transaction and
should be at arms length price.
The assessee’s AE, Tellabs Denmark, was
awarded a contract by Power Grid Corporation for the supply, installation and
commissioning of telecommunication equipments. The work was to be performed
both outside India (manufacture and supply of telecom equipments from Denmark-
offshore) and in India (customs clearance in India and installation of the
equipments – onshore). The Off-shore and Onshore contracts were independent
contracts. Pursuant to a corporate restructuring, Tellabs Denmark assigned a portion
of the On-shore contract relating to freight, insurance and installation to the
assessee. Power Grid consented to the assignment on the condition that Tellabs
Denmark will continue to be liable for due performance of all contracts. The AO
& TPO held that as Tellabs Denmark continued to be liable to Power Grid for
the onshore contract, the assignment of the said contract by Tellabs Denmark to
the assessee constituted a sub-contract (and not an independent contract) and
that for the work of customs clearance and installation of equipment performed
thereby the assessee ought to have earned an arms length profit margin of
PBIT/Sales of 9.49%. On appeal by the assessee to the Tribunal HELD:
The assessee’s claim that the effect of
the assignment of the work of customs clearance and installation by Tellabs
Denmark to the assessee is that an independent contract came into existence
between the assessee and Power Grid and that as both parties were residents,
the transfer pricing provisions cannot apply is not acceptable because it is
clear from the various agreements that there has been only an assignment of the
portion of an onshore contract by Tellabs Denmark to the assessee and not a
novation of the portion of the onshore contract between Tellabs Denmark and
PGCIL. The consequences in the event of an assignment and novation are
different. Since there has only been an assignment and not novation of the
contract in the present case, the transaction of assignment between the
assessee and Tellabs Denmark cannot be said to be a transaction between two
persons either or both of them were not non-residents. It is a very strange situation because if Tellabs Denmark had not
assigned the portion of the onshore contract, the transfer pricing provisions
would not have been applicable because Tellabs Denmark and PGCIL are not Associated
Enterprises. Though the assignment of the portion of the onshore contract has
taken place exactly at the same consideration for which Tellabs Denmark agreed
to render services to PGCIL, nevertheless, the assignment agreement between
Tellabs Denmark and the assessee has all the ingredients of an international
transaction within the meaning of s.92 of the Act. However, the ALP will have
to be determined afresh because the international transaction is the assignment
between Tellabs Denmark and the assessee and not the agreement between the assessee
and PGCIL. The TPO should also consider whether as the assignment of the
contract had taken place due to business restructuring and on the same terms as
agreed between Tellabs Denmark and PGCIL, it could be said that this
transaction itself would constitute a comparable uncontrolled transaction
(Swarnandhra IJMII Integrated Township (ITAT Hyd)
distinguished).(ITA NO. 1037
&1038/Mum/2008, ,dt. 05/04/2013)
Tellabs India Private
Ltd v. ACIT (Bang)(Trib)www.itatonline.org
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