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2014 (11) TMI 732

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...., which was made subject matter of scrutiny assessment under Section 143(3) of the Act vide order dated 16th December, 2011. The assessment order records that the respondent-assessee was engaged in the business of trading in readymade garments. A letter was received from the Assessing Officer, TDS Circle Mumbai that the respondent-assessee had paid "commission" to HDFC on payments received from customers who had made purchases through credit cards. Survey under Section 133A of the Act had been conducted on HDFC, who had provided card swiping machines to retail merchants, including the respondent-assessee. A credit card holder could make payment by swiping the credit card on the said machines. The details of the bill amount, etc. were thereupon forwarded to the acquiring bank, which is the bank which had provided the machine, i.e. HDFC in this case, which then made payment to the respondent assessee. The payment made to the respondent-assessee was after withholding or deducting the fee payable to HDFC. Thereafter, the acquiring bank, i.e. HDFC recovered the bill amount from the issuing bank of the customer. 3. The Assessing Officer held that the amount earned by the acquiring bank,....

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....ause (b) of section 44AB during the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which such commission or brokerage is credited or paid, shall be liable to deduct income-tax under this section: Provided also that no deduction shall be made under this section on any commission or brokerage payable by Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited or Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited to their public call office franchisees. Explanation.-For the purposes of this section,- (i) "commission or brokerage" includes any payment received or receivable, directly or indirectly, by a person acting on behalf of another person for services rendered (not being professional services) or for any services in the course of buying or selling of goods or in relation to any transaction relating to any asset, valuable article or thing, not being securities; (ii) the expression "professional services" means services rendered by a person in the course of carrying on a legal, medical, engineering or architectural profession or the profession of accountancy or technical consultancy or interior decoration or such other profession as is notified by the Board for the purposes of section 44AA; (iii) the expressi....

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....ount whatsoever. A "deduction" normally represents a reduction in the original price or a debt such as in case of securities (e.g. treasury bills), which are issued below the face value and are redeemed at the face value. Commission, it was held, is a reward paid to an agent as well as to a salesman, executor, trustee, broker or bailee and is calculated as a percentage of the amount of the transaction or on the profit of the principal. It is a fee paid to an agent or an employee for generating a piece of business or performing a service. In such cases, normally, there exists a fiduciary duty, which has to be discharged by the person to whom commission is paid. The following excerpt from the decision of the Bombay High in Harihar Cotton Processing Factory versus CIT, (1960) 391 ITR 594 (Bom.) was referred to with approval:- "The expression "commission" has no technical meaning but both in legal and commercial acceptation of the term it has definite signification and is understood as an allowance for service or labour in discharging certain duties such as for instance of an agent, factor, broker or any other person who manages the affairs or undertakes to do some work or renders som....

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....h services or transactions in order to fall within the expression "commission" and "brokerage". Reference was made to definition of the term "agent" in the Indian Contract Act and the implication thereof and it was observed that the contract between a principal and an agent primarily is a contract of employment to bring about a legal relationship with a third party and the agent either actually or by law is held to be authorized or employed by the first i.e. the principal, whom he represents. Representative character and derivative authority are distinguishing features of an agent. It was accordingly held that provisions of Sections 194H of the Act were not attracted in the case of stamp vendors. 12. The expressions "commission" or "brokerage" are words of general and common parlance used both commercially and by the common man on the street. Clause (i) expressly seeks to define the expression "commission" or "brokerage" but states that it will include payments received or receivable, directly or indirectly by a person acting on behalf of another if they fall in the three categories. A definition may be exhaustive or restrictive of its common meaning or may be an extensive one. In....

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....o Section 194H of the Act. Appropriate in this regard would be to refer to the decision of the High Court of Delhi in Commissioner of Income Tax versus Idea Cellular Limited, (2010) 325 ITR 148 (Delhi) wherein Explanation clause (i) to Section 194H of the Act had come up for consideration and on interpretation it was held that it would apply only if payment was received or receivable directly or indirectly by a person acting on behalf of another person for (i) services rendered (not being professional) and (ii) for any services in the course of buying or selling of goods or in relation to any transaction relating to an asset, valuable article or thing. The judgment records that the counsel for both the parties, i.e. the Revenue and the assessee, had agreed that the element of agency was to be established in all the aforesaid circumstances (see page 156 placitum 9 of the ITR citation). Thus, this contention if raised would not stand judicial scrutiny on the principles of consistency and certainty. Even otherwise, the view expounded and accepted is plausible, besides being reasonable. 15. Applying the above cited case law to the factual matrix of the present case, we feel that Secti....

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....d the provision. The bank in question is not concerned with buying or selling of goods or even with the reason and cause as to why the card was swiped. It is not bothered or concerned with the quality, price, nature, quantum etc. of the goods bought/sold. The bank merely provides banking services in the form of payment and subsequently collects the payment. The amount punched in the swiping machine is credited to the account of the retailer by the acquiring bank, i.e. HDFC in this case, after retaining a small portion of the same as their charges. The banking services cannot be covered and treated as services rendered by an agent for the principal during the course of buying or selling of goods as the banker does not render any service in the nature of agency. 17. Another reason why we feel Section 40(a)(ia) of the Act should not have been invoked in the present case is the principle of doubtful penalization which requires strict construction of penal provisions. The said principle applies not only to criminal statutes but also to provisions which create a deterrence and results in punitive penalty. Section 40(a)(ia) is a deterrent and a penal provision. It has the effect of penal....