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2020 (11) TMI 1127 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered in these appeals primarily revolve around transfer pricing adjustments made by the Assessing Officer (AO) and Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO) relating to software development services transactions between the appellant and its associated enterprises (AEs) both in the United States and outside the United States. Additional issues concern the compliance with procedural directions under sections 144C(5) and 144C(13) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 ("the Act"), the determination and computation of arm's length price (ALP), the application of comparability criteria in selecting comparable companies, and the grant of tax credits and deductions including interest levies under various sections of the Act.

Specifically, the issues include:

  • Whether the AO erred in not giving effect to the directions of the Dispute Resolution Panel (DRP) under section 144C(5) and thereby violating section 144C(13) of the Act.
  • The correctness and legality of transfer pricing adjustments made to transactions with US-based AEs, including the methodology for determining ALP, acceptance or rejection of economic analyses and comparable companies, and computational accuracy.
  • The correctness and legality of transfer pricing adjustments made to transactions with non-US AEs, including similar issues of ALP determination, comparability analysis, and computational aspects.
  • Whether the AO erred in computing total income and tax liability including the grant of credit for tax deducted at source (TDS) and advance tax.
  • Whether the AO erred in levying interest under sections 234B, 234C, 234D, and 244A of the Act.
  • Whether the AO erred in denying deductions under sections 10A/10AA of the Act in respect of interest income and miscellaneous income.
  • Whether the appellant is entitled to benefit of the +/- 5 percent range under the proviso to section 92C of the Act while computing ALP.
  • Whether the AO/TPO erred in rejecting certain comparable companies based on various quantitative and qualitative filters such as accounting year differences, turnover thresholds, revenue trends, employee cost ratios, and export earnings percentages.
  • Whether the AO/TPO erred in failing to consider foreign exchange fluctuations while computing operating margins.
  • Whether the AO/TPO erred in not making suitable adjustments for differences in risk profiles between the appellant and comparables.

Regarding the transfer pricing adjustments related to transactions with US AEs (Issues 1 to 10 and 1 to 9 in respective appeals), the appellant contended that the AO/TPO failed to comply with the DRP's directions under section 144C(5), rendering the assessment order void ab initio under section 144C(13). The appellant also challenged the addition made to income on account of transfer pricing adjustments, disputing the rejection of its economic analyses and the comparability filters applied by the AO/TPO. It was argued that the AO/TPO relied solely on FY 2009-10 data, which was not available at the time of documentation, and erred in rejecting internal transactional net margin method (TNMM) analyses submitted by the appellant. The appellant further challenged the exclusion of certain comparables based on turnover, accounting year, revenue trends, employee cost, and export earnings criteria, asserting these filters were unreasonable. Computational errors and failure to adjust for risk differences and the +/- 5 percent range under section 92C were also alleged.

For transactions with non-US AEs (Issues 11 to 20 and 10 to 18), similar contentions were raised regarding non-compliance with DRP directions, erroneous transfer pricing adjustments, improper rejection of economic analyses and comparables, and computational errors. The appellant additionally argued that the AO/TPO improperly rejected comparables based on turnover thresholds (e.g., turnover less than INR 5 crores), accounting year differences, diminishing revenue trends, employee cost ratios, and export earnings percentages. The failure to consider foreign exchange fluctuations and risk profile differences was also contested, as was the denial of the benefit of the +/- 5 percent range under section 92C.

With respect to corporate tax and other grounds (Issues 21 to 23 and 19 to 22), the appellant challenged the AO's determination of total income and tax liability, the denial of full credit for TDS and advance tax, the levy of interest under various sections, and the denial of deductions under sections 10A/10AA in relation to interest and miscellaneous income forming part of business income.

The legal framework governing these issues includes the provisions of the Income-tax Act, 1961, particularly sections 92C (computation of arm's length price), 144C (assessment and DRP directions), 10A/10AA (deductions for export profits), and the rules and guidelines relating to transfer pricing, including the use of comparability criteria and economic analyses such as TNMM. The Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) framework between India and the US also plays a role in resolving transfer pricing disputes.

The Court's interpretation and reasoning reflect that the disputes relating to transfer pricing adjustments with US AEs (Grounds 1 to 10 in one appeal and 1 to 9 in the other) have been resolved through MAP proceedings between the competent authorities of India and the US. Consequently, these grounds were allowed to be withdrawn and dismissed as such. The Court acknowledged the appellant's and Revenue's agreement on this resolution.

Regarding the transfer pricing adjustments with non-US AEs and other corporate tax issues, the appellant indicated an intention to settle the disputes under the Direct Tax Vivad Se Vishwas Act, 2020, a scheme designed to resolve pending tax disputes. The Revenue did not oppose this approach. In light of this, the Court consigned these appeals to records and treated them as dismissed, subject to a caveat that if the disputes are not ultimately resolved under the Vivad Se Vishwas Act, the appellant may seek reinstitution of the appeals, which the Tribunal will consider appropriately.

The Court did not delve into the substantive merits of the transfer pricing adjustments relating to non-US AEs or the corporate tax issues, deferring to the settlement mechanism chosen by the appellant. The procedural non-compliance issues under section 144C were noted but not adjudicated upon due to the settlement approach.

In terms of treatment of competing arguments, the Court accepted the appellant's submissions regarding resolution through MAP and the Vivad Se Vishwas Act without contest from the Revenue. The Court thus avoided a detailed examination of the transfer pricing methodologies, comparability analyses, or computational disputes, effectively suspending adjudication pending settlement.

The significant holdings include the following:

"Insofar as the dispute manifested in Ground of Appeal Nos.1 to 10 relating to the transfer pricing adjustment entered with Associated Enterprises in USA is concerned, the same has been resolved in terms of the MAP proceedings and, therefore, the said grounds may be allowed to be withdrawn."

"In view of the submissions made, the appeal in ITA No.1876/Del/2015 is consigned to records and treated as dismissed."

"However, the aforesaid is subject to a caveat that in case the dispute relating to tax arrears for the captioned assessment year is not ultimately resolved in terms of the aforestated Act, the appellant shall be at liberty to approach the Tribunal for reinstitution of the appeal and the Tribunal shall consider such application appropriately as per law."

"Accordingly, the appeal in ITA No.1876/Del/2015 is dismissed."

"In the result, both the appeals of the assessee are dismissed."

These pronouncements establish the principle that where disputes are resolved through MAP or settlement schemes like the Vivad Se Vishwas Act, the Tribunal will dispose of appeals accordingly, preserving the appellant's right to reinstitute appeals if the settlement fails. The Court's approach underscores the importance of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms in transfer pricing and tax disputes, emphasizing procedural compliance and the avoidance of duplicative litigation.

In conclusion, the Tribunal dismissed both appeals primarily on the basis of settlement through MAP and Vivad Se Vishwas Act, without adjudicating the substantive transfer pricing or tax issues. The appellant retains the right to reinstitute appeals if the settlement mechanisms do not resolve the disputes. The decision highlights procedural adherence to DRP directions and the evolving landscape of dispute resolution in direct tax matters.

 

 

 

 

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