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2018 (11) TMI 1107 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Characterization of payments received by the assessee from subscribers in India as fees for technical services (FTS).
2. Existence of a Permanent Establishment (PE) in India for the assessee.
3. Characterization of payments as royalty under the Income Tax Act and the India-UK Treaty.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Characterization of Payments as Fees for Technical Services (FTS):
The revenue argued that the payments received by the assessee from subscribers in India should be characterized as fees for technical services (FTS) under Explanation 2 to section 9(1)(vii) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, and as per the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) between India and the UK. The Assessing Officer (A.O) contended that the services provided by the assessee were technical in nature and the revenue earned therefrom was FTS. However, the CIT(A) disagreed, stating that mere use of technology in the provision of services does not per se lead to treating the same as technical services. The CIT(A) observed that the services provided did not "make available" any technical knowledge, skill, or know-how to the subscribers as required by the treaty. Thus, the CIT(A) concluded that the payments could not be characterized as FTS within the meaning of the Income Tax Act and the India-UK tax treaty. The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision, agreeing that the services rendered were in the nature of a "Standard facility" and did not involve any human intervention, thus not qualifying as FTS.

2. Existence of a Permanent Establishment (PE) in India:
The revenue also argued that the assessee had a Permanent Establishment (PE) in India, as the communication network in India, Reuters Dealing 2002, was owned and at the disposal of the assessee. The CIT(A) found that the communication network in India providing access to the assessee's server in Geneva was neither owned by the assessee nor at its disposal. The CIT(A) further noted that the assessee was rendering services from outside India and had no employees or personnel in India for rendering the services. Therefore, the CIT(A) concluded that the assessee did not have a PE in India. The Tribunal agreed with the CIT(A), stating that for constituting a fixed place PE, the place should be owned or at the disposal of the assessee, which was not the case here. The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s conclusion that the assessee did not have a PE in India during the year under consideration.

3. Characterization of Payments as Royalty:
The revenue raised additional grounds of appeal, arguing that the payments received by the assessee should be characterized as "royalty" under section 9(1)(vi) of the Income Tax Act and the India-UK Treaty. The A.O had initially characterized the payments as FTS, but the revenue sought to recharacterize them as royalty. The Tribunal declined to admit the additional grounds of appeal, noting that the A.O had consciously concluded that the fees received by the assessee were FTS after necessary deliberations. The Tribunal held that the A.O could not seek recharacterization of the payments in the garb of an additional ground of appeal before the Tribunal. The Tribunal also noted that the agreement relevant to the years under consideration was materially different from that for the subsequent years, and thus, the view taken by the Tribunal for the later years could not be simply applied to the present case.

Conclusion:
The Tribunal dismissed the appeals of the revenue for both A.Y 2001-02 and A.Y 2002-03, upholding the CIT(A)'s decision that the payments received by the assessee were not in the nature of FTS, the assessee did not have a PE in India, and the additional grounds of appeal regarding characterization of payments as royalty were not admitted. The Tribunal found no infirmity in the CIT(A)'s well-reasoned order and upheld the same.

 

 

 

 

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