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2014 (11) TMI 44 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Non-deduction of tax at source on remittances made to ATI Technologies, Canada.
2. Nature of payments made to ATI Technologies, Canada for engineering and software expenses.
3. Classification of payments as "income from other sources" or "fees for included services."
4. Applicability of Section 195 and Section 194J of the Income Tax Act.
5. Treatment of software license expenses as royalty under the India-Canada DTAA.
6. Reasonableness of cross charges for software licenses.
7. Alternative classification of payments as dividend income.

Issue-Wise Detailed Analysis:

1. Non-deduction of Tax at Source:
The assessee, a subsidiary of ATI Technologies, Canada, made payments to its parent company for software and engineering expenses without deducting tax at source as required by Section 195 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The Assessing Officer treated the assessee as in default under Sections 201(1) and 201(1A) for the assessment years 2007-08 to 2010-11.

2. Nature of Payments:
The assessee claimed that the payments were reimbursements for services rendered by Soctronics India Private Limited, initially paid by ATI Technologies, Canada. The Assessing Officer rejected this claim due to the absence of agreements and sufficient documentary evidence. Statements from Soctronics' directors indicated that services were provided to ATI Technologies, Canada, not the assessee.

3. Classification of Payments:
The Assessing Officer concluded that the remittances were fresh income to ATI Technologies, Canada, taxable in India as "income from other sources" under Article 21(3) of the India-Canada DTAA. The CIT(A) upheld this view, noting the lack of direct agreements and the structuring of transactions.

4. Applicability of Section 195 and Section 194J:
The assessee argued that the payments were reimbursements without profit and thus not subject to TDS under Section 195. The CIT(A) and the Tribunal found that the payments were for services rendered, not mere reimbursements, making them subject to TDS. The Tribunal also dismissed the applicability of Section 194J, as the services were procured through ATI Technologies, Canada.

5. Treatment of Software License Expenses:
The assessee contended that payments for software licenses were not royalties but reimbursements for the right to use copyrighted software. The Tribunal found insufficient evidence to support this claim and remanded the issue to the Assessing Officer for further verification.

6. Reasonableness of Cross Charges:
The CIT(A) accepted only 50% of the software license expenses as reasonable, treating the rest as excessive. The Tribunal reversed this decision, accepting the entire amount as reasonable based on the cost-plus model followed by the assessee.

7. Alternative Classification as Dividend:
The assessee's alternative claim to classify the payments as dividend under Section 2(22)(a) was dismissed by the Tribunal, as the entire software license expense was accepted as reasonable.

Conclusion:
The Tribunal partly allowed the appeals, holding the assessee liable for TDS on payments for engineering services as "fees for included services" but remanding the issue of software license expenses for further verification. The Tribunal accepted the entire software license expense as reasonable, dismissing the alternative classification as dividend.

 

 

 

 

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