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2025 (5) TMI 863 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in the appeals pertain to:

(a) Whether the disallowance of management fees paid by the assessee to a related group company under section 40A(2)(a) of the Income Tax Act is justified, particularly when such fees are paid pursuant to a corporate services agreement and supported by detailed invoices and ledger accounts.

(b) Whether the deduction under section 80G of the Income Tax Act can be allowed on donations made by the assessee towards Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) expenses, despite CSR expenses being disallowed as business expenditure under Explanation 2 to section 37(1) of the Act.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue (a): Disallowance of Management Fees under Section 40A(2)(a)

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 40A(2)(a) of the Income Tax Act permits the Assessing Officer (AO) to disallow any expenditure if it is found to be excessive or unreasonable in relation to the services rendered. The Tribunal referred to earlier decisions, including a coordinate bench ruling in the case of Spicer India Pvt. Ltd., which dealt with similar facts involving payments to Anand Automotive Private Limited (AAPL) for management and corporate services.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The AO had disallowed 20% of the management fees paid to AAPL on an ad hoc basis without challenging the books of account or the genuineness of the services rendered. The Tribunal emphasized that the AO's disallowance was based on estimation and guesswork rather than any concrete evidence questioning the validity of the payments or services.

Key evidence and findings: The assessee produced a corporate services agreement stipulating that all services of AAPL were charged at 1.5% of sales, detailed invoices, ledger accounts, and quantification of services rendered. The Tribunal noted that the assessee's flagship company, Anand Group, had a well-established business model involving provision of management and corporate services through AAPL.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal observed that the AO failed to question the genuineness of the services or the accounting treatment. It applied the principle that the revenue authority cannot substitute the business judgment of the assessee, who is entitled to avail of services necessary for running its business. The Tribunal relied on the coordinate bench decision in Spicer India Pvt. Ltd., which had held that such management fees paid at a fixed percentage of sales were allowable.

Treatment of competing arguments: The revenue's argument rested on the alleged excessiveness of the fees, but the Tribunal found no evidence to support this. The Tribunal also noted that the revenue's senior departmental representative failed to dispute the legal propositions or the factual matrix established by the assessee.

Conclusions: The Tribunal upheld the deletion of the disallowance of management fees under section 40A(2)(a) and dismissed the revenue's appeals on this issue.

Issue (b): Deduction under Section 80G on CSR Expenses

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Explanation 2 to section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act, inserted by the Finance Act, 2014, specifically disallows CSR expenses as a deductible business expenditure. However, no corresponding amendment was made to section 80G, which provides deduction for donations made to registered charitable institutions.

The Tribunal examined recent coordinate bench decisions, notably Ericsson India Global Services Pvt. Ltd. vs. DCIT and Rustomjee Realty Private Limited, which held that while CSR expenses are disallowed under section 37(1), this does not preclude claiming deduction under section 80G, provided the donations meet the conditions prescribed under that section.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the legislative intent behind disallowing CSR expenses under section 37(1) was to prevent such expenses from being treated as business expenditure. However, since there was no express amendment to section 80G to deny deductions for CSR-related donations, the Tribunal held that the assessee is entitled to claim deduction under section 80G if the donee institutions are registered under that section.

Key evidence and findings: The assessee submitted receipts from donee institutions evidencing their registration under section 80G. The Tribunal found this sufficient to direct the Assessing Officer to verify the eligibility and allow the deduction accordingly.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal distinguished the present case from the decision relied upon by the revenue (Agilent Technologies case), which took a different view based on the reasoning that disallowance under section 37(1) should extend to section 80G. The Tribunal emphasized that the assessee claimed deduction under section 80G and not under section 37(1), and the law and precedents support such a claim if conditions are met.

Treatment of competing arguments: The revenue contended that CSR expenses disallowed under section 37(1) should also be disallowed under section 80G. The Tribunal rejected this, relying on coordinate bench rulings that the absence of legislative amendment to section 80G means that disallowance under section 37(1) does not automatically negate section 80G deductions.

Conclusions: The Tribunal directed the AO to allow the deduction under section 80G subject to verification of the donee institutions' registration and fulfillment of other conditions under section 80G. The appeal on this issue was dismissed.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"The AO has made the addition merely on ad hoc basis without questioning the books of account, who has accounted the entire receipts in its books and offered the same to tax. Moreover all the services have been rendered by AAPL to the assessee company as per corporate services agreement that 'all services of AAPL have been allowed at 1.5% of sales of the assessee'."

"The AO without questioning the same on merit merely proceeded to made the addition on ad hoc basis by way of estimation and guess work which is not sustainable in the eyes of law."

"Expenditure has to be examined with the businessman's stand point and revenue authority cannot sit in the chair of the businessman to decide as to availing of any services to run its business."

"There is no restriction in the Act that expenditure when disallowed for CSR cannot be considered u/s 80G of the Act. Hence, we remit the issue to the file of AO to examine the same whether the payments satisfy the claim of donation u/s 80G of the Act or not, if they qualify as donation u/s 80G of the Act then the requisite amount deserves to be allowed."

Core principles established include:

  • The disallowance of management fees under section 40A(2)(a) must be based on concrete evidence questioning the genuineness or reasonableness of the expenditure rather than ad hoc estimates.
  • Payments made pursuant to a corporate services agreement at a fixed percentage of sales and supported by proper documentation are allowable.
  • Disallowance of CSR expenses under Explanation 2 to section 37(1) does not automatically preclude deduction under section 80G of the Act.
  • Deduction under section 80G is contingent upon the donee institutions being registered under that section and other prescribed conditions being fulfilled.

Final determinations:

The Tribunal dismissed the revenue's appeals against the deletion of disallowance of management fees under section 40A(2)(a) for AYs 2018-19, 2019-20, and 2020-21. It also dismissed the appeal relating to the denial of deduction under section 80G on CSR donations, directing the AO to allow such deduction subject to verification of eligibility.

 

 

 

 

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