Caltech Polymers GST Case: The GST law defines “supply” broadly under Section 7 of the CGST Act, 2017, covering all forms of transactions for consideration in the course or furtherance of business.
However, a frequent issue has been whether certain employee-related recoveries, especially canteen food expenses, qualify as taxable supplies.
In In Re: M/s Caltech Polymers Pvt. Ltd. [2018 (10) TMI 1313 – AAAR, Kerala], the question was whether recovery of food expenses from employees for canteen services provided at the factory amounted to an outward supply under GST.
The assessee, engaged in manufacturing and sale of footwear, provided an in-house canteen facility to its employees, incurring expenses and recovering them without profit.
The key dispute: Does recovery of actual canteen expenses attract GST?
Caltech Polymers GST Case: Facts of the Case
- Assessee: M/s Caltech Polymers Pvt. Ltd., engaged in footwear manufacturing.
- Facility: Canteen provided inside the factory premises, exclusively for employees.
- Arrangement:
- A cook was employed and paid salary by the company.
- Vegetables and provisions purchased directly by the company.
- Food consumption tracked daily per employee.
- At month-end, expenses for food were proportionately recovered from employees through salary deduction.
- Important Points:
- No profit motive – only actual costs were recovered.
- Canteen facility was a welfare measure, partly mandated by the Factories Act, 1948.
Point of Dispute
Whether recovery of canteen expenses from employees constituted a “supply” under Section 7 of the CGST Act and hence attracted GST, despite being without profit and in the nature of employee welfare.
Submissions by the Assessee
- Canteen facility was provided only to employees as a welfare measure and statutory requirement.
- Recovery of actual cost (without margin) was not a business activity and hence, not a “supply.”
- Activity not in the course or furtherance of business.
- Merely a facilitation of food supply to employees; therefore, outside GST ambit.
Findings of the AAAR (Kerala)
The Appellate Authority for Advance Ruling (AAAR), Kerala rejected the assessee’s arguments and held:
- Activity constitutes supply
- Supplying food to employees, even without profit, falls within Section 7(1)(a) as a transaction for consideration.
- Recovery of food cost from employees constitutes consideration under Section 2(31).
- Assessee is a supplier
- Under Section 2(105), the assessee qualifies as a “supplier” as it provides food against recovery.
- Taxable under GST
- The transaction amounts to supply of service and is liable to GST under relevant notification entry (Entry 17(iii), Heading 9973 of Notification No. 11/2017-CT (Rate), dated 28.06.2017).
Held:
“The supply of food items to the employees for consideration in the canteen run by the appellant company would come under the definition of ‘supply’ and would be taxable under GST.”
Practical Impact on Businesses
- Employer-Employee Transactions: Even cost recoveries from employees can fall within GST ambit.
- No exemption for cost recovery: Absence of profit does not exclude GST liability.
- Statutory welfare measures not automatically exempt: Even canteen services required under the Factories Act may be taxable.
- Compliance requirement: Employers need to evaluate HR/welfare-related recoveries (canteen, transport, etc.) from GST perspective.
Conflicting Rulings from Other States
Later rulings from other Advance Ruling Authorities (AARs/AAARs) diverged:
- Amneal Pharmaceuticals Pvt. Ltd. [2022 (3) TMI 1143, Gujarat AAAR] – Held GST not applicable on recovery of employees’ share for food supplied by third-party vendors.
- Cadila Healthcare Ltd. [2022 (4) TMI 1339, Gujarat AAR] – Held GST not applicable on similar recoveries.
- Cadmach Machinery Pvt. Ltd. [2022 (4) TMI 1337, Gujarat AAR] – Similar conclusion: no GST.
- Emcure Pharmaceuticals Ltd. [2022 (60) G.S.T.L. 231, Maharashtra AAR] – Held canteen facility is a welfare measure mandated by Factories Act, not in course of business, and thus not a supply.
This shows lack of uniformity in rulings across states, creating uncertainty for businesses.
Key Takeaways
- Kerala AAAR view: Recovery of canteen expenses from employees = taxable supply.
- Other states’ view: Canteen recoveries linked to statutory welfare are not supplies.
- Litigation risk: Position differs across jurisdictions; businesses must tread cautiously.
- Need for clarity: CBIC may need to issue a uniform clarification to avoid contradictory interpretations.
Why This Case Matters
The Caltech Polymers ruling highlights the wide scope of “supply” under GST, extending even to employee recoveries.
While later rulings from Gujarat and Maharashtra offered relief, the lack of consistency means companies must adopt a conservative approach and evaluate their canteen cost recovery models carefully.
For HR and compliance managers, this case emphasizes that employee welfare recoveries are not immune from GST unless expressly clarified or exempted.
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