2019(03)LCX0190(AAAR)
AAAR-KARNATAKA
M/s Nash Industries (I) Pvt.Ltd
decided on 01/03/2019
KARNATAKA APPELLATE
AUTHORITY FOR ADVANCE RULING
6th Floor, VANIJYA TERIGE KARYALAYA
KALIDASA ROAD, GANDHINAGAR, BANGALORE-560009.
(Constituted under Section 99 of the Karnataka Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
vide Government of Karnataka Order No FD 47 CSL 2017, Bengaluru, dated
25-04-2018
ORDER NO.KAR/AAAR/07/2018-19
DATE: 01/03/2019.
BEFORE THE BENCH OF
(1) Sri D.P.Nagendrakumar, Member.
(2) Sri Srikar M.S., Member
GSTIN or User ID | 29AADCN9558Q1ZC |
Legal Name of Appellant | M/s. Nash Industries (I) Pvt.Ltd |
Registered Address | No.236-237/2,8th Main Road, Peenya Industrial Area,3rd Phase, Bengaluru-560058 |
Details of appeal | Appeal against Advance Ruling No.KAR ADRG 24/2018 dated 25* October 2018 |
Date of filing appeal | 05.12.2018 |
Represented by | Shri. Shivadass. Advocate M/s Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan |
Jurisdictional Authority - Centre | ANWD-2,The Commissioner of Central Tax, North West Commissionerate, Bengaluru |
Jurisdictional Authority - State | LVO 075- BENGALURU |
Whether payment of fees for filing appeal is discharged. If yes, the amount and challan details. | CIN :HDFC 18122900008012 dt 03.12.2018 for Rs 20,000/- |
PROCEEDINGS
(Under Section 101 of the Central Goods and Service
Tax Act, 2017 and the Karnataka Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017)
At the outset, we would like to
make it clear that the provisions of both the CGST Act and the KGST Act are pari
materia and have the same provisions in like matters, and differ from each other
only on a few specific provisions; therefore; unless a mention is particularly
made to such a dissimilar provision, a reference to the CGST Act would also mean
a reference to the corresponding similar provisions under the KGST Act.
The present appeal has been filed under section 100 of the Central Goods and
Services Tax Act, 2017 and the Karnataka Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
(hereinafter referred to as the CGST Act and KGST Act¯) by M/s. Nash Industries
(I) Private Limited, (herein after referred to as the Appellant) against the
Advance Ruling No. NO. KAR ADRG 24/2018 dated 25th October 2018.
BRIEF FACTS OF THE CASE
1. M/s. Nash Industries (I) Private Limited is registered under GST with GSTIN
No. 29AADCN9558Q1ZC and is a manufacturer of sheet metal pressed components and
supplies to industrial customers like Automotive, Banking Hardware, Power
Protection, Alternate Energy etc. The tools required to manufacture these
components were designed and manufactured by the Appellant. Such manufactured
tools are billed to the customer and the payment is received for the same but
the tools are retained by the Appellant for the manufacture of components.
2. The Appellant had filed an application for Advance Ruling under section 98 of
the CGST Act, 2017 and KGST Act, 2017 on the following question:
a. Whether the amortized cost of the tools is to be added to arrive at the value
of the goods supplied for the purpose Of GST under Section 15 of the CGST Act
read with Rule 27 of CGST Rules.
3. The Karnataka Authority for Advance Ruling, vide Advance Ruling No. NO. KAR
ADRG 24/2018 dated 25th October 2018. (hereinafter referred to as Impugned
Order) gave the following ruling:
The amortised cost of tools which are re-supplied back to the applicant free of
cost shall be added to the value of the components while calculating the value
of the components supplied as per Section 15 of the CGST/KGST Act,2017.¯
4. Aggrieved by the said ruling of the Authority, the applicant has filed an
appeal under section 100 of the CGST Act, 2017 / KGST Act, 2017 on the following
grounds:
4.1. The appellant submitted that the purchase order provided by the
recipient/customer is only for the manufacture of components out of the tools
supplied by the recipient at free of cost.
4.2. Further, the appellant submitted that the CBIC vide Circular
No.47/21/2018-GST dated 08.06.2018 has clarified the position regarding
amortization of tool cost supplied free of cost by the customer, to the value of
components manufactured by the component manufacturer, The relevant extract of
the circular is provided below:
SI. No. |
Issue |
Clarification |
1 |
Whether moulds and dies owned by Original Equipment Manufacturers(OEM) that are sent free of cost (FOC) to a component manufacturer is leviable to tax and whether OEMs are required to reverse input tax credit in this case? |
1.1.Moulds and dies owned by the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) which are provided to a component manufacturer (the two not being related persons or distinct persons) on FOC basis does not constitute a supply as there is no consideration involved. Further, since the moulds and dies are provided on FOC basis by the OEM to the component manufacturer in the course or furtherance of his business, there is no requirement for reversal of input tax credit availed on such moulds and dies by the OEM. 1.2.It is further clarified that while calculating the value of the supply made by the component manufacturer , the value of moulds and dies provided by the OEM to the component manufacturer on FOC basis shall not be added to the value of such supply because the cost of moulds/dies was not to be incurred by the component manufacturer and thus, does not merit inclusion in the value of supply in terms of Section 15(2)(b) of the Central Goods and Service Tax Act,2017(CGST Act for short) 1.3.However,if the contract between OEM and component manufacturer was for supply of components made by using the moulds/dies belonging to the component manufacturer, but the same have been supplied by the OEM to the component manufacturer on FOC basis, the amortised cost of such moulds/dies shall be added to the value of the components. In such cases, the OEM will be required to reverse the credit availed on such moulds/dies, as the same will not be considered to be provided by OEM to the component manufacturer in the course or furtherance of the formers business |
4.3. They submitted that the
above circular covers two situations, which are as follows:
a. The value of the moulds and dies owned by the original equipment manufacturer
(OEM) which are provided to a component manufacturer on FOC basis shall not be
added to the value of such supply because the cost of moulds/dies was not to be
incurred by the component manufacturer.
b. The contract between OEM and component manufacturer was for supply of
components made by using the moulds/dies belonging to the component
manufacturer, but the same have been supplied by the OEM to the component
manufacturer on FOC basis-the amortised cost of such moulds/dies shall be added
to the value of the components.
4.4 They submitted that in the instant case,
a. The obligation of the supply of tools is on recipient/customer.
b. Accordingly, the owner of the tool is recipient /customers.
c. The recipient /customer provided the purchase order to appellant, wherein the
scope is merely supply of components.
From the above it is evident that the present case falls under the first
situation explained in the above circular. That means, the tool is owned by the
OEM (Customer) and supplied at free of cost to appellant. Further, the purchase
order is provided for supply of component. As the present case falls under first
situation, the cost of the tool is not to be added to the price of component as
per the clarification provided by the board.
4.5. Further, they submitted that the cost of the tool is required to be added
only if the tool is belonging to the component manufacturer (Appellant). In the
present case, the owner of the tool is the recipient / customer and hence the
cost of tool is not required to be added to the price of the component; that the
scope of the Appellants activity is limited to manufacture and supply of
components; that, the burden of supply of tools is on the customer and not on
the Appellant. Therefore, the tool supplied by the customer at free of cost is
not required to be added to the cost of components manufactured by the
Appellant.
4.6. The appellant drew attention to the provisions of Section 15 of CGST/KGST
Act,2017 and submitted that there is no amount which was liable to be paid by
the Appellant but incurred by the recipient. Instead the agreement between the
Appellant and the customer is only for manufacture and supply of components and
not to manufacture the tool. That being the case, the cost of the tool is not be
included in the value of components manufactured and supplied by the appellant
to the customer.
4.7. The appellant further submitted that the earlier decisions of Central
Excise cannot be applied to GST. The Central Excise duty was levied and
collected on the activity of the manufacture, whereas the levy of GST is on the
supply of goods/services. Further, the scope of supply depends on the scope of
the agreement and obligation of the supplier in the agreement. If there is no
obligation on the supplier on any aspect, such aspect cannot be constituted as
supply and also cannot be considered as value of supply.
4.8. In view of the above submissions, the Appellant pleaded that the ruling of
the Authority for Advance Ruling is required to be modified.
Personal Hearing:
5. The Appellant was called for a personal hearing on 19.02.2019 and were
represented by Shri. Rajesh Kumar T.R, Chartered Accountant. He reiterated the
submissions made in the grounds of appeal. The representative also filed
additional submissions before this Authority wherein they stated that the
Maharashtra Authority for Advance Ruling in the case of Lear Automotive India
Private Ltd had passed a ruling GST-ARA-19/2018-19/B-80 dated 31.07.2018 on the
same issue i.e. whether amortized value of the tool received on FOC basis from
the customer is required to be included in the value of finished goods
manufactured and supplied by the applicant to the customer. The Maharashtra AAR
had based on the facts and circumstances of the case before them, held in the
negative. Relying on the above said order they submitted that the same is also
applicable in their case. During the personal hearing, this Authority asked for
the details of the terms of the contract between the Appellant and their
customer to be furnished in order to understand each partys obligations.
The representative agreed to submit it in due course.
6. The Appellant through their representative Chartered Accountants submitted
copies of the following additional documents vide letter dated 28.02.2019.
a) Purchase order of tool and component of the same design
b) Comparison of facts of M/s. Nash Industries (I) Pvt Ltd with M/s Lear
Automotive India Pvt Ltd along with supporting documents.
DISCUSSION AND FINDINGS
7. We have gone through the records of the case and taken into consideration the
submissions made by the Appellant in writing and during the personal hearing and
also the documents produced by them.
8. The short point for determination is whether the value of the components
manufactured and supplied by the Appellant should include the cost of the tools
which are supplied by the customer free of cost and used by the Appellant in the
manufacture of the components.
9. Under the erstwhile Central Excise regime, Rule 6 of the Central Excise
Valuation Rules, 2000 required an assessee to calculate the intrinsic value of
the excisable goods by including any additional consideration flowing directly
or indirectly from the buyer to the assessee. In other words, since excise duty
was levied on the activity of manufacture, any activity which was contributing
to the manufacturing activity was included in the assessable value irrespective
of the fact as to who owned the inputs and capital goods. In view of the same,
the Appellant was amortizing the value of such tools supplied by their customers
free of charge and was including the same in the assessable value of the final
goods for discharging applicable Central Excise duty. With the advent of GST
with effect from 1st July 2017, a provision similar to the erstwhile Rule 6 of
the Valuation Rules does not exist thereby warranting the question whether,
under the GST regime, the value of the tool cost is required to be amortized.
10. Under the GST regime of taxation, the taxable event which attracts the levy
of GST is the supply of goods or services, in terms of Section 9 of the CGST
(and SGST) Act or Section 5 of the IGST Act, depending on whether the
transaction of supply is intrastate or interstate. The word supply has not
been defined under the GST law but rather the scope of what constitutes supply
is stated in Section 7 of the CGST Act which reads as under:
7. (1) For the purposes of this Act, the expression supply¯ includes “
(a) all forms of supply of goods or services or both such as sale, transfer,
barter, exchange, licence, rental, lease or disposal made or agreed to be made
for a consideration by a person in the course or furtherance of business;
(b) import of services for a consideration whether or not in the course or
furtherance of business;
(c) the activities specified in Schedule I, made or agreed to be made without a
consideration; and
(d) the activities to be treated as supply of goods or supply of services as
referred to in Schedule II.
In so far as the valuation of the supply is concerned, Section 15 of the CGST
Act provides that the value of taxable supply shall be the transaction value
which is the price paid or payable by the recipient provided the supplier and
recipient are unrelated parties and price is the sole consideration for the
supply. Further Section of the said Act specifically states that where any
amount which the supplier is liable to pay in relation to a supply but the same
has been incurred by the recipient on behalf of the supplier, then such amount
is required to be added while determining the transaction value.
11. In the present case, there is no dispute on the fact that the Appellant and
their customers are not related parties. We need to examine whether the price
paid by the customers is the sole consideration for the supply made by the
Appellant. For this purpose, it is necessary to understand the contractual
arrangement between the Appellant and their customers to see whether the scope
of the supply mandates that, the Appellant is to incur a cost for the
manufacture and use of the tool but the same has been supplied by the customer
free of charge. In the course of the present appeal proceedings, the Appellant
has provided us with details of the contract and purchase orders placed by their
OEM customer M/s. Daimler India Commercial Vehicles Pvt Ltd (DICV).
12. We have gone through the terms (General and Special terms) of the contract
entered into between the Appellant and DICV. As per para 16 of the General Terms
and Conditions of DICV for the purchase of products and spare parts, which form
an integral part of the Contract between DICV and the Appellant, the Appellant
is obligated to comply with the requirements of DICVs Special Terms pertaining
to tooling. Para 16.2 reads that If and to the extent the agreed total cost for
an item of tooling has been paid by Buyer in full, title to such tooling and any
and all IPR created in the course of the development of such tooling for buyer
will immediately be transferred to Buyer. Supplier is entitled to keep the
tooling only as a temporary possession until the Purchase Order has been
performed Supplier must hand over the tooling to Buyer following fulfillment of
the Purchase Order if so requested by Buyer.¯
13. The Daimler India Special Terms (DIST) are a set of rules governing the
supply arrangement between DICV and the Appellant. The DIST forms an integral
part of the contract along with the General Terms and Conditions of DICV for the
purchase of products that are specifically mentioned in the purchase contract.
The relevant provisions of the DIST relating to tools are reproduced hereunder:
1.4. With regard to tools, a distinction must be made between tools which are or
will become the property of DICV (hereinafter DICV Owned Tools¯) and tools
which are not the property of DICV (hereinafter Non-DICV Owned Tools¯)
To ensure the aforementioned distinction is made appropriately, DICV Asset
Accounting team will provide Asset Identification Tags to the supplier, which
should be affixed in the most appropriate place of DICV Owned Tools.
Regardless of ownership, the supplier must handle all tools and other equipments
with the degree of care necessary to guarantee that DICV is properly supplied
without any interruption.
2.1 The supplier is hereby authorized and required to use DICV Owned Tools
within the framework of the supply Contract concluded with DICV concerning the
parts to be manufactured with the tools.
The supplier shall use the tools only for the purpose of fulfilling its
manufacturing obligations under the supply contract. Hence the supplier is
prohibited front any deviating use of DICV Owned Tools in Particular the use of
tools for production of parts to supply third parties or the transfer of usage
to third parties or unauthorized handover of tools to third parties, without the
prior written consent of DIC.V.
2.2 The supplier shall retain DICV Owned Tools at the location as originally
agreed between the supplier and DICV
2.4 As a consideration for availing the tools from DICV free of charge, the
supplier shall abide by the following terms of maintenance. The supplier must
ensure constant defect-free functional capacity and readiness of the tools
during their use within the framework of the supply contract with DICV for the
purpose of uninterrupted delivery to DICV by means of continuous maintenance and
repair at its own expense.
2.5 In the event where changes in DICVs technical specifications require any
modifications to the tools, the supplier must submit a prior written offer to
DICV to modify the tools with the least possible expenditure.
2.6 The supplier must clearly and permanently identify those tools which are
DICV Owned Tools as the property Of DICV.
2.8 At the end of delivery or termination of contractual relationship with the
supplier, the supplier shall return the tools to DICV in the condition to be
expected following fulfillment of the suppliers duties arising from these DIST.
3. Insofar as Non-DICV Owned are concerned, DICV shall Obtain ownership of the
existing and subsequent tools by way of security in order to ensure delivery.
DICV reserves its right to demand surrender of tools to DICV in the event of an
interruption in delivery. In this case, DICV may reimburse the supplier the of
the tool costs which had not yet been amortized. Upon reimbursement of such
Costs, DICV shall be deemed to have unlimited ownership of the tools.
14. On going through the above terms and conditions of the contract between the
Appellant and DICV, it is evident that the Appellant is required to use DICV
Owned Tools concerning the part to be manufactured with the tool. The tool shall
be used only for the purpose of fulfilling its manufacturing obligations under
the supply contract. The Tool is developed and manufactured by the Appellant
under a specific Purchase Order. The applicable GST on the supply of the tool is
levied in the invoice raised by the Appellant for the supply of the Tool. Once
the agreed cost of the tool has been paid by DICV, the title of the tool and all
IPR created in the course of the development of the Tool will be transferred to
DICV. The Appellant is entitled to keep the tool in his premises only as a
temporary possession until the completion of the supply of components
manufactured using the tool. During the course of temporary possession of the
tools owned by DICV, the Appellant is required to affix Asset Identification
Tags on the DICV Owned Tools in order to identity the DICV owned tool. On
completion of the contractual relationship, the Appellant is required to return
the tools to DICV. In so far as Non-DICV Owned Tools are concerned, the terms of
the contract state that in order to ensure uninterrupted supply of parts, DICV
obtain ownership of the existing and subsequent tools by way of security. Thus
it is evident that, in this case, the customer, DICV, has assumed the
responsibility to provide the tools to the Appellant in the interest of ensuring
that there is uninterrupted supply of their parts. While the first priority is
that the supplier should use the DICV Owned Tools for the manufacture of the
component parts, there is also the possibility that Non-DICV Owned Tools can
also be used for the manufacture of parts for the customer. In the event of the
second possibility, the customer, DICV takes ownership of the Non-DICV Owned
Tools by way of a security only with the objective of ensuring that the supply
of their parts by the Appellant is uninterrupted. In the event there is an
interruption in delivery of manufactured components using the Non-DICV Owned
Tools, then the customer, DICV, has the right to demand the surrender of the
tools and reimburse the Appellant the percentage of the tool cost which has not
been amortized. On perusal of the contract, it is understood that, in the case
Non- DICV Owned Tools are used in the manufacture of the components, the price
agreed upon includes the amortized cost of the Non-DICV Owned Tools.
15. CBIC in its Circular No 47/21/2018-GST dated 08.06.2018 has clarified that
goods owned by OEM that are provided to a component manufacturer on FOC basis do
not constitute a supply as there is no consideration and in such cases, the
value of goods provided on FOC basis shall not be added to the value of supply
of components. However, in case the contractual obligation is cast upon the
component manufacturer to provide moulds/dies but the same have been provided by
the OEM on FOC basis, then the amortized cost of the moulds/dies is required to
be added to the value of the components supplied. In the present case, the terms
and conditions of the contract between the OEM DICV and the Appellant clearly
indicate that no such obligation is cast on the Appellant. The OEM has taken the
responsibility to provide the tools. In a case where the tools are developed and
manufactured by the Appellant according to the requirements of the customer (DICV),
then the total cost of the tools is borne by DICV and the title of the tools
transfers to DICV, while the Appellant is allowed to retain the tool in his
premises for undertaking the manufacture and supply of the components to DICV.
In such a case, the value of the tools, which has already suffered tax and
supplied FOC to the Appellant, is not required to be added to the value of the
components supplied by the Appellant.
16. We accordingly set aside the ruling of the AAR and hold that the cost of the
tools supplied by the OEM customer on FOC basis to the Appellant is not required
to be added to the value of the components supplied by the Appellant. We
emphasize that the ruling given by us in this appeal proceeding is based on
examination of the contract and purchase orders furnished by the Appellant in
the case of their customer M/s. Daimler India Commercial Vehicles Pvt Ltd. This
ruling will apply to other contracts entered into by the Appellant only if the
terms and conditions contained therein are the same as those contained in the
contract placed before us.
17. The appeal is disposed off accordingly on the above terms.
(D.P. NAGENDRAKUMAR)
Member
Karnataka Appellate Authority
for Advance Ruling
(M.S. SRIKAR)
Member
Karnataka Appellate Authority
for Advance Ruling
Equivalent .