BSNL v. Union of India
BSNL v. Union of India
BSNL v. Union of India
ORS.
(2006) 3 SCC 1
However, the Kerala High Court took a different view in the case of Escotel Mobile
Communications Ltd. v. Union of India5 and held that the transaction of sale of a SIM
card included its activation and thus formed part of State Sales tax. It also held that
selling of SIM cards and the process of activation were services as well and fell
within the definition of Taxable service as defined in Section 65(72)(b) of the Finance
Act, 1994.
If it is a sale, states are legislatively competent to levy sales tax on the transaction
under entry 54, List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. If it is a service,
the Central Government alone can levy service tax under entry 97 of List I (or entry
92c of List I after 2003). And if the nature of the transaction falls in categories of both
sale and service, the moot question would be whether both legislative authorities
could levy their separate taxes at the same time or only one of them can do so.
2
• It is pointed out that the sale was factually and legally distinct from the
activity of giving the connection or activation of the SIM cards.
• It was submitted that taxing telecommunication services as a deemed sale
under Entry 54 of List II would be violative of Article 286 of the Constitution
as the same involves connecting subscribers throughout the territories of India
without any regard to State boundaries.
• It is contended that there was no transfer of any right to use any goods and the
parties never intended for such transfer. It is submitted that the court should
apply the standard of the ordinary man for deciding whether the transaction in
question was a contract for service or for transfer of a right to use deemed
goods. The obligation of the service provider is merely to transmit voice and
the subscriber was not interested in stipulating as to how the voice/data is to be
conveyed to the other end.
• The Union of India has supported the service providers and contended that the
transaction in question was only "service".
RESPONDENTS CONTENTION
• The respondents, i.e., the States, raised a preliminary objection contending that
the plea of the petitioners is barred by res judicata because the issue has been
decided by the Apex Court as above stated in State of U P v. Union of India
(2003) 130 STC 1 (SC).
• The respondents contended that the transaction was a deemed sale under
Article 366(29A)(d) of the Constitution, i.e. a tax on the transfer of the right to
use any goods for any purpose read with the charging sections in their various
sales tax enactments and, therefore, they are competent to levy sales tax on the
transactions.
• It is further emphasised that Sub-clause (d) also use the words “for any
purpose". This could include the purpose of service. In any event, it is
submitted, the meaning and scope of Sub-clause (d) in Article 366(29A)
cannot be limited on account of the fact that a transaction may have been
described as a service in any legislative enactment or contract or licence.
• It was submitted that the test of dominant object of a composite works contract
was no longer relevant after the 46th Constitutional Amendment. It was
submitted that the service providers transfer the right to use radio frequency
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channel to a subscriber for a specific duration and thus have effected a deemed
sale of goods under Article 366(29A)(d).
• Therefore, the State's powers must be read harmoniously with the Union's
power and it is only when such reconciliation is impossible that the primacy
should be given to the non obstante clause under Article 248(1).
• The respondents further submitted that delivery of goods was not necessary
for the purpose of transferring the right to use and this had been held in the
decision of Apex Court in 20th Century Finance Corpn. Ltd. v. State of
Maharashtra.6
• A subscriber makes use of the telephone system as a matter of right and is
capable of asserting that right even against the Government. The subscriber's
right to use his telephone line is to the exclusion of every other person and to
that extent the right of the Government/service providers stands denuded. The
right is based on contract and is in addition to the right to the service provided
by the service providers. The SIM Card operates as key for access to the
telephone system or network and symbolizes the right of participation by a
subscriber in the telephone system.
• It is also submitted that in any event different aspects of a given transaction
can fall within the legislative competence of two legislations, then both would
have the power to tax that specific aspect, i.e. the theory of aspect would apply
so that what was service in one aspect was a sale in the other. It was also
submitted that because in sub- clauses (b) and (f) of Clause (29A) of Article
366 the tax on a component in a transaction of works is permissible, it cannot
be assumed that in Sub-clause (d) tax could not be imposed on an element of
the sale component of that transaction.
• These are two distinct transactions, one as the transferee of the legal right to
use the telephone and the other of a contract of service. These are two different
aspects, each attracting a different tax. Service is only one of the purposes for
which the transfer or deemed sale is made by the Government.
• It was submitted that the question whether the goods were moveable or
immoveable property as well as the question whether the tax was being levied
on inter state sales or not were all matters of assessment and that the judgment
in State of U.P. v. Union of India should be affirmed.7
6
(2000) 119 STC 182 (SC).
7
Supra n. 4
4
• Countering the submission that the sales would be inter state sales, it is
submitted that the situs of the taxable event under the Sales Tax Act would be
where the transfer of the right takes place between the service providers and
the subscribers. This was also a question which would vary from case to case
and would have to be ultimately factually decided by an assessment authority.
• The use of the words “any goods” in Article 366(29A)(d) showed that the
goods need not necessarily be transferred by the transferor. It is further
emphasised that sub-clause (d) also uses the words “for any purpose”. This
could include the purpose of service.
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A.1 Definition of “Goods” Not Altered
The Apex Court further observed that by introducing separate categories of
“deemed sales”, as a result of introduction of Article 366(29A), the meaning of
the word “goods” was not altered and secondly the Gannon Dunkerley11 case
had survived with reference to the dominant nature test to be applied to a
composite transaction not covered by article 366(29A).
A.1.1 Electromagnetic waves not goods
The Apex Court held that electromagnetic waves are neither abstracted nor are
they consumed in the sense that they are not extinguished by their user. They
are not delivered, stored or possessed. Nor are they marketable.12 They are
merely the medium of communication. What is transmitted is not an
electromagnetic wave but the signal through such means. The signals are
generated by the subscribers themselves. In telecommunication what is
transmitted is the message by means of the telegraph. No part of the telegraph
itself is transferable or deliverable to the subscribers. In view of the foregoing,
the Apex Court held that the electromagnetic waves are not 'goods' within the
meaning of the word either in Art. 366(12) or in the State Legislations.
B) Is there any transfer of any right to use any goods by providing access or
telephone connection by the telephone service provider to a subscriber?
11
In this case, the Supreme Court had held that the expression ‘sale of goods’ as used in the entries in
the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India has the same meaning as given in the sale of goods
act,1930. It was further held that for a transaction to be taxed, it must fulfill the following conditions:
1) parties competent to contract, 2) mutual assent, and 3) transfer of property in goods from one party
to the contract to the other thereto for a price
12
Relying on the Test laid out in the case of TCS v. State of A.P., (2005) 1 SCC 308
7
The Apex Court opined that the essence of the right under Article 366 (29A) (d) is that
it relates to use of goods. It may be that the actual delivery of the goods is not
necessary for effecting the transfer of the right to use the goods but the goods must be
available at the time of transfer must be deliverable and delivered at some stage. It is
assumed, at the time of execution of any agreement to transfer the right to use, that the
goods are available and deliverable. If the goods, or what is claimed to be goods by
the respondents, are not deliverable at all by the service providers to the subscribers,
the question of the right to use those goods, would not arise. But if there are no
deliverable goods in existence as in this case, there is no transfer of user at all.
Providing access or telephone connection does not put the subscriber in possession of
the electromagnetic waves any more than a toll collector puts a road or bridge into the
possession of the toll payer by lifting a toll gate. The Apex Court pointed out that the
toll payer will use the road or bridge in one sense. But the distinction with a sale of
goods is that the user would be of the thing or goods delivered. The delivery may not
be simultaneous with the transfer of the right to use. But the goods must be in
existence and deliverable when the right is sought to be transferred. Therefore
whether goods are incorporeal or corporeal, tangible or intangible, they must be
deliverable and capable of being abstracted. To the extent that the decision in State of
U.P. v.. Union of India held otherwise was held to be erroneous as this transaction did
not satisfy the test of TCS v. State of A.P.13
13
(2005) 1 SCC 308
14
MANU/SC/0152/1958 It was held that the contract for the construction of a building was not sale as
it comprised of a contract to provide for labour and a contract to provide for material. Of these, the
latter taken independently was a sale, but if it only formed a component of the whole transaction then it
was not a sale. Sale was to comprise of three elements: (i) an agreement to transfer title (ii) supported
by consideration, and (iii) an actual transfer of title in the goods.
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service provided.15 Hence Section 366 (29A) was enacted to remedy the evasion
of taxes being facilitated by this narrow definition of ‘sale of goods’ and hence
those contracts in which a certain element of sale was missing were made liable
to tax. Hence the title to the goods under Clause (d) remains with the transferor
who only transfers the right to use the goods to the purchaser.
15
State of Punjab v. Associated Hotels of India Ltd. MANU/SC/0570/1972
16
Supra n.4
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Thus the Apex Court held that the nature of the transaction involved in
providing the telephone connection may be a composite contract of service and
sale. It is possible for the State to tax the sale element provided there is a
discernible sale and only to the extent relatable to such sale.
This however, does not mean that the state can tax the service along with the goods in
a transaction and infringe on the domain of the Centre. For the same reason the Centre
cannot include the value of the SIM cards, if they are found ultimately to be goods, in
the cost of the service.18
Following the mandate of Gujarat Ambuja Cements Ltd. v. Union of India MANU/SC/0225/2005
18
which states that there is mutual exclusivity in VAT and Service Tax. Latest judgment on this aspect
being Imagic Creative Private Limited vs. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, 2008-TIOL-04-SC-
VAT, dated 9 January 2008.
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