Section 37B of the Central Excise Act, 1944 (as made applicable to Service Tax by Section 83 of the Finance Act,1994), the cbec it necessary, for the purpose of uniformity in connection with classification of services.
F.NO. 177/5/2001 - CX4
Government of India
Ministry of Finance
Department of Revenue
Central Board of Excise and Customs
26th February, 2002
37B Order No .1/1/2002-ST
Sub.: Providing service of third party inspection and
certification whether liable to Service Tax – regarding
In exercise of the power conferred under Section 37B of the Central Excise
Act, 1944 (as made applicable to Service Tax by Section 83 of the Finance
Act,1994), the Central Board of Excise and Custom considers it necessary, for
the purpose of uniformity in connection with classification of services, to
issue the following instructions.
- Doubts have been raised as to whether " third party inspections
and certifications" carried out by certifying agencies in respect of marine
as well as non-marine equipments, can be considered as a service provided by
a "consulting engineer" or not.
- This matter was also raised by two service providers before the Mumbai
High Court, in Writ Petition No 1436/2000. The petition was disposed of by
the Hon’ble Court on 11.9.2001 with directions to the Board to issue a
Section 37B Order in the matter for ensuring uniformity.
- The two service providers were heard in the matter on 4th January, 2002.
Views of the field formations were also procured. Some of the types of
inspection and certification work carried out by the said two service
providers relate to :-
- ARINEiNew
- Construction
- Periodical Surveys
- Marine equipment and components
- Type approval
- Marine specification
- Confirmation of class
- NON-MARINE
- Plan approval and Inspection
- ASME Inspection Service
- System Integrity and Management
- It is observed that as per clause (18) of Section 65 of the Finance
Act,1994, "Consulting Engineer" means any professionally qualified engineer
or an engineering firm who, either directly or indirectly, renders any
advice, consultancy or technical assistance in any manner to a client in one
or more disciplines of engineering".
- The issue, therefore, is whether the service of ‘third party inspection
and certification’ carried out by a professionally qualified engineer or an
engineering firm can fall under the category of advice, consultancy or
technical assistance.
- The main point raised by some service providers is that where they are
carrying out any certification as required by any statute it cannot come
under the purview of either consultancy, advice or technical assistance. As
for example, some of them have been authorized u/s.9 of the Merchant
Shipping Act, 1958, to survey and classify ships and issue necessary
certification. [refer S.O.No.769(E) dt.7.11.97 issued under section 9 of the
Act ibid].
- In the case of ‘Management Consultants’, the Board had clarified, in
Para 11 of the sec.37B Order No. 1/1/2001 – ST dt.27.6.2001, that "……….banks
who are required to play only a statutory role under any Act or regulation,
such as Takeover Regulations of SEBI, and do not provide any advice or
consultancy but merely verify and submit a report to the concerned
authorities, in connection with merger and acquisition transaction, are not
treated as Management Consultants……….". The definition of "Management
Consultant" also uses the words ‘consultancy, advice or technical
assistance’.
- Certificates given under authority of any statute/international
protocol/code/convention, cannot be considered to be a consultancy job. It
is then to be examined whether this activity can come under the purview of
advice or technical assistance. An advice is generally understood to be
optional in nature and has no statutory force. It is upto the client to
accept the advice or not. The activity of certification will therefore not
fall under the category of advice. As regards ‘technical assistance’, it is
observed that an assistance is normally for the purpose of achieving a
particular aim or result. A certificate given by, say, the Boiler Inspector
under the Factory’s Act, 1948, about the safety of a boiler, cannot be
considered to be an ‘assistance’ to the person using the said boiler in his
factory. Thus, if a certifying agency issues a ‘Cargo ship safety
construction certificate’ u/s.299A(i) of the Indian Merchant Shipping
Act,1958, it cannot be considered to be either an advice or a technical
assistance.
- To issue certificates under the authority of any statute it will
obviously be necessary for the certifying agency to conduct some
survey/inspection. Thus the survey/inspection by an agency for the purposes
of issuing certificates by the same agency under an authority of law, will
also not amount to consultancy, advice or technical assistance. If, however,
the shipping company gets the ship surveyed or inspected by another, agency
before taking it for certification by an authorized agency, only then can it
be said that the first agency is providing some technical assistance or
advice.
- It will, therefore, be essential to examine each activity of a service
provider on the basis of facts, the terms of agreement between the assessee
and the clients and the corresponding provisions of Indian or International
Statute/Convention/Protocol or Code, to determine whether the certificate
being given is under the authority of any such statute, convention, protocol
or code. If it is so, the payment received for that service will not be
taxable under the head " consulting engineer".
- Any other inspection, survey, assessment, technical assistance,
consultancy, recommendation, advice, undertaken/provided directly or
indirectly, by the assessee would be liable to Service Tax under the head
‘Consulting Engineer’.
- Suitable Trade Notice may be issued for the information of the trade.
- Hindi version will follow.
- The receipt of this order may kindly be acknowledged.
Suraksha Katiyar
Under Secretar