The Supreme Court has held that service tax is not separately payable on the interchange fee, as service tax has been paid on the Merchant Discount Rate (MDR).

The bench of Justice Sanjiv Khanna, Justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice R. Mahadevan has observed that the entire data and details are available with the Service Tax Department and could have been easily ascertained before issuance of the show cause notice. Interestingly, the show cause notice proceeds on the basis that, regardless of the service tax paid by the acquiring bank on the full MDR, the issuing bank would be liable to pay service tax on the proportion of its share in the MDR, which is the interchange fee.

Background

The department submitted that the acquiring bank should have paid service tax on the Merchant Discount Rate minus the interchange fee, and the issuing bank should have paid service tax on the interchange fee.

As per Section 65(33a) of the Act, seven distinct heads of credit card services were sought to be taxed, the idea being to broaden the coverage of the species of services into a taxation net. Clause (iii) applies to service by any person, which includes service by the issuing bank and the acquiring bank. The use of the word ‘and’ in conjuncture is indicative of the legislative intent. 

MDR is charged/levied by the acquiring bank at the first point in time and subsumes both the acquiring bank fee and the interchange fee of the issuing bank, as well as the platform fee. It is the sum total of the three. The aforesaid charge occurs first in point of time and deduction and payment of service tax at this stage is beneficial to the Revenue. It is not the case of the Revenue that payment by the acquiring bank to the issuing bank, known as interchange fee, is separately chargeable, in addition to the service tax on the MDR.

Interchange Fee

There is one unified service which is rendered to the consumer, that is, the credit card holder, and the merchant. The subsequent bifurcation in the context and the nature of the transaction, read with Sections 66 and 68 of the Act and Rule 5(1) of the Service Tax (Determination of Value) Rules, 2006, is immaterial as MDR is taxable and service fee is to be taxed. MDR, as a service, has been taxed and also paid.

Conclusion

The court held that the onus to show that payment of service tax on the entire MDR was made by the acquiring bank will be on the issuing bank, that is, the respondent, M/s. Citibank N.A.

The court stated that the entire amount of the service tax payable on the MDR has been paid to the Government and there is no loss of revenue.

Read More: Softwares/Websites Development Service Or Consultancy On Internet Requires Human Intervention; Can’t Be Categorised As OIDAR Service: CESTAT

Case Details

Case Title: Commissioner Of Gst And Central Excise Versus M/S Citibank N.A.

Case No.:  Civil Appeal No. 8228 Of 2019

Date: 16/10/2024

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