Untitled Document
2003-TIOL-13-SC-IT
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Civil Appeal Nos. 8161-8162 of 2003
(With C.A. Nos. 8163-8164 of 2003)
UNION OF INDIA
Vs
AZADI BACHAO ANDOLAN AND SHIVA KANT JHA
Ruma Pal and B.N. Srikrishna JJ.
Dated : October 7, 2003
Appellants rep by : Soli J. Sorabjee, Attorney General, S. Ganesh,
H.N. Salve, Sr. Adv., Preetish Kapur, B.V. Balaram Das, P.H. Parekh, Nishith
Desai, Ms. Bijal Ajinkya, Sameer Parekh, Ms. Sonali Bau Parekh, Lalit Chauhan,
Ashim Sood, Sunil Mathews, Aman Sinha, Anand Misra and Sandeep Parekh, Adv
Respondents rep by : Prashant Bhushan, Vishal Gupta, Narinder Verma,
Sanjai Pathak, B. Balaji, Anil Kumar Mittal, Shiva Kant Jha, Caveator-in-person/Adv
FIIs based in Mauritius are entitled to exemption from capital
gains tax; CBDT Circular dated April 13, 2000 upheld legal and valid
JUDGEMENT
Per : Srikrishna, J :
Leave granted.
2. These appeals by special leave arise out of the judgment
of the Division Bench of Delhi High Court allowing Civil Writ Petition (PIL)
No. 5646/2000 and Civil Writ Petition No. 2802/2000. The High Court by its
judgment impugned in these appeals quashed and set aside the circular No. 789
dated 13.4.2000 issued by the Central Board of Direct Taxes (hereinafter referred
to as "CBDT") by which certain instructions were given to the Chief
Commissioners/Directors of Income-tax with regard to the assessment of cases
in which the Indo-Mauritius Double Taxation Avoidance Convention, 1983 (hereinafter
referred to as ‘DTAC’) applied. The High Court accepted the contention
before in that the said circular is ultra vires the provisions of Section 90
and Section 119 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Act’) and also otherwise bad and illegal.
3. It would be necessary to recount some salient facts in
order to appreciate the plethora of legal contentions urged.
Facts
4. A: The Agreement
5. The Government of India has entered into various Agreements
(also called Conventions or Treaties) with Governments of different countries
for the avoidance of double taxation and for prevention of fiscal evasion.
One such Agreement between the Government of India and the Government of Mauritius
dated April 1, 1983, is the subject matter of the present controversy. The
purpose o this Agreement, as specified in the preamble, is ‘avoidance
of double taxation and the prevention of fiscal evasion with respect to taxes
on income and capital gains and for the encouragement of mutual trade and investment".
After completing the formalities prescribed in Article 28 this agreement was
brought into force by a Notification dated 6.12.1983 issued in exercise of
the powers of the Government of India under Section 90 of the Act read with
Section 24A of the Companies (Profits) Surtax Act, 1964. As stated in the Agreement,
its purpose is to avoid taxation and to encourage mutual trade and investment
between the two countries, as also to bring an environment of certainty in
the matters of tax affairs in both countries.
6. Some of the salient provisions of the Agreement need to
be noticed at this juncture. The Agreement defines a number of terms used therein
and also contains a residuary clause. In the application of the provisions
of the Agreement by the contracting States any term not defined therein shall,
unless the context otherwise requires, have the meaning which it has under
the laws in force in that contracting State, relating to the words which are
the subject of the convention. Article 1(e) defines ‘person’ so
as to include an individual, a company and any other entity, corporate or non-corporate "which
is treated as a taxable unit under the taxation laws in force in the respective
contracting States". The Central Government in the Ministry of Finance
(Department of Revenue), in the case of India, and the Commissioner of Income
Tax in the case of Mauritius, are defined as the ‘competent authority’.
Article 4 provides the scope of application of the Agreement. The applicability
of the Agreement is determined by Article 4 which reads as under;
7.
"Article 4 Residents
1. For the purposes of the Convention, the term ‘resident
of a Contracting State’ means any person who under the laws of that State,
is liable to taxation therein by reason of his domicile; residence, place or
management or any other criterion of similar nature. The terms ‘resident
of India’
and ‘resident of Mauritius’ shall be construed accordingly.
2. Where by reason of the provisions of paragraph 1, an individual
is a resident of both Contracting States, then his residential status for the
purposes of this Convention shall be determined in accordance with the following
rules:
a) he shall be deemed to be a resident of the Contracting
State in which he has a permanent home available to him; if he has a permanent
home available to him in both Contracting States, he shall be deemed to be
a resident of the Contracting State with which his personal and economic relations
are closer (hereinafter referred to as his "centre of vital interests");
b) if the Contracting State in which he has his centre of
vital interest cannot be determined, or if he does not have a permanent home
available to him in either Contracting State he shall be deemed to be a resident
of the Contracting State in which he has an habitual abode;
c) if he has an habitual abode in both Contracting States
or in neither of them, he shall be deemed to be a resident of the Contracting
State of which he is a national;
(d) if he is a national of both Contracting States or of neither
of them, the competent authorities of the Contracting States shall settle the
question by mutual agreement.
3. Where by reason of the provision of paragraph 1, a person
other than an individual is a resident of both the Contracting States, then
it shall be deemed to be a resident of the Contracting State in which its place
of effective management is situated."
8. The Agreement provides for allocation of taxing jurisdiction
to different contracting parties in respect of different heads of income. Detailed
rules are stipulated with regard to taxing of Dividends under Article 10, interest
under Article 11, Royalties under Article 12, Capital Gains under Articles
13, income derived from Independent Personal Services in Article 14, income
from Dependent Personal Services in Article 15, Directors’ Fees in Article
16, income of Artists and Athletes in Article 17, Government Functions in Article
18, income of students and Apprentices in Article 20, income of Professors,
Teachers and Research Scholars in Article 21, and other income in Article 22.
9. Article 13 deals with the manner of taxation of capital
gains. It provides that gains from the alienation of immovable property may
be taxed in the Contracting State in which such property is situated. Gains
derived by a resident of a Contracting State from the alienation of moveable
property, forming part of the business property of a permanent establishment
which an enterprise of a Contracting State has in the other Contracting State,
or of moveable property pertaining to a fixed base available to a resident
of a Contracting State in the other Contracting State for the purpose of performing
independent personal services, including such gains from the alienation of
such a permanent establishment, may be taxed in that other State. Gains from
the alienation of ships and aircraft operated in international traffic and
moveable property pertaining to the operation of such ships and aircraft, shall
be taxable only in the Contracting State in which the place of effective management
is situated. With respect to capital gain derived by a resident in the Contracting
State from the alienation of any property other than the aforesaid is concerned,
it is taxable only in the State in which such a person is a ‘resident’.
10. Article 25 lays down the Mutual Agreement Procedure. It
provides that where a resident of a Contracting States considers that the actions
of one or both of the Contracting State result or will result for him in taxation
not in accordance with this Convention, he may, notwithstanding the remedies
provided by the national laws of those States, present his case to the competent
authority of the Contracting State of which he is a resident. This case must
be presented within three years of the date of receipt of notice of the action
which gives rise to taxation not in accordance with the Convention. Thereupon,
if the objection appears to be justified, the competent authority shall attempt
to resolve the case by mutual agreement with the competent authority of the
other Contracting State so as to avoid a situation of taxation not in accordance
with the convention. This Article also provides for endeavour by the competent
authorities of the Contracting States to resolve by mutual agreement any difficulties
or doubts arising as the interpretation or application of the convention. For
this purpose, the convention contemplates continuous or periodical communication
between the competent authorities of the Contracting States and exchange of
views and opinions.
B: The Circulars
11. By a Circular No. 682 dated 30.3.1994 issued by the CBDT
in exercise of its powers under Section 90 of the Act, the Government of India
clarified that capital gains of any resident of Mauritius by alienation of
shares of an Indian company shall be taxable only in Mauritius according to
Mauritius taxation laws and will not be liable to tax in India. Relying on
this, a large number of Foreign Institutions Investors (hereinafter referred
to as ‘the FIIs"), which were resident in Mauritius, invested large
amounts of capital in shares of Indian companies with expectations of making
profits by sale of such shares without being subjected to tax in India. Sometime
in the year 2000, some of the income tax authorities issued show cause notices
to some FIIs functioning in India calling upon them to show cause as to why
they should not be taxed for profits and for dividends accrued to them in India.
The basis on which the show cause notice was issued was that the recipients
of the show cause notice were mostly
"shell companies" incorporated in Mauritius, operating through Mauritius,
whose main purpose was investment of funds in India. It was alleged that these
companies were controlled and managed from countries other than India or Mauritius
and as such they were not ‘residents’ of Mauritius so as to derive
the benefits of the DTAC. These shows cause notices resulted in panic and consequent
hasty withdrawal of funds by the FIIs. The Indian Finance Minister issued a
Press note dated April 4, 2000 clarifying that the views taken by some of the
income-tax officers pertained to specific cases of assessment and did not represent
or reflect the policy of the Government of India with regard to denial of tax
benefits to such FIIs.
12. Thereafter, to further clarify the situation, the CBDT
issued a Circular No. 789 dated 13.4.2000. Since this is the crucial Circular,
it would be worthwhile reproducing its full text. The Circular reads as under:
"Circular No. 789
F.No. 500/60/2000-FTD
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
CENTRAL BOARD OF DIRECT TAXES
New Delhi, the 13th April, 2000
To,
All the Chief Commissioners/Directors
General of Income-tax
Sub: Clarification regarding taxation of
income from dividends and capital gains under the Indo-Mauritius Double Tax
Avoidance Convention (DTAC) - Reg.
The provisions of the Indo-Mauritius DTAC of 1983 apply to ‘residents’
of both India and Mauritius. Article 4 of the DTAC defines a resident of one
State to mean any person who, under the laws of that State is liable to taxation
therein by reason of his domicile, residence, place of management or any
other criterion of a similar nature. Foreign Institutional Investors and
other investment funds etc. which are operating from Mauritius are invariably
incorporated in that country. These entities are ‘liable to tax’ under
the Mauritius Tax law and are therefore to be considered as residents of
Mauritius in accordance with the DTAC.
Prior to 1st June, 1997, dividends distributed by domestic
companies were taxable in the hands of the shareholder and tax was deductible
at source under the Income-tax Act, 1961. Under the DTAC, tax was deductible
at source on the gross dividend paid out at the rate of 5% or 15% depending
upon the extent of shareholding of the Mauritius resident. Under the Income-tax
Act, 1961, tax was deductible at source at the rates specified under section
115A etc. Doubts have been raised regarding the taxation of dividends in the
hands of investors from Mauritius. It is hereby clarified that wherever a Certificate
of Residence is issued by the Mauritian Authorities, such Certificate will
constitute sufficient evidence for accepting the status of residence as well
as beneficial ownership for applying the DTAC accordingly.
The test of residence mentioned above would also apply in
respect of income from capital gains on sale of shares. Accordingly, FIIs etc.,
which are resident in Mauritius would not be taxable in India on income from
capital gains arising in India on sale of shares as per paragraph 4 of article
13.
The aforesaid clarification shall apply to all proceeding
which are pending at various levels."
C: The Writ Petitions
13. Circular No. 789 was challenged before the High Court
of Delhi by two writ petitions, both said to be by way of Public Interest Litigation.
The petitioner in CWP 2802 of 2000 (Azadi Bachao Andolan) prayed for quashing
and declaring as illegal and void Circular No. 789 dated 13.4.2000 issued by
the CBDT. The petitioner in CWP 5646 of 2000 sought an appropriate direction/order
or writ to the Central Government and made the following prayers:
"a) issue such appropriate direction/order/writ as the
Court deem proper, under the circumstances brought to the knowledge of the
Hon’ble Court, to the Central Government to initiate a process whereby
the terms of the Indo-Mauritius Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement are revised,
modified, or terminated and / or effective steps taken by the High Court Contracting
Parties so that the NRIs and FIIs and such other interlopers do not maraud
the resources of the State.
b) declare and delimit the powers of the Central Government
under section 90 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 in the matter of entering into
an agreement with the Government of any country outside India;
(c) declare and delimit the powers of the Central Board of
Direct Taxes in the matter of the issuance of instructions through circulars
to the statutory authorities under the Income tax Act, specially through such
circulars which are beneficial to certain individual taxpayers but injurious
to Public Interest.
(d) declare the illegality of Circular No. 789 of April 13,
2000 issued by the Central Board of Direct Taxes and to quash it as a matter
of consequence;
(e) issue mandamus so that the respondents discharge their
statutory duties of conducting investigation and collection of tax as per law;
(f) issue appropriate direction/order or writ of the nature
of mandamus as the Court deem fit, so that all remedial actions to undo the
effects of the acts done to the prejudice or Revenue in pursuance of Circular
No. 789 are taken by the authorities under the Income tax Act, 1961".
D: High Court’s findings
14. The High Court has quashed the circular on the following
broad grounds:
(A) Prima facie, by reason of the impugned circular no direction
has been issued. The circular does not show that it has been issued under section
119 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 and as such it would not be legally binding
on the Revenue;
(B) The Central Board of Direct Taxes cannot issue any instruction,
which would be ultra vires the provisions of the Income-Tax Act, 1961 : Inasmuch
as the impugned circular directs the income-tax authorities to accept a certificate
of residence issued by the authorities of Mauritius as sufficient evidence
as regards status of resident and beneficial ownership, it is ultra vires the
powers of the CBDT;
(C) The Income-tax Officer is entitled to lift the corporate
veil in order to see whether a company is actually a resident of Mauritius
or not and whether the company is paying income-tax in Mauritius or not and
this function of the Income-tax Officer is quasi-judicial. Any attempt by the
CBDT to interfere with the exercise of this quasi-judicial power is contrary
to intendment of the Income-tax Act.
(D) Conclusiveness of a certificate of residence issued by
the Mauritius Tax Authorities is neither contemplated under the DTAC, nor under
the Income-tax Act; whether a statement is conclusive or not, must be provided
under a legislative enactment such as the Indian Evidence Act and cannot be
determined by a mere circular issued by the CBDT;
E)
"Treaty Shopping", by which the resident of a third country takes
advantage of the provisions of the Agreement, is illegal and thus necessarily
forbidden;
F) Section 119 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 enables the issuance
of a circular for a strictly limited purpose. By a circular issued thereunder,
neither can the essential legislative function be delegated, nor arbitrary,
uncanalized or naked power be conferred;
G) Political expediency cannot be a ground for not fulfilling
the constitutional obligations inherent in the Constitution of India and reflected
in section 90 of the Act. The circular confers power to lay down a law which
is not contemplated under the Act on the ground of political expediency, which
cannot but be ultra vires.
H) Any purpose other than the purpose contemplated by section
90 of the Act, however, bona fide it be, would be ultra vires the provisions
of section 90 of the Income Tax Act.
(I) While political expediency will have a role to play in
terms of Article 73 of the Constitution, the same is not true when a Treaty
is entered into under the statutory provision like section 90 of the Act.
(J) Avoidance of double taxation is a term of art and means
that a person has to pay tax at least in one country, avoidance of double taxation
would not mean that a person does not have to pay tax in any country whatsoever.
(H) Having regard to the law laid down by the Supreme Court
in McDowell & Company vs. C.T.O. (1985) 154 ITR 148) = (2002-TIOL-40-SC-CT),
it is open to the Income-tax Officer in a given case to lift the corporate
veil for finding out whether the purpose of the corporate veil is avoidance
of tax or not. It is one of the functions of the assessing officer to ensure
that there is no conscious avoidance of tax by an assessee, and such function
being quasi-judicial in nature, cannot be interfered with or prohibited. The
impugned circular is ultra vires as it interferes with this quasi judicial
function of the assessing officer.
(L) By reason of the impugned circular the power of the assessing
authority to pass appropriate orders in this connection to show that the assessee
is a resident of a third country having only paper existence in Mauritius,
without any economic impact, only with a view to take advantage of the double
taxation avoidance agreement, has been taken away.
The Submissions
15. The learned Attorney General and Mr. Salve, for the appellants,
have assailed the judgment of the Delhi High Court on a number of grounds,
while the respondents through Mr. Bhushan, and in person, reiterated their
submissions made before the High Court and prayed for dismissal of these appeals.
Purpose and consequence of Double Taxation Avoidance Convention
16. To appreciate the contentions urged, it would be necessary
to understand the purpose and necessity of a Double Taxation Treaty, Convention
or Agreement, as diversely called. The Income-tax Act, 1961, contains a special
Chapter IX which is devoted to the subject of ‘Double Taxation Relief’.
17. Section 90, with which we are primarily concerned, provides
as under:
"90. Agreement with foreign countries.
(1) The Central Government may enter into an agreement with
the Government of any country outside India -
(a) for the granting of relief in respect of income on which
have been paid both income-tax under this Act and income-tax in that country,
or
(b) for the avoidance of double taxation of income under this
Act and under the corresponding law in force in that country, or
(c) for exchange of information for the prevention of evasion
or avoidance of income-tax chargeable under this Act or under the corresponding
law in force in that country, or investigation of cases of such evasion or
avoidance, or
(d) for recovery of income-tax under this Act and under the
corresponding law in force in that country;
and may, by notification in the Official Gazette, make provisions
as may be necessary for implementing the agreement.
(2) Where the Central Government has entered into an agreement
with the Government of any country outside India under sub-section (1) for
granting relief of tax, or as the case may be, avoidance of double taxation,
then, in relation to the assessee to whom such agreement applies, the provisions
of this Act shall apply to the extent they are more beneficial to that assessee".
(Explanation omitted as not relevant)
18. Section 4 provides for charge of Income-tax. Section 5
provides that the total income of a resident includes all income which; (a)
is received, deemed to be received in India or (b) accrues, arises or deemed
to accrue or arise in India, or (c) accrues or arises outside India, during
the previous year. In the case of a non-resident, the total income includes "all
income from whatever source derived" which (a) is received or is deemed
to be received or, (b) accrues or is deemed to accrue in India, during such
year. A person ‘resident’
in India would be liable to income-tax on the basis of his global income unless
he is a person who is ‘not ordinarily’ resident within the meaning
of section 6(b). The concept of residence in India is indicated in section
6. Speaking broadly, and with reference to a company, which is of concern here,
a company is said to be ‘resident’ in India in any previous year,
if it is an Indian company or if during that year the control and management
of its affairs is situated wholly in India.
19. Every country seeks to tax the income generated within
its territory on the basis of one or more connecting factors such as location
of the source, residence of the taxable entity, maintenance of a permanent
establishment, and so on. A country might choose to emphasise one or the other
of the aforesaid factors for exercising fiscal jurisdiction to tax the entity.
Depending on which of the factors is considered to be the connecting factor
in different countries, the same income of the same entity might become liable
to taxation in different countries. This would give rise to harsh consequences
and impair economic development. In other to avoid such an anomalous and incongruous
situation, the Governments of different countries enter into bilateral treaties,
Conventions or agreements for granting relief against double taxation. Such
treaties, conventions or agreements are called double taxation avoidance treaties,
conventions or agreements.
20. The power of entering into a treaty is an inherent part
of the sovereign power of the State. By article 73, subject to the provisions
of the Constitution, the executive power of the Union extends to the matters
with respect to which the Parliament has power to make laws. Our Constitution
makes no provision making legislation a condition for the entry into an international
treaty in time either of war or peace. The executive power of the Union is
vested in the President and is exercisable in accordance with the Constitution.
The Executive is qua the State competent to represent the State in all matters
international and may be agreement, convention or treaty incur obligations
which in international law are binding upon the State. But the obligations
arising under the agreement or treaties are not by their own force binding
upon Indian nationals. The power to legislate in respect of treaties lies with
the Parliament under entries 10 and 14 of the List I of the Seventh Schedule.
But making of law under that authority is necessary when the treaty or agreement
operates to restrict the rights of citizens or others or modifies the law of
the State. If the rights of the citizens or others which are justiciable are
not affected, no legislative measure is needed to give effect to the agreement
or treaty [See in this connection Maganbhai Ishwarbhai Patel and Others vs.
Union of India and another (1970) 3 SCC 400).
21. When it comes to fiscal treaties dealing with double taxation
avoidance, different countries have varying procedures. In the United States
such a treaty becomes a part of municipal law upon ratification by the Senate.
In the United Kingdom such a treaty would have to be endorsed by an order made
by the Queen in Council. Since in India such a treaty would have to be translated
into an Act of Parliament, a procedure which would be time consuming and cumbersome,
a special procedure was evolved by enacting section 90 of the Act.
22. The purpose of section 90 of becomes clear by reference
to its legislative history. Section 49A of the Income-tax Act, 1922 enabled
the Central Government to enter into an agreement with the Government of any
country outside India for the granting of relief in respect of income on which,
both income-tax (including super-tax) under the Act and income-tax in that
country, under the Income-tax Act and the corresponding law in force in that
country, has been paid. The Central Government could make such provisions as
necessary for implementing the agreement by notification in the Official Gazette.
When the Income-tax Act, 1961 was introduced, section 90 contained therein
initially was a reproduction of section 49A of 1922 Act. The Finance Act, 1972
(Act 16 of 1972) modified section 90 and brought it into force with effect
from 1.4.1972. The object and scope of the submission was explained by a circular
of the Central Board of Taxes (No. 108 dated 20.3.1973) as to empower the Central
Government to enter into agreements with foreign countries, not only for the
purpose of avoidance of double taxation of income, but also for enabling the
tax authorities to exchange information for the prevention of evasion or avoidance
of taxes on income or for investigation of cases involving tax evasion tax
evasion or avoidance or for recovery of taxes in foreign countries on a reciprocal
basis. In 1991, the existing section 90 was renumbered as sub-section (1) and
sub-section (2) was inserted by Finance Act, 1991 with retrospective effect
from April 1, 1972. CBDT Circular No. 621 dated 19.12.1991 explains its purpose
as follows:
"Taxation of foreign companies and other non-resident
taxpayers -
43. Tax treaties generally contain a provision to the effect
that the laws of the two contracting States will govern the taxation of income
in the respective State except when express provision to the contrary is made
in the treaty. It may so happen that the tax treaty with a foreign country
may contain a provision giving concessional treatment to any income as compared
to the position under the Indian law existing at that point of time. However,
the Indian law may subsequently be amended, reducing the incidence of tax to
a level lower than what has been provided in the tax treaty.
43.1. Since the tax treaties are intended to grant tax relief
and not put residents of a contracting country at a disadvantage vis-a-vis
other taxpayers, section 90 of the Income-tax Act has been amended to clarify
that any beneficial provision in the law will not be denied to a resident of
a contracting country merely because the corresponding provision in the tax
treaty is less beneficial."
23. The provisions of Sections 4 and 5 of the Act are expressly
made ‘subject to the provisions of this Act’, which would include
section 90 of the Act. As to what would happen in the event of a conflict between
the provision of the Income-tax Act and a Notification issued under Section
90, is no longer res-integra.
24. The Andhra Pradesh High Court in Commissioner of Income
Tax vs. Visakhapatnam Port Trust (1988) 144 ITR 146 held that provisions of
section 4 and 5 of Income-tax Act are expressly made ‘subject to the
provisions of the Act’ which means that they are subject to provisions
of section 90. By necessary implication, they are subject to the terms of the
Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement, if any, entered into by the Government
of India. Therefore, the total income specified in Sections 4 and 5 chargeable
to income tax is also subject to the provisions of the agreement to the contrary,
if any.
25. In Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Davy Ashmore India Ltd.
(1991) 190 ITR 626, while dealing with the correctness of a circular no. 333
dated April 2, 1982, it was held that the conclusion is inescapable that in
case of inconsistency between the terms of the Agreement and the taxation statute,
the Agreement alone would prevail. The Calcutta High Court expressly approved
the correctness of the CBDT circular No. 333 dated April 2, 1982 on the question
as to what the assessing officers would have to do when they found that the
provision of the Double Taxation was not in conformity with the Income-tax
Act, 1961. The said circular provided as follows (quoted at p.632):
"The correct legal position is that where a specific
provision is made in the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement, that provision
will prevail over the general provisions contained in the income tax Act, 1961.
In fact the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements which have been entered into
by the Central Government under section 90 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, also
provide that the laws in force in either country will continue to govern the
assessment and taxation of income in the respective country except where provisions
to the contrary have been made in the Agreement.
Thus, where a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement provided
for a particular mode of computation of income, the same should be followed,
irrespective of the provisions in the Income-tax Act. Where there is no specific
provision in the Agreement, it is the basic law, i.e. the Income-tax Act, that
will govern the taxation of income".
26. The Calcutta High Court held that the circular reflected
the correct legal position inasmuch as the convention or agreement is arrived
by the two Contracting States
"in deviation from the general principles of taxation applicable to the
Contracting States". Otherwise, the double taxation avoidance agreement
will have no meaning at all. [See also in this connection Leonhardt Andhra
Und Partner, Gmbh vs. Commissioner of Income Tax (2001) 249 ITR 418].
27. In Commissioner of Income Tax vs. R.M. Muthaiah [1993)
202 ITR 508, the Karnataka High Court was concerned with the DTAT between Government
of India and Government of Malaysia. The High Court held that under the terms
of agreement, if there was a recognition of the power of taxation with the
Malaysian Government, by implication it takes away the corresponding power
to the Indian Government. The Government was thus held to operate as a bar
on the power of the Indian Government to tax and that the bar would operate
on Sections 4 and 5 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, and take away the power of
the Indian Government to levy tax on the income in respect of certain categories
as referred to in certain Articles of the Agreement. The High Court summed
up the situation by observing (at p.512-513):
"The effect of an ‘agreement’ entered into
by virtue of section 90 of the Act would be; (1) If no tax liability is imposed
under this Act, the question of resorting to the agreement would not arise.
No provision of the agreement can possibility where the liability is not imposed
by this Act; (ii) if a tax liability is imposed by this Act, the agreement
may be resorted to for negativing or reducing it; (iii) in case of difference
between the provisions of the Act and of the agreement, the provisions of the
agreement prevail over the provisions of this Act and can be enforced by the
appellate authorities and the court."
28. It also approved of the correctness of the Circular No.
333 dated April 2, 1982 issued by the Central Board of Direct Taxes on the
subject.
29. In Arabian Express Line Ltd. of United Kingdom and others
vs. Union of India (1995) 212 ITR 31, the Gujarat High Court, interpreting
section 90, in the light of circular No. 333 dated April 2, 1982 issued by
the CDBT, held that the procedure of assessing the income of a NRI because
of his occasional activities in establishing business in Indian would not be
applicable in a case where there is a convention between the Government of
India and the foreign country as provided under Section 90 of the Income-tax
Act, 1961. In case of such an agreement, section 90 would have an overriding
effect. Interestingly, in this case a certificate issued by the H.M. Inspector
of Taxes certifying that the company was a resident of the United Kingdom for
purposes of tax and that it had paid advance corporate tax in the office of
the English Revenue Accounts Office, was held to be sufficient to take away
the jurisdiction of the Income-tax Officer.
30. A survey of the aforesaid cases makes it clear that the
judicial consensus in India has been that section 90 is specifically intended
to enable and empower the Central Government to issue a notification for implementation
of the terms of a double taxation avoidance agreement. When that happens, the
provisions of such an agreement, with respect to cases to which where they
apply, would operate even if inconsistent with the provisions of the Income-tax
Act. We approve of the reasoning in the decisions which we have noticed. If
it was not the intention of the legislature to make a departure from the general
principle of chargeability to tax under section 4 and the general principle
of ascertainment of total income under section 5 of the Act, then there was
no purpose in making those sections
"subject to the provisions" of the Act". The very object of
granting the said two sections with the said clause is to enable the Central
Government to issue a notification under section 90 towards implementation
of the terms of the DTAs which would automatically override the provisions
of the Income-tax Act in the matter of ascertainment of chargeability in income
tax and ascertainment of total income, to the extent of inconsistency with
the terms of the DTAC.
31. The contention of the respondents, which weighed with
the High Court viz, that the impugned circular No. 789 in inconsistent with
the provisions of the Act, is a total non-sequitur. As we have pointed out,
Circular No. 789 is a circular within the meaning of section 90; therefore,
it must have the legal consequences contemplated by sub-section (2) of section
90. In other words, the circular shall prevail even if inconsistent with the
provisions of Income-tax Act, 1961 insofar as assessees covered by the provisions
of the DTAC are concerned.
32. Though a number of interconnected and diffused arguments
were addressed, broadly the argument of the respondents appears to be as follows:
By reason of Article 265 of the Constitution, no tax can be levied or collected
except by authority of law. The authority to levy tax or grant exemption therefrom
vests absolutely in the Parliament and no other body, howsoever high, can exercise
such power. Once Parliament has enacted the Income-tax Act, taxes must be levied
and collected in accordance therewith and no person has power to grant any
exemption therefrom. The treaty making power under Article 73 is confined only
to such matters as would not fall within the province of Article 265. With
respect to fiscal treaties, the contention is that they cannot be enforced
in contravention of the provisions of the Income-tax Act, unless Parliament
has made an enabling law in support. The respondents highlighted the provisions
of the OECD models with regard to tax treaties and how tax treaties were enunciated,
signed and implemented in America, Britain and others countries. Placing reliance
on the observations of Kier and Lawson (Cases in Constitutional Law, D.L. Kier
and F.H. Lawson, Pg. 53-54, 159-163 (ELBS & Oxford University Press 5th
Ed.), it was contended that in England it has been recognised that "there
are, however, two limits to its capacity; it cannot legislate and it cannot
tax without the concurrence of the Parliament". It is urged that the situation
is the same in India; that unless there is a specific exemption granted by
the Parliament, it is not open for the Central Government to grant any exemption
from the tax payable under the Income-tax Act.
33. In our view, the contention is wholly misconceived. Section
90, as we have already noticed (including its precursor under the 1922 Act),
was brought on the statute book precisely to enable the executive to negotiate
a DTAC and quickly implement it. Even accepting the contention of the respondents
that the powers exercised by the Central Government under section 90 are delegated
powers of legislation, we are unable to see as to why a delegatee of legislative
power in all cases has no power to grant exemption. There are provisions galore
in statutes made by Parliament and State legislatures wherein the power of
conditional or unconditional exemption from the provisions of the statutes
are expressly delegated to the executive. For example, even in fiscal legislation
like the Central Excise Act and Sales Tax, Act there are provisions for exemption
from the levy of Tax [See Section 5A of Central Excise Act, 1944 and Section
8(5) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956]. Therefore we are unable to accept
the contention that the delegate of a legislative power cannot exercise the
power of exemption in a fiscal statute.
34. The niceties of the OECD model tax treaties or the report
of the Joint Parliamentary Committee on the State Market Scam and Matters Relating
thereto, on which considerable time was spent by Mr. Jha, who appeared in person,
need not detain us for too long, though we shall advert to them later. This
Court is not concerned with the manner in which tax treaties are negotiated
or enunciated; nor is it concerned with the wisdom of any particular treaty.
Whether the Indo-Mauritius DTAC ought to have been enunciated in the present
form, or in any other particular form, is none of our concern. Whether section
90 ought to have been placed on the statute book, is also not our concern.
Section 90, which delegates powers to the Central Government, has not been
challenged before us, and, therefore, we must proceed on the footing that the
section is constitutionally valid. The challenge being only to the exercise
of the power emanating from the section, we are of the view that section 90
enables the Central Government to enter into a DTAC with the foreign Government.
When the requisite notification has been issued thereunder, the provisions
of sub-section (2) of section 90 spring into operation and an assessee who
is covered by the provisions of the DTAC is entitled to seek benefit thereunder,
even if the provisions of the DTAC are inconsistent with the provisions of
Income-tax Act, 1961.
STARE DECISIS
35. The Learned Attorney General justifiably relied on the
observations of this Court in Mishri Lal vs. Dhirendra Nath (dead) by Lrs.
and others (1999) 4 SCC 11, para 14 to 22, in which this Court referred to
its earlier decision in Muktul vs. Manbhari (1959) SCR 1099), on the scope
of the doctrine of stare decisis with reference to Halsbury’s Law of
England and Corpus Juris Secundum, pointing out that a decision which has been
followed for a long period of time, and has been acted upon by persons in the
formation of contracts or in the disposition of their property, or in the general
conduct of affairs, or in legal procedure or in other ways, will generally
be followed by courts of higher authority other than the court establishing
the rule, even though the court before whom the matter arises afterwards might
be of a different view. The learned Attorney General contended that the interpretation
given to section 90 of the Income-tax Act, a Central Act, by several High Courts
without dissent has been uniformally followed: several transactions have been
entered into based upon the said exposition of the law; that several tax treaties
have been entered into with different foreign Governments based upon this law,
hence, the doctrine of stare decisis should apply or else it will result in
chaos and open up a Pandora’s box of uncertainty.
36. We think that this submission is sound and needs to be
accepted. It is not possible for us to say that the judgments of the different
High Courts noticed have been wrongly decided by reason of the arguments presented
by the respondents. As observed in Mishrilal (supra note 10) even if the High
Courts have consistently taken an erroneous view, (though we do not say that
the view is erroneous) it would be worthwhile to let the matter rest, since
large numbers of parties have modulated their legal relationship based on this
settled position of law.
37. Much of the argument centred around the effect of the
circular issued by the CBDT under Section 119 of the Act and its binding nature.
38. Section 119, strategically placed in Chapter XIII which
deals with ‘Income-Tax Authorities’ is an enabling power of the
CBDT, which is recognised as an authority under the Income-tax Act under section
116(a). The CBDT under this section is empowered to issue such orders instructions
and directions to other income-tax authorities "as it may deem fit for
proper administration of this Act". Such authorities and all other persons
employed in the execution of this Act are bound to observe and follow such
orders, instructions and directions of the CBDT. The proviso to sub-section
(1) of section 119 recognises two exceptions to this power. First, that the
CBDT cannot require any income-tax authority to make a particular assessment
or to dispose of a particular case in a particular manner. Second, is with
regard to interference with the discretion of the Commissioner (Appeals) in
exercise of his appellate functions. Sub-section (2) of Section 119 provides
for the exercise of power is certain special cases and enables the CBDT, if
it considers it necessary or expedient so to do for the purpose of proper and
efficient management of the work of assessment and collection of revenue, to
issue general or special orders in respect of any class of incomes of class
of cases, setting forth directions or instructions as to the guidelines, principles
or procedures to be followed by other income-tax authorities in the discharge
of their work relating to assessment or initiating proceeding for imposition
of penalties. The powers of the CBDT are wide enough to enable it to grant
relaxation from the provisions of several sections enumerated in clause (a).
Such orders may be published in the Official Gazette in the prescribed manner,
if the CBDT is of the opinion that it is so necessary. The only bar on the
exercise of power is that it is not prejudicial to the assessee. We are not
concerned with the provisions in clauses (b) and (c) in the present appeals.
39. In K.P. Varghese vs. Income-Tax Officer, Ernakulam (1981)
131 ITR 597 = (2002-TIOL-128-SC-IT),
it was pointed out by this Court that not only are the circulars and instructions,
issued by the CBDT in exercise of the power under section 119, binding on the
authorities administering the tax department, but they are also clearly in
the nature of contemporanea expositio furnishing legitimate aid to the construction
of the Act.
40. The Rule of contemporanea expositio is that "administrative
construction (i.e. contemporaneous) construction placed by administrative or
executive officers) generally should be clearly wrong before it is overturned;
such a construction commonly referred to as practical construction, although
non-controlling, is nevertheless entitled to considerable weight, it is highly
persuasive (Crawford on Statutory Construction, 1940 Ed, as in Supra Note 13)."
41. The validity of this principle was recognised in Baleshwar
Bagarti vs. Bhagirathi Dass (1908) ILR 35 Cal. 701, 713, where the Calcutta
High Court stated the rule in the following words:
"It is a well-settled principle of interpretation that
court in construing a statute will give much weight to the interpretation put
upon it, at the time of its enactment and since, by those whose duty it has
been to construe, execute and apply it."
42. The statement of this rule has also been quoted with approval
by this Court in Deshbandhu Gupta & Company vs. Delhi Stock Exchange Association
Ltd. [1979) 4 SCC 565].
43. In K.P. Varghese (Supra note 13), this Court held that
the circulars of the CBDT issued in exercise of its power under section 119
are legally binding on the revenue and that this binding character attaches
to the circulars "even if they be found not in accordance with the correct
interpretation of sub-section (2) and they depart or deviate from such construction".
44. Navnit Lal C. Javeri vs. K.K. Sen (1965) 56 ITR 198, and
Ellerman Lines Ltd. vs. CIT (1971) 82 ITR 913, clearly establish the principle
that circulars issued by the CBDT under section 119 of the Act are binding
on all officers and employees employed in the execution of the Act, even if
they deviate from the provisions of the Act.
45. In UCO Bank vs. Commissioner of Incom-Tax, (1999) 237
ITR 889 at 896, dealing with the legal status of such circulars, this Court
observed:
"Such instructions may be by way of relaxation of any
of the provisions of the sections specified there or otherwise. The Board thus
has power, inter alia, to tone down the rigour of the law and ensure a fair
enforcement of its provisions, by issuing circulars in exercise of its statutory
powers under section 119 of the Income-tax Act which are binding on the authorities
in the administration of the Act. Under section 119(2) however, the circulars
as contemplated therein cannot be adverse to the assessee. Thus the authority
which wields the power for its own advantage under the Act is given the right
to forgo the advantage when required to wield it in manner it considers just
by relaxing the rigour of the law or in other permissible manners as laid down
in section 119. The power is given for the purpose of just, proper and efficient
management of the work of assessment and in public interest. It is a beneficial
power given to the Board for proper administration or fiscal law so that undue
hardship may not be caused to the assessee and the fiscal laws may be correctly
applied. Hard cases which can be properly categorised as belonging to a class,
can thus, be given the benefit of relaxation of law by issuing circulars binding
on the taxing authorities."
46. In Commissioner of Income-Tax vs. Anjum M.H. Ghaswala
and others, (2001) 252 ITR 1) it was pointed out that the circulars issued
by CBDT under Section 119 of the Act have statutory force and would be binding
on every income-tax authority although such may not be the case with regard
to press releases issue by the CBDT for information of the public.
47. In Collector of Central Excise Badodra vs. Dhiren Chemical
Industries, (2002) 2 SCC 127 at para 11, this Court, interpreting the phrase ‘appropriate’,
observed:
"We need to make it clear that, regardless of the interpretation
that we have placed on the said phrase, if there are circulars which have been
issued by the Central Board of Excise and Customs which place a different interpretation
upon the said phrase, that interpretation will be binding upon the Revenue."
48. While commenting adversely upon the validity of the impugned
circular, the High Court says "that the circular itself does not show
that the same has been issued under Section 119 of the Income-tax Act. Only
in a case where the circular is issued under section 119 or the income-tax
Act, the same would be legally binding on the revenue. The circular does not
deal with the power of the ITO to consider the question as to whether although
apparently a company is incorporated in Mauritius but where the company is
also a resident of India and or not a resident of Mauritius at all." It
is trite law that as long as an authority has power, which is traceable to
a source, the mere fact that source of power is not indicated in an instrument
does not render the instrument invalid. [See in this connection State of Sikkim
vs. Dorjee Tshering Bhutia and others (1991) 4 SCC 243 at para 16; N.B. Sanjana,
Assistant Collector of Central Excise, Bombay and others vs. Elphinshone Spinning
and Weaving Mills Co. Ltd. (1971) 1 SCC 337; B. Balakotaiah vs. Union of India
and others (1968) SCR 1052 and Afzal Ullah vs. State of U.P. (1964) 4 SCR 991.]
Is the impugned circular ultra-vires Section 119?
49. It was contended successfully before the High Court that
the circular is ultra vires the provisions of section 119. Sub-section (1)
of section 119 is deliberately worded in general manner so that the CBDT is
enabled to issue appropriate orders, instruction or direction to the subordinate
authorities "as it may deem fit for the proper administration of the Act".
As long as the circular emanates from the CBDT and contains orders, instructions
or directions pertaining to proper administration of the Act, it is relatable
to the sources of power under section 119 irrespective of its nomenclature.
Apart from sub-section (1), sub-section (2) of section 119 also enables the
CBDT "for the purpose of proper and efficient management of the work of
assessment and collection of revenue, to issue appropriate orders, general
or special in respect of any class of income or class of cases, setting forth
directions or instructions (not being prejudicial to assessees) as to the guidelines,
principles or procedures to be followed by other income tax authorities in
the work relating to assessment or collection of revenue or the initiation
of proceedings for the imposition of penalties". In our view, the High
Court was not justified in reading the circular as not complying with the provisions
of section 119. The circular falls well within the parameters of the powers
exercisable by the CBDT under Section 119 of the Act.
50. The High Court persuaded itself to hold that the circular
is ultra vires the powers of the CBDT on completely erroneous grounds. The
impugned circular provides that whenever a certificate of residence is issued
by the Mauritius Authorities, such certificate will constitute sufficient evidence
of accepting the status of residences as well as beneficial ownership for applying
the DTAC accordingly. It also provides that the test of residence mentioned
above would also apply in respect of income from capital gains on sale of shares.
Accordingly, FIIs etc. which are resident in Mauritius would not be taxable
in India on income from capital gains arising in India on sale of shares as
per paragraph 4 of Article 13. This, the High Court thought amounts to issuing
instructions "de hors the provisions of the Act".
51. In our view, this thinking of the High Court is erroneous.
The only restriction on the power of the CBDT is to prevent it from interfering
with the course of assessment of any particular assessee or the discretion
of the Commissioner of Income-Tax (Appeals). It would be useful to recall the
background against which this circular was issued.
52. The Income-tax authorities were seeking to examine as
to whether the assessees were actually residents of a third country on the
basis of alleged control of management therefrom.
53. We have already extracted the relevant provisions of Article
4 which provide that, for the purposes of the agreement, the term ‘resident
of a contracting State’ means any person who under the laws of that State
is liable to taxation therein by reason of his domicile, residence, place of
management or any other criterion of similar nature. The term ‘resident
of India’
and ‘the resident of Mauritius’ are to be construed accordingly.
Article 13 of the DTAC lays down detailed rules with regard to taxation of
capital gains. As far as capital gains resulting from alienation of shares
are concerned, Article 13(4) provides that the gains derived by a ‘resident’ of
a contracting State shall be taxable only in that State. In the instant case,
such capital gains derived by a resident of Mauritius shall be taxable only
in Mauritius. Article 4, which we have already referred to, declares that the
term resident of Mauritius’ means any person who under the laws of Mauritius
is ‘liable to taxation’ therein by reason, inter alia, of his residence.
Clause (2) of Article 4 enumerates detailed rules as to how the residential
status of an individual resident in both contracting States has to be determined
for the purposes of DTAC. Clause (3) of Article 4 provides that if, after application
of the detailed rules provided in Article 4, it is found that a person other
than an individual is a resident of both the contracting States, then it shall
be deemed to be a resident of the contracting State in which its place of effective
management is situated. The DTAC requires the test of ‘place of effective
management’ to be applied only for the purposes of the tie-breaker clause
in Article 4(3) which could be applied only when it is found that a person
other than an individual is a resident both of India and Mauritius. We see
no purpose or justification in the DTAC for application of this test in any
other situation.
54. The High Court has held, and the respondents so contend,
that the assessing officer under the Income-tax Act is entitled to lift the
corporate veil, but the circular effectively, bars the exercise of this quasi-judicial
function by reason of a presumption with regard to the certificate issued by
the competent authority in Mauritius; conclusiveness of such a certificate
of residence granted by the Mauritius tax authorities is neither contemplated
under the DTAC, nor under the Income-tax Act a provision as to conclusiveness
of a certificate is a matter of legislative action and cannot form the subject
matter of a circular issued by a delegate of legislative power.
55. As early as on March 30, 1994, the CBDT had issued circular
no. 682 in which it had been emphasised that any resident of Mauritius deriving
income from alienation of shares of an Indian company would be liable to capital
gains tax only in Mauritius as per Mauritius tax law and would not have any
capital gains tax liability in India. This circular was a clear enunciation
of the provisions contained in the DTAC, which would have overriding effect
over the provisions of sections 4 and 5 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 by virtue
of section 90(1) of the Act. If, in the teeth of this clarification, the assessing
officers chose to ignore the guidelines and spent their time, talent and energy
on inconsequential matters, we think that the CBDT was justified in issuing ‘appropriate’
directions vide circular no. 789, under its powers under section 119, to set
things on course by eliminating avoidable wastage of time, talent and energy
of the assesssing officers discharging the onerous public duty of collection
of revenue. The circular no. 789 does not in any way crib, cabin or confine
the powers of the assessing officer with regard to any particular assessment.
It merely formulates broad guidelines to be applied in the matter of assessment
of assessees covered by the provisions of the DTAC.
56. We do not think the circular in any way takes away or
curtails the jurisdiction of the assessing officer to assess the income of
the assessee before him. In our view, therefore, it is erroneous to say that
the impugned circular No. 789 dated 13.4.2000 is ultra vires the provisions
of section 119 of the Act. In our judgment, the powers conferred upon the CBDT
by sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 119 are wide enough to accommodate such
a circular.
Is the DTAC bad for excessive delegation?
57. The respondents contend that a tax treaty entered into
within the umbrella of section 90 of the Act is essentially delegated legislation;
if it involves granting of exemption from tax, it would amount to delegation
of legislative powers, which is bad. The legislature must declare the policy
of the law and the legal principles which are to control any given case and
must provide a procedure to execute the law [See in this connection the observations
of this Court in Harishankar Bagla and Another vs. The State of Madhya Pradesh
1955 SCR 380 and Kishan Prakash Sharma vs. Union of India and others (2001)
5 SCC 212.]
58. The question whether a particular delegated legislation
is in excess of the power of the supporting legislation conferred on the delegate,
has to be determined with regard not only to specific provisions contained
in the relevant statute conferring to the power to make rule or regulation,
but also the object and purpose of the Act as can be gathered from the various
provisions of the enactment. It would be wholly wrong for the Court to substitute
its own opinion as to what principle or policy would best serve the objects
and purposes of the Act, nor is it open to the Court to sit in judgment of
the wisdom, the effectiveness or otherwise of the policy, so as to declare
a regulation to be ultra vires merely on the ground that, in the view of the
Court, the impugned provision will not help to carry through the object and
purposes of the Act. This court reiterated the legal position, well established
by a long series of decisions, in Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and
Higher Secondary Education and another vs. Paritosh Bhupeshkumar Sheth and
others [(1984)4 SCC 27 at para 14].
"So long as the body entrusted with the task of framing
the rules or regulations acts within the scope of the authority conferred on
it, in the sense that the rules or regulations made by it have a rational nexus
with the object and purpose of the status, the court should not concern itself
with the wisdom or efficaciousness of such rules or regulations. It is exclusively
within the province of the legislature and its delegate to determine, as a
matter of policy, how the provisions of the statute can best be implemented
and what measures, substantive as well as procedural would have to be incorporated
in the rules or regulations for the efficacious achievement of the objects
and purposes of the Act. It is not for the Court to examine the merits or demerits
of such a policy because its scrutiny has to be limited to the question as
to whether the impugned regulations fall within the scope of the regulation-making
power conferred on the delegate by the statute".
59. Applying this test, we are unable to hold that impugned
circular amounts to impermissible delegation of legislative power. That the
amendment made in section 90 was intended to empower the Government to enter
into agreement with foreign Government, if necessary, for relief or avoidance
of double taxation, is also made clear by the Finance Minister in his Budget
Speech, 1953-54
Is the Double Taxation Avoidance Convention (‘DTAC’)
illegal and ultra vires the powers of the Central Government u/s 90.
60. Although the High Court has not made any finding of this
nature, the respondents have strenuously contended before us that the Indo-Mauritius
Double Taxation Avoidance Convention, 1983 it itself ultra vires the powers
of the Government under Section 90 of the Act. This argument deserves short
shrift.
61. Section 90 empowers the Central Government to enter into
agreement with the Government of any other country outside India for the purposes
enumerated in clauses (a) to (d) of sub-section (1). While clause (a) talks
of granting relief in respect of income on which income-tax has been paid in
India as well as in the foreign country, clause (b) is wider and deals with ‘avoidance
of double taxation of income’ under the Act and under the corresponding
law in force in the foreign country. We are not concerned with clauses (c)
and (d).
62. There are two hurdles against accepting the arguments
presented on behalf of the respondents. Even if we accept the argument of the
respondent that the DTAC is delegated legislation, the test of its validity
is to be determined, not by its efficacy, but by the fact that it is within
the parameters of the legislative provision delegating the power. That the
purpose of the DTAC is to effectuate the objectives in clauses (a) and (b)
of sub-section (1) of Section 90, is evident upon a reasonable construction
of the terms of the DTAC. As long as these two objectives are sought to be
effectuated, it is not possible to say that the power vested in the Central
Government, under section 90, even if it is delegated power of legislation,
has been used for a purpose ultra vires the intendment of the section. The
respondents tried to highlight a number of unintended deleterious consequences
which, according to them, have arisen as a result of implementation of the
DTAC. Even if they be true, it would not enable this Court to strike down the
delegated legislation as ultra vires. The validity and the vires of the legislation,
primary, or delegated, has to be tested on the anvil of the law making power.
If an authority lacks the power, then the legislation is bad. On the contrary,
if the authority is clothed with the requisite power, then irrespective of
whether the legislation fails in its object or not, the vires of the legislation
is not liable to be questioned. We, are therefore, unable to accept the contention
of the respondent that the DTAC is ultra vires the powers of the Central Government
under Section 90 on account of its susceptibility to ‘treaty shopping’ on
behalf of the residents of third countries.
63. The High Court seems to have heavily relied on an assessment
order made by the assessing officer in the case of Cox and Kings Ltd. drawing
inspiration therefrom. We are afraid that it was impermissible for the High
Court to do so. An assessment made in the case of a particular assessee is
liable to be challenged by the Revenue or by the assessee by the procedure
available under the Act. In a Public Interest Litigation it would be most unfair
to comment on the correctness of the assessment order made in the case of a
particular assessee, especially when the assessee is not a party before the
High Court. Any observation made by the Court would result in prejudice to
one or the other party to the litigation. For this reason, we refrain from
making any observations about the correctness or otherwise of the assessment
order made in Cox and Kings Ltd. Needless to say, we decline to draw inspiration
therefrom, for our inspiration is drawn from principles of law as gathered
from statutes and precedents.
What is ‘liable to taxation’?
Fiscal Residence
64. The concept of ‘fiscal residence’ of a company
assumes importance in the application and interpretation of double taxation
avoidance treaties.
65. In Cahiers De Droit Fiscal International [Jean Maic Riviere,
Cahiers de droit fiscal international, Voll. XXIIa at pp.47-76] it is said
that under the OECD and UNO Model Convention, ‘fiscal residence’ is
a place where a person amongst others a corporation is subjected to unlimited
fiscal liability and subjected to taxation for the worldwide profit of the
resident company. At para 2.2 it is pointed out:
"The UNO Model Convention takes these two different concepts
into account. It has not embodied the second sentence of article 4, paragraph
1 of the OECD Model Convention, which provides that the term ‘resident’ does
not include any person who is liable to in that State in respect only of income
from sources in that State. In fact, if one adhered to a strict interpretation
of this text, there would be no resident in the meaning of the convention in
those States that apply the principle of territoriality."
66. Again in paragraph 3.5 it is said:
"The existence of a company from a company law standpoint
is usually determined under the law of the State of incorporation or of the
country where the real seat is located. On the other hand, the tax status of
a corporation is determined under the law of each of the countries where it
carries on business, be it as resident or non-resident".
67. In paragraph 4.1 it is observed that the principle of
universality of taxation i.e. the principle of worldwide taxation, has been
adopted by a majority of States. One has to consider the worldwide income a
company to determine its taxable profit. In this system it is crucial to define
the fiscal residence of a company very accurately. The State of residence is
the one entitled to levy tax on the corporation’s worldwide profit. The
company is subject to unlimited fiscal liability in that State. In the case
of a company, however, several factors enter the picture and render the decision
difficult. First, the company is necessary incorporated and usually registered
under the tax law of a State that grants it corporate status. A corporation
has administrative activities, directors and managers who reside, meet and
take decisions in one or several places. It has activities and carries on business.
Finally, it has shareholders who control it. Hence, it is opined:
"What all these elements coexist in the same country,
no complications arise. As soon as they are dissociated and ‘scattered" in
different States, each country may want to subject the company to taxation
on the basis of an element to which it gives preference; incorporation procedure,
management functions, running of the business, shareholders’ controlling
power. Depending on the criterion adopted, fiscal residence will abide in one
or the other country.
All the European countries concerned, except France, levy
tax on the worldwide profit at the place of residence of the company considered.
South Korea, India and Japan in Asia, Australia and New Zealand
in Oceania follow this principle."
68. In paragraph 4.2.1. it is pointed out that the Anglo-Saxon
concept of a company’s
‘incorporation test’, which is applied in the United States, has
not been adopted by other countries like Australia, Canada, Denmark, New Zealand
and India and instead the criterion of incorporation amongst other tests has
been adopted by them.
69. The judgment in Ingemar Johansoon et al vs. United State
of America [336F.2d.809] on which the respondent place reliance, is easily
distinguishable. In this case the appellant, Johansson, was a citizen of Switzerland
and a heavy weight boxing champion by profession. He had earned some money
by boxing in the United States for which he was called upon to pay tax. Johansson
floated a company in Switzerland of which he became an employee and contended
that all professional fee paid for his boxing bouts were received by his employer
company in Switzerland for which he was remunerated as an employee of the said
company. He sought to take advantage of the DTAT between USA and Switzerland
which provided "an individual resident of Switzerland shall be exempt
from United States Tax upon compensation for labour personal services performed
in the United States... if he is temporarily present in the United States for
a period or periods not exceeding a total of 183 during the taxable year..." There
was no doubt that the appellant was not present in the United States for more
than 183 days and that he had floated the Swiss company motivated with the
desire to minimise his tax burden. As conclusive proof of residence he relied
upon a determination by the Swiss Tax Authority that he had become a resident
of Switzerland on a particular date. The United States Court of Appeal rejected
the claim of the appellant pointing out that the term ‘resident’ had
not been defined in the US-Swiss treaty, but under article II(2) each country
was authorised to apply its own definition to terms not expressly defined ‘unless
the context otherwise requires’. The Court, therefore, held that determination
of the appellant’s residence statues by the Swiss tax authority, according
to Swiss law, was not conclusive and that the U.S. tax authorities were entitled
to decide it in accordance with the US laws under the treaty. Hence, it was
held that Johansson was not a resident of Switzerland during the period in
question and that the tax exemption in the treaty was not available to him.
70. In our view, this judgment, though relied upon very heavily
by the respondents, is of no avail. The Indo-Mauritius DTAC, Article 3, clearly
defines the term
‘residence’ in a ‘Contracting State’. Interestingly,
even in this judgment, the Court observed: "Of course, the fact that Johansson
was motivated in his actions by the desire to minimize his tax burden can in
no way be taken to deprive him of an exemption to which an applicable treaty
entitles him", which will have some relevance to the contention of the
respondents with regard to the motivation to avoid tax.
71. The respondents contend that the FIIs incorporated and
registered under the provisions of the law in Mauritius are carrying on no
business there; they are, in fact, prevented from earning any income there;
they are not liable to income tax on capital gains under the Mauritius Income
tax Act. They are liable to pay income-tax under Indian Income-tax Act, 1961,
since they do not pay any income-tax on capital gains in Mauritius, hence,
they are not entitled to the benefit of avoidance of double taxation under
the DTAC.
72. Some of the assumptions underlying this contention, which
prevailed with the High Court, need greater critical appraisal.
73. Article 13(4) of the DTAC provides that gains derived
by a resident of a Contracting State from alienation of any property, other
than those specified in the paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the Article, shall be
taxable only in that State. Since most of the arguments centred around capital
gains made on transactions in shares on the stock exchange in India, we may
leave out of consideration capital gains on the type of properties contemplated
in paras 1,2 and 3 of Article 13 of the DTAC. The residuary clause in para
4 of Article 13 is relevant. It provides that capital gains made on sale of
shares shall be taxable only in the State of which the person is a ‘resident’ taking
us back to the meaning of the term ‘resident’ of a contracting
State. According to Article 4, this expression means any person who under the
laws of that State is ‘liable to taxation’ therein by reason of
his domicile, residence, place of management or any other criterion of a similar
nature. The terms ‘resident of India’
and ‘resident of Mauritius’ are required to be construed accordingly.
This takes us to the test to determine when a company is ‘liable to taxation’
in Mauritius.
Mauritian Income Tax Act, 1995
74. Section 4 of the Income Tax Act, 1995 (Mauritian Income-tax
Act) provides that, subject to the provisions of the Act, income-tax shall
be paid to the Commissioner of Income-tax by every person on all income other
than exempt income derived by him during the preceding year and be calculated
on the chargeable income of the person at the appropriate rate specified in
the First Schedule.
75. Section 5 defines as to when income is deemed to be derived.
76. Section 7 provides that the income specified in the Second
Schedule shall be exempt fro income-tax.
77. Part IV of the Mauritian Income Tax Act deals with Corporate
Taxation.
78. Section 44 of the Act provides that every company shall
be liable to income tax on its ‘chargeable income’ at the rate
specified in Part II, Part III or Part IV of the First Schedule, as the case
may be.
79. Section 51 defines the ‘gross income’ of a
company as inclusive of income referred to in section 10(1)(b) (income derived
from business), 10(1)(c) (any income from rent, premium or other income derived
from property), 10(1)(d) (any dividend, interest, charges, annuity or pension
other than a pension referred to in paragraph a(ii) and 10(1)(e) (any other
income derived from any other sources).
80. Section 73(b) provides that for the purposes of the Act
the expression ‘resident’, when applied to a ‘company’,
means a company which is incorporated in Mauritius or has its central management
and control in Mauritius.
81. Part II of the First Schedule prescribes the rate of tax
on chargeable income at 15% in the case of Tax Incentive companies and at other
rates for other types of companies. Part V of the First schedule enumerates
the list of tax incentive companies and item 16 is : "a corporation certified
to be engaged in international business activity by the Mauritius Offshore
Business Activities Authority established under the Mauritius Offshore Business
Activities Act, 1992". The second Schedule to the Mauritius Income-tax
Act in Part IV enumerates miscellaneous income exempt from income-tax. Item
I read ‘gains or profits derived from the sale of units or of securities
quoted on the Official List or on such Stock Exchanges or other exchanges and
capital markets as may be approved by the Minister".
82. A perusal of the aforesaid provisions of the Income Tax
Act in Mauritius does not lead to the result that tax incentive companies are
not liable to taxation, although they have been granted exemption from income-tax
in respect of a specified head of income, namely, gains from transactions in
shares and securities. The respondents contend that the FIIs are not "liable
to taxation" in Mauritius, hence they are not ‘residents’ of
Mauritius within the meaning of Article 4 of the DTAC. Consequently, it is
open to the assessing officers under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 to determine
where the taxable entities are really resident by investigating the centre
of their management and thereafter to apply the provisions of Income-tax Act,
1961 to the global income earned by them by reason of sections 4 and 5 of the
Income-tax Act, 1961.
83. It is urged by the learned Attorney General and Shri Salve
for the appellants that the phrase ‘liable to taxation’ is not
the same as ‘pays tax’. The test of liability for taxation is not
to be determined on the basis of an exemption granted in respect of any particular
source of income, but by taking into consideration the totality of the provisions
of the income-tax law that prevails in either of the Contracting States [See
in this connection Ramanathan Chettiar vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras
(1973) 88 ITR 169.] Merely because, at a given time, there may be an exemption
from income-tax in respect of any particular head of income, it cannot be contended
that the taxable entity is not liable to taxation. They urge that upon a proper
construction of the provisions of Mauritian Income Tax Act it is clear that
the FIIs incorporated under Mauritius laws are liable to taxation; therefore,
they are ‘residents’
in Mauritius within the meaning of the DTAC.
84. For the appellant reliance is placed on the judgment of
this Court in Wallace Flour Mills Contracting State Ltd. vs. Collector of Central
Excise, Bombay Division II [(1989) 4 SCC 592] = (2002-TIOL-216-SC-CX),
a case under the Central Excise Act. This Court held that though the taxable
event for levy of excise duty is the manufacture or production, the realisation
of the duty may be postponed for administrative convenience to the date of
removal of the goods from the factory. It was held that excisable goods do
not become non-excisable merely because of an exemption given under a notification.
The exemption merely prevents the excise authorities from collecting tax when
the exemption is in operation [See also in this connection the judgment of
Madras High Court in Tamil Nadu (Madras State) Handloom Weavers Contracting
State-operative Society Ltd. vs. Assistant Collector of Central Excise 1978
ELT 57 (Mad HC).
85. In Kasinka Trading and Another vs. Union of India and
Another [(1995) 1 SCC 274] this principle was reiterated in connection with
an exemption under the Customs Act. This Court observed. "The exemption
notification issued under section 25 of the Act had the effect of suspending
the collection of customs duty. It does not make items which are subject to
levy of customs duty etc. as items not leviable to such duty. It only suspends
the levy and collection of customs duty, wholly or partially, and subject to
such conditions as may be laid down in the notification by the Government in ‘public
interest’. Such an exemption by its very nature is susceptible of being
revoked or modified or subjected to other conditions."
86. We are inclined to agree with the submission of the appellants
that, merely because exemption has been granted in respect of taxability of
a particular source of income, it cannot be postulated that the entity is not ‘liable
to tax’ as contended by the respondents.
Effect of MOBA, 1992
87. The respondents, shifted ground to contend that the fact
that a company incorporated in Mauritius is liable to taxation under the Income
Tax Act there may be true only in respect of certain class of companies incorporated
there. However, with respect to companies which are incorporated within the
meaning of the Mauritius Offshore Business Activities Act, 1992 (hereinafter
referred to as "MOBA"), this would be wholly incorrect.
88. MOBA was enacted "to provide for the establishment
and management of the MOBA Authority to regulate offshore business activities
from within Mauritius and for the issue of offshore certificates, and to provide
for other ancillary or incidental matters", as its preamble suggests. ‘Offshore
business activity’ is defined as the business or other activity referred
to in section 33 and includes activity conducted by an international company. ‘Offshore
company’ is defined as a corporation in relation to which there is a
valid certificate and which carries on offshore business activity.
89. In part II, MOBA establishes an Offshore Business Activity
Authority entrusted, inter alia, with the duty of overseeing offshore business
activities and also issuing permits, licences or any other certificate as may
be required, and other authorisation which may be required by an offshore company
through which they may communicate with any of the public sector companies.
90. Section 16 of MOBA prescribes the procedure for issuing
of a certificate. Section 15 requires maintenance of confidentiality and non-disclosure
of information contained in applications and documents filed with it except
where such information is bona fide required for the purpose of any enquiry
or trial into or relating to the trafficking of narcotics and dangerous drugs,
arms, trafficking or money, laundering under the Economic Crime and Anti Money
Laundering Act, 2000.
91. Part II of MOBA contains the statutory provisions applicable
to offshore companies. Section 26 provides that an offshore company shall not
hold immovable property in Mauritius and shall not hold any share or any interest
in any company incorporated under the Companies Act, 1984, other than in a
foreign company or in another offshore company or in an offshore trust or an
international company. An offshore company shall not hold and account in a
domestic bank in Mauritian Rupees, except for the purpose of its day to day
transactions arising from its ordinary operations in Mauritius.
92. Sections 26 and 27 of MOBA are important and read as under:
"26. Property of an offshore company
(1) Subject to sub-section (2), an offshore company shall
not hold -
(a) immovable property in Mauritius;
(b) any share, or any interest in any company incorporated
under the Companies Act, 1984 other than in a foreign company or in another
offshore company or in an offshore trust or an international company;
(c) any account in a domestic bank in Mauritian Rupee
(2) An offshore company may -
(a) open and maintain with a domestic bank an account in Mauritian
rupees for the purpose of its day to day transactions arising from its ordinary
operations in Mauritius;
(b) open and maintain with a domestic bank an account in foreign
currencies with the approval of the Bank of Mauritius;
(c) where authorised by the terms of its certificate, or where
otherwise permitted under any other enactment, lease, hold, acquire or dispose
of an immovable property or any interest in immovable property situated in
Mauritius;
(d) invest in any securities listed in the stock Exchange
established under the Stock Exchange Act 1988 and in other debentures.
27. Dealings with residents
Notwithstanding any other enactment, the Minister, on the
recommendation of the Authority may authorise any offshore company engaged
in any offshore business activities to deal or transact with residents on such
terms and conditions as it thinks fit."
93. On the basis of these provisions, it is urged by the respondents
that any company which is registered as an offshore company under MOBA can
hardly carry out any business activity in Mauritius, since it cannot hold any
immovable property or any shares or interest in any company registered in Mauritius
other than a foreign company or another offshore company and cannot open an
account in a domestic bank in Mauritius. The respondents urge that such a company
cannot transact any business whatsoever within Mauritius as the purpose of
such a company would be to carry out offshore business activities and nothing
more. The respondents contend that when the possibility of such a company earning
income within Mauritius is almost nil, there is hardly any possibility of its
paying tax in Mauritius, whatever be the provisions of the Mauritian Income-Tax
Act.
94. In our view, the contention of the respondents proceeds
on the fallacious premise that liability to taxation is the same as payment
of tax. Liability to taxation is a legal situation; payment of tax is a fiscal
fact. For the purpose of application of Article 4 of the DTAC, what is relevant
is the legal situation, namely, liability to taxation, and not the fiscal fact
of actual payment of tax. If this were not so, the DTAC would not have used
the words ‘liable to taxation’, but would have used some appropriate
words like ‘pays tax’. On the language of the DTAC, it is not possible
to accept the contention of the respondents that offshore companies incorporated
and registered under MOBA are not ‘liable to taxation’ under the
Mauritius Income-tax Act; nor is it possible to accept the contention that
such companies would not be ‘resident’
in Mauritius within the meaning of Article 3 read with Article 4 of the DTAC.
95. There is a further reason in support of our view. The
expression ‘liable to taxation’ has been adopted from the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development Council (OECD) Model Convention 1977.
The OECD commentary on article 4, defining ‘resident’, says; "Conventions
for the avoidance of double taxation do not normally concern themselves with
the domestic laws of the Contracting States laying down the conditions under
which a person is to be treated fiscally as ‘resident’ and, consequently,
is fully liable to tax in that State’. The expression used is ‘liable
to tax therein’, by reasons of various factors. This definition has been
carried over even in Article 4 dealing with ‘resident’ in the OECD
Model Convention 1992.
96. In A Manual on the OECD Model Tax Convention on Income
and On Capital, at paragraph 4B.05, while commenting on Article 4 of the OECD
Double Tax Convention, Philip Baker points out that the phrase ‘liable
to tax’ used in the first sentence of Article 4.1 of the Model Convention
has raised a number of issues, and observes:
"It seems clear that a person does not have to be actually
paying tax to be ‘liable to tax’ - otherwise a person who had deductible
losses or allowances, which reduced his tax bill to zero would find himself
unable to enjoy the benefits of the convention. It also seems clear that a
person who would otherwise be subject to comprehensive taxing but who enjoys
a specific exemption from tax is nevertheless liable to tax, if the exemption
were repealed, or the person no longer qualified for the exemption, the person
would be liable to comprehensive taxation’.
97. Interestingly, Baker refers to the decision of the Indian
Authority for Advance Ruling in Mohsinally Alimohammed Rafik [(1994) 213 ITR
317]. An assessee, who resided in Dubai and claimed the benefits of UAE-India
Convention of April 29, 1992, even though there was no personal income-tax
in Dubai to which he might be liable. The Authority concluded that he was entitled
to the benefits of the convention. The Authority subsequently reversed this
position in the case of Cyril Eugene Pereira [(1999) 239 ITR 650] where a contrary
view was taken.
98. The respondents placed great reliance on the decision
by the Authority for Advance Rulings constituted under section 245-O of the
Income Tax Act, 1961 in Cyril Eugene Pereira’s case (ibid). Section 245S
of the Act provides that the Advance Ruling pronounced by the Authority under
section 245R shall be binding only:
"(a) on the applicant who had sought it;
(b) in respect of the transaction in relation to which the
ruling had been sought; and
(c) on the Commissioner, and the income-tax authorities subordinate
to him, in respect of the applicant and the said transaction."
99. It is therefore obvious that, apart from wherever its
persuasive value, it would be of no help to us. Having perused the order of
the Advance Rulings Authority, we regret that we are not persuaded.
100. There is substance in the contention of Mr. Salve learned
counsel for one of the appellants, that the expression ‘resident’ is
employed in the DTAC as a term of limitation, for otherwise a person who may
not be ‘liable to tax’ in a Contracting State by reason of domicile,
residence, place of management or any other criterion of a similar nature may
also claim the benefit of the DTAC. Since the purpose of the DTAC is to eliminate
double taxation, the treaty takes into account only persons who are ‘liable
to taxation’
in the Contracting States. Consequently, the benefits thereunder are not available
to persons who are not liable to taxation and the words ‘liable to taxation’
are intended to act as words of limitation.
101. In John N. Gladden vs. Her Majesty the Queen [85 DTC
5188 at 5190] the principle of liberal interpretation of tax treaties was reiterated
by the Federal Court, which observed:
"Contrary to an ordinary taxing statute a tax treaty
or convention must be given a liberal interpretation with a view to implementing
the true intentions of the parties. A literal or legalistic interpretation
must be avoided when the basic object of the treaty might be defeated or frustrated
insofar as the particular item under consideration is concerned.
102. Gladden (ibid) was a case where an American citizen resident
in USA owned shares in two privately controlled Canadian companies. Upon his
death, the question arose as to the capital gains which would arise as a result
of the deemed disposition of the said shares. The Canadian Revenue took the
position that there was a deemed disposition of the shares on the death of
the tax payer and capital gains tax was chargeable on account of the deemed
disposition. This view of the Revenue was upheld in appeal by the Tax Court
of Canada. Upon further appeal to the Federal Court it was held that capital
gains were exempt from tax under the Canada-USA. Tax Treaty as Canada had no
capital gains tax when it entered the treaty and it could not unilaterally
amend its legislation. The argument which prevailed with the trial court in
this case was similar to the one which prevailed with the High Court in the
matter before us. Interpreting the relevant Article of the Double Taxation
Avoidance Treaty the trial court held: "The parties could not have negotiated
to avoid double taxation on a tax which did not exist in Canada’. The
Federal Court emphasised that in interpreting and applying treaties the Courts
should be prepared to extend ‘a liberal and extended construction" to
avoid an anomaly which a contrary construction would lead to. The Court recognised
that "we cannot expect to find the same nicety or strict definition as
in modern documents, such as deeds, or Acts of Parliament; it has never been
the habit of those engaged in diplomacy to use legal accuracy but rather to
adopt more liberal terms".
103. Interpreting the Article of the Treaty against avoidance
of double taxation, the Federal Court said (at p.5):
"The non-resident can benefit from the exemption regardless
of whether or not he is taxable on that capital gain in his own country. If
Canada or the U.S. were to abolish capital gains completely, while the other
country did not, a resident of the country which had abolished capital gains
would still be exempt from capital gains in the other country."
104. The appellants rely on this judgment to contend that,
irrespective of the exemption from income-tax on capital gains upon alienation
of shares under the Mauritius Income-tax Act, the benefits of the DTAC would
apply.
105. The appellants contend that, acceptance of the respondents’ submission
that double taxation avoidance is not permissible unless tax is paid in both
countries is contrary to the intendment of section 90. It is urged that clause
(b) of sub-section (1) of Section 90 applies to a situation to grant relief
where income tax has been paid in both countries, but clause (b) deals with
a situation of avoidance of doubt taxation of income. Inasmuch as Parliament
has distinguished between the two situations, it is not open to a Court of
law to interpret clause (b) of section 90 sub-section (1) as if it were the
same as the situation contemplated under clause (a).
106. According to Klaus Vogel "Double Taxation Convention
establishes an independent mechanism to avoid double taxation through restriction
of tax claims in areas where overlapping tax-claims are expected, or at least
theoretically possible. In other words, the Contracting States mutually bind
themselves not to levy taxes or to tax only to a limited extent in cases when
the treaty reserves taxation for the other contracting States either entirely
or in part. Contracting States are said to ‘waive’ tax claims or
more illustratively to divide
‘tax sources’, the ‘taxable objects’, amongst themselves’.
Double taxation avoidance treaties were in vogue even from the time of the
League of Nations. The experts appointed in the early 1920s by the League of
Nations describe this method of classification of items and their assignments
to the Contracting States. While the English lawyers called it ‘classification
and assignment rules’, the German jurists called it ‘the distributive
rule’ (Verteilungsnorm). To the extent that an exemption is agreed to,
its effect is in principle independent of both whether the other contracting
State imposes a tax in the situation to which the exemption applies, and of
whether that State actually levies the tax. Commenting particularly on German
Double Taxation Convention with the United States, Vogel comments: "Thus,
it is said that the treaty prevents not only ‘current’, but also
merely ‘potential’ double taxation". Further, according to
Vogel, "only in exceptional cases, and only when expressly agreed to by
the parties, is exemption in one contracting State dependent upon whether the
income or capital is taxable in the other contracting state, or upon whether
it is actually taxed there.[ See in this connection Kalus Vogel, Double Taxation
Convention, Pg.26-29 (3rd ed.)" .
107. It is, therefore, not possible for us to accept the contentions
so strenuously urged on behalf of the respondents that avoidance of double
taxation can arise only when tax is actually paid in one of the Contracting
States.
108. The decision of Federal Court of Australia in Commissioner
of Taxation vs. Lamesa Holdings [(1997) 785 FCA]. is illustrating. The issue
before the Federal Court was whether a Netherlands company was liable to income-tax
under the Australian Income Tax Act on profits from the sale of shares in an
Australian company and whether such profits fell within Article 13 (alienation
of property) of the Netherlands-Australia Double Taxation Agreement, so as
to the be excluded from Article 7 (business profits) of that Agreement. Once
Leonard Green, a principle of Leonard Green and Associates a limited partnership
established in the United States, became aware of a potential investment opportunity
in Australia. Arimco Resources and Mining Company NL (Armico) a company listed
on the Australian Stock Exchange, which had a subsidiary called Armico Mining
Pty. Limited engaged in gold mining activities, was the subject of a hostile
takeover bid, at a price which Green was advised was less than the real value
of the Armico. With this knowledge Green decided to mount a takeover offer
for the subsidiary company. Then followed a series of steps of formation of
a number of companies with interlocking share holdings where each company owned
1005 share s of a different subsidiary company. Lamesa Holdings was one such
intermediary company of which 100% shares were held by Green Equity Investments
Ltd. The share transactions brought about a profit to Lamesa Holdings which
would be assessable to tax under the Australian Income Tax Act. Lamesa, however,
relied on the provisions of the Article 13(2) of the Double Taxable Avoidance
Convention (‘DTAC’) between Netherland and Austalia and claimed
that the income was not taxable in Australia by reason thereof. This income
was wholly exempt from tax in the Netherlands by reason of the Income Tax Law
applicable therein. The Federal Court found that under Article 13(2)(a)(ii)
of the DTAC shares in a company were treated as personally, that since the
place of incorporation of a company or the place of situs of a share may be
the subject of choice, the place of incorporation or the register upon which
shares were registered would not from a particularly close connection with
shares to ground the jurisdiction to tax share profits. It was held:
"It happens to be the case, because of unilateral relief
granted by the law of the Netherlands, that no tax will be payable in the Netherlands.
That of itself can not affect the interpretation of the Agreement. If the relevant
mining property had happened to be in the Netherlands so that the issue was
between taxation there on the one hand and taxation in Australia on the other,
the situation would have been one where tax would clearly have been payable
on the alienation of the shares in Australia without the benefit of any exemption.
Yet the Agreement must operate uniformly, whether the realty is in the Netherlands
or in Australia".
109. In this view of the matter, it was held that there was
no tax payable in Australia.
110. Chong vs. Commissioner of Taxation holds similarly. Australia
and Malaysia have an agreement to avoid double taxation. An Australian resident
was paid pension by Malaysian Government for services rendered to Malaysian
Government while he was in service there. This pension was taxed in Malaysia
and the issue was whether the right to tax Government pensions under the Agreement
could be exercised by the Australian Government and the effect of the domestic
law on the agreement. Article 18 of the double taxation avoidance agreement
provided that pension paid to a resident of a contracting State shall be taxable
only in that State upon a proper construction of Article 18(2) of the Treaty
it was held that pension paid by Malaysia is taxable in Australia inasmuch
as the said Article did not provide that Malaysia alone was to have the power
to tax Government pension, nor did it restrict Australia from doing so. Rather
it provided for the Contracting State paying the pension to have the power
to tax the pension if it is so desired and did not limit or restrict the taxing
power of the other Contracting State in that respect. The Federal Court point
out "Whether one uses the language of allocation of power or the language
of limitation of power, the result is the same; there is designated or agreed
who shall have the right under the agreement to impose taxation in the particular
area".
111. The Estate of Michel Hausmann vs. Her Majesty The Queen
[1998 Can. Tax Ct. LEXIS 1140] is another Canadian judgment which throws light
on the principle that the benefits of a double taxation agreement would be
available even if the other contracting State in which a particular head of
income is to be taxed, chooses not to impose tax on the same.
112. The central question in this case was whether the pension
received by Mr. Hausmann from the pension office of the Belgium Government
was taxable in Canada. The facts indicated that there was not tax withheld
at source in Belgium. The argument of the Canadian Tax Authority was that if
Belgium was not going to tax the pension, Canada should. Otherwise, the unthinkable
might occur and the amount might not be taxed by anyone. This would be anathema.
The facts indicated that the payment received by Mr. Hausmann fell below the
prescribed threshold and therefore was not taxed in Belgium. The Canadian Court
rejected the argument that if Belgium did not tax the payment, it must be taxed
by the Canada as plainly wrong by relying on the terms of the treaty. On the
basis of the material available, the Federal Court came to the inference that
in negotiating the Belgium treaty both Canada and Belgium unquestionably regarded
pensions paid under their social security legislation, such as the CPP or the
corresponding Belgian statutory scheme, to be taxable only in the country from
which they emanated and not the country of residence of the recipient. Hence,
it was held that the pension payments received by Mr. Hausmann from the office
of Belgium were social security pension and such allowance could be taxable
only in Belgium. The fact that Belgium did not choose to tax them was held
to be totally irrelevant.
113. Mr. Salve contended that a profit made by sale of shares
may not invariably amount to capital gains, as for example if the shares were
par to the trading assets of the company. If such be the case, the gains may
amount to trading income of such a company. He also relied on the observations
of this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax Nagpur vs. Sutlej Cotton Mills
Supply Agency Limited [(1975) 100 ITR 706] It is not necessary for us to go
into this question as it would depend upon as to whether the shares are held
by a company as an investment or as trading asset. The possibility urged by
the learned counsel certainly exists and cannot be ruled out without examination
of facts.
Treaty Shopping - Is it illegal?
114. The respondents vehemently urge that the offshore companies
have been incorporated under the laws of Mauritius only as shell companies,
which carry on no business therein, and are incorporated only with the motive
of taking undue advantage of the DTAC between Indian Mauritius. They also urged
that ‘treaty shopping’
is both unethical and illegal and amounts to a fraud on the treaty and that
this Court must be astute to interdict all attempts at treaty shopping.
115.
‘Treaty shopping’ is a graphic expression used to describe the
act of a resident of a third country taking advantage of a fiscal treaty between
two Contracting States. According to Lord McNair, "provided that any necessary
implementation by municipal law has been carried out, there is nothing to prevent
the nationals of ‘third States’, in the absence of any expressed
or implied provision to the contrary, from claiming the right or becoming subject
to the obligation created by a treaty [Lord McNair, the Law of Treaties, Pg.
336 (Oxford, at the Clarendan Press, 1961].
116. Reliance is also placed on the following observations
of Lord McNair [ibid).
"that any necessary implementation by municipal law has
been carried out, there is nothing to prevent the nationals of ‘third
States’, in the absence of any express or implied provision to the contrary,
from claiming the rights, or becoming subject to the obligations, created by
a treaty, for instance, if an Anglo-American Convention provided that professors
on the staff of the universities of each country were exempt from taxation
in respect of fees earned for lecturing in the other country, and any necessary
changes in the tax laws were made, that privilege could be claimed by, or on
behalf of, professors of those universities who were the nationals of ‘third
States’.
117. It is urged by the learned counsel for the appellants,
and rightly in our view, that if it was intended that a national of a third
State should be precluded from the benefits of the DTAC, then a suitable term
of limitation to that effect should have been incorporated therein. As a contrast,
our attention was drawn to the Article 24 of the Indo-Us Treaty on Avoidance
of Double Taxation which specifically provides the limitations subject to which
the benefits under the Treaty can be availed of. One of the limitations is
that more than 50% of the beneficial interest, or in the case of a company
more than 50% of the number of share of each class of the company, be owned
directly or indirectly by one or more individual residents of one of the contracting
States. Article 24 of the Indo-U.S. DTAC is in marked contrast with the Indo-Mauritius
DTAC. The appellants rightly contend that in the absence of a limitation clause,
such as the once contained in Article 24 of the Indo-U.S. Treaty, there are
not disabling or disentitling conditions under the Indo-Mauritius Treaty prohibiting
the resident of a third nation from deriving benefits thereunder. They also
urge that motives with which the residents have been incorporated in Mauritius
are wholly irrelevant and cannot in any way effect the legality of the transaction.
They urge that there is nothing like equity in a fiscal statute. Either the
statute applies proprio vigore or it does not. There is no question of applying
a fiscal statute by intendment, if the expressed words do not apply. In our
view, this contention of the appellants has merit and deserves acceptance.
We shall have occasion to examine the argument based on motive a little later.
118. The decision of the Chancery Division in Re F.G. Films
Ltd. [53(1) WLR. 483] was pressed into service as an example of the mask of
corporate entity being lifted and account be taken of what lies behind in order
to prevent ‘fraud’. This decision only emphasises the doctrine
of piercing the veil in incorporation. There is no doubt that, where necessary,
the Courts are empowered to lift the veil of incorporation while applying the
domestic law. In the situation where the terms of the DTAC have been made applicable
by reason of section 90 of the Income-Tax Act, 1961, even if they derogate
from the provisions of the Income-tax Act, it is not possible to say that this
principle of lifting the veil of incorporation should be applied by the court.
As we have already emphasised, the whole purpose of the DTAC is to ensure that
the benefits thereunder are available even if they are inconsistent with the
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act. In our view, therefore, the principle
of piercing the veil of incorporation can hardly apply to a situation as the
one before us.
119. The respondents banked on certain observations made in
Oppenheim’s International Law [L. Oppenheim, Oppenheim’s International
Law, Article 626 (9th Ed.). All that is stated therein is a reiteration of
the general rule in municipal law that contractual obligations bind the parties
to their contracts and not a third party to the contract. In international
law also, it has been pointed out that the Vienna Convention on the Laws of
Treaties, 1969 reaffirms the general rule that a treaty does not create either
obligations or rights for a third party state without its consent, based on
the general principle pacta tertiis nec nocent nec prosunt. It is true that
an international treaty between States A & B is neither intended to confer
benefits nor impose obligations on the residents of State C, but, here we are
not concerned with this question at all. The question posed for our consideration
is: If the residents of State C qualify for a benefit under the treaty, can
they be denied the benefit on some theoretical ground that ‘treaty shopping’ is
unethical and illegal? We find no support for this proposition in the passage
cited from Oppenheim.
120. The respondents then relied on observations of Philip
Baker [Philip Baker, Double Taxation Convention and International Law, Pg.
91 (1994) 2nd Ed.] regarding a seminar at the IFI Barcelona in 1991, wherein
a paper was presented on "Limitation of treaty benefits for companies" (treaty
shopping). He points out that the Committee on Fiscal Affairs of the OECD in
its report styled as "Conduit Companies Report 1987" recognised that
a conduit company would generally be able to claim treaty benefits.
121. There is elaborate discussion in Baker’s treatise
on the anti abuse provisions in the OECD model and the approach of different
countries to the issue of ‘treaty shopping’. True that several
countries like the USA, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland and United Kingdom
have taken suitable steps, either by way of incorporation of appropriate provisions
in the international conventions as to double taxation avoidance, or by domestic
legislation, to ensure that the benefits of a treaty/convention are not available
to residents of a third State. Doubtless, the treatise by Philip Baker is an
excellent guide as to how a state should modulate its laws or incorporate suitable
terms in tax conventions to which it is party so that the possibility of a
resident of a third State deriving benefits thereunder is totally eliminated.
That may be an academic approach to the problem to say how the law should be.
The maxim "Judicis est jus dicere, non dare"
pithily expounds the duty of the Court. It is to decide what the law is, and
apply it; not to make it.
Report of the working group on non-resident taxation
122. The respondents contended that anti-abuse provisions
need not be incorporated in the treaty since it is assumed that the treaty
would only be used for the benefit of the parties.
123. They also strongly rely on the ‘Report of the working
group on Non-Resident Taxation’ dated 3rd January, 2003. In Chapter 3,
para 3.2 of the report it is stated:
"3.2 Entitlement to avail DTAA benefit:
Presently a person is entitled to claim application of DTAA
if he is ‘liable to tax’ in the other Contracting State. The scope
of liability to tax is not defined. The term ‘liable to tax’ should
be defined to say that there should be tax laws in force in the other State,
which provides for taxation of such person, irrespective that such tax fully
or partly exempts such persons from charge of tax on any income in any manner."
124. In para 3.3.1, after noticing the growing practice amongst
certain entities, who are not residents of either of the two Contracting States,
to try and avail of the beneficial provisions of the DTAAs and indulge in what
is popularly known as ‘treaty shopping’, the report says:
"3.3.1. .. there is a need to incorporate suitable provisions
in the chapter on interpretation of DTAAs, to deal with treaty shopping, conduit
companies and thin capitalization. These may be based on UN/OECD model or other
best global practices."
125. In para 3.3.2, the working group recommended introduction
of anti-abuse provisions in the domestic law.
126. Finally, in paragraph 3.3.3. it is stated "The Working
Group recommends that in future negotiations, provisions relating to anti-abuse/limitation
of benefit may be incorporated in the DTAAs also."
127. We are afraid that the weighty recommendations of the
Working Group on Non-Resident Taxation are again about what the law ought to
be, and a pointer to the Parliament and the Executive for incorporating suitable
limitation provisions in the treaty itself or by domestic legislation. This
per se does not render an attempt by resident of a third party to take advantage
of the existing provisions of the DTAC illegal.
J.P.C. Report
128. Strong reliance is placed by the respondents on the report
of the Joint Parliamentary Committee (hereinafter referred to as "JPC")
on the Stock Market Scam and Matters Relating thereto which was presented in
the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha on December 19, 2002.
129. While considering the causes which led to the Stock Market
scam, the JPC had occasion to consider the working of the Indo-Mauritius DTAC.
It noticed that area- wise foreign direct investment inflow from Mauritius
increased from 37.5 million Rupees in 1993 to 61672.8 million Rupees in the
year 2001. The CBDT had approached the Indian High Commissioner at Mauritius
to take up the matter with the Mauritian authorities to ensure that benefit
of the bilateral tax treaty were not allowed to be misused, by suitable amendment
in Article 13 of the agreement. The Mauritian authorities, however, were of
the view that, though the beneficiaries of such capital funds domiciled in
Mauritius may be residing in third countries, these funds had been invested
in the Indian stock market in accordance with SEBI norms and regulations and
that the Finance Minister of India had himself encouraged such FIIs as a channel
for promoting capital flow to India in a meeting between himself and the Finance
Minister of Mauritius. The Ministry of finance was willing to have regular
joint monitoring of the situation to avoid possible misuse of the tax treaty
by unscupulous elements. It was pointed out by the Mauritian authorities that
DTAC between the two countries "had played a positive role in covering
the higher cost of investing in what was then assessed as ‘high risk
security’ and being decisive in making possible public offerings in U.S.A.
and Europe of funds investing in India". In the absence of such a facility,
as afforded by the Indo-Mauritius DTAC, the cost of raising such investment
would have been capital prohibitive. The JPC report points out that the negotiations
between the Government of India and Government of Mauritius resulted in which
the Mauritius Government felt that any change in the provisions of the DTAC
would adversely affect the perception of potential investors and would prejudicially
affect their financial interests.
130. The issue still appears to be the subject matter of negotiations
between the two Governments, though no final decision has been taken thereupon.
The JPC took notice of the facts that MOBA has since been repealed by Mauritius
and Financial Services Development Act has been promulgated with effect from
1.12.2001, which has to some extent removed the drawback of MOBA, and led to
greater transparency and facility for obtaining information under the DTAC,
which was hitherto not available.
131. Taking notice of the facts, and the reluctance of the
Government of Mauritius in the matter to renegotiate the terms of treaty, the
Committee recommended as under (vide para 12.205):
"The Committee find that though the exact amount of revenue
loss due to the ‘residency clause’ of the treaty cannot be quantified,
but taking into account the huge inflows/outflows, it could be assumed to be
substantial. They therefore recommended that Companies investing in Indian
through Mauritius should be required to file details of ownership with RBI
and declare that all the Directors and effective management is in Mauritius.
The Committee suggest that all the contentious issues should be resolved by
the Government with the Government of Mauritius urgently through dialogue".
132. In our view, the recommendations of the Working Group
of the JPC are intended for Parliament to take appropriate action. The JPC
might have noticed certain consequences, intended or unintended, flowing from
the DTAC and has made appropriate recommendations. Based on them, it is not
possible for us to say that the DTAC or the impugned circular are contrary
to law, nor would it be possible to interfere with either of them on the basis
of the report of the JPC.
Interpretation of Treaties
133. The principles adopted in interpretation of treaties
are not the same as those in interpretation of statutory legislation. While
commenting on the interpretation of a treaty imported into a municipal law,
Francis Bennion observes:
"With indirect enactment, instead of the substantive
legislation taking the well-known form of an Act of Parliament, it has the
form of a treaty. In other words the form and language found suitable for embodying
an international agreement become, at the stroke of a pen, also the form and
language of a municipal legislative instrument. It is rather like saying that,
by Act of Parliament, a woman shall be a man. Inconveniences may ensue. One
inconvenience is that the interpreter is likely to be required to cope with
disorganised composition instead of precision drafting. The drafting of treaties
is notoriously sloppy usually for very good reason. To get agreement, politic
uncertainty is called for.
......The interpretation of a treaty imported into municipal
law by indirect enactment was described be Lord Wilberforce as being ‘unconstrained
by technical rules of English law, or by English legal precedent, but conducted
on broad principles of general acceptation. This echoes the optimistic dictum
of Lord Widgery CJ that the words ‘are to be given their general meaning,
general to lawyer and layman alike...the meaning of the diplomat rather than
the lawyer [Francis Bennion, Statutory Interpretation, Pg. 461 (Butterworths,
1992 (2nd Ed.]
134. An important principle which needs to be kept in mind
in the interpretation of the provisions of an international treaty, including
one for double taxation relief, is that treaties are negotiated and entered
into at a political level and have several considerations as their basis. Commenting
on this aspect of the matter, David R. Davis in Principles of International
Double Taxation Relief, [David R.David, Principles of International Double
Taxation Relief, Pg. 4 (London Sweet & Maxwell, 1985)], points out that
the main function of a Double Taxation Avoidance Treaty should be seen in the
context of aiding commercial relations between treaty partners and as being
essentially a bargain between two treaty countries as to the division of tax
revenues between them in respect of income falling to be taxed in both jurisdictions.
It is observed (vide para 1.06):
"The benefits and detriments of a double tax treaty will
probably only be truly reciprocal where the flow of trade and investment between
treaty partners is generally in balance. Where this is not the case, the benefits
of the treaty may be weighted more in favour of one treaty partner than the
other, even though the provisions of the treaty are expressed in reciprocal
terms. This has been identified as occurring in relation to tax treaties between
developed and developing countries, where the flow of trade and investment
is largely one way.
Because treaty negotiations are largely a bargaining process
with each side seeking concessions from the other, the final agreement will
often represent a number of compromises, and it may be uncertain as to whether
a full and sufficient quid pro quo is obtained by both sides."
And, finally, in paragraph 1.08:
"Apart from the allocation of tax between the treaty
partners, tax treaties can also help to resolve problems and can obtain benefits
which cannot be achieved unilaterally".
135. Based on these observations, counsel for the appellants
contended that the preamble of the Indo-Mauritius, DTAC recites that it is
for the ‘encouragement of mutual trade and investment’ and this
aspect of the matter cannot be lost sigh of while interpreting the treaty.
136. Many developed countries tolerate or encourage treaty
shopping, even if it is unintended, improper or unjustified, for other non-tax
reasons, unless it leads to a significant loss of tax revenues. Moreover, several
of them allow the use of their treaty network to attract foreign enterprises
and offshore activities. Some of them favour treaty shopping for outbound investment
to reduce the foreign taxes of their tax residents but dislike their own loss
of tax revenues on inbound investment or trade of non-residents. In developing
countries, treaty shopping is often regarded as a tax incentive to attract
scarce foreign capital or technology. They are able to grant tax concessions
exclusively to foreign investors over and above the domestic tax law provisions.
In this respect, it does not differ much from other similar tax incentives
given by them, such as tax holidays, grants, etc. [Roy Rohtagi, Basic International
Taxationt Pg. 373-374 (Kluwer Law international).
137. Developing countries need from foreign investments, and
the treaty shopping opportunities can be an additional factor to attract them.
The use of Cyprus as treaty haven has helped capital inflows into eastern Europe.
Maderia (Portugal) attractive for investments into the European Union. Singapore
is developing itself as a base for investments in South East Asia and China.
Mauritius today provides a suitable treaty conduit for South Asia and South
Africa. In recent years, India has been the beneficiary of significant foreign
funds through the
"Mauritius conduit". Although the Indian economic reforms since (1991)
permitted such capital transfers, the amount would have been much lower without
the India-Mauritius tax treaty [ibid).
138. Overall, countries need to take, and to take, a holistic
view. The developing countries allow treaty shopping to encourage capital and
technology inflows, which developed countries are keen to provide to them.
The loss of tax revenues could be insignificant compared to the other non-tax
benefits to their economy. Many of them do not appear to be too concerned unless
the revenue losses are significant compared to the other tax and non-tax benefits
from the treaty, or the treaty shopping leads to other tax abuses (ibid).
139. There are many principles in fiscal economy which, though
at first blush might appear to be evil, are tolerated in a developing economy,
in the interest of long term development. Deficit financing for example, is
one treaty, shopping in our view, is another. Despite the sound and fury of
the respondents over the so called "abuse" of "treaty shopping",
perhaps, it may have been intended at the time when Indo-Mauritius DTAC was
entered into. Whether it should continue, and, if so, for low long is a matter
which is best left to the discretion of the executive as it is dependent upon
several economic and political considerations. This Court cannot judge the
legality of treaty shopping merely because one section of thought considers
it improper. A holistic view has to be taken to adjudge what is perhaps regarded
in contemporary thinking as a necessary evil in a developing economy.
Rule in McDowell
140. The respondents strenuously criticized the act of incorporation
by FIIs under the Mauritian Act as a ‘sham’ and ‘a device’ actuated
by improper motives. They contend that this Court should interdict such arrangements
and, as if by waiving a magic wand, bring about a situation where the incorporation
becomes non est. For this they heavily rely on the judgment of the Constitution
Bench of this Court in McDowell and Company Ltd. vs. Commercial Tax Officer
[supra note 1]. Placing strong reliance on McDowell [Ibid] it is argued that
McDowell [Ibid] has changed the concept of fiscal jurisprudence in this country
and any tax planning which is intended to and results in avoidance of tax must
be struck down by the Court. Considering the seminal nature of the contention,
it is necessary to consider in some detail as to why McDowell [Ibid], what
it says, and what it does not say.
141. In the classic words of Lord Summer in IRC vs. Fisher's
Executors (1926) AC 395 at 412,
"My Lords, the highest authorities have always recognised
that the subject is entitled so to arrange his affairs as not to attract taxes
imposed by the Crown, so far as he can do so within the law, and that he may
legitimately claim the advantage of any expressed terms or any omissions that
he can find in his favour in taxing Acts. In so doing, he neither comes under
liability nor incurs blame."
142. Similar views were expressed by Lord Tomlin in IRC vs.
Duke of Westminister [(1936) AC 1; 19 TC 490] which reflected the prevalent
attitude towards tax avoidance:
"Every man is entitled if he can to order his affairs
so that the tax attaching under the appropriate Acts is less than it otherwise
would be. If he succeeds in ordering them so as to secure this result, then,
however, unappreciative the Commissioners of Inland Revenue or his fellow taxgatherers
may be of his ingenuity, he cannot be compelled to pay an increased tax."
143. These were the pre second world war sentiments expressed
by the British Courts. It is urged that McDowell [Supra note 1] has taken a
new look at fiscal jurisprudence and "the ghost of Fisher [Supra note
56] (supra) and Westminster [Supra note 57] have been exorcised in the country
of its origin". It is also urged that McDowell's [Supra note 1] radical
departure was in tune with the changed thinking on fiscal jurisprudence by
the English Courts, as evidenced in W.T. Ramsay Ltd. vs. IRC [(1982) AC 300].
Inland Revenue Commissioners vs. Burman Oil Company Ltd. [(1982) STC 30] and
Furniss vs. Dawson [(1984) 1 All ER 530].
144. As we shall show presently, far from being exorcised
in its country of origin, Duke of Westminster [Supra note 57] continues to
be alive and kicking in England. Interestingly, even in McDowell [Supra note
1], though Chinnappa Reddy, J., dismissed the observation of J.C. Shah, J.
in CIT vs. A. Raman and Company [(1968) 67 ITR 11] based on Westminster [Supra
note 57] and Fisher's Executors [Supra note 56], by saying "we think that
the time has come for us to depart from the Westminster principle as emphatically
as the British courts have done and to dissociate ourselves from the observations
of Shah J., and similar observations made elsewhere", it does not appear
that the rest of the leaned Judges of the Constitutional Bench contributed
to this radical thinking. Speaking for the majority, Ranganath Mishra, J.,
(as he then was) says in McDowell [Supra note 1 at pg. 17] :
"Tax planning may be legitimate provided it is within
the framework of law. Colourable devices cannot be part of tax planning and
it is wrong to encourage or entertain the belief that it is honourable to avoid
the payment of tax by resorting to dubious methods. It is the obligation of
every citizen to pay the taxes honestly without resorting to subterfuges."
(Emphasis supplied)
145. This opinion of the majority is a far cry from the view
of Chinnappa Reddy, J: "In our view the proper way to construe a taxing
statute, while considering a device to avoid tax, is not to ask whether a provision
should be construed liberally or principally, nor whether the transaction is
not unreal and not prohibited by the statute but whether the transaction is
a device to avoid tax, and whether the transaction is such that the judicial
process may accord its approval to it." We are afraid that we are unable
to read or comprehend the majority judgment in McDowell [Supra note 1] as having
endorsed this extreme view of Chinnapa Reddy, J., which, in our considered
opinion, actually militates against the observations of the majority of the
Judges which we have just extracted from the leading judgment of Ranganath
Mishra, J (as he then was).
146. The basic assumption made in the judgment of Chinnappa
Reddy, J. in McDowell [Ibid] that the principle in Duke of Westminster [Supra
note 57] has been departed from subsequently by the House of Lords in England,
with respect, is not correct. In Craven vs. White [(1988) 3 All ER 495] the
House of Lords pointedly considered the impact of Furniss [Supra note 64],
Burma Oil [Supra note 63] and Ramsay [Supra note 62]. The Law Lords were at
great pains to explain away each of these judgments. Lord Keith of Kinkel says,
with reference to the trilogy of these cases, (at p. 500):
"My Lords, in my opinion the nature of the principle
to be derived from the three cases is this: the court must first construe the
relevant enactment in order to ascertain its meaning; it must then analyse
the series of transactions in question, regarded as a whole, so as to ascertain
its true effect in law; and finally it must apply the enactment as construed
to the true effect of the series of transactions and so decide whether or not
the enactment was intended to cover it. The most important feature of the principle
is that the series of transactions is to be regarded as a whole. In ascertaining
the true legal effect of the series it is relevant to take into account, if
it be the case, that all the steps in it were contractually agreed in advance
or had been determined on in advance by a guiding will which was in a position,
for all practical purposes, to secure that all of them were carried through
to completion. It is also relevant to take into account, if it be the case,
that one or more of the steps was introduced into the series with no business
purpose other than the avoidance of tax.
The principle does not involve, in my opinion, that it is
part of the judicial function to treat as nugatory any step whatever which
a taxpayer may take with a view to the avoidance or mitigation or tax. It remains
true in general that the taxpayer, where he is in a position to carry through
a transaction in two alternative ways, one of which will result in liability
to tax and the other of which will not is at liberty to choose the latter and
to do so effectively in the absence of any specific tax avoidance provision
such as s. 460 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act, 1970.
In Ramsay and in Burmah the result of application of the principle
was to demonstrate that the true legal effect of the series of transactions
entered into, regarded as a whole, was precisely nil."
Lord Oliver (at p. 518-19) says:
"It is equally important to bear in mind what the case
did not decide. It did not decide that a transaction entered into with the
motive of minimising the subject's burden of tax is, for that reason, to be
ignored or struck down. Lord Wilberforce was at pains to stress that the fact
that the motive for a transaction may be to avoid tax does not invalidate it
unless a particular enactment so provides (see (1981) 1 All ER 865, (1982)
AC 300 at 323). Nor did it decide that the court is entitled, because of the
subject's motive in entering into a genuine transaction, to attribute to it
a legal effect which it did not have. Both Lord Wilberforce and Lord Fraser
emphasise the continued validity and application of the principle of IRC vs
Duke of Westminster (1936) AC 1 (19350 All ER Rep. 259, a principle which Lord
Wilberforce described as a 'cardinal principle'. What it did decide was that
that cardinal principle does not, where it is plain that a particular transaction
is but one step in a connected series of interdependent steps designed to produce
a court to regard it as otherwise than what it is, that is to say merely a
part of the composite whole."
Lord Oliver (at p. 523) observes:
"My Lords, for my part I find myself unable to accept
that Dawson either established or can properly be used to support a general
proposition that any transaction which is effected for the purpose of avoiding
tax on a contemplated subsequent transaction and is therefore 'planned' is,
for that reason, necessarily to be treated as one with that subsequent transaction
and as having no independent effect even where that is realistically and logically
impossible."
Continuing, (at page 524) Lord Oliver observes:
"Essentially, Dawson was concerned with a question which
is common to all successive transactions where an actual transfer of property
has taken place to a corporate entity which subsequently carries out a further
disposition to an ultimate disponee. The question is : when is a disposal not
a disposal within the terms of the statute? To give to that question the answer ‘when,
on an analysis of the facts, it is seen in reality to be a different transaction
altogether’ is well within the accepted canons of construction. To answer
it ‘when it is offered with a view to avoiding tax on another contemplated
transaction’ is to do more than simply to place a gloss on the words
of the statute. It is to add a limitation or qualification which the legislature
itself has not sought to express and for which there is no context in the statute.
That, however, desirable it may seem, is to legislate, not to construe, and
that is something which is not within judicial competence. I can find nothing
in Dawson or in the cases which preceded it which causes me to suppose that
that was what this House, was seeking to do".
147. Thus we see that even in the year 1988 the House of Lords
emphasised continued validity and application of the principle in Duke of Westminster.
[Supra note 57].
148. While Chinnappa Reddy, J. took the view that Ramasay
[supra note 62], was an authoritative rejection of principle in the Duke of
Westminster [supra note 57], the House of Lords, in the year 2001, does not
seem to consider it to be so, as seen from MacNiven (Inspector of Taxes) vs.
Westmoreland Investments Ltd [(2001) 1 All ER 865 at 877-878]. Lord Hoffmann
observes:
"In the Ramsay case both Lord Wilberforce and Lord Fraser
of Tullybelton, who gave the other principal speech, were careful to stress
that the House was not departing from the principle in IRC vs. Duke of Westminster
(1936) AC 1, (1935) All ER Rep. 259. There has nevertheless been a good deal
of discussion about how the two cases are to be reconciled. How, if the various
juristically discrete acquisitions and disposals which made up the scheme were
genuine, could the House collapse them into a composite self-cancelling transaction
without being guilty of ignoring the legal position and looking at the substance
of the matter?
My Lords, I venture to suggest that some of the difficulty
which may have been felt in reconciling the Ramsay case with the Duke of Westminster’s
case arises out of an ambiguity in Lord Tomlin’s statement that the courts
cannot ignore ‘the legal position’ and have regard to ‘the
substance of the matter’. If ‘the legal position’ is that
the tax is imposed by reference to a legally defined concept, such as stamp
duty payable on a document which constitutes a conveyance on sale, the court
cannot take a transaction which uses no such document on the ground that it
achieves the same economic effect. On the other hand, if the legal position
is that tax is imposed by reference to a commercial concept, then to have regard
to the business ‘substance’ of the matter is not to ignore the
legal position but to give effect to it.
The speeches in the Ramsay case and subsequent cases contain
numerous references to the ‘real’ nature of the transaction and
to what happens in ‘the real ‘world’. These expressions are
illuminating in their context, but you have to be careful about the sense in
which they are being used. Otherwise you land in all kinds of unnecessary philosophical
difficulties about the nature of reality and, in particular, about how a transaction
can be said not to be a ‘sham’ and yet be ‘disregarded’ for
the purpose of deciding what happened in ‘the real world’ . The
point to hold on to is that something may be real for one purpose but not for
another. When people speak of something being a ‘real’ something,
they mean that it falls within some concept which they have in mind, by contrast
with something else which might have been thought to do so, but does not. When
an economist says that real incomes have fallen, he is not intending to contrast
real incomes with imaginary incomes. The contrast is specifically between which
have been adjusted for inflation and those which have not. In order to know
what he means by ‘real’, one must first identify the concept (inflation
adjustment) by reference to which he is using the word.
Thus in saying that the transactions in the Ramsay case were
not sham transactions, one is accepting the juristic categorisation of the
transactions as individual and discrete and saying that each of them involved
no pretence. They were intended to do precisely what they purported to do.
They had a legal reality. But in saying that they did not constitute a ‘real’ disposal
giving rise to a ‘real’ loss, one is rejecting the juristic categorisation
as not being necessarily determinative for the purposes of the statutory concepts
of ‘disposal’ and ‘loss’ as property interpreted. The
contrast here is with a commercial meaning of these concepts. And in saying
that the income tax legislation was intended to operate ‘in the real
word’, one is again referring to the commercial context which should
influence the construction of the concepts used by Parliament".
149. With respect, therefore, we are unable to agree with
the view that Duke of Westminster (supra note 57) is dead, or that its ghost
has been exorcised in England. The House of Lords does not seem to think so,
and we agree, with respect. In our view, the principle in Duke of Westminster
(ibid) is very much alive and kicking in the country of its birth. And as far
as this country is concerned, the observations of Shah, J. in CIT vs. Raman
[supra note 67] are very mcuh relevant even today.
150. We may in this connection usefully refer to the judgment
of the Madras High Court in M.V. Vallipappan and others, vs. ITO, [(1988) 170
ITR 238], which has rightly concluded that the decision in McDowell [supra
note 1] cannot be read as laying down that every attempt at tax planning is
illegitimate and must be ignored, or that every transaction or arrangement
which is perfectly permissible under law, which has the effect of reducing
the tax burden of the assessee, must be looked upon with disfavour. Though
the Madras High Court had occasion to refer to the judgment of the Privy Council
in IRC vs. Challenge Corporation Ltd. [(1987) 2 WLR 24], and did not have the
benefit of the House of Lords’s pronouncement in Craven [supra note 74],
the view taken by the Madras High Court appears to be correct and we are inclined
to agree with it.
151. We may also refer to the judgment of Gujarat High Court
in Banyan and Berry vs. Commissioner of Income-Tax [(1996) 222 ITR 831 at 850]
where referring to McDowell [supra note 1], the Court observed:
"The court nowhere said that every action or inaction
on the part of the taxpayer which results in reduction of tax liability to
which he may be subjected in future, is to be viewed with suspicion and be
treated as a device for avoidance of tax irrespective of legitimacy or genuineness
of the act; an inference which unfortunately, in our opinion, the Tribunal
apparently appears to have drawn from the enunciation made in McDowell case
(1985) 154 ITR 148 (SC). The ratio of any decision has to be understood in
the context it has been made. The facts and circumstances which lead to McDowell’s
decision leave us in no doubt that the principle enunciated in the above case
has not affected the freedom of the citizen to act in a manner according to
his requirements, his wishes in the manner of doing any trade, activity or
planning his affairs with circumspection, within the framework of law, unless
the same fall in the category of colourable device which may properly be called
a device or a dubious method or a subterfuge clothed with apparent dignity".
152. This accords with our own view of the matter.
153. In CWT vs. Arvind Narottam [(1988) 173 ITR 479], a case
under the Wealth Tax Act, three trust deeds for the benefit of the assessee,
his wife and children in identical terms were prepared under section 21(2)
of the Wealth Tax Act. Revenue placed reliance on McDowell. [(supra note 1)].
Both the learned Judges of the Bench of this Court gave separate opinions.
154. Chief Justice Pathak, in his opinion said (at p. 486):
"Reliance was also placed by learned counsel for the
Revenue on McDowell and Company Ltd. vs. CTO (1985) 154 ITR 148 (SC). That
decision cannot advance the case of the Revenue because the language of the
deeds of settlement is plain and admits of no ambiguity."
155. Justice S. Mukherjee said, after noticing McDowell’s
case, (at page 487):
"Where the true effect on the construction of the deeds
is clear, as in this case, the appeal to discourage tax avoidance is not a
relevant consideration. But since it was made, it has to be noted and rejected".
156. In Matnauram Agrawal vs. State of Madhya Pradesh [(1999)
8 SCC 667 at para 12], another Constitution Bench had occasion to consider
the issue. The Bench observed:
"The intention of the legislature in a taxation statute
is to be gathered from the language of the provisions particularly where the
language is plain and unambiguous. In a taxing Act it is not possible to assume
any intention or governing purpose of the statute more than what is stated
in the plain language. It is not the economic results sought to be obtained
by making the provision which is relevant in interpreting a fiscal statute.
Equally impermissible is an interpretation which does not follow from the plain,
unambiguous language of the statute. Words cannot be added to or substituted
so as to give a meaning to the statute which will serve the spirit and intention
of the legislature".
157. The Constitution Bench reiterated the observations in
Bank of Chettinad Ltd. vs. CIT [(1940) 8 ITR 522 (PC)], quoting with approval
the observations of Lord Russel of Killowen in IRC vs. Duke of Westminster
[supra note 57] and the observations of Lord Simonds in Russel vs. Scott [(1948)
2 All ER 15].
158. It thus appears to us that not only is the principle
in Duke of Westminster [supra note 57] alive and kicking in England, but it
also seems to have acquired judicial benediction of the Constitutional Bench
in India, notwithstanding the temporary turbulence created in the wake of McDowell
[supra note 1].
159. Hence, reliance on Furniss [supra note 64], Ramsay [supra
note 62] and Burmah Oil [supra note 63] by the respondents in support of their
submission is of no avail.
160. The situation is no different in United States and other
jurisdictions too.
161. The situation in the United State is reflected in the
following passage from American Jurisprudence [American Jurisprudence (1973)
2nd Ed. Vol. 71].
"The legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount
of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether to avoid them, by means
which the law permits, cannot be doubted. A tax-saving motivation does not
justify the taxing authorities or the courts in nullifying or disregarding
a taxpayer's otherwise proper and bona fide choice among courses of action,
and the state cannot complain, when a taxpayer resorts to a legal method available
to him to compute his tax liability, that the result is more beneficial to
the taxpayer than was intended. It has even been said that it is common knowledge
that not infrequently changes in the basic facts affecting liability to taxation
are made for the purpose of avoiding taxation, but that where such changes
are actual and not merely simulated, although made for the purpose of avoiding
taxation, they do not constitute evasion of taxation. Thus, a man may change
his residence to avoid taxation, or change the form of his property by putting
his money into non-taxable securities, or in the form of property which would
be taxed less, and not be guilty of fraud. On the other hand, if a taxpayer
at assessment time converts taxable property into non-taxable property for
the purpose of avoiding taxation, without intending a permanent change, and
shortly after the time for assessment has passed, reconverts the property to
its original form, it is a discredible evasion of the taxing laws, a fraud,
and will not be sustained."
162. Several judgments of the US Courts were cited in respect
of the proposition that motive of tax avoidance is irrelevant in consideration
of the legal efficacy of a transactional situation [See in this connection
Gregory vs. Helvering 293 US465, 469, 55 S.Ct. 226, 267, 78 L.ed. 566, 97 ALR
1335; Helering vs. St. Louis Trust Company 296 US 48, 56, S.Ct. 78, 80L; Becker
vs. St. Louis Union Trust Company 296 US 48, 56 S.Ct. 78, 90L].
163. We may recapitulate the observations of the Federal Court
in Johansson [supra note 27] as to the irrelevance of the motive for Johansoon.
To similar effect are the observations of the US Court in Perry R. Bas vs.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue [(1968) US 50 TC 595].
"We infer that Stantus was created by petitioners with
a view to reducing their taxes through qualification of the corporation under
the convention. The test, however, is not the personal purpose of a taxpayer
in creating a corporation. Rather, it is whether that purpose is intended to
be accomplished through a corporation carrying out substantive business functions.
If the purpose of the corporation is to carry out substantive business functions,
or if it in fact engages in substantive business activity, it will not be disregarded
for Federal tax purposes."
164. In Barber-Greene Americas, Inc. vs. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue [1960) 35 T.C. 365, 383, 384] it was observed that a corporation will
not be denied Western Hemisphere trade corporation tax benefits merely because
it was purposely created and operated in such way as to obtain such benefits.
Similarly, a corporation otherwise qualified should not be disregarded merely
because it was purposely created and operated to obtain the benefits of the
United States-Swiss Confederation Income Tax Convention.
165. Though the words ‘sham’, and ‘device’ were
loosely used in connection with the incorporation under the Mauritius law,
we deem if fit to enter a caveat here. These words are not intended to be used
as magic mantras or catshall phrases to defeat or nullify the effect of a legal
situation. As Lord Atkin pointed out in Duke of Westminster [supra note 57]:
"I do not use the word device in any sinister sense;
for it has to be recognised that the subject, whether poor and humble or wealthy
and noble, has the legal right so to dispose of his capital and income as to
attract upon himself the least amount of tax. The only function of a court
of law is to determine the legal result of his dispositions so far as they
affect tax."
Lord Tomlin said:
"There may, of course, be cases where documents are not
bona fide nor intended to be acted upon, but are only used as a cloak to conceal
of different transaction."
166. In Snook vs. London and West Riding Investments Ltd.
[(1967) All ER 518 at 528] Lord Diplock L.J, explained the use of the word ‘sham’ as
a legal concept in the following words:
"it is, I think necessary to consider what, if any, legal
concept is involved in the use of this popular and pejorative word. I apprehend
that, if it has any meaning in law, it means acts done or documents executed
by the parties to the
‘sham’ which are intended by them to give to third parties or to
the court the appearance of creating between the parties legal rights and obligations
different from the actual legal rights and obligations (if any), which the
parties intend to create. One thing I think, however, is clear in legal principle,
morality and the authorities (see Yorkshire Railway Wagon Contracting State
vs. Maclure (1882) 21 Ch. D. 309; Stoneleigh Finance, Ltd. vs. Phillips (1965)
1 All ER 513) that for acts or documents to be a ‘sham’, with whatever
legal consequences follow from this, all the parties thereto must have a common
intention that the acts or documents are not to create the legal rights and
obligations which they give the appearance of creating. No unexpressed intentions
of a ‘shammer’
affect the rights of a party whom he deceived."
167. In Waman Rao and others vs. Union of India & others
[1981) 2 SCC 362 at para 45, and Minerva Mills Ltd and others vs. Union of
India and others [1980) 3 SCC 625 at para 91] this Court considered the import
of the word ‘device’
with reference to Article 31B which provided that the Acts and Regulations
specified Ninth Schedule shall not be deemed to be void or even to have become
void on the groud that they are inconsistent with the Fundamental Rights. The
use of the word ‘device’ here was not pejorative, but to describe
a provision of law intended to produce a certain legal result.
168. If the Court finds that notwithstanding a series of legal
steps taken by an assessee, the intended legal result has not been achieved,
the Court might be justified in overlooking the intermediate steps, but it
would not be permissible for the Court to treat the intervening legal steps
as non-est based upon some hypothetical assessment of the ‘real motive’ of
the assesssee. In our view, the court must deal with what is tangible in an
objective manner and cannot afford to chase a will-o’-the-wisp.
169. The judgment of the Privy Council in Bank of Chettiand
[supra note 94], wholeheartedly approving the dicta in the passage from the
opinion of Lord Russel in Westminster [supra note 57], was the law in this
country when the Constitution came into force. This was the law in force then,
which continued by reason of Article 372. Unless abrogated by an Act or Parliament,
or by a clear pronouncement of this Court, we think that this legal principle
would continue to hold good. Having anxiously scanned McDowell [supra note
1], we find no reference therein to having dissented from or overruled the
decision of the Privy Council in Bank of Chettinad [supra note 94]. If any,
the principle appears to have been reiterated with approval by the Constitutional
Bench of this Court in Mathuram [supra note 93]. We are, therefore, unable
to accept the contention of the respondents that there has been a very drastic
change in the fiscal jurisprudence, in India, as would entail a departure.
In our judgment, from Westminster [supra note 57] to Bank of Chettinad [supra
note 94] to Mathuram [supra note 93], despite the hiccups of McDowell [supra
note 1], the law has remained the same.
170. We are unable to agree with the submission that an act
which is otherwise valid in law can be treated as non-est merely on the basis
of some underlying motive supposedly resulting in some economic detriment or
prejudice to the national interests, as perceived by the respondents.
171. In the result, we are of the view that Delhi High Court
erred on all counts in quashing the impugned circular. The judgment under appeal
is set aside and it is held and declared that the circular No. 789 dated 13.4.2000
is valid and efficacious.
172. We cannot part with this judgment without expressing
our grateful appreciation to the Learned Attorney General. Mr. Harish Salve,
Mr. Prashant Bhushan as also the party in person, Mr. S.K. Jha, all of whom
by their industrious research produced a wealth of material and by their meticulous
arguments rendered immense assistance.
(DISCLAIMER: Though all efforts have been
made to reproduce the order correctly but the access and circulation
is subject to the condition that Taxindiaonline.com Pvt Ltd are not
responsible/liable for any loss or damage caused to anyone due to any
mistake/error/omissions.)
|
|