Home Case Index All Cases Income Tax Income Tax + AT Income Tax - 2020 (7) TMI AT This
Forgot password New User/ Regiser ⇒ Register to get Live Demo
2020 (7) TMI 822 - AT - Income TaxTP adjustment made on account of intra-group services - assessee has purportedly received support services from its regional headquarter primarily in the areas of management of human resources, sale, debt management and collection, advertisement and marketing, legal services, etc. - TPO applied ‘benefit test’ on the intra-group services received by the assessee and determined the ALP of such services at ‘Nil’ - HELD THAT:- We find that the TPO has failed to properly analyse the support services received by the assessee from its regional headquarter - The settled legal position now is that the ALP of intra group services cannot be determined at ‘Nil’. The ‘benefit test’ analysis which was earlier accepted has now been held to be redundant. The Tribunal in the case of Merck Ltd. [2016 (3) TMI 1105 - ITAT MUMBAI] has held the concept of ‘benefit test’ as irrelevant. The Tribunal held that by applying befit test ALP of intra-group services cannot be determined at ‘Nil’. Thereafter, in various decisions by the Tribunal the application of benefit test analysis has been rejected. Thus, we deem it appropriate to restore the issue back to the file of TPO for fresh adjudication and for determination of ALP of intra-group services by applying most appropriate method specified in section 92C of the Act. Ground No.1 of the appeal is thus, allowed for statistical purposes. Adjustment in respect of reimbursement of expenses - Since we have restored ground No.1 to the TPO, we deem it appropriate to restore ground No.2 of the appeal as well, to the TPO for de-novo adjudication after affording reasonable opportunity of hearing to the assessee. Adjustment made in respect of loans extended by the assessee to domestic group companies, held as ‘deemed International Transaction’ - HELD THAT:- A bare perusal of the meaning of “international transaction” defined in section 92B (1) would show that a transaction would fall within the ambit of international transaction if, either or both the associated enterprises are nonresident. In the present case none of the AEs i.e. neither the assessee nor the domestic group companies with which the assessee had entered into transaction are non-residents. All the companies are domestic entities and are subject to tax under the provisions of the Act. In the present case, the authorities below have failed to take note of the fact that the transactions in question are within domestic entities only. No overseas entity is involved in the transaction. Unless the conditions set out in subsection (1) are satisfied, the provisions of subsection (2) cannot be invoked. The authorities below in the present case have erred in invoking deeming fiction solely on the premise that since shareholders of overseas holding company are holding shares of the assessee and AEs, ‘in substance’ the transaction between the assesse and the domestic group entities would fall within the ambit of “deemed international transaction”. Deeming provisions cannot be invoked by expanding the latitude of expressions used in the section. The authorities below have failed to take into consideration the fact that all group entities are companies incorporated in India having separate legal existence. Except for common shareholding, no material has been relied on by the TPO/DRP to substantiate that the transaction between the entities was influenced by the overseas holding company. The findings of the lower authorities are based on conjectures and surmises. The authorities below have travelled too far to bring the transactions between the assessee and domestic entities within the domain of ‘deemed international transaction’ under section 92B (2) of the Act (prior to amendment). We find merit in ground no.3 of the appeal, according the same is allowed.
|