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2025 (5) TMI 271 - AT - Income TaxTP Adjustment - Project Technical and Marketing Services Accounting and Financial Services Sourcing/Logistics/HR Services and Business Support Services ( IGS ) availed by the company from its Associated Enterprises (AEs) - addition on account of administrative and business support services availed - HELD THAT - From examination of record it is crystal clear that learned Authorized Representative for the assessee submitted the Cost benefit analysis and relevant documentary evidence of these services with regard to Finance and Accounting services HR/Sourcing Marketing Services and Product Technical Services and Business support services. As relying on Tribunal in assessee s case titled as Corteva Agriscience India Pvt. Ltd. 2024 (12) TMI 1566 - ITAT DELHI the entire Transfer Pricing Adjustment made by the revenue on account of administrative support services segment deserves to be deleted. Decided in favour of assessee.
The principal legal issues considered pertain to the characterization and arm's length pricing of intra-group services (IGS) availed by the assessee from its Associated Enterprises (AEs), specifically relating to Product Technical and Marketing Services, Accounting and Financial Services, Sourcing/Logistics/HR Services, and Business Support Services. The core questions include whether the services rendered constitute stewardship activities or genuine intra-group services, the appropriateness of the Transfer Pricing Officer's (TPO) benchmarking methodology and resulting adjustments, and the validity of the disallowance of expenses on these services. Additional issues involve the deductibility of education cess and secondary and higher education cess on income tax paid, though these were not pressed before the Tribunal.
Regarding the intra-group services, the legal framework involves the provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961, specifically sections 92CA and 250(6), which govern transfer pricing and appellate jurisdiction, respectively. The Transfer Pricing Officer applied the Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) method, determining the Arm's Length Price (ALP) of the services as nil, premised on the finding that the assessee failed to demonstrate tangible business benefits from the services. The TPO treated these services as stewardship activities, which are generally not chargeable to the recipient company, thereby disallowing the corresponding expenditure. The assessee contested this view, submitting detailed cost-benefit analyses and documentary evidence demonstrating the nature, receipt, and benefits of the services rendered by the AEs. The assessee adopted the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM) with a 5% profit level indicator as the Most Appropriate Method (MAM) for benchmarking, supported by financial analyses of comparable companies in the Asia Pacific and USA regions. The assessee also argued that the services were core business intra-group services, not stewardship activities, and that the disallowance was unjustified. The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) partly allowed the assessee's appeal by restricting the disallowance to 20% of the expenditure on certain services, relying on the previous year's order. However, the Tribunal undertook a detailed examination of the evidence, including extensive documentary proof of the services rendered, their modes of delivery (such as personal visits, conference calls, emails), and the tangible benefits derived, such as operational efficiencies, cost savings, enhanced business processes, and increased revenues. The Tribunal referred to authoritative precedents, including a Coordinate Bench decision and a jurisdictional High Court ruling, which elucidated the distinction between stewardship activities and intra-group services. The legal principle established is that stewardship activities are those undertaken solely to protect the capital investment or comply with the renderer's own regulatory requirements, without producing any effect on the recipient company. In contrast, intra-group services produce direct or indirect benefits to the recipient and are chargeable at arm's length. The Tribunal noted that the TPO's reliance on the stewardship activity classification was misplaced, as the services rendered by the AEs had demonstrable effects and benefits on the assessee's business operations. The Tribunal also observed that the TPO failed to provide external CUP data as mandated under Rule 10B, undermining the validity of the benchmarking. The Tribunal accepted the assessee's TNMM benchmarking and cost-benefit analyses as credible and sufficient to establish the arm's length nature of the transactions. In addressing competing arguments, the Tribunal acknowledged the Revenue's contentions but found them unsubstantiated in light of the comprehensive evidence and judicial precedents. The Tribunal emphasized that the payments were subjected to withholding tax and accepted by the tax authorities, reinforcing the genuineness of the transactions. The Tribunal declined to entertain the Revenue's challenge on the arm's length price determination, as no specific grounds were raised against the CIT(A)'s acceptance of the assessee's pricing. On the additional grounds concerning the deductibility of education cess and secondary and higher education cess, these were not pressed and thus left open. The significant holdings include the following verbatim excerpt from the Coordinate Bench decision, which the Tribunal adopted: "From the above, it is clearly established beyond reasonable doubt that assessee had indeed requested for rendition of services, the AEs have indeed rendered the various services to the assessee, the manner in which those services were rendered are also elaborated ... The entire payment deserves to be allowed. Further, we find that the Learned TPO having applied CUP method for benchmarking the international transaction of administrative support service charges segment had not brought any comparables to justify the ALP of these services to be at Rs Nil. That itself goes to prove that the entire TP adjustment made by the Learned TPO deserves to be deleted on that count itself." Core principles established include the clear demarcation between stewardship activities and intra-group services for transfer pricing purposes, the requirement that intra-group services must be benchmarked at arm's length considering the benefits derived, and the necessity for the Revenue to substantiate adjustments with appropriate comparable data. In conclusion, the Tribunal allowed the assessee's appeal on grounds relating to the intra-group services, deleted the transfer pricing adjustments made by the Revenue, and dismissed the Revenue's appeal. The additional grounds regarding cess deductions were not adjudicated due to non-pressing by the parties.
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