Whether
tax should be withheld on the export commission payments to non-resident agents
made by an Indian company (especially in light of withdrawal of Circular 23 of 1969) ?
by
Mr.Vikram Vijayaraghavan,
Ms.Bhavya Rangarajan
M/s Subbaraya Aiyar, Padmnabhan & Ramamani (SAPR) Advocates
Answer:
Firstly,
let us assume that the Indian company pays export commission to non-residents for
procuring export orders as per commission Agreements drawn up with each of them.
The non-residents merely perform standard activities of a general commission agent
and do not have any right to negotiate or conclude any contract with clients
which vests solely with the Indian company (assessee/payer).
We
have to consider two propositions when it comes to withholding taxes on the foreign
commission payments to the non-residents made by the Indian company:
Proposition #1: Whether commission paid
to foreign agents on exports by an Indian firm will be liable to provisions of
TDS under the Indian Income Tax Act 1961?
Section
195
of the Income-Tax Act, 1961 reads as follows:
“Section 195. (1) Any person responsible for paying
to a non-resident, not being a company, or to a foreign company, any interest
or any other sum chargeable under the
provisions of this Act (not being income chargeable under the head
“Salaries”) shall, at the time of credit of such income to the account of the payee
or at the time of payment thereof in cash or by the issue of a cheque or draft
or by any other mode, whichever is earlier, deduct income-tax thereon at the
rates in force :
----- ……..
------…….
Explanation.—For the purposes of this section, where
any interest or other sum as aforesaid is credited to any account, whether
called “Interest payable account” or “Suspense account” or by any other name,
in the books of account of the person liable to pay such income, such crediting
shall be deemed to be credit of such income to the account of the payee and the
provisions of this section shall apply accordingly.
(2) Where the person responsible for
paying any such sum chargeable under
this Act (other than salary) to a non-resident considers that the whole of
such sum would not be income chargeable in the case of the recipient, he may
make an application to the Assessing Officer to determine, by general or
special order, the appropriate proportion of such sum so chargeable, and upon
such determination, tax shall be deducted under sub-section (1) only on that
proportion of the sum which is so chargeable. …..”
In
other words, Section 195 requires that any person responsible for paying to a
non-resident “any sum chargeable to tax “
shall deduct tax thereon at the rates in force at the time of credit of
such sum to the account of the payee or at the time of actual payment thereof,
whichever is earlier. Thus the fundamental question to be
considered is whether commission payment to the non-resident is chargeable to tax in India or not.
Section 4(1)
defines the income chargeable to tax
as the ‘Total income’ and Section 4(2) provides that tax shall be deducted from income
chargeable to tax.
Section 5 of
the Income Tax Act, states that:
“(1)
……
(2) Subject to the provisions of this
Act, the total income of any previous
year of a person who is a non-resident includes all income from whatever
source derived which
(a)
is received or is deemed to be received in India in
such year by or on behalf of such person ; or
(b) accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue
or arise to him in India
during such year.”
Whether
commission income of the non-resident agents will come within the meaning of- received, deemed to be received,
arises/accrues, deemed to arise/accrue in India:
1. Income received in India:
the non-resident agents do not receive the commission in India, so their income do not fall
under this category.
2. Income deemed to be received in India: Section 7 of the Income Tax Act lists the
income which are deemed to be received in India and this does not include
commission income
3. Income accrues or arises in India: the non-resident agents are
situated outside India and carry on their business activity outside India and market for customers
abroad.
There is no business
operation or rendering of marketing related services for the Indian company in
India by the non-resident agents. the commission income therefore, does not accrue or arise in
India
4. Income deemed to accrue or arise in India: the provisions of Sec 9(1)(i)/9(1)(vi)/9(1)(vii) provides for certain deeming fiction
wherein certain specified income or payments are deemed to accrue or arise in India.
Now,
Section 9(1)(i) states that
“ Section 9(1) The following incomes shall be deemed to accrue or arise in
India –
(i)
all income accruing or arising, whether
directly or indirectly, through or from any
business connection in India,
or through …….
[Explanation
1].—For the purposes of this clause—
(a) in the case of a
business of which all the operations are not carried out in India, the income
of the business deemed under this clause to accrue or arise in India shall be
only such part of the income as is reasonably
attributable to the operations carried out in India ;
.....
.....
…..”
a) The
concept of “business connection” was
dealt with in the landmark case of CIT
vs R.D.Aggarwal & Co. & ANR. (1965 56 ITR 20 SC) where the Apex
Court held that a business connection “””involves a relation between a
business carried on by a non-resident which yields profits or gains and some
activity in the taxable territories which contributes directly or indirectly to
the earning of those profits or gains. It predicates an element of
continuity between the business of the non-resident and the activity in the
taxable territories.”””. Given the above definition, there can be a case
made out by the tax authorities that there does exist a business connection
between the Indian company and the non-resident agent.
b) However,
it is clear from reading of Explanation
1 to Section 9(1)(i) that the income of the business to accrue or arise in
such a scenario is only such part that
can reasonably be attributed to operations carried out in India .
c) Since
the non-resident agents do not have a PE in India, no part of the commission income of
the agents can be said to accrue or arise in India.
Section 9(1)(vi): Royalty: Our view is that
commission payments cannot be construed as royalty payments going by the
definition of ‘royalty’ under the I.T. Act as given in Explanation 2 of Section 9(i)(vi)
Section 9(i)(vii): Fees for
technical services: From
a reading of the Agreements entered into with the foreign agents by the Indian
company, it would not be possible to construe by any possible means that mere
order procurement, sales promotion and no right to conclude contracts by the
agents will be a managerial, technical or consultancy service. Hence, in our view, commission payments to
non-resident agents cannot be as regarded ‘fees
for technical services’ as
defined in Explanation 2 of Section 9(vii), as the commission payment is not
for the rendering of any managerial, technical or consultancy
services
Another
aspect to be considered with respect to Royalty & Fees for technical
services is that normally the payment in the nature of Royalty or fees for
technical services, made to a non resident is not taxable in India except
for the operation of these deeming provisions. However under Clause (b) of
these two provisions, Royalty or fees for technical services would not accrue in
India if it is for the purpose of making or earning any income from any
source outside India.
A stand can thus be taken that as the fees are paid to non-residents for the
purpose of procuring export orders outside India,
it is for the purpose of earning from a source outside India. This
stand has been upheld by the Tribunals in CIT vs. KKK West Germany
(262 ITR 513 Mad.), Titan
Industries vs. ITO (11 SOT 206 Bang.) and Lufthansa Cargo India (P) Ltd. Vs.
DCIT (91 ITD 133 Del.).
Therefore the fact is even if the commission is considered as Royalty or fees
for technical Services, it does not accrue in India.
Case
laws: There are a
number of decisions about the
payment of commission to foreign agents which uphold the non-taxability of such
payments under the Indian Income Tax Act, 1961:
1. CIT
v Toshoku Ltd (125 ITR 525, SC) the Hon’ble Supreme Court
held that when a non-resident, with no operation of business in India, rendered services outside India to an Indian
concern , then provisions of Section 9 of the I.T Act 1961 are not attracted.
2. CIT vs. Eon Technology P. Ltd. (ITA No.
1167 dated 8th November 2011, Delhi HC) wherein the Delhi
High Court held that Indian taxpayer is not liable to deduct tax under Section
195 of the Act from commission and other related charges payable to
non-resident who has rendered services outside India
3. CIT vs. Sheraton International Inc
((2009) 313 ITR 267) where the Delhi High Court
has reversed the order of Tribunal by holding that the main service rendered by
the U.S Company to Indian company was advertisement, publicity and sales
promotion and these would neither fall under the category of ‘Royalty’ nor
‘Fees for Technical Service’
4. CIT
vs Indopel Garments (P) Ltd. Vs DCIT (2001 72 TTJ Mad 702) where the ITAT Chennai held
that no disallowance under s. 40(a)(i) could be made for commission payment,
without deducting tax, to foreign concern without acting as a selling agent of
the assessee for canvassing orders outside India as income will be deemed to
accrue or arise in India only if any part of the income is reasonably
attributable to the operations carried out in India and if no operations are
carried out in India, there would be no income deemed to accrue or arise in
India and no tax was to be deducted under s. 195 out of remittances made to
foreign concern.
5. Spahi
Projects (P) Ltd., IN RE (315 ITR 374 AAR) where
the AAR held that commission for services rendered in connection with arranging
sales abroad (in South Africa) cannot be brought within the net of income-tax
in India as there was no fixed place of business in India for the South African
entity nor does the SA entity enter into any contracts in India.
6. Ind
Telesoft P. Ltd, IN RE (543 of 2001) where the AAR held
that for payment of commission thereon to non-resident companies for securing
business outside India
there is no liability to deduct tax at source under the Indian Income Tax 1961
7. DCIT
vs. Ardeshi B. Cursetjee & Sons Ltd (2008 115 TTJ Mumbai 916) where the ITAT Mumbai held
that commission payment made to non-resident for services rendered outside
India not being chargeable to tax in India could not be disallowed under
Section 40(a)(i)
8. JCIT
vs. George Williamson (Assam) Ltd. (2009 116 ITD 328) where in the ITAT Guwahati
Bench held that with respect to payment of selling commission, brokerage and
other related charges to non-resident agents in respect of sale of tea outside
India, no income had accrued or arisen in India either under Section 5(2) or
under Section 9 and therefore no tax was deductible under Section 195.
9. DCIT
vs. Sanjiv Gupta (2011 135 TTJ Lucknow 641) where
the ITAT Lucknow had held that disallowance under Section 40(a)(i) for the A.Y
2007-08 on the commission payments made to non-residents was not called for as
the withdrawal of Circulars 23 of 1969 and 786 of 2000 by Circular 7 of 2009
dated 22-10-2009 was only operative from the date of issue of Circular 7 and
did not have retrospective effect
10. TVS
Motor Company vs. ACIT (ITA Nos.697 &757/Mds/2009) where
the ITAT Chennai in an order dated 22nd December 2010, amongst other
issues, has affirmed that export commission payments made to non-resident
agents will not be liable to tax deduction at source and disallowance u/s
40(a)(i) is to be deleted
In conclusion, it is clear from the
reading of the provisions of Section 9 as well as a number of case laws that
none of the Section 9 tests will succeed (specifically, Section 9(1)(i), 9(1)(vi)
and 9(1)(vii)) and therefore the income of foreign agents from commission
payments made by the Indian company is not deemed to accrue or arise in India
and hence is not taxable in India under the Indian Income Tax Act, 1961
Proposition #2: Whether commission paid
to the foreign agents will be income taxable in India
under the provisions of Double Tax Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) India has with
various countries?
·
Section
90 of the Indian
Income Tax Act provides that if a non-resident taxpayer is a tax resident of a
foreign country with which India
has a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA), then such non-resident
taxpayer can apply either the provisions of the Income Tax Act or the
provisions of the applicable tax treat, whichever
is more beneficial to it.
·
Let
us take the India-UK DTAA for example; let us assume one of the payments Is
made to a UK commission agent (Note that many other treaties including the USA
have similar FTS clauses like UK; if not always the Act may be relied upon as
being more beneficial).
·
Now
coming to the India-UK DTAA, the only contention of the Department can be to
construe the payments as Fees for Technical Services (FTS) which
is covered by Article 13(4) which reads:
“””(4) For the purposes of
paragraph (2) of this Article, and subject to paragraph (5), of this Article,
the term "fees for technical services" means payments of any kind to
any person in consideration for the rendering of any technical or consultancy
services (including the provisions of services of technical or other personnel)
which:
(a)
are ancillary and subsidiary to the application or enjoyment of the right,
property or information for which a payment described in paragraph (3)(a) of
this Article is received; or
(b) are ancillary and
subsidiary to the enjoyment of the property for which a payment described in
paragraph (3)(b) of this Article is received; or
(c) make available
technical knowledge, experience, skill, know-how or processes, or consist of
the development and transfer of a technical plan or technical design
…..”
It is seen that the DTAA adopts the more narrow definition
of fees for technical services given that it talks about only technical or
consultancy (and not managerial) services made available to the recipient of
said service.
The concept of “make
available” is discussed in detail in the India-USA DTAA and its annexed
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). The India-UK and India-USA DTAA have similar
wording when it comes to Fees for Technical Services (called “Fees for Included
Services” in the USA Treaty) and hence the India-USA can be looked at as a
source for understanding and derived import from. The MOU to the India-USA DTAA
treaty has this to say about its “make available” clause:
“””
Paragraph 4(b)
Paragraph 4(b)
of Article 12 refers to technical or consultancy services that make available
to the person acquiring the service technical knowledge, experience, skill,
know-how, or processes, or consist of the development and transfer of a
technical plan or technical design to such person. (For this purpose, the
person acquiring the service shall be deemed to include an agent, nominee, or
transferee of such person.) This category is narrower than the category
described in paragraph 4(a) because it excludes any service that does not make
technology available to the person acquiring the service.
Generally speaking, technology will be considered "made
available" when the person acquiring the service is enabled to apply the
technology. The fact that the provision of the service may require technical
input by the person providing the service does not per se mean that technical
knowledge, skills, etc. are made available to the person purchasing the
service, within the meaning of paragraph 4(b). Similarly, the use of a product
which embodies technology shall not per se he considered to make the technology
available.
Typical categories of services that generally involve either the development
and transfer of technical plans or technical designs, or making technology
available as described in paragraph 4(b), include:
1. engineering
services (including the subcategories of bioengineering and aeronautical,
agricultural, ceramics, chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical, metallurgical,
and industrial engineering);
2.
architectural services; and
3. computer
software development.
Under paragraph
4(b), technical and consultancy services could make technology available in a
variety of settings, activities and industries. Such services may, for example, relate to any of the following areas:
1.
bio-technical services;
2. food
processing;
3.
environmental and ecological services;
4.
communication through satellite or otherwise;
5. energy
conservation;
6. exploration
or exploitation of mineral oil or natural gas;
7. geological
surveys;
8. scientific
services; and
9. technical
training.“””
The
key takeaway from the reading of the MOU is that the service recipient must
acquire the service he/she paid for as well as the knowhow & technical
skill which will enable the service recipient to independently perform the
service thenceforth.
One
view could be that the said FTS clause is intended for specific
knowledge/knowhow transfer and merely procuring orders and sales promotion will
not result in any such specific
knowledge transfer as envisaged under the FTS clause and hence the payments
should be merely treated as business profits of the agent
·
Furthermore, the Courts have indeed decided
previously on a number of ‘make available’ cases upholding (correctly) the
principles outlined in the MOU and discussed above
o CIT
vs. Eon Technologies Ltd. [TS-661-HC-2011 (Del)]
o Raymond
Limited v DCIT [2003] 86 ITD 791 (Mum)
o Diamond
Services International Ltd vs UOI [2007] 304 ITR 201 (Mumbai High Court)
o Mahindra
& Mahindra vs DCIT [2009] 313 ITR 263 (AT) (Mum) (SB)
o DDIT
vs Scientific Atlanta Inc 2009-TIOL-585-ITAT-MUM
o InterTek
Testing Services India
(Pvt) Ltd [2008] 307 ITR 418 (AAR)
o Anapharm
Inc [2008] 305 ITR 394 [AAR]
o CESC
Ltd. vs DCIT [2003] 80 TTJ 806 (Kol)
o National
Organic Chemical Industries Ltd vs DCIT [2005] 96 TTJ 765 (Mum)
o NQA
Quality System Ltd v DCIT [2004] 92 TTJ 946 (Del)
o Mckinsey
A Co. Inc. (Philippines)
v Assistant Director of Income-tax
(International Taxation) 284 ITR (AT) 227 (Mum.)
o ITO
v M/s. Cepha Imaging P. Ltd. (ITAT Bangalore)
[2009-TIOL-558-ITAT-BANG]
o ACIT
vs. Modern Insulator Ltd. (2011 56 DTR 362 Trib.)
·
Therefore,
in our view, such payments would NOT be fees for technical services under the
India-UK Treaty but would be the business profits in the hands of the recipient
(foreign agents) and in the absence of their business presence (i.e., permanent
establishment) in India such
payments would not be taxable in India
under Article 5 (Permanent Establishment) read with Article 7 (Business
Profits) of the India-UK DTAA.
Now,
given that we have conclusively shown, via both Propositions above, that the
payments made to the agents are not
taxable in India under the Indian Income Tax Act and/or the DTAA, it is now
settled law by the decisions of the Delhi High Court in Van Oord and the Hon’ble Supreme Court in G.E.Technology
Center vs. CIT (327 ITR 256) wherein
it has been held that that if there is no income taxable in India there is no TDS
under the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Impact of CBDT circular No.
7 of 2009:
Let
us now analyze the impact of the recent CBDT circular No. 7 of 2009 (which withdrew the earlier CBDT circulars
(#23 of 1969, #163 of 1975, #786 of 2000)).
•
CBDT
circulars - a short overview of their
powers
•
Section
119 of the I.T.Act empowers CBDT to issue orders,
instructions and directions to subordinate authorities.
•
CBDT issues circulars which are binding
effect on tax authorities so long as they are not in conflict with the
provisions of the Act or interpretation provided by the Supreme Court.
•
Withdrawal does not necessarily mean that a
non–resident automatically is taxable in India in the situations described
in the circular. The taxability will be evaluated independent of the provisions of the circular.
•
In short, circulars issued under section 119
are in the nature of instructions/ guidelines and do not constitute law.
•
Thus the earlier CBDT circulars (23 of 1969,
163 of 1975, 786 of 2000) were useful in merely
clarifying the issues related to
non-resident payments and reinforced the existing provisions, nothing more
nothing less.
•
This
view has been upheld by various decisions of the Tribunal including the Lucknow
Tribunal in DCIT
vs. Sanjiv Gupta (2011 135 TTJ Lucknow 641). We
also point out that in DDIT vs. M/s. Siemens Aktiengesellschaft (ITA
No.6133/Mum/2002 & 7589/Mum/2003 said Circulars (23 of 1969, 163 of
1975 and 786 of 2000) have been held to apply only prospectively in any case.
Thus even after the recent
CBDT circular (which purports to withdraw the earlier circulars) should not
change the Indian company’s position that tax needed not be deducted at source
for payments made to its non-resident agents.
Department’s
Position:
Notwithstanding
all the points discussed above, the Department seems to have recently taken a stand, especially with the
withdrawal of the above mentioned CBDT Circular #23 of 1969, to tax all remittances to non-residents. The Department typically disallows
the entire expenditure u/s
40(a)(i) of the Act and the assessee company has to prefer appeals to establish
their case. In other words due to 40(a)(i) disallowance the assessee ends up
paying 30% (i.e., normal company tax rate) and litigating the case rather than
paying 10% (or whatever typically lower rate the applicable DTAA prescribes)
via withholding taxes.
Thus,
it would be prudent for administrative purposes and to avoid litigation,
for the Indian company to either gross-up the payment to the foreign agents
(OR) withhold the tax on its payments to foreign agents (and have the foreign
agents either claim a corresponding tax credit in their country of residence or
have them file a return in India to claim refund)
Furthermore for completeness sake we would like to
discuss two related issues:
-
In a
very recent decision of the AAR in SKF Boilers & Driers Pvt. Ltd. (AAR
No.983-984 of 2010) dated 22nd February 2012 though the AAR did not go into the merits of
the applicable DTAA it held that under the Act, after the aforesaid Circular
withdrawal, tax has to be deducted on commission agent payments for supply of
boilers to Pakistan by an Indian company. We believe this ruling underscores
the current general trend that payments made to foreign entities are to be
subject to tax withholding whatever be the circumstances.
-
We
would also like to bring to your attention that the Department is now taking a
view after the recent introduction of controversial S.206AA of the Act, that if that the non-resident does not have a
PAN number, tax is to be deducted at a 20% flat-rate. This provision though needs
to be legally contested as the total tax liability of the Non-Resident is only
10% under DTAA and hence the withholding taxes cannot be more than the total
lax liability under the DTAA. In any
case, it is suggested that non-resident obtain a PAN in India.
Overall conclusion:
Our
considered view is that:
- Commission payments to
non-resident agents for export by Indian firm does not represent income
which is chargeable to tax under section 195 of the I.T Act 1961 when analyzed under the framework of
provisions of the Indian I.T Act or under most Treaties. Hence, in our
view, tax deduction at source is not required for said commission
payments to non-resident agents for export of cotton by Indian
company.
- The
CBDT circular 7 of 2009, which withdraws earlier CBDT circular(s) specific
to the case, does not have an effect on the
locus standi that the tax deduction at source is not required for
commission payments to non-resident agents by the Indian company. In
short, the position has not changed and status quo of Indian company payments
can be maintained with the new circular
- However,
as a matter of abundant caution and in order to avoid litigation, it would
be advisable for the Indian company to either gross-up the tax OR deduct
the tax (and have the non-resident agent either claim tax credit or file
its return in India to claim refund)