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Issues: (i) Whether the appellant was entitled to threshold exemption for the relevant financial year on the basis of the service turnover as reflected in the income-tax records and return statements. (ii) Whether the service tax demand, interest and penalties were sustainable, and if so, to what extent, in view of the discrepancy between the service-tax returns and the income-tax materials.
Issue (i): Whether the appellant was entitled to threshold exemption for the relevant financial year on the basis of the service turnover as reflected in the income-tax records and return statements.
Analysis: The turnover shown in the income-tax records and Form 26AS was treated as the reliable basis for determining the taxable value of services. On that basis, the appellant's service receipts were found to be below the threshold exemption limit. The appellant, however, did not succeed in claiming complete exemption for the entire disputed turnover, because the record also showed admitted short payment of service tax on the balance taxable value after accounting for the admissible threshold benefit.
Conclusion: The appellant was entitled to threshold exemption only to the extent recognised in the order, and not to complete immunity from tax on the disputed receipts.
Issue (ii): Whether the service tax demand, interest and penalties were sustainable, and if so, to what extent, in view of the discrepancy between the service-tax returns and the income-tax materials.
Analysis: The non-disclosure of the full receipts in the service-tax returns was treated as suppression of facts with intent to evade tax, justifying invocation of the extended period. Interest was held payable as a statutory consequence of delayed payment. Penalty under section 78 was upheld in principle, while the quantum was reduced to the tax amount sustained. Penalty under section 77(1) was also sustained but reduced.
Conclusion: The demand was reduced to the amount sustained, interest was upheld, penalty under section 78 was sustained at the reduced amount, and penalty under section 77(1) was reduced.
Final Conclusion: The appeal succeeded only in part, with the tax liability and consequential penalties modified downward, while the findings on suppression, extended limitation and liability to pay interest were sustained.
Ratio Decidendi: Where service receipts are not fully disclosed in service-tax returns despite being reflected in the taxpayer's records, suppression with intent to evade may be inferred, warranting extended limitation, recovery of tax with interest and imposition of penalties, subject to reduction where the taxable base is re-determined on the evidence.