IN THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL
DELHI BENCH, ‘D’: NEW DELHI
BEFORE SHRI SAKTIJIT DEY, VICE PRESIDENT
AND
SHRI BRAJESH KUMAR SINGH, ACCOUNTANT MEMBER
3399/DEL/2023
[Assessment Year: 2021-22]
Backbase Europe VB,
Jacob Bontiusplaats 9,
1018 LL, Amsterdam,
Netherlands
Vs
The Assistant Commissioner of
Income Tax, Circle International
Taxation-1(1)(2),
Civic Centre, Minto Road,
New Delhi-110002
PAN-AAGCB1699B
Assessee Revenue
Assessee by Sh. Tarun G. Advocate
Revenue by Sh. Vijay B. Vasanta, CIT-DR
Date of Hearing 26.07.2024
Date of Pronouncement 20.08.2024
ORDER
PER BRAJESH KUMAR SINGH, AM,
This appeal by the assessee is directed against the order of the
Assessing Officer dated 29.09.2023 passed u/s 143(3)/144C(13) of the
Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter ‘the Act’) arising out of directions of
Dispute Resolution Panel dated 22.08.2023 pertaining to Assessment
Year 2021-22.
2. The grounds of appeal raised by the assessee are as under:-
“1. The order of the Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax,
Circle International Tax - 1(1)(2), New Delhi dated 29.09.2023
vide DIN & Order No. ITBA/AST/S/143(3)/2023-
24/1056642431(1) read in conjunction with the directions of
the Dispute Resolution Panel dated 22.08.2023 for the above
2 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
mentioned Assessment Year is contrary to law, facts, and in
the circumstances of the case.
2. The ACIT / DRP erred in bringing to tax Rs. 5,55,358 / -
being the amount received from IDFC Bank Ltd as Software
Consultancy Charges as fee for technical services on the
application of section 9(1)(vii) of the Act in the computation of
taxable total income without assigning proper reasons and
justification.
3. The ACIT / DRP erred in bringing to tax Rs.2,25,46,600/-
being the amount received from HDFC Bank Ltd as Software
Consultancy Charges as fee for technical services on the
application of section 9(1)(vii) of the Act in the computation of
taxable total income without assigning proper reasons and
justification.
4. The ACIT / DRP erred in bringing to tax Rs. 89,081/-being
the amount received from Xebia Architects India Pvt Ltd as
Software Consultancy Charges as fee for technical services on
the application of section 9(1) (vii) of the Act in the computation
of taxable total income without assigning proper reasons and
justification.
5. The ACIT / DRP erred in bringing to tax Rs. 4,71,24,998/-
being the amount received from HDFC Bank Ltd as Software
License AMC Charges as fee for technical services on the
application of section 9(1) (vii) of the Act in the computation of
taxable total income without assigning proper reasons and
justification.
6. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that the provisions of
section 9(1)(vii) of the Act had no application to the facts of the
case and ought to have appreciated that the support
services/consultancy services were erroneously reckoned as
fee FTS upon misreading the related provisions in the treaty
as well as in the statute.
7. The ACIT/ DRP failed to appreciate that the receipts from
the transactions which were subjected to Indian Taxation suo
moto were erroneously compared with the disputed receipts
and ought to have appreciated that the transactions which
were subjected to Indian Taxation were clearly
distinguishable from the facts pertaining to the receipts which
are now disputed for inclusion as part of the computation of
taxable total income.
8. The ACIT/ DRP failed to appreciate that the provisions of
Article 12 of the concerned treaty were wrongly understood
and applied and ought to have appreciated that the disputed
receipts would be subjected to taxation only in Netherlands by
virtue of tax residency status of the appellant, thereby
3 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
vitiating the related findings both in the impugned order as
well as in the order passed by the DRP.
9. The ACIT / DRP failed to appreciate that the annual
maintenance and support services were in connection with
perpetual licence given to HDFC Bank & others for ensuring
the copy righted software being maintained/updated by
providing new version/by providing patches and hence ought
to have appreciated that having not made available the
technical knowledge, the decision to bring the related receipts
under Indian Tax Regime should accordingly be reckoned as
bad in law.
10. The ACIT/ DRP failed to appreciate that having not
disputed the fact of the appellant/assessee not making
available the technical knowledge, the taxability of the
related/disputed receipts under Indian Tax Regime within the
scope of the related treaty provisions read with the statutory
provisions in the Act was wrong, incorrect, erroneous, invalid,
unjustified and not sustainable both on facts and in law.
11. The ACIT/ DRP failed to appreciate that the findings in
para 6.1 of the DRP's order which were adopted in the final
assessment order under challenge in the present appeal were
wrong, erroneous, incorrect, invalid, unjustified and not
sustainable both on facts and in law.
12. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that the provisions
governing the definition of FTS both under the treaty as well
as in the statute under consideration were completely misread
and ought to have appreciated that the tangential findings in
this regard were wrong, incorrect, erroneous, invalid,
unjustified and not sustainable both on facts and in law.
13. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that the Dispute
Resolution Panel's mechanical action in following the Panel's
order rendered for assessee's own case for the Assessment
Year: 2020 - 21, which order had also relied upon the order
passed for the previous assessment years, thereby
demonstrating the lack of proper adjudication on their part
inasmuch ought to have appreciated that the first order
passed in the appellant's own case for the assessment year:
2016 - 17 had attained finality under VSVS Act, 2020, thereby
vitiating the decision based on the said year's findings in the
impugned order under consideration.
14. The ACIT/ Dispute Resolution Panel erred in adding back
a sum of Rs. 4,22,062/- being the sum received in the nature
of reimbursement from Xebin IT Architects India Pvt Ltd as
income of the appellant without assigning proper reasons and
justification.
4 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
15. The ACIT/ DRP failed to appreciate that there could not be
any scope for income accruing in the hands of the appellant
for the sum received in the nature of reimbursement, thereby
vitiating the findings in relation there to.
16. The ACIT/ DRP failed to appreciate that having sufficiently
and adequately explained the nature of the reimbursement
sum received through documentary evidences filed before
them at every stage of assessment proceedings, the action in
adding back the said sum was wrong, erroneous, incorrect,
invalid, unjustified and not sustainable both on facts and in
law.
17. The ACIT / DRP failed to appreciate that the findings of
the DRP in this regard were wrong, incorrect, erroneous,
invalid, unjustified and not sustainable both on facts and in
law and ought to have appreciated that the mechanical
adoption of such findings in the impugned order as a
consequence should be considered as nullity in law.
18. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the evidences filed in
support of the stand were not considered and looked into,
despite the directions issued by the DRP at para 6.1 and
ought to have appreciated that non recording of findings in
relation to the evidences filed in support would vitiate the
related findings in the impugned order.
19. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that the order passed
by the Dispute Resolution Panel - 1, New Delhi dated
22.08.2023 should be reckoned as non-est in law in the
absence of Document Identification Number forming part of the
said order passed by them and further ought to have
appreciated that the attempt in validating the said order by
issuing intimation letter on 24.08.2023 should also be
reckoned as bad in law, thereby vitiating the consequential
impugned order under consideration.
20. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that non adherence to
the decision rendered by the jurisdictional Delhi High Court in
the case of Brandix Mauritius Holdings Ltd in ITA 163/2023
dated 20.03.2023 would vitiate the impugned order in its
entirety.
21. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that the entire re-
computation of taxable total income was wrong, incorrect,
erroneous, invalid, unjustified and not sustainable both on
facts and in law and ought to have appreciated that the
brushing aside of revised return of income was wholly
unjustified and not sustainable in law.
5 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
22. The ACIT /DRP failed to appreciate that the impugned
order was passed out of time, invalid, passed without
jurisdiction and not sustainable both on facts and in law.
23. The ACIT / DRP failed to appreciate that the mechanical
approach in following the earlier assessment years' decision
for taxing the disputed sums should be reckoned as bad in
law and ought to have appreciated that the said order were
subjected to further appeal.
24. The ACIT / DRP failed to appreciate that there was no
proper opportunity given before passing the impugned
order/DRP order and any order passed in violation of the
principles of natural justice is nullity in law.”
3. Brief facts of the case: The Assessee is a tax resident of Netherlands
and holds a valid tax residency certificate. The Assessee is part of
Backbase group with Twinspark BV as holding company and the said
group consists of operating companies specialized in development,
licensing and implementation of digital banking software. The companies
provide Fin-tech software for financial institutions.
4. The main issue in this appeal in ground no.2 to 12 pertain to
taxability of Rs.7,03,16,037/- received from the ancillary services
provided in relation to the software sold by the assessee company to
HDFC Bank, IDFC
Bank and Xebia Architects India Pvt Ltd. The same
was held to be income from Fee from Technical Services (FTS) and taxable
as per provisions of Article-12 of India Netherlands DTAA and Income Tax
Act, 1961 by the AO. According to the assessee, the services rendered in
upgrading / updating the software already sold should be reckoned as
transfer of software and hence would not fall within the ambit of FTS or
royalty. The assessee relied on Article 12 of India Netherlands Double
Taxation Avoidance Agreement and submitted that the receipt was not
chargeable to tax in India. It was further submitted that the same issue
6 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
relating to similar amounts received by the assessee for the ancillary
services provided in relation to the software sold to HDFC Bank and IDFC
Bank
was also therein assessment year 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2020-21.
4.1. The second issue relates to reimbursement of expenses of
Rs.4,22,062/- from Xebia Architects India Pvt Ltd. considered as income
of the assessee by the AO on the ground that necessary evidences of its
claim of reimbursement was not submitted by the assessee.
5. The above disputes were summarised by the DRP in its order dated
22.08.2023 as under:-
“2) The ACIT erred in bringing to tax Rs. 7,03,16,037/- being
the annual maintenance and support services receipts
received from HDFC Bank Ltd. as fee for technical services on
the application of section 9(1)(vii) of the Act in the computation
of taxable total income without assigning proper reasons and
justification.
3) The ACIT erred in bringing the tax of Rs. 4,22,062/- being
reimbursement of expense received from Xebia IT Architects
India Pvt Ltd. As fee for technical services in the computation
of taxable total income without assigning proper reason and
justification.”
5.1 During the course of hearing, at the outset, it was submitted by the
ld. AR that the issue with respect to amount of Rs.7,03,16,037/- received
from the ancillary services provided in relation to the software sold to
HDFC Bank/IDFC Bank/ Xebia Architects India Pvt Ltd. is covered by
the decision of the Tribunal in assessee’s own case for AYs 2018-19,
2019-20 and 2020-21 in ITA Nos.1572/Del/2022, ITA No.1573/Del/2022
and in ITA No.301/Del/2023. It was submitted that on similar facts, the
Tribunal vide its order dated 24.04.2024 held that the decision rendered
by the ld. DRP by reckoning the disputed components as royalty as well
7 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
as FTS was self-contradictory. It was further submitted that the Tribunal
in the said order held that the principles governing for considering the
particular components of receipt as royalty involve the consideration as
prescribed under the relevant DTAA and in contra distinction for
reckoning the very same receipts as FTS and that there are different set of
principles governing in relation there to and that the disputed receipts
cannot fall under both the categories of royalty and FTS. It was
submitted that the Tribunal after considering these facts had referred to
the ld. DRP to independently examine the issue for the years also and
pass appropriate directions as deemed fit.
5.2. In view of the above facts, it was submitted that the matter be
referred to the ld. DRP to independently examine this issue for the
present assessment year also in light of the above directions of the
Tribunal and to pass appropriate directions as deemed fit.
6. On the second issue, it was submitted that the issue regarding
reimbursement of expenses of Rs.4,22,062/- from Xebia Architects India
Pvt Ltd. considered as income of the assessee may also be set-aside to the
file of the AO as the AO did not examine the evidences in support of its
claim of reimbursement submitted before him.
7. The Ld. DR objected in principle and supported the orders of the
authorities below.
8. We have considered the rival submissions and perused the material
available on record. On the issue of amount of Rs.7,03,16,037/- received
from the ancillary services provided in relation to the software sold to
8 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
HDFC Bank/IDFC Bank/ Xebia Architects India Pvt Ltd., the Ld. DRP in
para no.5 and 5.1 of its order for the present assessment year noted that
the issue was repetitive in nature and has been adjudicated by the DRP in
its previous order for AY 2020-21 and held that since the legal and factual
matrix remains the same as in AY 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2020-21, the
DRP reiterated its view as pronounced in AY 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2020-
21 for the present assessment year also. The relevant extract of the
directions of the DRP in para no.5 and 5.1 is reproduced as under:-
“5.Grounds No. 2 to 13 (excluding ground 3) relate to taxability of
annual maintenance and support services receipt from HDFC bank as
FTS under section 9(1)(vii) of the Act, read with the India Netherlands
DTAA. This issue is repetitive in nature and has been adjudicated by the
DRP in his previous orders as below:
"3.3 In respect of annual maintenance and support services
receipt from HDFC bank, it is submitted that the assessee is part
of M/s Backbase group with Twinspark BV as holding company
and they are specializing in development, licensing and
implementation of digital banking software. The AO records his
findings in para 5 to para 8 of his order in justifying the inclusion
of two components of receipts aggregating to Rs. 901,57,167/- as
part of the assessable income under the Act by reckoning such
receipts as fee for technical services. The assessee place heavy
reliance on Article 12 of the India Netherlands DTAA by justifying
its claim. It is submitted that the assessee granted right to use
the software, namely, copy righted article and not the copy right
in the article as the copy right of the software was retained as the
customer could only use the software. It is stated that the
assessee is providing annual maintenance and support services
in connection with the perpetual licence given to HDFC. The
company does not provide any technical service to HDFC. It
merely ensures that the software is updated and maintained
properly by providing new version of the software or by providing
a patch, e.g., for functionality or security. Such maintenance and
support is not custom for HDFC, it is the same for all Backbase's
customers. For greater certainty, there is no technical knowledge
transferred to HDFC, the benefit of the maintenance and support
services in connection with the license stops when the
maintenance and support subscription stops.
3.4 The Panel has considered the submission. It is noticed that a
similar receipt from IDFC was sustained by this Panel during AY
2016-17, rejecting an identical objection in the following words:
"After hearing the contentions of the assessee and its
submissions, the Panel is of the view that the services
provided by assessee to IDFC are ancillary or subsidiary to
the payments received by the assesse, and which qualify
as royalty and that the technical knowledge and know how
9 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
has been rendered to IDFC and the payment therefore
qualify as FTS.
The software maintenance and support services cannot
operate independent of the software service being provided
by the assesse. In fact the agreement to purchase or
acquire the software service is integral with the
maintenance and support service. Service clause of the
agreement provided mentions "by making use of backbase
support your development team is powered with direct
channel to the heart of all backbase expertise-directly
accessible via web or phone" which supports the condition
of providing technical knowledge and know how rendered
to IDFC which qualifies is FTS.
AO's action is upheld and assessee's objections on the
issue are rejected."
3.5 Accordingly, following its direction for AY 2016-17,
2018-19 & 2019-20, which was followed in AY 2018-19,
the Panel rejects this ground for AY 2020-21 as well. The
reliance placed to the Supreme Court decision [2021) 125
taxmann.com 42 (SC) - Engineering Analysis Centre of
Excellence (P.) Ltd. v CIT. However, it is noticed that the
Engineering Analysis decision is rendered on
distinguishable facts and without offer any aid to the facts
of this case. The action of the AO is accordingly upheld.
This objection stands dismissed accordingly."
5.1 The Panel is of the view that reliance on the decision of Engineering
Analysis Centre of Excellence (P.) Ltd. V CIT by the assessee is misplaced
and the AO has brought out clearly in the draft assessment order that the
above services rendered by the assessee partakes in nature of FTS and
further, satisfies the make available plause The DRP in its previous
direction as above have held it to be taxable as proposed by the
assessing officer in the previous orders. Since the legal and factual matrix
remains same, the DRP reiterates its view as pronounced above.
Assesse's objections s on the above is rejected.
8.1. On similar issue, the directions of the DRP for AYs 2018-19, 2019-
20 and 2020-21 was challenged by the assessee before the Tribunal and
the Tribunal vide an order dated 24.04.2024 in assessee’s own case, had
referred the matter to the ld. DRP to independently examine the issue for
the years involved and pass appropriate directions as deem fit. The
relevant order of the Tribunal is reproduced hereunder:-
“The present appeals have been filed by the assessee
against the orders dated 12.05.2022 and 19.01.2023
passed by the AO u/s 143(3) r.w.s. 144C(13) of the
Income Tax Act, 1961.
10 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
2. Since, the issue involved in all the appeals are
similar, they were heard together and being adjudicated by
a common order. In ITA No. 1572/Del/2022, the assessee
has raised the following grounds:
“1. The order of the Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax,
Circle International Tax - 1(1)(2), New Delhi dated 12.05.2022
for the above mentioned Assessment Year is contrary to law,
facts, and in the circumstances of the case.
2. The ACIT erred in bringing to tax Rs.4,14,70,000/-being the
annual maintenance and support service receipts received from
the clients as fee for technical services on the application of
section 9(1)(vii) of the Act in the computation of taxable total
income without assigning proper reasons and justification.
3. The ACIT erred in bringing to tax Rs.6,03,362/-being the
consultancy receipts received from the clients as fee for
technical services on the application of section 9(1)(vii) of the
Act in the computation of taxable total income without
assigning proper reasons and justification.
4. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the provisions of section
9(1) (vii) of the Act had no application to the facts of the case
and ought to have appreciated that the support
services/consultancy services were erroneously reckoned as
fee FTS upon misreading the related provisions in the treaty as
well as in the statute.
5. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the receipts from the
transactions which were subjected to Indian Taxation suo moto
were erroneously compared with the disputed receipts and
ought to have appreciated that the transactions which were
subjected to Indian Taxation were clearly distinguishable from
the facts pertaining to the receipts which are now disputed for
inclusion as part of the computation of taxable total income.
6. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the provisions of Article
12 of the concerned treaty were wrongly understood and
applied and ought to have appreciated that the disputed
receipts would be subjected to taxation only in Netherlands by
virtue of tax residency status of the appellant, thereby vitiating
the related findings both in the impugned order as well as in
the order passed by the DRP.
7. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the annual maintenance
and support services were in connection with perpetual licence
given to the clients for ensuring the copy righted software being
maintained/updated by providing new version/by providing
patches and hence ought to have appreciated that having not
made available the technical knowledge, the decision to bring
the related receipts under Indian Tax Regime should
accordingly be reckoned as bad in law.
8. The ACIT failed to appreciate that having not disputed the
fact of the appellant/assessee not making available the
technical knowledge, the taxability of the related/disputed
receipts under Indian Tax Regime within the scope of the
related treaty provisions read with the statutory provisions in
the Act was wrong, incorrect, erroneous, invalid, unjustified
and not sustainable both on facts and in law.
11 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
9. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the findings of the DRP
were wrong, incorrect, erroneous, invalid, unjustified and not
sustainable both on facts and in law and ought to have
appreciated that the mechanical adoption of such findings in
the impugned order as a consequence should be considered as
nullity in law.
10. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the evidences filed in
support of the stand were not considered and looked into and
ought to have appreciated that non recording of findings in
relation to the evidences filed in support would vitiate the
related findings in the impugned order.
11. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the provisions governing
the definition of FTS both under the treaty as well as in the
statute under consideration were completely misread and ought
to have appreciated that the tangential findings in this regard
were wrong, incorrect, erroneous, invalid, unjustified and not
sustainable both on facts and in law.
12. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the entire re-computation
of taxable total income was wrong, incorrect, erroneous,
invalid, unjustified and not sustainable both on facts and in
law.
13. The ACIT failed to appreciate that the impugned order was
passed out of time, invalid, passed without jurisdiction and not
sustainable both on facts and in law.
14. The ACIT failed to appreciate that there was no proper
opportunity given before passing the impugned order/DRP order
and any order passed in violation of the principles of natural
justice is nullity in law.”
3. The Assessee is a tax resident of Netherlands and
holds a valid tax residency certificate. The Assessee is part
of Backbase group with Twinspark BV as holding company
and the said group consists of operating companies
specialized in development, licensing and implementation
of digital banking software. The companies provide Fin-
tech software for financial institutions.
4. The main issue in the above three appeals pertain
to taxability of the amounts received from the ancillary
services provided in relation to the software sold to HDFC
Bank and IDFC Bank.
5. According to the assessee, the services rendered in
upgrading / updating the software already sold should be
reckoned as transfer of software and hence would not fall
within the ambit of FTS or royalty. The assessee relied on
Article 12 of India Netherlands Double Taxation Avoidance
Agreement submitted that the receipt was not chargeable
to tax in India.
6. The ld. DRP after considering the objections raised
by the appellant had followed their findings rendered for
the assessment year 2016-17 with respect to the disputed
sum.
7. The ld. DRP in their directions had extracted their
decision rendered for the said assessment year 2016-17
12 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
and wherein it was concluded that the services to IDFC
Bank should be reckoned as ancillary / subsidiary to the
payments received by the Appellant as Royalty in as much
as the technical knowledge and know-how was rendered /
shared to IDFC Bank and therefore, the payment would
qualify as FTS. The decision of the ld. DRP is as under:
"After hearing the contentions of the assessee and its
submissions, the Panel is of the view that the services
provided by assessee to IDFC are ancillary or subsidiary to
the payments received by the assesse, and which qualify
as royalty and that the technical knowledge and know how
has been rendered to IDFC and the payment therefore
qualify as FTS.
The software maintenance and support services cannot
operate independent of the software service being provided
by the assesse. In fact the agreement to purchase or
acquire the software service is integral with the
maintenance and support service. Service clause of the
agreement provided mentions "by making use of backbase
support your development team is powered with direct
channel to the heart of all backbase expertise- directly
accessible via web or phone" which supports the condition
of providing technical knowledge and know how rendered
to IDFC which qualifies is FTS.”
8. In this process, the software maintenance and
support services according to the ld. DRP could not
operate independent of the software service being provided
which was based on the agreement to purchase or acquire
software services. As a consequence, such services would
be integral part of maintenance and support services and
in this regard, the service clause of the agreement
provided 'by making use of Backbase support your development
team is powered with direct channel to the heart of all Backbase
expertise-directly accessible via web or phone
would fortify the
directions for treating the disputed payment received from
IDFC Bank as FTS falling in the Indian tax regime.
9. The ratio / directions issued by the ld. DRP
summarized in the preceding paragraph pertaining to the
assessment year 2016-17 was followed for the payments
received from HDFC Bank during the assessment year
under consideration and justified their directions to tax it
either as royalty or FTS.
10. On going through the record, we find that there has
been overlapping findings of the ld. DRP on the two
receipts contested in the present appeal. The decision
rendered by the ld. DRP by reckoning the disputed
components as royalty as well as FTS is self-contradictory.
The principles governing for considering the particular
components of receipt as royalty involve the consideration
as prescribed under the relevant DTAA and in contra
distinction for reckoning the very same receipts as FTS,
there are different set of principles governing in relation
13 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
thereto. The disputed receipts cannot fall under both the
categories of royalty and FTS.
11. At this juncture, it was pleaded by the ld. AR for
setting aside the directions of the orders and to direct the
ld. DRP to consider the issue afresh. The ld. DR objected
in principle. We find no prejudice would be caused to the
Revenue if the matter is referred to the ld. DRP to
independently examine the issue for the years involved and
pass appropriate directions as deemed fit. The AO shall
complete the Assessment Order de-novo as per the new
directions issued by the ld. DRP.
12. In the result, the appeals of the assessee are
allowed for statistical purpose.”
9. Respectfully following the above decision of the Tribunal on similar
facts, the issue relating to the amount of Rs.7,03,16,037/- received from
the ancillary services provided in relation to the software sold to HDFC
Bank/IDFC Bank/ Xebia Architects India Pvt Ltd. for the present
assessment year also is referred to the file of the Ld. DRP to
independently examine the issue for the present assessment year in light
of the above decisions of the Tribunal for AY 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2020-
21 and pass appropriate directions as deemed fit. Further, the AO shall
complete the assessment order de novo as per the new directions issued
by the Ld. DRP.
10. Regarding the issue of adding back a sum of Rs. 4,22,062/- being
the sum claimed to be received in the nature of reimbursement from
Xebin IT Architects India Pvt Ltd., it was submitted that the AO did not
examine the necessary evidences as directed by the ld. DRP, which would
have supported its claim that it was in the nature of reimbursement and
hence not taxable. In para no.6, the ld. DRP had directed the AO to verify
the necessary evidences and if it was found to be purely reimbursement
in nature, then the assessee would be eligible for relief on this account. It
14 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
is seen from the paper book (page nos.135, 141 and 152) that in the letter
dated 03.11.2022 before the AO during the assessment proceedings, the
details of expenses in this regard and invoices thereto were submitted in
reply to query no.6 and 16 respectively, which apparently has not been
considered by the AO, while passing the draft assessment order or the
final assessment order as per the direction of the Ld. DRP. Therefore, in
order to subserve the interests of natural justice and to provide one more
opportunity to the assessee to effectively represent its case, this matter is
also restored to the file of Ld. DRP for allowing the assessee to submit the
necessary evidences in this regard and if required to get necessary
verifications from the AO and pass appropriate directions as deemed fit.
The AO shall complete the Assessment Order de-novo on this issue also
as per the new directions issued by the Ld. DRP. Ground Nos.14 to 18 are
allowed for statistical purposes.
11. Ground no. 21 is with respect to the fact that the ACIT /DRP failed
to appreciate that the entire re-computation of taxable total income was
wrong, incorrect, erroneous, invalid, unjustified and not sustainable both
on facts and in law and ought to have appreciated that the brushing aside
of revised return of income was wholly unjustified and not sustainable in
law. In this regard, the matter is restored to the file of the Ld. DRP for
necessary verification regarding the non consideration of the revised
return of income and passing appropriate directions as deemed fit. The
AO shall complete the Assessment Order de-novo on this issue also as per
the new directions issued by the Ld. DRP. Ground No.20 is allowed for
statistical purposes .
15 ITA No.3399/Del/2023
12. Ground nos. 22 and 23 relate to the above main two issues. No
specific arguments have been made on these grounds and hence, they are
dismissed.
13. In ground nos. 19 and 20, the assessee submitted that the
assessment order passed was invalid on account of not following the
procedure of DIN. However, during the course of hearing, these grounds
were not pressed by the ld. AR. We, therefore, dismiss the ground nos. 19
and 20 of the assessee as not pressed.
14. In the result, the appeal of the assessee is partly allowed for
statistical purposes.
Order pronounced in the open court on 20
th
August, 2024.
Sd/- Sd/-
[SAKTIJIT DEY] [BRAJESH KUMAR SINGH]
VICE PRESIDENT ACCOUNTANT MEMBER
Dated 20.08.2024.
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Copy forwarded to:
1. Assessee
2. Respondent
3. CIT
4. CIT(A)
5. DR
Asst. Registrar,
ITAT, New Delhi