An assessee employer is liable to deducted tax at source under section 192.
Deduction of tax of the employees was not uniform during the year very negligible in the initial months and high amount in the last months.
AO passed order levying interest under section 201(1A) on the grounds that tax was not properly deducted.
5 Case Study 1ISSUES
Whether the Assessing Officer has rightly levied interest on non-uniformity of TDS deducted?
CASE LAWS
Vinsons v. ITO, 89 ITD 267 (Mum)
Grasim Industries Ltd. v. ITO, 92 TTJ 944 (Jodh)
Secy. Board Of Secondary Education, Rajasthan v. ITO, 93 TTJ 256 (Jaipur)
6 Case Study 2 FACTS
The assessee company (employer) deducted tax under section 192 treating leave travel expense as exempt on the basis of declarations filed by the employee.
The assessee did not obtain any documentary evidence to treat LTA as exempt.
AO passed order under section 201(1) treating assessee in default having regard to non-verification of travel payments proof.
7 Case Study 2ISSUES
Is the AOs order justified in treating the assessee as assessee in default and levy interest u/s 201(1A)?
CASE LAWS
DCIT v. HCL Infosystems Ltd. 282 ITR 263
Savani Financials Ltd. v. ITO, 1 SOT 111
Lintas India Ltd. v. Ass. CIT, 5 SOT 310
DCIT v. Excel Industries Ltd., 5 SOT 235
8 Case Study 3 FACTS
G Ltd is a construction company engaged in the business of construction etc.
At the initiation of the job work, the client provides G Ltd. some interest bearing mobilization and plant advance, which is to be repaid by the end of the contract along with interest.
G Ltd. submits the running account bills on monthly basis depending on the completion of contract.
Against this the client recovers the principal interest amount and thus G Ltd. does not actually pay any interest.
Since no direct payment of interest made, NO TDS deducted.
9 Case Study 3 ISSUES
Is the contention of assessee correct?
Whether tax is required to be deducted at source under section 194A- Interest other than interest on securities?
What are the other implications of such non-deduction?
CASE LAWS
Raymond Limited V. DCIT 86 ITD 791.
Kanchanganga Sea Foods Ltd. v. CIT 265 ITR 644
10 Case Study 4FACTS
Assessee engaged in business of imports and/or exports, engages services of Clearing Forwarding agents.
Payments to such CF agents comprise of the following
Reimbursement of freight paid to shipping companies or airlines.
Reimbursement of freight on local transportation.
Reimbursement of import or export clearing expenses like payments to Port Trust, Airport Authorities of India, miscellaneous charges, etc.
Reimbursement of bonded warehousing charges.
Reimbursement of Customs duties and Octroi.
Reimbursement for Crane and Machinery charges to Port Trust etc.
Agency service charges.
11 Case Study 4ISSUES
Whether any tax is liable to be deducted on any of the above payments to CF agents?
If the agent has already deducted TDS on freight payment to the Indian Shipping Co., then whether the importer/exporter also needs to deduct tax on the payments made to the agents and if so then on what amount?
When CF agent deduct tax and pays it to the exchequer, the payment would be on his own TDS account or his clients account number?
The assessee is a pharmaceutical company, engaged in manufacturing and selling business.
It procures packing material like plastics wrappers, containers, cardboard boxes etc from the vendors (manufacturers) as per assessees desired specifications viz. brand name, name address, designs, trademarks etc.
Similarly, payments are also made to printing and stationary vendors who supply printed letterheads, business cards, sales and other printed literature where the printing is done as per the assessees specifications.
Vendors charge excise duty and sales tax on such items.
14 Case Study 5 ISSUES
Whether TDS is required to be deducted under section 194C for payments made as printing charges?
CASE LAWS
BDA Ltd. v. ITO (TDS), 281 ITR 99 (Mum.)
15 Case Study 6 FACTS
G Ltd. is engaged in the business of engineering and construction.
G Ltd enters into execution of construction contracts.
G Ltd has made certain payments for carrying out certain ancillary work undertaken for the purpose of executing the above contracts.
16 Case Study 6ISSUES
Whether the payments made by G Ltd should be treated as payments for main contract or as sub-contract for deduction of tax at source u/s 194 C?
Assessee, a Govt. establishment procured milk from various Sanghs etc and sold it in the market through milk centres run by the appointed agents.
Agents sold the goods at the price fixed by the assessee.
Assessee used to reimburse these agents _at_ Re.0.90 per litre towards transport cost, container cost and chilling charges.
Assessee had given the nomenclature as Commission for such payments.
AO held to deduct tax u/s 194H as payments for commission.
18 Case Study 7ISSUES
Is the said transaction based on principal-agent relationship?
Whether any TDS is required to be deducted u/s 194H?
CASE LAWS
Government Milk Scheme v. ACIT 2006 98 ITD 306
19 Case Study 8 FACTS
B Ltd is engaged in the business of providing cellular mobile telephone services through its distributors.
It sold SIM and other pre-paid cards at a fixed rate below market price to such distributors for ultimate sale to customers.
As agreed, all rights, title, ownership and property rights in such cards would all time vest with B Ltd.
Assessee claimed such price difference as discount allowed and not as commission defined in Expl. u/s 194H
AO treated it as default and levied interest under section 201(1) and 201(1A).
20 Case Study 8 ISSUES
Is the AOs claim justified in treating it as commission?
Whether provisions of section 194H gets attracted??
CASE LAWS
ACIT v. Bharti Cellular Ltd. 105 ITD 129 (Cal.)
Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages (P.) Ltd. v. ITO 2005 97 ITD 105 (Jp.)
21 Case Study 9 FACTS
X Ltd. is in the business of running a call centre.
Contract is entered with transport contractor for transporting the employees of X
X Ltd. uses the bus or van and such other means of transport for this purpose.
The payments made by X Ltd to transport contractor are fixed hire charges .
TDS is deducted by X u/s 194 C.
AO is of the view that payments are in nature of rent under section 194I, as defined by Tax Law Amendment, 2006.
22 Case Study 9 ISSUES
Is the stand taken by the AO is correct?
CASE LAW REFERENCE
Circular No. 558 dated 28.3.1990
23 Case Study 10 FACTS
PQR Ltd., the assessee, is engaged in the business of providing airline services.
Co. frequently requires hotel rooms for accommodation of its pilots and crew members.
Co. books rooms and makes payments for hire of rooms.
PQR Ltd. has entered into rate-contracts with some and with others the nature of contract is such that hotels are under an obligation to provide accommodation to PQR Ltd.
TDS is deducted under section 194C.
24 Case Study 10ISSUES
Is PQR Ltd. required to deduct tax under section 194-I or whether the co. is justified in deducting under section 194C?
CASE LAWS
Krishna Oberoi and another v. UOI 2002 257 ITR 105 (AP)
Circular No. 5/2002 dtd. 30-7-2002, 194I does not apply to Rate Contracts.
25 Case Study 11 FACTS
G Ltd. is a manufacturer.
Company has made payments to an Indian entity towards the Internet connectivity, Vo-Data card charges and Domain registration charges.
No TDS is deducted on such payments made.
Company has a view that the payments made are not in terms with payment for technical services as covered under section 194J.
However, CCIT treats the payments made as fees received for providing technical services and deduct tax at source.
26 Case Study 11ISSUES
Is G Ltd correct in its stand that the payments made to providers of internet connectivity, facility of Vo-Data card or domain registration charges are out of the purview of fees for technical services?
Whether TDS should be deducted on such payments?
CASE LAW
Skycell Communications Ltd (251 ITR 53) Mad.
27 Case Study 12 FACTS
The invoice raised on the assessee was inclusive of professional charges and service tax thereon and reimbursement of actual expenses.
No TDS deducted on the reimbursement of expenses.
Under any sum paid as referred to in Sec.194J, reimbursement of actual expenses cannot be deducted out of the bill amount for the purpose of tax deduction. Circular No. 715 dtd. 8-8-1995
AO relied on CBDT circular and levied interest u/s 201(1A).
28 Case Study 12ISSUES
Whether TDS will be deductible on gross value of bill or on net?
Will the answer be different if separate bills are raised for both?
CASE LAW
ITO v. Dr. Willmar Schwabe India (P) Ltd. , 3 SOT 71.
29 Case Study 13 FACTS
A Ltd., the assessee, entered into a lease agreement with B Ltd. for taking premises on lease with a separate agreement on hire of furniture.
A Ltd. fails to deduct tax at source under section 194-I on the lease payments made to the payee.
However B Ltd. while filing his return of income declared the said receipt of income and paid taxes thereon.
Assessing officer issued notice under section 201(1) 201(1A) levying interest for non deduction of TDS.
30 Case Study 13 ISSUES
Whether the AO can issue such a notice on A Ltd.?
If yes, is he liable to pay tax?
If not, is he liable to pay interest?
If yes, what is the period for which interest is payable?
CASE LAWS
CIT v. Adidas India Marketing Pvt. Ltd. , 288 ITR 379
A Ltd. delayed in depositing the tax deducted at source into Governments account for the assessment years 1988-89 to 1996-97.
For the above stated Ass. yrs. the Assessing Officer passed orders dated 25.5.2000 levying interest under section 201(1A) on the grounds of such delay.
The assessment and other proceedings for all those years has been completed much earlier.
Appeal was filed by A Ltd. saying no such interest could be levied after lapse of such a long time.
32 Case Study 14ISSUES
Whether in absence of the prescribed time limit for initiation and completion of proceedings under the Act, initiation of proceedings should be within reasonable time?
What can be the reasonable time period of levy of interest under section 201(1A) for delay in deposit of TDS?
Whether AO can levy/order interest u/s 201(1A)?
CASE LAWS
Raymond Woollen Mills Ltd. 57 ITD 536 (Mum.)
Century Textiles Industries Ltd. 13 SOT 507 (Mum.)