A great relief for Air-Conditioned Restaurants.
The Kerala High Court on Wednesday held that the Centre’s decision to impose service tax on food and beverages supplied by air-conditioned restaurants with licences to serve alcoholic beverages in the 2011-12 budget was beyond the legislative competence of Parliament.
Justice
A.M. Shaffique passed the verdict while allowing a batch of writ
petitions filed by Kerala Bar Hotels Association and certain bar
hoteliers.
The
service tax was imposed on air-conditioned restaurants with licence to
serve alcoholic beverages in the 2011-12 Union Budget. A service tax of
12.36 per cent applicable on 30 per cent of the bill had been imposed on
such restaurants, which came into effect on April 1 last year.
The
petitioners contended that Article 366 Section 29 (f) of the
Constitution defined supply of food and drinks in hotels as ‘deemed
sales’ and empowered the State governments to collect sales tax on the
total value of sales. Therefore, the Centre has no authority or power to
collect such service tax.
The
court observed that the every purpose of incorporating the definition
of tax on sale or purchase of goods in Article 366 was to empower the
State government to impose tax on the supply, whether it was by way of
or as part of any service of goods either being food or any other
article for human consumption or any drink, intoxicating or not.
The
Constitution permitted sale of goods during service as taxable.
Necessarily, service formed part of sale of goods. Therefore, the State
government alone has the legislative competence to enact a law imposing a
tax on service elements forming part of sales of goods, the court
ruled.
The
court also ordered that if the petitioners had made any payments on the
basis of the impugned clauses, they were entitled to seek refund of the
amount.
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