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2025 (2) TMI 1128 - AT - Income TaxTP Adjustment - Arm s length price of guarantee fee in respect of international transactions of corporate guarantee given by the assessee to AEs - HELD THAT - We note that the Assessee had supported the ALP Guarantee Commission Rate of 0.41% per annum determined by the Assessee with the Facility Sanction Letter dated 18/11/2016 issued from Kotak Mahindra Bank to the Assessee expressing its willingness to give guarantee on behalf of the AEs concerned in consideration of guarantee commission of 0.30% per annum whereas the Assessee had determined ALP Guarantee Commission Rate at 0.41% per annum. We note that the TPO had not brought on record any material to support Guarantee Commission Rate at 1.25% per annum and has merely placed reliance upon the order passed by the DRP for the Assessment Year 2015-2016 (which has since been overturned by the Tribunal). While the Revenue has pleaded that determination of ALP is a factual exercise which needs to be carried out on yearly basis we find that the TPO has failed to follow this approach and had rejected the ALP determined by the Assessee for the AY 2016-2017 by following the DRP order for the AY 2015-2016. We decline to interfere with the order passed by the CIT(A) deleting the transfer pricing addition. Disallowance u/s 14A r.w.r. 8D - Assessee has earned exempt dividend income during the relevant previous year by investing its surplus funds in units of Liquid Mutual Funds - CIT(A) was justified in restricting the disallowance to the suomoto disallowance made by the assessee - HELD THAT - It is admitted position that there is no change in the facts and circumstances of the present case. We note that the AO has proceeded to invoke provisions contained in Rule 8D of the IT Rules without recording his dissatisfaction regarding the computation/methodology adopted by the Assessee to arrive at the suo moto disallowance u/s 14A of the Act. CIT(A) had granted relief to the Assessee by following the decisions of the Tribunal in the case of the Assessee for earlier Assessment Years 2021 (10) TMI 822 - ITAT MUMBAI 2023 (10) TMI 1180 - ITAT MUMBAI 2022 (12) TMI 1464 - ITAT MUMBAI 2023 (3) TMI 653 - ITAT MUMBAI 2021 (10) TMI 453 - ITAT MUMBAI 2021 (4) TMI 254 - ITAT MUMBAI which was binding upon the CIT(A) since there was neither any change in facts or in law. No infirmity in the order passed by the CIT(A).
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The legal judgment primarily revolves around two core issues: (a) The determination of the Arm's Length Price (ALP) for the guarantee fee in respect of international transactions involving corporate guarantees provided by the assessee to its Associated Enterprises (AEs). The primary question is whether the CIT(A) erred in restricting the ALP to 0.41% as opposed to the 1.25% determined by the Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO). (b) The appropriateness of disallowance under Section 14A of the Income Tax Act, concerning the expenditure incurred for earning exempt income. Specifically, whether the CIT(A) was justified in restricting the disallowance to the suomoto disallowance made by the assessee instead of following the computation mechanism under Rule 8D of the IT Rules. 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issue 1: Determination of ALP for Guarantee Fee - Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents: The determination of ALP is governed by Section 92CA(1) of the Income Tax Act, which mandates that international transactions be conducted at arm's length. The TPO initially determined the ALP at 1.25% based on external Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) method, while the assessee used an internal CUP method to arrive at 0.41%. - Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the CIT(A) had followed precedents from the assessee's own previous cases, where the Tribunal had consistently upheld the internal CUP method. The Tribunal emphasized that the TPO had not provided substantial evidence to justify the 1.25% rate and had relied on a previous DRP order, which had been overturned by the Tribunal. - Key Evidence and Findings: The assessee supported its ALP determination with a Facility Sanction Letter from Kotak Mahindra Bank, which expressed willingness to provide guarantees at a rate of 0.30% per annum. The TPO's reliance on the DRP's previous order was found insufficient as it lacked new evidence. - Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that ALP determination is a factual exercise requiring yearly assessment. However, the TPO's approach lacked this annual review, relying instead on previous determinations without fresh evidence. - Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Tribunal favored the assessee's argument that the internal CUP method was appropriate, given the lack of contrary evidence from the TPO. The Tribunal also referenced multiple precedents where similar ALP determinations had been upheld. - Conclusions: The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision to delete the transfer pricing addition, affirming that the ALP of 0.41% was appropriate and consistent with past decisions. Issue 2: Disallowance under Section 14A - Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 14A of the Income Tax Act deals with disallowance of expenditure incurred in relation to income not includible in total income. Rule 8D provides a method for determining such disallowance when the Assessing Officer is not satisfied with the assessee's computation. - Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the Assessing Officer had not recorded dissatisfaction with the assessee's methodology, a prerequisite for invoking Rule 8D. The CIT(A) had relied on consistent past Tribunal decisions in the assessee's favor. - Key Evidence and Findings: The assessee's computation involved a methodical allocation of expenses related to exempt income, which had been accepted in prior assessments. The CIT(A) found no reason to deviate from this established method. - Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal found that the Assessing Officer's failure to express dissatisfaction with the assessee's computation invalidated the application of Rule 8D. The CIT(A)'s reliance on past decisions was deemed appropriate. - Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Tribunal dismissed the Revenue's argument for applying Rule 8D, given the lack of recorded dissatisfaction and the consistency of the assessee's method with past accepted practices. - Conclusions: The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision to restrict disallowance to the suomoto amount determined by the assessee, dismissing the Revenue's appeal. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS - Preserve Verbatim Quotes of Crucial Legal Reasoning: "The Tribunal in its aforesaid order passed in the assessee's own case for the preceding years had approved the determining of ALP of corporate guarantee provided by the assessee to a foreign bank for facilitating raising of loan by its AE by applying of Internal CUP by the assessee." - Core Principles Established: The determination of ALP must be based on consistent and factual analysis, with reliance on internal CUP methods when substantiated by evidence. The application of Rule 8D requires explicit dissatisfaction with the assessee's computation. - Final Determinations on Each Issue: The Tribunal dismissed the Revenue's appeal, affirming the CIT(A)'s decisions on both the transfer pricing adjustment and the Section 14A disallowance, thereby upholding the assessee's methodologies.
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