· First point before us for consideration is to decide whether
the Income of the International Software Consultant is taxable in India or not?
a. As per the recent
amendment in section 9 of Income tax act 1961proposed by finance bill 2010, as
passed by Loksabha on 29th April 2010;all payments made to a non-resident
outside India shall be taxable in India regardless of the fact that whether the
services have been rendered in India or not. It is the situs of the payer
and situs of utilization of service which is relevant now and not the situs of
rendering service.
The extract of amendment
is as follows:
In
section 9 of the Income-tax Act, for the Explanation occurring after
sub-section (2), the following explanation shall be substituted and shall be
deemed to have been substituted with effect from the 1st day of June, 1976,
namely:—
“Explanation.—For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared
that for the purposes of this section, income of a non-resident shall be deemed
to accrue or arise in India under clause (v) or clause (vi) or clause (vii) of
sub-section (1) and shall be included in the total income of the nonresident,
whether or not,—
(i) the non-resident has a residence or place of business or
business connection in India; or
(ii) the non-resident has rendered services in India.”.
The
payment being made by the company to the International Software Consultant Squarely
falls within the ambit of above amendment since it is a payment for technical
services as covered in explanation 2 to clause (vii) of sub-section (1) of
section 9 of Income tax act.
The
relevant extract of section 9 which talks about ‘Income deemed to accrue or
arise in India’ is as follows:
b. Another point to be
noted here is that the DTAA provisions for the
granting of relief to the non resident comes into picture, not at the time of
deciding the taxability of non resident in India; but at the time of deciding
the rates/relieves available to him. If the income is taxable as per the Indian Law, then the
Non resident can opt for the provisions of the DTAA for extinction or
marginalizing the liability so created
In
view of the above discussion it is clear that the International Software
Consultant is taxable in India and hence is liable for deduction of tax at
source on all payments received by it. The implications of the above conclusion
are as follows:
- The international Software
Consultant is required to file its Income tax return In India
b. It is required for the Indian company to take a
certificate in form 15CB from a certified chartered accountant certifying the
rates at which TDS on such payments has been deducted. Subsequently, it will have to
upload a form 15CA online.The duly signed Form 15CA
(undertaking) and Form 15CB (certificate), will be submitted in duplicate to
the Reserve Bank of India / authorized dealer. The Reserve Bank of India /
authorized dealer will in turn forward a copy the certificate and undertaking
to the Assessing Officer concerned
· Second point to be
considered is what should be the rate at which TDS needs to be deducted?
Section 195 of income tax act talks
about the tax to be deducted at source on payments being made to non residents.
It reads as follows:
“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”
The rates are to be decided in
accordance with the provisions of DTAA. The rates as per Income tax act or as
per DTAA; whichever is beneficial to the assessee shall prevail.
Now, as per the clauses of Indo-US DTAA, payments
for professional/legal services are covered in Article 15 that reads as under:
“Article
12
ROYALTIES
AND FEES FOR INCLUDED SERVICES
……....5.
Notwithstanding paragraph 4, "fees for included services" does not
include amounts paid :
………(e) to an
employee of the person making the payments or to any individual or firm of
individuals (other than a company) for professional services as defined in
article 15 (Independent Personal Services).
Article 15
INDEPENDENT
PERSONAL SERVICES
1. Income
derived by a person who is an individual or firm of individuals (other than a
company) who is a resident of a Contracting State from the performance in the
other Contracting State of professional services or other independent
activities of a similar character shall be taxable only in the first-mentioned
State except in the following circumstances when such income may also be taxed
in the other Contracting State:
(a) if such
person has a fixed base regularly available to him in the other
Contracting State for the purpose of performing his activities, in that case,
only so much of the income as is attributable to that fixed base may be taxed
in that other State ; or
(b) if the
person's stay in the other Contracting State is for a period or periods
amounting to or exceeding in the aggregate 90 days in the relevant taxable
year.
2. The term "professional
services" includes independent scientific, literary, artistic, educational
or teaching activities as well as the independent activities of physicians,
surgeons, lawyers, engineers, architects, dentists and accountants.”
Where tax
treaties define IPS to mean services rendered by a “resident”, the term could
include, inter alia, individuals, corporate entities, etc. [MSEB v. DCIT 83
TTJ 325 (Bom)]
Since the International Software Consultant do not have a fixed base
regularly available to it In India, nor its period of stay in India exceeds 90
days, there is no requirement to deduct TDS from payments made to it.
To have more understanding please
refer the following case laws.
01. Mumbai ITAT in the case of Ashapura
Minichem Ltd V ADIT held that Utilisation of service in India is enough to
attract taxability in India, however same has not been rendered in India and
hence same is liable for TDS. Thus, utilisation of service is must in India. In
the case of the assessee since the service had not been utilised in India and
hence not liable for TDS in India.
02. There are number on case laws on
Commission where payment made to foreign agent is not taxable in India because
service had not been served or utilised in India. Same basis must be utilised
for the assessee . Ref. Spahi Projects
(P) Ltd., 26 DTR 303.
03. Payment made by applicant to the UK
company for providing international leg of the service in transmitting
voice/data to places outside India using its international infrastructure and equipments
is neither royalty nor fees for technical services: payment is in the nature of
business profits and in the absence of PE of UK company in India, same is not
taxable in India. Ref. Cable &
Wireless Networks India (P) Ltd 25 DTR 49 (AAR). Similarly, the foreign
consultants use their international infrastructures to provide services on
foreign projects of assessee and hence cannot be liable for TDS in India.
04. In the case of Linklaters LLP v ITO, 42
DTR (Mumbai) (Trib) 233., it was held that In view of Explanation to section 9
(1), as amended retrospectively by Finance Act, 2010, the fees for professional
services earned by the assessee a UK based partnership firm, in connection with projects in India is
taxable in India under the domestic law. Since, in the case of the assessee,
the projects were outside India, same cannot be subject to TDS in India.
2 comments:
We at Live-in Space Corp Serve Pvt ltd specialize in sourcingcommercial Office space for rent in Bangalore
our expertise specializes in Plug and play office space for rent in Bangaloreacross globe. Live-in Space offers its customers a complete suite of Fully Furnished Office space for rent in Bangalore
Solutions including buying, selling and leasing of property with an approach that is multi-disciplinary, well thought-out and completely integrated.
Hi,
In which section it is mentioned that if the service provided outside India and utilised outside India, then no need to deduct TDS???
Post a Comment