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2019 (6) TMI 71 - AT - Service TaxLevy of Service Tax - hospital services to doctors - providing consulting rooms required by the panel/non-panel doctors for treating their (doctor s) patients in the OPD. - Support Services for Business or Commerce (BSS) - difference of amount charged by the appellants-hospitals to the patients towards doctors consultation and the charges paid by them to the visiting/consulting doctors - HELD THAT - As per the provisions governing the service tax statute prior to July 2012 the value of taxable services was determined under Section 67 of the Finance Act 1994. The statutory provisions prevalent at the material time provided that the value of any taxable service shall be the gross amount charged by the service provider for such service provided or to be provided by him. - After 1st July 2012 the term service has been defined in Section 65B (44) of the Act to mean inter alia that any activity carried out by a person for another for consideration. In the present cases admittedly the appellants-hospitals did not charge the doctors at all. There is no payment by the doctors to the hospital and therefore no consideration is received by the hospitals from the consultant doctors. Thus in absence of any consideration being received no service tax is required to be paid by the hospitals. On perusal of the contracts it is found that there is no privity of contract between the doctors and the patients and the patients are under no obligation to pay any amount to the doctors. The billed amount paid by the patients is reflected as the income of the hospitals alone in the books of accounts and the doctors are paid for the amount as per the contractual norms on which the hospitals deduct the tax at source under the income tax statute. Further also the department has not brought on any evidence to show the nature of support services provided by the hospitals to the doctors - Hence is absence of any specific allegation and discussions with any supporting evidence regarding the type of support services provided and the amount received on such account by the hospitals service tax demand cannot be fastened on the hospitals under the taxable category of BSS/Support Services. In order to arrive at a definitive conclusion on the taxability of service the main ingredients which need to be necessarily present as per this statute are the service service provider service receiver and the consideration for the service - In the instant case the alleged service provider is undoubtedly the hospitals/ institutions; the service rendered is to the patients; remuneration is received by the hospitals/institutions and is paid by the patients. Understandably the services rendered by the hospitals/institutions are at best medical services to the patients and by no stretch of imagination Business Support Services . It is immaterial that the hospitals are paying a portion of the remuneration received to the doctors for the services rendered by them to the hospitals. Counsels for the appellants submitted that wherever the Hospitals are providing infrastructural services per se to the doctors i.e. without any reference to the patients admitted to the Hospitals they are paying applicable service tax. Under the circumstances it cannot be alleged that the hospitals are providing Business Supports Services to the doctors. Therefore the argument taken on the basis of discussions between a Profession and Business are not relevant to the present facts of the case. The Appellant hospitals/institutions are not liable to pay service tax under the category of Business Support Services - appeal allowed - decided in favor of appellant.
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