An Update
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Justice may be blind. But it's not dumb. Robots just arent as devious as humans. Yet. But they're learning. JL
Oliver Roeder reports in the 538 blog:
ICL
Input from a law student >
The Supreme Court in Ajanta Pharma Ltd. V. Commissioner of Income Tax-9, Mumbai [1] has clarified that the intent with which the...
Cross refer Lci Art:
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Xcerpts
<Foreign portfolio investors, hit by the minimum
alternate tax (MAT) issue, might find a fresh problem snapping at their heels.
This time, rules governing indirect transfers are
emerging as a cause for concern, especially for foreign portfolio investors running
multi-billion-dollar India-focused funds.
Indirect transfer rules look to tax the transactions where foreign companies buy or sell their India assets. Sometimes, such transactions take place through holding companies set up in jurisdictions with favourable tax laws. The government has taken the position that such indirect asset transfers are also to be taxed, as the route can otherwise be used for getting around paying taxes in India.>
Indirect transfer rules look to tax the transactions where foreign companies buy or sell their India assets. Sometimes, such transactions take place through holding companies set up in jurisdictions with favourable tax laws. The government has taken the position that such indirect asset transfers are also to be taxed, as the route can otherwise be used for getting around paying taxes in India.>
Related News
- FPIs skip applying for treaty exemption on MAT
- MAT tussle: More FPIs take tax dept to court
- Foreign investors' MAT woes not over just yet
- Tax net: Foreign portfolio investors caught in a bind
- FIIs with tax pact shield may be exempt from MAT
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Jun 13, 2015
Robots Aren't As Good As Humans At Predicting Supreme Court Decisions
Oliver Roeder reports in the 538 blog:
ICL
Input from a law student >
Posted: 09 Jun 2015 11:43 PM PDT
[The following guest post is contributed by Abhik Chakraborty, who is a 4th year student at NUJS, Kolkata]
Cross refer Lci Art:
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22 April 2015
Published Date |
For Ready Read:
Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR)-
Self-contradicting Rulings (A Critique)
Prologue
Historically, in the Indian income tax regime, by and
large, there has always been more than a justifiable cause for taxpayers, in
general, and foreign taxpayer-companies in particular, in clamoring for,
besides ‘simplification’ of the law, a hassle- free implementation and
administration. So much so, they are obliged to feel frustrated but keep on
persisting, hoping on hopes, in efforts for a non-adversarial treatment from
the Revenue. In the recent years, no marked improvement has, however, come to
be noted. Instead, if at all, any steps taken and worth a mention, -including
so-claimed rationalization measures attempted through annual fiscal budgets,
with the aim of reformism, - has failed to bring about the most desired
outcome. And those have come to be widely regarded and criticized as
retrograde, rather regressive, rendering the scenario, of course from the
taxpayers’ angle, tending to change from bad to worse. The root causes have
come to stay and continue as an obsession, stubbornly, over the decades. An
attempt has been made herein, to touch upon the most outstanding and long
enduring root causes.
1. Recently, an instance of a very recent origin has come to be reported
and given publicity of its kind in the media. The reference is to the report
(s) under sensational headlines:
1.1. A random selected portion of the first mentioned report reads:
“When contacted by TOI, senior officials said that the Authority for
Advance Rulings had ruled in tax department's favour, which allows it to levy
MAT on capital gains. But the government has proposed to amend the law after
FIIs cited concerns. The offshore funds, however, said these "amendments will
take effect from April, 1, 2016 and will, accordingly, apply in relation to the
assessment year 2016-17 and subsequent assessment years".
Such an official explanation may serve the purpose of a backdrop, for a
broad understanding of what that is all about. Nonetheless, it is
prima facie too confusing to be readily understood by anyone wishing
to know more; hence calls for a further probe.
1.2. A quick search goes to reveal that, contrary to the offhand
impression, the confusing piquant situation has arisen because of mutually
contradicting AAR Rulings; more so, because of the latest, which contradicts an
earlier Ruling and proves to be adverse to foreign companies.
2. AAR’s Advance Rulings:
The Rulings need to be mainly looked through are available in public
domain @
(For discussion herein, the two Rulings are referred to, in short, as in ,-
Timken and Castleton case.)
The common question / proposition so covered on which the Rulings are
contradictory to each other, selected for an independent analytical study
herein, in pith and substance is this:
Whether or not MAT (section 115 JB) applies to a foreign company, whose
status for taxation in India is that of a non-resident; more so, if it has the
only income by way of ‘capital gains’ but not chargeable to tax in India by
virtue of the applicable ‘tax treaty’?
2.1. In Timken case the Ruling is in its favour; holding
that, - a foreign company, which has no ‘physical’ presence (or
‘PE’) (within its tax treaty meaning) in India, having only
‘long-term capital gains’ (within its statutory meaning), is not liable to MAT.
The grounds/reasoning as stated in the Ruling may be summed up as
under:
(a) In terms of the relevant sec. 591 of the
Companies Act, only foreign companies who have established a place of business
within India have to comply with the requirement of preparation of a balance
sheet and profit and loss account as per s. 594. As such, the obligation
as envisaged in sec. 115JA(2), to “prepare a profit and loss account in
accordance with Parts II and III of Schedule VI” is of no relevance and cannot
apply to a foreign company to which the sec 591 requirement does not apply.
(b) The relevant Budget Speech, so also the
Memorandum & Notes on Clauses explaining the purpose of introduction of s.
115JA, make the legislative intent and the legal position clear- that is, to
the effect as mentioned in (a) above:
(c) The contention of the Revenue that Sec 115
JB requires no distinction to be made between a ‘domestic company’ and a
‘foreign company’ is not acceptable.
As Timkon did not have a place of business in India
and was not required to prepare its accounts under s. 594 r.w.s. 591 of the
Companies Act, it could not have (in the normal course) prepared its accounts
in accordance with the provisions of Parts II and III of Schedule VI to the
companies Act, 1956.
In essence, the Ruling is to the effect that it is
NOT THE LAW that, regardless of other material and vital aspects or
considerations, every foreign company is under an obligation to prepare
accounts; so as to attract MAT.
NOTE: It calls for a pointed mention that, while in the Explanation under sec.
115 JB, the host of items requiring adjustments for reckoning the “book profit”
for its purposes, include also items NOT debited or credited to the
‘profit and loss account’, the requirement in sub-section (2) is to prepare
“its profit and loss account”; albeit succeeded by the phrase “in accordance
with...”. As viewed, there is an element of incompatibility; which, perhaps,
calls for a separate study, for ascertaining the legal implications and special
significance, if any. For the nonce, the gut feeling is, that could be taken to
provide a clue to support the viewpoints set out and urged in the succeeding
sub-paragraphs (i.e. 2.2., 2.3. and 2.5.)
2.2. In Castleton case, the AAR is seen to have chosen not to follow its
‘own’ earlier Ruling (in Timken case). The grounds /reasons stated for doing
so, however, with due respect, but honestly speaking, are not at all clearly
understood. In any case, if were to be independently perceived, in one’s
conviction, the Ruling in Timken case bears out a much better view, the logic
behind being apparently quite sound; and not amenable to be rightly faulted for
any reason.
2.3. For a better appreciation in proper light as
to why one could say so, the following added points may help:
In Castleton case, the observations seeking to
explain, - to the effect as to why, in preference to the Ruling in Timken case,
- an earlier Ruling (citation 234 ITR 335) is followed, are set out in
concluding paragraphs 37 and 38; selected portions thereof read:
Q
Surely, there is no need to restrict or warrant for restricting the
operation of these two sections in the Act in the absence of any compelling
circumstance. In this context, with great respect, it appears
to me that the reasoning in the Ruling in 234 ITR 335 is impressive. I am
respectfully inclined to follow that reasoning. The
circumstances highlighted in Timken Ruling have been dealt with and explained
in 234 ITR 335, followed in Niko Resources Ruling (234 ITR 828).
.....
On a reading of the Section 115JB it can be seen that sub-section (1)
thereof imposes the liability to be taxed and sub-section (2) only charts out
the procedure for calculating the taxable profit. In fact sub-section (2) casts
an obligation on a company to which section 115JB (1) is attracted to prepare
an account in terms of the Companies Act, 1956. It is not as if the liability
to be taxed depends on the obligation to prepare an account in terms of the
Companies Act, 1956. The liability to tax depends on the profit earned or deemed
to be earned. The deemed profit is specified in sub-section (1) and the rate of
tax is also specified. Only the mode of determining the book profit is left to
sub-section (2) and a duty is cast on the assessee to determine the book profit
as set out in sub-section (2). Taking note of the inconvenience that may be
caused by this mandate to some of the companies coming under the proviso to
section 211(2) of the Companies Act, the requirement to comply with the mandate
has been done away with by the Finance Act, 2012, leaving untouched the
liability under sub-section (1) of that section. This also would support the
soundness of the reasoning in 234 ITR 335 and would indicate that section 115JB
(1) of the Act always subjected even the companies coming under the proviso to
section 211(2) of the Companies Act. Section 115JB is the overriding provision.
It overrides all the other provisions in the Act. It is the overriding charging
provision. It is clear. It provides for payment of income-tax by an assessee, which
is a company. That company normally, is a company of whatsoever hue, or in the
alternative, a company as defined in the Income-tax Act. There is no warrant
for borrowing the definition of a company from section 3 of the companies Act,
1956. Merely because sub-section (2) of section115JB refers to the Companies
Act, it does not mean that the definition from therein has to be borrowed.
There may be practical difficulties for foreign companies to prepare an account
in terms of Schedule VI of the Companies Act, but that is no reason to whittle
down the scope of section 115JB of the Act. The difficulties are for the
legislature to consider and remove and not for this Authority. In fact, the
difficulties in respect of some of them are now sought to be removed by the
amendment made by the Finance Act, 2012.” Section 115JB of the Act
overrides section 34 to 48 of the Act. So by reading section 115JB as confined
in its operation to domestic companies alone, one may be doing violence to the
special scheme of taxation adopted for taxing certain companies. Unless there
are compelling reasons no such interpretation is justified. There is no
compelling reason to jettison the scheme of taxation adopted by the Act by
reading down section 115JB as confined in its application to domestic companies
alone.
UQ
2.4. The two Rulings of AAR on the issue of MAT are mutually contradicting;
in that, in Castleton case the Ruling has turned out to be adverse to the
Petitioner, whereas in the previous Timken case it is in its favour. The matrix
of facts, of relevance, on comparison, indisputably, is no different but is on
all fours. As might be perceived, if at all, the cause for the contradictory
Rulings seems to lie in having read and understood the implications of the
cinching sub-section (2) of section 115JB differently.
Said sub-section (2) of relevance (without its later amendments)
reads:
“(2) Every assessee, being a company, shall, for the purposes of this
section, prepare its profit and loss account for the relevant previous year in
accordance with the provisions of Parts II and III of Schedule VI to the
Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956):“
In Castleton case, the provision, as stands to be inferred, has been read
and understood, in a truncated fashion - if so wrongly, - as if, it reads:
“(2) Every assessee, being a company, shall, for the purposes of this
section, prepare its profit and loss account for the relevant previous
year, AND in accordance with the provisions of Parts II and III of
Schedule VI to the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956):“(FONT supplied; if
read with the added imaginary conjunction AND, will mean’and which shall be’)
As per the Ruling in Castleton case, the justification given by the AAR to
depart from that in Timken case has been stated thus:
“... This section does not need any aid from tools of interpretation
for its understanding. It is plain and
clear. Sub-section (2) of section 115JB which is sought to be
shoved in to deprive sub-section (1) of its width actually reaffirms the
independent operation of sub-section (1). It exhorts every
company, for the purpose of sub-section (1) to prepare its profit and loss
account as provided for therein. The operation of sub-section
(1) does not depend on the applicability of sub-section
(2). It is on the applicability of sub-section (1) that the
obligation under sub-section (2) arises. It is a fallacy to think
that unless sub-section (2) is independently attracted, sub-section (1) also
cannot be operated. Sub-section (2) gets attracted when sub-section
(1) operates proprio vigorie. It is for the
purpose of the section that the account has to be prepared as detailed
therein.”
2.5. To critically consider and incisively form an independent opinion as
to which of the two Rulings is founded on sound reasoning and
logic, the following well known principles of
‘Interpretation ‘,- besides certain others such as, ‘Mischief Rule’,
‘Harmonious Construction’, and ‘Punctuation’ - may have to be
usefully summoned for aid:
(a) ‘Causas Omissus’; and
(b) ‘Principle of Beneficial Interpretation’.
For knowing more as to why, as implied, the underlying scheme of
sub-sections (1) and (2) of sec. 115 JB cannot be clearly and rightly
understood, without seeking guidance from the aforementioned rules and principles,
it is recommended to go through the expert commentary and cited case law <
in the leading Palkhivala’s Text Book (Tenth Edition, Volume I, page 16).
Aside: On the principle of ‘Punctuation’, and its importance or otherwise
as an aid for appropriate and proper guidance, according to a school of
thought, punctuation need not be given so much importance, as a puritan may
nonetheless wish and hope for.
That could not have been normally expected to be otherwise; more so, in the
commonly given context of our modern times, in which clumsy drafting, framing
and structuring of any enactment on one hand, and confused understanding and
inevitable messing up of the legal regime on the other, have come to be
growingly recognised but yet come to stay as the hallmark of today’s
legislation and/or judicial interpretation.
Should care to and scout around (say, through Google search), anyone should
be able to locate a plethora of interesting material , holding out a different
school of thought founded on a varying stroke of reasoning. For instance,
look up the random chosen bizarre century old episode, but in criminal law
regime, – HERE >
(THE CASEMENT CASE)
Even so, the point of grave doubt and real concern herein really is,
whether at all a punctuation (or a conjunction such as ‘AND’) is permissible to
be supplied for the purpose of construing an enactment.
3. Other Aspects
Urging the need to specially focus on:
(A) The concept of (Tax) ‘Treaty Override’ is well settled and long
accepted; and there is no reason why it could be taken to be otherwise. In the
Ruling in Castleton case itself, the admitted position is that the only income
of the foreign company by way of capital gains is not chargeable to income tax
in India. That is equally so / explicit in AAR holding that Sec 195 requirement
of TDS has no application. Still to say that it could be
taxed (via backdoor) by invoking section 115 JB , one strongly feels, goes to
offend , besides legal sense, so called ‘common sense’ as well. Also flies in
the face of the time honoured concept of ‘Treaty Override’, apart from the
practical wisdom underlying the doctrine, - Stare Decis; last but not the
least, the wisdom behind the Ruling in Timken case.
(B) Reverting to the media report mentioned at the outset, that it
does make a mention of the Act being amended but prospectively. On a plain
reading and understanding, also reading in between lines, the indelible
impression one left with is that, seeing the hazardous potentials the Ruling in
Castleton case has, the law is, as indicated by the FM repeatedly
since on several occasions, proposed to be amended. The reasonable expectation
is that, the intention is to clarify inter alia that MAT is not to
apply to foreign companies; with the only exception being those required to
comply with the company law provisions even in the normal course. Ostensibly,
that should ward off or obviate the otherwise inevitable unintended and
unpalatable consequences. On that premise, there appears to be no reason why
for a change, contrary to the indication, the proposed amendment ought not to be
made retrospective; thereby save from and avoid, - for the common benefit of
one and all truly concerned,- inconclusive litigation , entailing in- fructuous
waste of valuable time and energy for both taxpayers and
the Revenue .
EPILOGUE
One of the great Jurist of yesteryears, Will Durant, when asked, though in
a different context, what he thought of the world situation, is quoted to have
said, -"The world situation is fouled up. It has always been fouled up. I
see no reason for change".
Perhaps, what he meant to say was that there could be no change for any
better. However, there could imaginably be nothing coming in the way of any
Government and/or its authorities, given the necessary will and initiative, to
stop the world from being fouled up any more. The discomfortingly nagging
question in anyone’s mind, lastingly for decades, is this: Why cannot the two
essential functionaries duly empowered under the Indian Constitution namely,
the Executive and the Judiciary, the nation being globally the richest of all
in cultural heritage and spiritual values, decide to make a concerted effort
and give it a try for the benefit of its own people?
Quoting late Nani A. Palkhivala, a tax expert in its true sense, and a
distinguished humane counsellor:
"The bewildering complexity of tax laws is coupled with the
hyper-technical spirit in which the laws are being administered. The words,
‘The Letter Killeth’ should be inscribed over the portals of every income-tax
officer."
Yielding to an irresistible temptation, to add: Should that, perhaps, not
be so inscribed, also over the portals of the draftsmen of our laws; and in the
portals of courts as well?!
The discussion herein above may not really be complete without the
following quotes, rich in wisdom, which seem to aptly fit into the context:
“At least… million of our citizens are contributors
to the national product... To every economic policy and legislation we must
apply the acid test – how far will it bend the talent, energy and time of our
people to fruitful ends and how far will it dissipate them in coping with legal
inanities and a bumbling bureaucracy.”
“The lawyer has to act as a catalyst. The
responsibilities, which today lie on the shoulders of the lawyers, are far
greater than at any earlier time in world history.”
(Source:
Books – “We the Nation” and “WE THE PEOPLE” < Inside, late N A Palkhivala’s
articles and speeches)
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