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2019 (12) TMI 441 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Condonation of delay in filing the appeal by the Revenue.
2. Disallowance under Section 40(a)(ia) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 due to non-deduction of tax at source on payments made to non-residents.
3. Classification of services rendered by non-residents as technical or non-technical services.
4. Applicability of Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) between India and other countries.
5. Requirement to file Form 15CA and 15CB under Section 195(6) of the Income-tax Act.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Condonation of Delay:
The Tribunal found a reasonable cause for the Revenue's delay of 146 days in filing the appeal. Consequently, the delay was condoned, and the appeal was admitted.

2. Disallowance under Section 40(a)(ia):
The Revenue disallowed ?2,95,31,708/- paid to non-residents under Section 40(a)(ia) due to non-deduction of tax at source. The CIT(Appeals) deleted the disallowance for payments to non-residents in the USA and UK but upheld it for Germany and Spain. The Tribunal examined if the services rendered by non-residents were technical services, which would necessitate tax deduction under Section 195.

3. Classification of Services:
The Tribunal analyzed whether services like copy editing, indexing, and proofreading rendered by non-residents were technical services. The Tribunal noted that these services do not involve technology or technical expertise. The Mumbai Bench's decision in IMP Power Ltd. and the Tribunal's decision in Cosmic Global Ltd. were cited, confirming that such services are not technical. Therefore, payments for these services are not taxable in India, and no tax deduction is required under Section 195.

4. Applicability of DTAA:
The CIT(Appeals) applied the "make available" clause from the DTAA between India and the USA/UK, concluding that since technology was not made available, the payments were not taxable. However, for Germany and Spain, where the "make available" clause is absent, the CIT(Appeals) upheld the disallowance. The Tribunal disagreed, stating that the services were non-technical and thus not taxable, irrespective of the DTAA provisions.

5. Requirement to File Form 15CA and 15CB:
The Tribunal clarified that Section 195(6) requires furnishing information in Form 15CA and 15CB but does not mandate tax deduction. Non-compliance with this requirement attracts penalties under Section 271I but does not justify disallowance under Section 40(a)(ia).

Conclusion:
The Tribunal concluded that payments to non-residents in the USA, UK, Germany, and Spain for services like copy editing, indexing, and proofreading are not taxable in India as they are non-technical services. Consequently, the assessee is not liable to deduct tax under Section 195, and there can be no disallowance under Section 40(a)(ia). The Tribunal allowed the assessee's appeal and dismissed the Revenue's appeal.

 

 

 

 

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