Clarity delivered on long standing issue of Permanent Establishment –
Recent decision of the Hon’ble
Supreme Court in the case
of UOI &
Anr. Vs U.A.E. Exchange Centre
(Civil Appeal No. 9775 of 2011)
Introduction
Multi-National Companies (‘MNCs’) are allowed
to set up their presence
in India subject to the Foreign Direct Investment
policy and other relevant regulations. One such presence that MNCs typically try to build
is in the form of a liaison
office (‘LO’) in India.
Such offices are set up by foreign enterprises to understand the Indian market
and to carry out certain
pre-defined limited activities. For setting up an LO, necessary approval is required.
An LO is a temporary office
of a foreign company in India set up for carrying out liaising
activities in relation to its business; without
any exchange of commercial value.
So, the scope of activities permitted to be done
by an LO, is fairly
restricted and well
defined. All expenses of an LO in India
are required to be borne
by its head
office outside India,
as the LO cannot
and does not
earn any income
in India. In a nutshell, the LO merely
acts as a communication channel between its head office
and entities in India.
The regulatory governing body to
provide approvals and to monitor activities of an LO in India, is the Reserve
Bank of India (‘RBI’). Since LO is permitted to carry out only restricted activities, often the issue
that arises is whether an LO can be considered as a Permanent Establishment (‘PE’)
of a foreign enterprise in India.
PE exposure and LO
An LO in India faces
the risk of being considered as a ‘business connection’ of its group
foreign entity / entities in India in terms of section 9(1)(i)
of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (‘the Act’). Alternatively, it could
also be treated
as a ‘PE’ of its group foreign
entity / entities
in India, in view of Article
5 of the relevant tax treaty (Article
5 deals with PE).
Nonetheless, a few exceptions to the aforesaid deemed tax exposure
in India are also
specified under the Act and in relevant
tax treaties, e.g.,
operation for the purchase of goods in India for the purpose of
export. Also, Article 5(3) of tax treaties inter alia generally mention
that if activities carried out in India are
preparatory or auxiliary in nature, PE is not constituted.
The common position adopted
vis-a-vis LOs’ is that since
they do not undertake any commercial or business activity
in India and their operations in India are limited to the
extent of approvals granted in the RBI’s approval letter, no profits earned by
their foreign parent should
be attributable to the activities undertaken by the LO in India.
However, judicial authorities in
India have delivered contradictory judgements on whether a particular activity
of an LO constitutes PE of its group foreign
entity in India
or not. All these judgements are based on given facts and hence they
cannot be simply applied unless the facts are same.
Recently, the Hon’ble Supreme
Court of India
(‘the Hon’ble SC’), in Civil Appeal No. 9775
of 2011, dealt with the issue of whether activities carried out by an LO in
India, constituted a PE of its foreign enterprise in India. The brief facts and
ruling of the Hon’ble SC have been discussed in the ensuing
paragraphs.
Brief facts of the case
The taxpayer, a company incorporated in UAE, was engaged
in offering remittance services to non-resident Indians (‘NRIs’) vis-a-vis
transferring amounts from UAE to India.
The taxpayer had obtained permission from the RBI to set up an LO in India to
carry out certain activities, such as:
Respond quickly and
economically to enquiries from correspondent banks
with regard to suspected fraudulent
drafts;
Undertake reconciliation of bank accounts held in
India;
Act as a communication centre for receiving
computer advices (via modem) of mail transfer,
T.T. stop payments
messages, payments details,
etc., originating from UAE
and transmission to Indian correspondent banks;
Printing Indian Rupee
drafts with facsimile signature from the Head Office
and counter signature by the authorised signatory of the office at Cochin.
Further, the RBI approval prohibited the following:
The LO should
not carry on any trading,
commercial or industrial activity; The LO shall
not charge any commission / fees; and
All expenses of the LO should be met out of funds
received from abroad.
The activities carried out by the LO were
in line with the terms
and conditions mentioned in the RBI approval. The taxpayer entered
into contracts with
NRI customers in UAE for providing remittance services and charged a one-time fee of Dirham
15. Post collection of funds from the
NRI remitters, the taxpayer made
remittance of the
said funds to India
in the following two ways:
a)
By telegraphic transfer
through bank channels; or
b)
On the request
of the NRI remitter, it sent instruments/cheques through
it’s LO to the
beneficiaries in India.
The entire expenses of the LO in
India were met exclusively out of funds received from UAE through normal
banking channels.
The taxpayer had always been
filing its return of income in India showing NIL income, and these were being
accepted by the tax department. However, with a view to obtaining tax
certainty, the assessee filed an application before the Authority for Advance Rulings
(‘AAR’) seeking a ruling on whether any of its income accrued/was deemed to
accrue in India from the activities carried out in India. The AAR ruled that
income shall be deemed to accrue in India from the activities carried out by
the LO in India. Further, the taxpayer was liable to pay tax in India,
as it had carried on business through
a PE in India. The AAR
specifically observed that the activities of the LO are a significant part of
the main activities carried out by the taxpayer in India and hence, they cannot
be deemed to be preparatory and auxiliary in nature. Accordingly, it was held
that the LO in India constitutes a PE in terms of Article
5 of India-UAE tax treaty.
The taxpayer filed a writ petition
before the Delhi High Court (‘HC’) against the ruling of the AAR. The Delhi HC
reversed the AAR ruling and ruled in favour of the taxpayer. It observed that
no income had accrued or could be deemed to have accrued in India. The Delhi HC
held that since the activities carried out by the LO in India were preparatory / auxiliary
in nature, these were covered by the exclusions from the scope of PE, as
specified in Article 5(3) of the IndiaUAE tax treaty. Further, the Delhi HC
relied on the Hon’ble SC’s decision
in the case of ‘DIT(IT)
vs Morgan Stanley
& Co. 7 SCC 1 (2007) (SC)’ and held that the activity carried
on by the LO in India did not contribute to earning of profits or gains by the
taxpayer in UAE and activities of LO were only supportive to the transaction
carried out in UAE.
The tax department challenged the Delhi HC decision by filing a Special Leave Petition
before the Hon’ble SC.
Observations and ruling of the Hon’ble
SC:
The Hon’ble SC observed that the core issue which
had to be addressed was whether the stated
activities of the
taxpayer would qualify
to be of preparatory or auxiliary character or not.
Considering the activities carried out by the
taxpayer in India through the LO, it appeared that the taxpayer was engaged in
‘business’ and had a ‘business connection’ in India. Hence, by virtue of
deeming provisions of section 9 of the Act, it would be a case of income deemed
to accrue or arise to the taxpayer in India. So, in a nutshell, taxability
under the Act did exist vis-Ã -vis the LO’s activities in India.
Moving further, the Hon’ble SC placed reliance
on various case
laws and held
that the current matter required analysis under the provisions of the
India-UAE tax treaty.
In view of the findings
recorded by the Delhi HC, the Hon’ble
SC observed that the
LO qualified to be a fixed place
of business of the taxpayer
in India through
which the business of the taxpayer
was wholly or partly carried
on. Hence, the LO would be
covered under the term “permanent establishment” as per Article 5(2)
of the India-UAE tax treaty. However, Article 5(3) of the India-UAE tax treaty begins
with a non-obstante clause
and provides that
notwithstanding the preceding provisions of the concerned Article, which would
mean clauses 1 and 2 of Article
5, if any of the clauses
in Article 5(3)
are applicable, a PE would
not be created.
Article 5(3)(e) of the India-UAE tax treaty specifically provides that if the activities carried on in the fixed place
of business are in the nature of preparatory and auxiliary activities, the said fixed
place of business would not be considered as a PE. Accordingly, it all now rested on
whether the activities of the LO in India were preparatory and
auxiliary in nature
as per Article
5(3)(e) of the India-UAE tax
treaty or not.
The Hon’ble SC observed that the key activities of
the LO were downloading particulars of remittances, printing cheques / drafts and
couriering / dispatching them to beneficiaries in
India. While doing these activities, the LO remained connected to the main server in UAE.
Further, the activities carried out by the LO were in conformity with
the conditions mentioned in
the RBI approval. Few prohibitory conditions mentioned in the RBI approval were
that the LO would not enter into any business contracts without prior approval
of the RBI or undertake any trading, commercial or industrial activity or render any consultancy or any other
services. Also, the LO could
not even charge commission/fee or receive any
remuneration or income
in respect of the activities undertaken by it in India.
Accordingly, the Hon’ble SC, after referring to its own earlier decisions in the cases
of ‘ADIT-1 vs. E-Funds IT Solutions Inc.
13 SCC 294 (2018) (SC)’, concluded that based on the onerous
stipulations levied by the RBI,
it could be safely
deduced that the activities of the LO in India
were restricted by the
RBI permission, and were preparatory and auxiliary in nature.
Thus, the activities carried out at the fixed place
(i.e. the LO) in India did not qualify as a ‘PE’ of the taxpayer as per Article
5 of the India-UAE tax treaty.
To conclude:
This is a welcome
ruling by the Hon’ble SC on PE exposure for
LOs set up in India
by foreign companies and embroiled in similar litigation. This has been
a long-standing issue demanding tax certainty, and rightly so, since all LOs in India work as per the RBI guidelines, which permit the LO to conduct only
basic activities. If the LOs were to indeed
perform PE like activities, it would mean that they are somewhere breaching the
RBI stipulations and going
way beyond their
permitted activities. Of course, while
this ruling does not
offer blanket PE risk immunity
to every single
LO in India, it does
provide a line of
direction, and also
once again echoes
and re-affirms prior
SC decisions on this matter.
It goes without saying that each
LO would have to evaluate their activities to determine PE exposure in India.
The PE exposure would be predominantly determined by the facts of each case and
the specific activities carried out by LO in India.
The key caution point
here would be to restrict
the activities of the LO to preparatory and auxiliary. Further, the LO should not venture into or
towards activities which could be viewed as commercial or core activities undertaken on behalf
of the foreign entity or its
group entity. If so done,
not only could
the LO trigger
a PE risk in India,
but it could also be seen
as going beyond the domain of the activity permissions granted by the RBI.
Further, appropriate documentation should be maintained to prove that
the activities of the LO are preparatory and auxiliary
in nature – for instance the RBI approval letter in the present case, which
reflected that the activities of the LO were mere
support services to the
foreign parent entity.
Also, while analysing the
‘preparatory and auxiliary’ activities, one may
additionally need to be mindful of the BEPS
Action Plan 7 and Article
13 of the Multi-Lateral Instruments (‘MLI’), which
deals with the issue of artificial fragmentation of activities between
various group companies to avail the benefit of ‘preparatory and auxiliary’ activities.
All in all, this
ruling does lend
tax certainty and
a disciplined and ring-fenced framework for LOs to operate
in India without
triggering a PE risk.
2 comments:
Very well analysed. However to go into the crux of preparatory and auxiliary service it would be an immense challenge to satisfy at the first stages of assessment.
Very well analysed. However to go into the crux of preparatory and auxiliary service it would be an immense challenge to satisfy at the first stages of assessment.
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