Liquidated damages in certain cases to draw 18% GST, rules Andhra AAR
Liquidated damages are the sum that one party receives when the other party fails to meet provisions of a contract between them.
The order came despite a circular issued by the government in 2022 that says that liquidated damages are a mere flow of money from a party which causes a breach of contract to a party which suffers loss due to such breach. Such payments do not constitute consideration for supply and are not taxable, the circular clarifies.
APPDCL entered into an agreement with Chettinad Logistics Pvt. Ltd. (CLPL) for supply of services, which included liasoning with MCL, East Coast Railways, Paradip and Adani Krishnapatnam ports for coordination and supervision of coal loading, arranging rakes, transportation of raw coal, crushing of boulders.
APPDCL submitted in its application that these liquidated damages arise on mutual acceptance of both parties on account of unintentional occurrence, which both parties tend to avoid. Hence liquidated damages cannot be a consideration for tolerating the breach or non-performance of contract.
AAR emphasised that the circular cited above has to be understood in the proper context. This meant that the payment towards damages are incidental to the main supply and since the main supply is taxable they shall also be taxable.
AAR said liquidated damages in the present case constitutes supply of service and are exigible to 18 per cent GST.
Amit Maheshwari, tax partner at AKM Global, said the ruling of the AAR does not seem to be well reasoned. “The ruling focuses more on the meaning of ‘consideration’ rather than ‘supply’ since consideration would be subservient to supply,” he said.
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