Based on the case SAIC Motor Corporation Limited v. ACIT, the Delhi ITAT ruled on several key issues regarding Article 5 (Permanent Establishment) of the India-China Tax Treaty:
Offshore Supply of Parts: The sale of CKD car parts was held to be an offshore transaction with no income taxable in India. The title, risk, and rewards transferred outside India. The requirement for inspection upon delivery in India does not alter this offshore character.
Supervisory PE (Seconded Employees): The secondment of employees to the Indian Associated Enterprise (AE) did not create a Supervisory PE. This was because the employees worked under the control of the Indian AE and were not supervising a construction or installation project as defined in the Treaty.
Fixed Place PE (Manufacturing Unit): The foreign company did not have a Fixed Place PE through its Indian subsidiary's manufacturing unit. The Tribunal held that the parent company did not have the right to use or control the subsidiary's premises. It cautioned that treating such common parent-subsidiary setups as a PE would cause widespread disruption in global cross-taxation.
In essence: The ITAT ruled in favor of the foreign taxpayer (SAIC Motor), holding that its operations in India through offshore sales, seconded staff, and its subsidiary's manufacturing did not create a taxable Permanent Establishment under the India-China Tax Treaty.
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