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2022 (7) TMI 1366 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Transfer Pricing Adjustment on Advertising & Marketing (A&M) Expenses.
2. Transfer Pricing Adjustment on Import of Raw Materials.
3. Disallowance of Payments to Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) for Non-Deduction of TDS.

Detailed Analysis:

Issue 1: Transfer Pricing Adjustment on Advertising & Marketing (A&M) Expenses
The primary contention revolves around whether the A&M expenses incurred by the appellant constitute an international transaction. The Assessing Officer (AO) and Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO) inferred that the appellant incurred excessive A&M expenses compared to comparables, presuming that the benefit of this expenditure enured to its foreign Associated Enterprise (AE). The appellant argued that the TPO/DRP should not have re-characterized the A&M expenses as an international transaction and that the inference of benefit to its foreign AE was based on surmises and conjectures without any explicit arrangement or agreement.

The Tribunal referenced previous decisions, including Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. vs. CIT, which held that in the absence of an explicit arrangement, it cannot be presumed that the benefit of A&M expenses enured to the foreign AE. The Tribunal reiterated that the existence of an international transaction cannot be inferred merely by comparing the expenses incurred by the appellant with those of comparables. The Tribunal concluded that the revenue failed to prove the existence of an international transaction and that the provisions of Chapter X could not be invoked without machinery provisions to compute the arm's length price (ALP). Consequently, the Tribunal allowed the appellant's appeal on this issue.

Issue 2: Transfer Pricing Adjustment on Import of Raw Materials
The appellant challenged the TPO's use of the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM) instead of the Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) method for benchmarking the transaction of import of raw materials. The appellant provided certificates from third-party vendors and AEs to substantiate that the prices charged were at arm's length. The TPO rejected these certificates, considering the third-party vendors as deemed AEs and questioning the reliability of the evidence provided.

The Tribunal noted that the contention that third-party vendors are not AEs remained unaddressed. Therefore, the certificates from third-party vendors confirming discounts and lower prices could not be ignored. The Tribunal remanded the matter to the AO/TPO to examine the benchmarking analysis provided by the appellant and proceed accordingly. The Tribunal also considered the appellant's alternate claim to benchmark the transaction based on gross margins, referencing decisions in similar cases. The Tribunal directed the AO/TPO to examine this approach if the initial benchmarking analysis was found unacceptable.

Issue 3: Disallowance of Payments to Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) for Non-Deduction of TDS
The draft assessment order included disallowances for payments made to HUL on account of A&M expenses, employee deputation costs, and selling discounts due to non-deduction of TDS. The Dispute Resolution Panel (DRP) sustained the addition on A&M expenses but directed the AO to allow claims for additional discounts and reimbursement of employee costs, subject to verification of certificates in Form No. 26A.

The Tribunal upheld the DRP's directions, emphasizing that the AO should verify the certificates and allow the claims accordingly. The Tribunal found no merit in the revenue's appeal challenging the DRP's direction to restrict the TP adjustment to international transactions alone, referencing jurisdictional High Court decisions supporting the DRP's stance.

Conclusion:
The Tribunal allowed the appellant's appeal on the A&M expenses issue, remanded the matter of import of raw materials for further examination, and upheld the DRP's directions regarding disallowances for non-deduction of TDS. The revenue's appeal was dismissed.

 

 

 

 

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