International Tax Update
1.1) Comments: In the instant case, Indian division is allowed deduction of technical expenses paid to Head office even without deduction of TDS and further the income of head office is also considered as non-taxable in India leading to DOUBLE NON-TAXATION of technical expenses.
1.1(a): There are 2 issues in the case:
a) Taxability of PE in India as a separate entity and Allowability of deduction for payment of technical expenses to HO in the hands of Indian PE for non-deduction of TDS u/s 40(a)(ia)
1.1(b): The tribunal has rightly observed that assessee was not required to deduct tax at source from the impugned payment, consequently no disallowance could be made of the said amount of fee for technical services paid by the assessee to its Head Office, therefore, disallowance under section 40(a)(ia) of the Act was not called for.
1.1(c): Further, the tribunal has also kept the receipts by non-resident head office out of the purview of Income Tax on the grounds that it is not in the nature of fees for technical services and also not business profits.
1.1(d):
Thus the payment by Indian division to foreign head office is
completely taken out of the purview of Income tax by the above judgement
and hence exposing the loophole in the present scheme of Indian
taxation.
1.1(e): DTAA requires that Indian PE should be treated as separate entity for the purpose of computation of income and hence payments by the Indian PE to its foreign head office is also required to be deducted for the purpose of computation of Income of Indian PE and determining its tax liability. Also, it allows under Article 7(3)(b) the deduction for amounts towards reimbursement of actual expenses by PE to head office. However, In Income Tax Act, Indian PE and foreign head office are considered as One entity and payment by Indian PE to foreign head office is not liable for TDS as it is payment to self.
1.1(f): It should be noted that Finance Act 2015 has tried to plug the above loophole by bringing into tax net the interest paid by Indian branch office of foreign bank and making it liable for TDS. However, other payments by Indian branch office to foreign head offices is still a possible loophole.
2.
No Shipping Profits clause in DTAA: ADIT vs. Mediterranean Shipping
Company S.A. 2015 (3) TMI 148 - ITAT MUMBAI: Assessee, a Switzerland
based company, was engaged in business of operation of ships in
international waters. Assessee filed its return claiming refund of tax
liability on freight earnings contending that profits arising out of
operation of shipping activities was not taxable in India - Assessing
Officer held that profits earned by assessee from operations of ships in
international traffic was taxable in accordance with provisions of
section 44B. HELD, It was noted that held that international shipping
profits of assessee company were covered by Article 22 of Indo-Swiss
treaty in terms of which shipping income earned by assessee was taxable
in Switzerland. Where assessee, a Switzerland based company, was engaged
in business of operation of ships in international water, in terms of
article 22 of India-Switzerland DTAA, freight income earned by assessee
was taxable in Switzerland and not in India
2.1) Comment: It should be noted that the above judgement has brought the taxability of shipping Income under Article 22 ”Other Income” as there is no specific article dealing with shipping profits under India -Swiss DTAA. Also, the income was not considered as business profits under Article 7 as the said article specifically excludes income from operation of ships in International traffic.
2.1(a)
Also, It should be noted that normally DTAAs with other countries
require income from operation of ships in international traffic be taxed
in the state in which place of effective management in situated.
However, Article 22 only requires the condition of residence to
determine taxability of “other income”.
2.1(b) Since, DTAA does not define residence, the meaning has to be taken from Indian Income Tax Act which as amended by Finance Act 2015 considers a company as Indian resident if Place of Effective management(POEM) is situated ‘AT ANY TIME’ of the year in India.
2.1(c) So, this judgement shall be highly disputed by tax authorities for shipping profits after 1.4.2015 in respect of Swiss based companies as POEM at any time will make swiss company an Indian Resident and hence taxable in respect of ‘other income’ in India.
(For detailed discussion refer article Place of Effective Management (POEM) in India Corporate Taxation: Analysis & Safeguards)
4. Transfer of Intangible asset not royalty: Flag Telecom Group Ltd. vs. DCIT 2015 (2) TMI 454 - ITAT MUMBAI: The assessee sold the cable capacity to VSNL for US $ 28,940,000. The CSA provided for the ownership rights in the Flag Cable System with all the rights and obligations in he capacity sold i.e., VSNL can transfer, assign or sell the capacity. It also lays down the concept of standby maintenance, payments, obligations, management decisions etc. The entire procedure for ownership of capacity in the cable system and all other terms and conditions has been contained in a separate agreement titled as "Construction and Maintenance Agreement" (CandMA). As per the terms, once CandMA comes into force, the CSA will come to an end. HELD, The entire agreement was for the period of 25 years which coincided with the life of the cable. In case of 'royalty', the complete ownership in the equipment is never transferred to the other party. What is envisaged in section 9(1)(vi) read with Explanation thereto, is consideration for use or rights to use of any equipment. Where consideration is received by foreign company from Indian Co. for sale of capacity involving transfer of ownership of cable system to Indian company as distinguished from a mere payment for simply user of capacity, the consideration is not taxable as royalty u/s 9(1)(vi).
5.
NO FTS Clause in DTAA: McKinsey Business Consultants Sole Partner
Limited Liability Company MEPE vs. DDIT 2015 (2) TMI 683 - ITAT MUMBAI:
Assessee was a foreign company incorporated in Greece - It had provided
assistance in form of borrowed service to Mckinsey India (associate
concern), in consideration for which, assessee received an amount from
Indian company - Assessing Officer held that said sum was to be taxed as
fee for technical services within meaning of section 9. HELD, since
assessee had earned income by rendering services in course of its
business, in absence of FTS clause in DTAA between India and Greece, it
was nothing but business profit which was covered under article 3. Also,
in absence of any PE in India, it could not be taxed in India
Foreign Remittance: Taxability: Case Law Analysis 2015: Series 3
1.
Reimbursement of Technical Expenses to Head office: Bureau
Veritas-Indian Division vs. ADIT 2015 (4) TMI 578 - ITAT MUMBAI: The
Assessee was a French company which operated in India
through its Indian
Division. Assessing Officer had observed that 'the head office
expenditure allocated to the Indian division was in the nature of
technical and administrative expenses'. According to Assessing Officer,
it represented fee for technical services and as while crediting such
amount to head office account no tax was deducted, he added said amount
under section 40(a)(ia). The Assessing Officer also added the said
amount in the hands of the assessee as according to him the said amount
was taxable separately at the rate of 20 per cent in the hands of
permanent establishment as per the DTAA between India and France. HELD,
connotations of fees for technical services under Indo-French tax treaty
are confined to payment for such services 'as make available' technical
knowledge, skill, experience, etc. In instant case, payment in question
was in nature of reimbursement of technical expenses to head office and
not on account of any specific technical services having been 'made
available' and, therefore, said amount could not be brought to tax in
hands of assessee under article 13 of Indo-French Tax Treaty. Also, said
amount could not also be taxed in hands of assessee under article 7 as
it was not an income 'attributable to PE'.1.1) Comments: In the instant case, Indian division is allowed deduction of technical expenses paid to Head office even without deduction of TDS and further the income of head office is also considered as non-taxable in India leading to DOUBLE NON-TAXATION of technical expenses.
1.1(a): There are 2 issues in the case:
a) Taxability of PE in India as a separate entity and Allowability of deduction for payment of technical expenses to HO in the hands of Indian PE for non-deduction of TDS u/s 40(a)(ia)
b)
Taxability of Foreign Company for income in India: Taxability of Income
of Non-resident Company In Respect Of Income earned from Indian branch
office.
1.1(b): The tribunal has rightly observed that assessee was not required to deduct tax at source from the impugned payment, consequently no disallowance could be made of the said amount of fee for technical services paid by the assessee to its Head Office, therefore, disallowance under section 40(a)(ia) of the Act was not called for.
1.1(c): Further, the tribunal has also kept the receipts by non-resident head office out of the purview of Income Tax on the grounds that it is not in the nature of fees for technical services and also not business profits.
1.1(e): DTAA requires that Indian PE should be treated as separate entity for the purpose of computation of income and hence payments by the Indian PE to its foreign head office is also required to be deducted for the purpose of computation of Income of Indian PE and determining its tax liability. Also, it allows under Article 7(3)(b) the deduction for amounts towards reimbursement of actual expenses by PE to head office. However, In Income Tax Act, Indian PE and foreign head office are considered as One entity and payment by Indian PE to foreign head office is not liable for TDS as it is payment to self.
1.1(f): It should be noted that Finance Act 2015 has tried to plug the above loophole by bringing into tax net the interest paid by Indian branch office of foreign bank and making it liable for TDS. However, other payments by Indian branch office to foreign head offices is still a possible loophole.
2.1) Comment: It should be noted that the above judgement has brought the taxability of shipping Income under Article 22 ”Other Income” as there is no specific article dealing with shipping profits under India -Swiss DTAA. Also, the income was not considered as business profits under Article 7 as the said article specifically excludes income from operation of ships in International traffic.
2.1(b) Since, DTAA does not define residence, the meaning has to be taken from Indian Income Tax Act which as amended by Finance Act 2015 considers a company as Indian resident if Place of Effective management(POEM) is situated ‘AT ANY TIME’ of the year in India.
2.1(c) So, this judgement shall be highly disputed by tax authorities for shipping profits after 1.4.2015 in respect of Swiss based companies as POEM at any time will make swiss company an Indian Resident and hence taxable in respect of ‘other income’ in India.
(For detailed discussion refer article Place of Effective Management (POEM) in India Corporate Taxation: Analysis & Safeguards)
3.
Purchase of Technical Know-How not royalty: ITO vs. Heubach Colour (P.)
Ltd. 2015 (4) TMI 579 - ITAT AHMEDABAD: Assessee-company was in
business of manufacturing and sale of colour pigments and fine chemicals
- It acquired Arocia business from 'CL', a non-resident company and
paid certain sum to 'CL' claimed to be for intangibles assets,
trademarks and goodwill - Assessing Officer treated assessee as
assessee-in-default holding that payment was covered by section 9(1)(vi)
and, therefore, assessee was required to deduct tax under section 195
treating payment as royalty. HELD, purchase of technical know-how could
not be treated as royalty and, therefore provisions of section 195 were
not applicable.
3.1)
Comment: Judgement has rightly held the payment as not royalty on the
basis of judgement by Delhi high court in Asia Satellite Communications
Ltd. 2011 (1) TMI 47 - DELHI HIGH COURT wherein it was held that ‘The
Term 'royalty' appearing in Explanation 2 to sub-clause (vi) of section
9(1) of the Act. Sub-clause (i) deals with the transfer of all or any
rights (including the granting of a licence) in respect of a patent,
etc. Thus, what this sub-clause envisages is the transfer of "rights in
respect of property" and not transfer of "right in the property". The
two transfers are distinct and have different legal effects. In first
category, no purchase is involved, only right to use has been granted,
while in the second category, the rights are purchased which enable use
of those rights. Ownership denotes the relationship between a person and
an object forming the subject-matter of his ownership. It consists of a
bundle of rights, all of which are rights in rem, being good against
the entire world and not merely against a specific person and such
rights are indeterminate in duration and residuary in character. the
definition of term 'royalty' in respect of the copyright, literary,
artistic or scientific work, patent, invention, process, etc. does not
extend to the outright purchase of the right to use an asset, In case of
royalty, the ownership on the property or right remains with owner and
the transferee is permitted to use the right in respect of such
property. A payment for the absolute assignment and ownership of rights
transferred is not a payment for the use of something belonging to
another party and, therefore, no royalty. In an outright transfer to be
treated as sale of property as opposed to licence, alienation of all
rights in the property is necessary’
4. Transfer of Intangible asset not royalty: Flag Telecom Group Ltd. vs. DCIT 2015 (2) TMI 454 - ITAT MUMBAI: The assessee sold the cable capacity to VSNL for US $ 28,940,000. The CSA provided for the ownership rights in the Flag Cable System with all the rights and obligations in he capacity sold i.e., VSNL can transfer, assign or sell the capacity. It also lays down the concept of standby maintenance, payments, obligations, management decisions etc. The entire procedure for ownership of capacity in the cable system and all other terms and conditions has been contained in a separate agreement titled as "Construction and Maintenance Agreement" (CandMA). As per the terms, once CandMA comes into force, the CSA will come to an end. HELD, The entire agreement was for the period of 25 years which coincided with the life of the cable. In case of 'royalty', the complete ownership in the equipment is never transferred to the other party. What is envisaged in section 9(1)(vi) read with Explanation thereto, is consideration for use or rights to use of any equipment. Where consideration is received by foreign company from Indian Co. for sale of capacity involving transfer of ownership of cable system to Indian company as distinguished from a mere payment for simply user of capacity, the consideration is not taxable as royalty u/s 9(1)(vi).
5.1)
Comment: Greece is one of the few countries where DTAA does not have
clause on taxability of Fees for technical services. Other countries are
Thailand, Phillippines, Indonesia. Other relevant judgements pertaining
to NO FTS clause in DTAA where authorities held the payment as business
profits include: Bangkok Glass Industry Co. Ltd. v. ACIT 2015 (4) TMI
503 - MADRAS HIGH COURT, Mckinsey and Company (Thailand) Co. Ltd. v. Dy.
DIT (Int. Tax.) 2014 (1) TMI 925 - ITAT MUMBAI, GECF Asia Ltd. vs. DDIT
2014 (9) TMI 605 - ITAT MUMBAI, IBM India Private Limited vs DDIT
[TS-78-ITAT-2014 (Bang.)] (Country: Phllipines) PT McKinsey Indonesia
vs. DDIT 2014 (1) TMI 925 - ITAT MUMBAI
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