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2022 (5) TMI 1002 - AT - Income TaxTDS u/s 195 - Disallowance u/s 40(a)(i) - non-deduction of tax at source on payment made towards membership/subscription fee - principle of mutuality- amount paid by a member firm to the umbrella association - nature of membership and subscription fee paid to GTIL and whether such payment required withholding of tax at source under section 195 - whether the payment made by the assessee to GTIL falls within the definition of royalty either under the India- UK DTAA or domestic law? - HELD THAT - As irrespective of the fact whether use of trade mark/brand name is mandatory or voluntary the nature and character of payment made has to be determined by looking at the terms of the agreement under which payment was made. A reading of the Member Firms Agreement as a whole does not indicate that the payment made was for use of brand name. Member Firms Agreement read as whole would demonstrate that the umbrella association GTIL was formed for the benefit of its members. Therefore the relationship between GTIL and its members would be governed by the principle of mutuality. While dealing with more or less identical issue concerning payment of membership fee by KPMG to an international association/umbrella association viz KPMG International the Coordinate Bench in case of DCIT Vs. KPMG 2017 (4) TMI 869 - ITAT MUMBAI has held that the amount paid by a member firm to the umbrella association would fall within the ambit of principle of mutuality hence would not be taxable. Therefore the Bench held that there was no obligation on the assessee to deduct tax at source. In our view the ratio laid down by the Coordinate Bench in case of DCIT Vs. KPMG (supra) will also apply to the facts of the present appeal. In a recent decision rendered in case of DCIT vs. M/s. Deloitte Touche Tohmastu 2022 (5) TMI 896 - ITAT DELHI the Coordinate Bench has reiterated the view expressed in case of DCIT Vs. KPMG. Thus the issue in dispute in a way is covered by the aforesaid decisions of the Tribunal. Thus we hold that the payment made by the assessee to GTIL towards membership and subscription fee is not taxable at the hands of the payee. That being the case the assessee was not required to withhold tax at source in terms with section 195 of the Act. In view of the aforesaid we delete the addition. This ground is allowed. Addition u/s 40(a)(ia) with 195 - whether the assessee was required to withhold tax under section 195 of the Act on the payment made to GT UK LLP.? - HELD THAT - In the facts of the present case an Indian company had engaged a group entity of the assessee in India to render certain professional services which required to be performed in UK. Instead of deploying its employees to travel to UK to do the work GT Firm engaged another group entity GT UK LLP to do the work on its behalf. GT UK LLP instead of raising the invoice for the services rendered on GT Firm raised it on the assessee. Whereas GT Firm reimbursed the expenses incurred by the assessee on actual basis after deduction of tax at source. Obviously the departmental authorities have treated the payment made by the assessee to GT UK LLP as FTS under section 9(1)(vii) of the Act. However the departmental authorities have not at all examined whether it can be regarded as FTS under Article 13(4) of the Tax Treaty. The payment made cannot be regarded as FTS under Article 13(4) of the Tax Treaty. The only other provision under which it can fall is Article 15 of the Tax Treaty which speaks of independent personal services. However the payment cannot also fit into Article 15 as neither the services were rendered in India or any employees of the payee came to India to render such services. Even there is no material on record to suggest that the payee has rendered such services from any fixed base in India. Thus the payment made cannot even come under Article 15. In any case of the matter the amount in dispute has been subjected to TDS in India though may not be at the hands of the payee but certainly at the hands of the assessee. That being the factual position in our view the assessee was not obliged to deduct tax at source under section 195 of the Act while remitting the amount to GT UK LLP. Accordingly the disallowance is deleted. Ground is allowed.
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