and a consolidated transfer of the right to use the goods; and the common facilities include a part of the tower, movable goods such as shelter, air conditioning equipment, diesel generator, electrical wiring, electrical installations, power plant, batteries, electricity accumulators, etc.  The Revenue urged that the transfer for joint use to all co-service providers for consideration constitutes transfer of the right to use such facility and is exigible to tax under the 2005 Act. 

Per contra the petitioners contended that infrastructure service providers enter into agreements with other service providers for use by them of various kinds of infrastructure and there is no transfer of the right to use the equipment and no deemed sale under Article 366 [29A (d)]; that towers are permanent industrial structures and constitute immovable property; are not “goods” and no tax is leviable on them under this Act.  These competing contentions were analysed and this Court held :
38.       For providing telecommunication services, the service providers interconnect their networks with various other operators by inter-connection agreements.  The calls generated from one network travels through various networks before they reach the ultimate called party.  Telecommunication involves not only the network of one particular operator, but several cellular operators for carriage and termination of the call.  The whole network system constitutes the telecommunication network either of one operator or collectively of various operators through which telephone services are provided by telephone operators to their subscribers.

39.       Service providers erect towers on sites (either land or roof tops of buildings), for their network operation.  As part of their network, other assets like shelter, air conditioning equipment, diesel generator, electrical wiring, power plant etc are also provided.  The structural towers are rooted to the ground with a height of upto 90 metres.  Antennas are fixed on the tower to receive and transmit messages.  On a reciprocal basis, other service providers are permitted to fix their antennas on the tower, and share the infrastructure namely the other equipment, against monthly payment described as “Infrastructure Share Fee”.  Other cellular operators are permitted to bring their own equipment, like BTS, access radio etc., and station such equipment at the site.  Each site has a minimum lock of period of 3 years.  Apart from the antenna fixed on the tower by the beneficiary party, the entire infrastructure is under the control, possession and maintenance of the passive service provider.

40.       The service provider, who erects the tower and locates various equipment thereat, is called the PASSIVE INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICE PROVIDER.  Under the ‘infrastructure sharing agreement’ entered into with various other cellular operators, the PASSIVE INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICE PROVIDER shares its infrastructure i.e., tower sites (along with identified assets thereat like room shelter, air conditioning equipment, diesel generator, electrical wiring, power plant, etc.) and generates revenue from its infrastructure.  The beneficiary party, (also a service provider), bring their own BTS, access radio and other equipment.  The right, title and interest on such sits, and the identified assets thereon, remain with the PASSIVE INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICE PROVIDER .  The right, title and interest in the BTS, access radio and other equipment brought in by the beneficiary party remains with the beneficiary party.  The PASSIVE INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICE PROVIDER is responsible for obtaining necessary permissions/approvals from local/municipal authorities/departments.  The beneficiary party is entitled to use the identified assets, subject to technical feasibility.  Upgradation is required to be made by the principal owner, after consulting the beneficiary party.  The beneficiary party has free access to the identified assets and/or the sites as per the procedure agreed upon by the parties.  Section 11(b)(iv) of the TRAI Act relates to functions of the authority and, under sub-sections (b)(iv) thereof, the authority is required to regulate arrangement amongst service providers for sharing their revenue derived from providing telecommunication services.  The consideration, for infrastructure sharing, is arrived at between the parties on the basis of capital expenditure (CAPEX) and Operational expenditure (OPEX) sharing at agreed rations/parameters.  These expenses are collected from each of the other service provider by raising invoices.

41.       The Telecommunication tower, of a height of around 90 metres and embedded either to the earth or to the roof top of a building, is under the control and possession of the passive service provider.  The manner in which this 90 meter huge structure is fastened would necessitate its being excluded from the ambit of “goods”, and included within the category of “immovable property”.  Transfer of the right to use “immovable property” would not fall within the ambit of Section 4(8) of the Act as “immovable property” is excluded from the definition of “goods” under Section 2(16) of the Act.  Section 3(26) of the General Clauses Act, 1897 includes, within the definition of the term “immovable property”, things attached to the earth or permanently fastened to anything attached to the earth.  Section 3 of the Transfer of Property Act gives the following meaning to the expression “attached to the earth” : (a)  rooted in the earth, as in the case of trees or shrubs;  (b)   imbedded in the earth, as in the case of walls or buildings; or (c)  attached to what is so imbedded for the permanent beneficial enjoyment of that to which it is attached.  The question whether a chattel is imbedded in the earth so as to become “immovable property” is to be decided on the principles of annexation to the land.  The twin tests are the degree or mode of annexation, and the object of annexation.  (Solid and Correct Engineering Works v. CCE (2010) 5 SCC 122.  From a combined reading of the definition of “immovable property”, in Section 3 of the Transfer of Property Act and Section 3(26) of the General Clauses Act, it is evident that, in an immovable property, there is no mobility.  The test of permanency is whether the chattel is movable to another place of use in the same position, or is liable to be dismantled and re-erected at the latter place?  If the answer is yes to the former it must be a movable property and, thereby, it must be held that it is not attached to the earth.  If the answer is yes to the latter, it is attached to the earth.  (T.T.G. Industries Ltd. V. CCE (2004) 4 SCC 751 (DB) = 2004-TIOL-49-SC-CX; Ad Age Outdoor Advertising Private Limited, Hyderabad v. The Government of Andhra Pradesh Judgment of APHC DB in W.P.No.23811 of 2009 dated 11.02.2011).  The 90 metre huge tower can only be erected at another place after it is completely dismantled at the existing site, and cannot be moved to another place of use in the same position.  The telecommunication tower is, therefore, “immovable property” and not “goods” liable to tax under the Act.

42.       Under Article 366(29-A) (d) levy of tax is not on the use of goods, but on the transfer of the right to use goods.  The right to use goods accrues only on account of the transfer of the right and, unless there is a transfer of the right, the right to use does not arise.  It is the transfer which is the sine qua non for the right to use any goods.  The title to the goods, under Sub-clause (d) of Article 366 (29-A), remains with the transferor who only transfers the right to use the goods to the purchaser.  Yet, by fiction of law, it is treated as a sale.  Article 366(29-A) has served to extend the meaning of the word “sale” to the extent stated, but no further.  (20th Century Finance Corpn. Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra (2000) 6 SCC 12).

The BSNL conclusion :

43.       As a telecommunication tower is “immovable property” it does not stand to reason that a part of it, where a beneficiary party fixes its antenna, would become “goods”.  Even if the other equipment located near the tower are held to be “goods”, merely by permitting other cellular operators to use, or in giving them access, to identified assets does not involve any transfer of the right to use such assets, as control and possession of these equipment always remains with the service provider who owns them, and there is no transfer of either control or possession of the equipment in favour of other cellular operators.  The distinction, between mere use of “goods” and “transfer of the right to use goods”, must be borne in mind.  What the co-service providers are permitted is use of the equipment provided at the site of the tower by the passive service provider.  Such usage by them is along with the passive service provider, and other service providers also.  Effective control and possession of such equipment continues to remain with the passive service provider, and is not parted to the other service providers who are merely permitted to use these equipment.

44.       Though there is user of the equipment on a sharing basis there is no transfer of the right to use these goods and, as such, would not constitute “deemed sales” either under Article 366 (29A)(d) of the Constitution of India or under Explanation IV to Section 2(28) of the Act.  Such sharing of infrastructure is  incidental to, and a means of, rendition of “telecommunication service”.  The impugned orders passed by the revisional/appellate/assessing authorities, levying tax on the proceeds received by the passive service provider on sharing their infrastructure equipment with other service providers, treating it as “sale” under explanation (iv) to sub-section (2) of Section 28 of the Act, is without jurisdiction and is illegal.

The Rajasthan Electricity Board ruling :

Provisions of Section 8(1) of the CST Act in the context of the issue whether trucks, trolleys, trailers and the like purchased by the Rajasthan State which is engaged in the business of generation and distribution of electricity was a facility validly availed fell for analyses in Commercial Tax Officer Circle-D, Jaipur v. Rajasthan Electricity Board, Jaipur[2][2].  The Supreme Court noticed that what is used in distribution of electricity or intended for such use falls within the scope of Section 8(3)(b) read with Rule 13 of the CST (R & T) Rules, 1957.  The Rajasthan High Court had held that trucks, trolleys, trailers and the like but not passenger vehicles, as also their accessories and spare parts, tyre and tubes could be purchased by the respondent – Board at the concessional rate of tax prescribed under Section 8(1).  The High Court further held that soaps, paints and varnishes fall within the contours of Section 8(1) only insofar as they were intended to be used for the purpose of cleaning boilers and machinery and other equipment and for the purpose of painting machinery and electrical goods; that raincoats could be purchased at the concessional rate of tax so far as they were necessary for use by linesmen working on transmission lines during rainy season and winter; that battery cells to the extent they were necessary for the use by linesmen for working on transmission lines during the night could also be purchased at the concessional rate of tax specified in Section 8(1) of the CST Act. 

Confirming the analyses and conclusions of the High Court and dismissing appeals by the Revenue, the Supreme Court, following its earlier judgment in J.K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills Co. Ltd. v. STO[3][3] ruled that if a process or activity is so integrally related to the ultimate manufacture of goods so that without that process or activity, manufacture may even if theoretically possible be commercially inexpedient, goods intended for use in the process or activity as specified in Rule -13 [of the CST (R & T) Rules, 1957] would qualify for special treatment.  The Court further held that motor vehicles aforementioned and soap, paints, raincoats and battery cells to the extent spelt out by the High Court are integrally related to the distribution of electricity and their non-use would make such distribution commercially inexpedient.
The Orissa Power Generation Corporation ratio :

          In Orissa Power Generation Corporation Limited v. Commissioner, Commercial Taxes and others[4][4], the Orissa High Court upheld the claim of the dealer (the petitioner) and held that (a)  survey and drawing instruments used for the purpose of laying the foundation of the power house building and associated structure; (b)  building materials related to the construction of the power house building and associated civil structures; (c)  H.S. motors, G.I. Pipes, C.I. Pipes, and streetlight fittings required for the construction of a power house and control room and required for operation and maintenance of the thermal power plant; (d)  road material like tar, road-rollers, concrete mixer and water treatment plant, filteration plants and associated materials; and (e)  goods for protection and control of boiler turbines and generator during operation for generating power, operation of the switch yard to transmit power from the generating station to grid sub-substations and for operation of the power house plant, are all goods and material required for use in the generation and distribution of electricity falling within the provisions of Section 8(1) read with 8(3)(b) of the CST Act and therefore liable to tax at the rate specified in Section 8(1).  In this case while initially the certificate of registration issued to the petitioner – dealer under Section 7(2) of the CST Act included all these goods, some of the goods and processes were deleted from the certificate of registration by subsequent orders passed by the assessing authority or amendments to the registration certificate.  The writ petition was filed challenging the deletions and excluding these goods from the benefit of concessional tax under Section 8(1) of the CST Act. 

          In the above factual context the learned Division Bench of the Orissa High Court held :
…The petitioner-company is a registered dealer, which is seeking to purchase goods for use by it “in the generation of power and distribution of electricity”.  Therefore, it is imperative to take note of the fact that when the “functional test” is applied to a dealer such as in the case of petitioner-company, it has to be ascertained as to whether the goods being purchased by it are integrally related to the generation and distribution of the electricity.  Even if theoretically possible, whether it would make it commercially inexpedient for the purpose of generation of power and distribution of electricity.  In respect of this issue, it is clearly covered by the decision of the honourable Supreme Court in the case of Commercial Taxes Officer, Circle-D, Jaipur v. Rajasthan Electricity Board (1997) 104 STC 89.  In that case  the honourable Supreme Court affirmed the view taken by the Rajasthan High Court, wherein the Rajasthan High Court came to hold that the Rajasthan Electricity Board which was engaged in the business of generation and distribution of electricity to the consumers, could purchase by way of inter-State trade, at concessional rate of tax under section 8(1) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, trucks, trolleys, trailers and the like (but not passenger vehicles), as also their accessories and spare parts, tyres, and tubes and that the board was entitled to have its certificate of registration altered to include “tools and plants, including vehicles and other transportable goods, including other spare parts, tubes and tyres.”

          In the present lis, the Revenue places reliance on a judgment of this Court in Coastal Andhra Power Limited, Nellore v. State of Andhra Pradesh[5][5].  A dealer who intended to develop, distribute and sell electricity and towards that end was setting up a Mega Power Project at Krishnapatnam, Nellore District, preferred a revision (to this Court) against an order of the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal confirming the order of the Appellate Deputy Commissioner.

          The petitioner (in Coastal Andhra Power Limited) was registered as a dealer under the CST Act as well as the 2005 Act.  While applying for registration it sought inclusion of various items including goods, machinery, equipment, building material, etc., claiming that these were integrally connected with the generation and distribution of electricity.  The petitioner was issued a certificate under Section 7 of the CST Act enabling purchase of the application specified goods during the course of inter-State transactions for availing the benefit of a concessional rate of tax under Section 8(1) read with Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act.  Later, the CTO issued a show-cause notice proposing to delete several items from the certificate of registration on the ground that the items specified for deletion were used for construction of buildings and other uses not directly related to power generation and did not fall within the ambit of Section 8.  Despite petitioner’s objections, the CTO disallowed certain items.  Aggrieved, the petitioner preferred appeals to the appellate authority and thereafter to the STAT unsuccessfully, and then moved this Court for revision. 

This Court, distinguishing the judgment in Orissa Power Distribution Corporation Limited (supra) on the ground that certain observations of the Supreme Court in J.K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills Co. Ltd. v. STO (supra) were not noticed by the Orissa High Court, concluded that building material used by the petitioner for the purpose of construction of a labour colony, administrative building and boundary wall, cannot be considered as goods qualifying for inclusion in the certificate of registration issued under Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act read with Rule 13 of the CST (R & T) Rules, 1957.  This Court held that the mere fact that there was a statutory obligation cast on the petitioner to construct a labour colony, a compound wall or an administrative building would not constitute a sufficient nexus between the goods used in such construction and the generation or distribution of electricity or any other form of power, so as to render them goods intended for use in those operations; and that refusal by the registering authority to include such building material in the certificate of registration, is unassailable.

          The issue in the present batch of cases, in the factual context of the Registration certificate issued and the nature of the petitioner’s business, is whether goods purchased by the petitioners/dealers (for the purposes of building, operating and maintaining passive telecom infrastructure and where on the towers erected and maintained but nonetheless continued to be owned by the petitioner – the passive infrastructure provider; goods which are indisputably integrally associated with the building and maintenance of the cell towers), are goods falling within the ambit of Section 8(1) read with the provisions of Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act, and thus exigible only at the concessional rate of tax provided in Section 8(1).
Are cell phone towers part of the Telecommunication Network ?

          Cell phone technology is a relatively recent species in the evolution of telecommunications technology.  Cell phones are wireless phones which receive their signals from towers.  A cell is typically a geo-specific area several miles around a tower, within which a signal can be received.  Division of a city or an area into small cells enables extensive frequency re-use so that a large number of people can use cell phones simultaneously.   Cell phones operate within cells and are capable of switching cells as they move around and thus have an incredible range.  A person using a cell phone can therefore drive or move long distances and yet maintain a conversation during the entire time, on account of the cellular matrix.  Typically each cell has a base station that consists of a tower and a small building containing the radio equipment.  A cell phone tower is either a steel pole or a lattice structure that rises several feet into the air, erected either on land or on roof-tops.  The box contains radio transmitters and receivers that enable the tower to communicate with the phones.  The radio transmitters and receivers connect with the antennae on the tower through a set of cables and all these are grounded.

          Telecommunications network as a matrix, is inter alia a synergy between passive and active infrastructure.  While the telecom towers and associated apparatii - goods and materials like shelter, air conditioning equipment, diesel generator, electrical wiring, power plant, power back-up systems, surge and lightning systems, etc., functionally integral to the establishing and maintaining of these towers, constitute the passive infrastructure; the base transmission and reception systems including the antennae fixed on the cell towers constitute active telecommunication infrastructure. 

The petitioners/dealers are registered as infrastructure provider Category-1 (IP-1) by the DOT, Government of India, a fact not in dispute.  That they are registered under the CST Act; that the certificate of Registration describes the petitioners as telecommunication network service providers; that the goods purchased by them against issue of ‘C’ Forms during the course of inter-State transactions are goods specified for purchase for use in telecommunications network specified by them in para – 16 of the Form ‘A’ application submitted for seeking registration under the CST Act, are also facts not in dispute.  It is also not in dispute that the goods in respect of which the impugned penalty orders were passed under the provisions of Section 10A of the CST Act were goods specified in the list of goods stated by the petitioners while applying for registration under the CST Act and enumerated in the respective certificates of registration, and were used for the erection and maintenance of the passive telecommunication infrastructure (the cell towers).

          It is not the case of the Revenue that the petitioners had purchased these goods against issue of ‘C’ Forms but had not employed them for the purpose of erection or maintenance of the towers, for supporting the active telecommunication infrastructure mounted on these towers by the several cellular telephone operators.  Nor is it the case of the Revenue that the goods so purchased during the course of inter-State transactions were re-sold by the petitioners and the fact of such re-sale suppressed.

          The theme song of the Revenue, to support the impugned orders of penalty and reiterated in the counter-affidavit filed by the assessing authority (in W.P.No.31462 of 2011) is predicated on the fundamentally misconceived assertion that the petitioners are not telecom service providers but are only engaged in the construction of towers equipped with generators and other equipment that are provided to actual telecom service providers/operators and that the petitioners wrongly represented themselves as telecommunication network service providers.  Another contention of the Revenue is that in order to be a telecom service provider a person or a dealer has to possess a license issued by the DOT and no such license is produced (insofar as the petitioners in W.P.No.31462 and 32482 of 2011). 

The above contention and assumption by the Revenue is wholly erroneous.  As earlier noticed the petitioner (in W.P.Nos.31462 and 31482 of 2011) is registered under Section 7 of the CST Act and the certificate of Registration describes the petitioner as engaged in the business of telecommunication network service provider.  That the petitioner in W.P.No.8205 of 2012 is also in the same business, is also not in dispute.  In fact, in the show-cause notice dated 02-12-2010 issued under Section 10 of the CST Act to this petitioner, the clear assertion by the Revenue is that the petitioner cannot be called as a telecommunication network as it only supports the telecommunication network and does not form part of the network. 
The Constitutional context :

The other contention of the Revenue (that in order to be a telecom service provider, the person or a dealer has to possess a license issued by the DOT but the petitioner has not been so licensed); proceeds on a misconception of jurisdictional parameters and separation of powers under our federal constitutional order.  The legislative field posts and telegraphs; telephones, wireless broadcasting and other like forms of communication is enumerated in Entry-31 of the Union list of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.  Since under the Constitution, exercise of executive power is co-extensive with legislative power, subject to legislation in the area, the legislative or executive discretion whether telecommunications (the area falling under Entry-31 of List-1) should be regulated, to what degree and in what manner, whether by the requirement of mere registration or licensing, is an area within exclusive federal discretion.  As already noticed, the DOT had clarified that an infrastructure provider Category – 1     (IP-1) is required to be registered only and no license is required for (IP-1); and a company registered as (IP-1) can provide assets such as dark fibre, right of way, duct space and tower, etc.  It is not the case of the Revenue that the control and limited regulation of infrastructure providers Category-1 by such policy determination of the Union of India (DOT) or the grant of a registration to the petitioners by the DOT is either beyond the powers and authority of the Union or is in any event of no consequence.  The regulatory power in respect of telecommunications, conferred on the TRAI (an independent Telecom Regulatory Authority) under a legislation enacted in that behalf (The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Act, 1997 – Central Act 24 of 1997) is also traceable to the legislative field under Entry-31 of List-1.  Such being the position, the Registration Certificate issued by the DOT, enabling establishment and maintenance of assets such as dark fibre, tower, etc., for the purpose of granting on lease/rent/sale to licensees of telecom services, licensed under Section 4 of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 constitutes a federal recognition that the erection and maintenance of telecom/cell towers is an activity falling within the legislative field enumerated in Entry-31 of List-1.  On this analyses, the Revenue cannot be heard to contend that the petitioners are not comprehended within the generic area “Telecommunications network”, an expression employed in Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act as well [also a Union legislation, traceable to Entry 92 A of List 1 (Union List)].

          The Revenue additionally contends that the Registration certificate issued under the CST Act specifies certain goods eligible to be purchased in the course of inter-State trade or commerce for the purpose of re-sale.  This assertion overlooks the fact that while the initial certificate of registration dated 29-03-2008 did state the specified goods as for use in manufacture or processing of goods for re-sale, apart from use in telecommunication network, the revised registration certificate issued on 21-03-2011 and with effect from 01-03-2008 clearly states in Clause (f) that the goods were for use in telecommunication network as per the list attached.  The transactions pertaining to purchase of goods, which were considered for the issue of the impugned penalty orders, are all goods set out in the annexure to the revised Registration certificate dated 21-03-2011 (W.P.Nos.31462 and 31482 of 2011).

          Telecommunication towers are held by a Division Bench of this Court in BSNL to be immovable property.  We are not informed at the Bar that the judgment in BSNL has either been stayed or appealed against or the ratio of the said decision stands eclipsed.  This judgment has also analysed that the service providers (passive infrastructure service providers) provide other assets like shelter, air-conditioning equipment, diesel generator, electrical wiring, power plant, etc., for their network operations and concluded that sharing of infrastructure is incidental and only as a means of rendition of telecommunication service; that the effective control and possession of such equipment continues with the passive service provider; is not parted to the other service providers who are merely permitted use of this equipment; and levying tax on the proceeds received by the passive infrastructure provider from sharing of their infrastructure with other service providers, treating it as a sale under Explanation – IV to sub-section – 28 of Section 2 of the APVAT Act, 2005, is without jurisdiction and illegal.
          The legislative context of TRAI needs be considered.  TRAI is an independent regulatory authority established under Section – 3 of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Act, 1997.  Chapter – III sets out the powers and functions of TRAI.  Section – 11 therein delineating the functions of the Authority, enumerates the functional contours of TRAI including :
(i)                  measures to facilitate competition and promote efficiency in the operation of telecommunication services so as to facilitate growth in such services [Sub-section (1) clause (a)(iv)]; and
(ii)                measures for the development of telecommunication technology and any other matter relatable to telecommunication industry in general [Sub-section (1) clause (a)(vii)].


          It also requires to be noticed that the functions conferred on TRAI under Chapter – III are enacted to be operative notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 [vide Section 11(1)].

Section 8(1) read with Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act enjoins levy of the specified and concessional rate of tax in respect of goods of the class or classes specified in the certificate of Registration of the registered dealer purchasing the goods as being intended for use by him in the telecommunications network.  The expression “Telecommunication network” is not defined.  The TRAI, an expert regulatory body constituted under an Act of Parliament to regulate and evolve policy for the systematic development of telecommunications in the country has, as a part of its recommendations on telecommunications infrastructure policy, in the report dated 12-04-2011 clearly observed that telecom towers are an integral part of the wireless telecom infrastructure.  This is not a recommendation but an observation by an expert body as to the functional integrality of telecommunication towers with the telecommunications network, an opinion which we defer to and see no reason and justification to differ from.

          The BSNL ruling that a telecommunication tower is immovable property may not be of direct relevance to the issue on hand in the present lis as the impugned orders of penalty are not predicated on a premise by the Revenue that the income received by the passive infrastructure providers is exigible to tax under the 2005 Act.  The case of the Revenue is that there was a misuse  of ‘C’ Forms and that the incorporation and use for provision of the passive telecommunications infrastructure (of goods procured through inter-State transactions) are not comprehended within the expression “telecommunications network” in Section 8(3) of the CST Act.

The petitioners in W.P.No.31462 brought to the notice of the appellate authority a letter dated 30-06-2011, bearing CCT’s Ref. CAU/B1(2)/110/2009, addressed to the Principal Secretary, Revenue by the Commissioner of Commercial Taxes regarding a similarly situated dealer – M/s. Aster Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd.  The CCT informed the Government that the vigilance and enforcement department opined that M/s. Aster Infrastructure had misused the ‘C’ Form in violation of Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act, attracting levy of penalty.  However, after levy of penalty and appeal thereagainst by the dealer and remand by the appellate authority to the assessing authority, the assessing authority passed a reasoned order, dropping the levy of penalty.  The CCT opined that the activity of the dealer is to render telecommunications infrastructure services and the goods purchased from outside the State are inevitably for the infrastructure and maintenance of the telecommunications network and the network is not complete without the towers and the goods so purchased from outside the State.  The CCT further clarified that it is not material whether the goods purchased are not meant for re-sale; that the dealer is also registered as infrastructure provider -1 with the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, DOT, and is licensed to establish and maintain assets such as dark fibres, towers, etc., for the purpose of granting on lease/rent/sale to Telecom service providers.  The CCT concluded that in view of the amendment to Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act by Act 20 of 2002 (whereby “Telecommunications network” was inserted in the said provision), the dealer is eligible to purchase goods from outside the State by issuing ‘C’ Forms meant to be used in telecommunication network and since the dealer in question has so purchased the goods and used them in the telecommunication network, the dealer could issue ‘C’ Forms and no levy of penalty is warranted in the case. 

The appellate authority, in rejecting the appeals (in W.P.Nos.31462 and 31482 of 2011) adverted to reliance by the petitioners/appellants on the letter of the CCT to the Secretary (Revenue) of the State but side-stepped the normative issues arising from the policy view taken by the CCT and observed that the CCT’s letter is neither a circular, direction nor has a direct bearing on the disputes involved in the appeals. 

We do not refer to the above aspect to indicate that the letter of the CCT constitutes a circular binding on the assessing or appellate authority but observe that since it constitutes a normative policy view taken on the identical aspect by the Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, due deference must have been accorded to it by the assessing and appellate authority.
          In the facts and circumstances of this lis (adverted to supra), in view of the rationes deducible from the judgments of the Supreme Court in Rajasthan Electricity Board and in J.K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills Co. Ltd, we are of the considered view that the purchase of goods by the petitioners from outside the State, comprising goods specified in the certificates of Registration under the CST Act granted to them, against issue of ‘C’ Forms and where the goods have been employed in erection and maintenance of cell phone towers which are integral to Telecommunication Network, fall within the ambit of Section 8(1) read with Section 8(3)(b) of the CST Act and are entitled to be taxed accordingly. The fact that the goods purchased by the petitioners were neither sold nor used in the manufacture of goods for re-sale does not constitute violation of the ‘C’ Forms.  Consequently, levy of penalty, on the factual parameters apparent on the record of these cases, is unsustainable.

­                        For the reasons above and on the aforesaid analyses, the orders impugned, imposing on the petitioners penalty under the provisions of CST Act, are quashed.  The orders dated 05-07-2010 and 14-10-2010 passed by the assessing authority – The Commercial Tax Officer, Begumpet Circle (for the years 2008-09 & 2009-10, respectively); the common order dated 07-10-2011 passed by the appellate Deputy Commissioner, Panjagutta, confirming the primary orders imposing penalty (impugned in W.P.Nos.31462 & 31482 of 2011); and the order of penalty dated 29-09-2012 passed by the CTO, Srinagar Colony Circle (impugned in W.P.No.8205 of 2012), are set aside.

          The writ petitions are allowed as above, but in the circumstances without costs.

_______________________
JUSTICE GODA RAGHURAM

_______________________
     JUSTICE N. RAVI SHANKAR
         
Date : June 12, 2012.
Ndr/*

LR copy to be marked : YES







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