IN THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL,
MUMBAI BENCH “L”, MUMBAI
BEFORE SHRI R.S. SYAL (AM) & SHRI AMIT SHUKLA (JM)
I.T.A. No.8866/Mum/2010
(A.Y. 2006-07)
Hinduja Ventures Ltd.,
49/50, In Centre, MIDC,
Mumbai-400 093.
PAN: AAACH2058H.
Appellant
Vs.
Addl. Commr. of Income-tax,
Range 8(2), Aaykar Bhavan,
Mumbai-400 020.
Respondent
Appellant by: Shri Y . P. Trivedi & Ms.Rupal Vora.
Respondent by: Shri Ajit Kumar Jain.
Date of hearing
Date of pronouncement
O R D E R
PER R.S. SYAL, AM:
This appeal by the assessee arises out of the order passed by the AO on
2. The first ground is against the disallowance of exemption claimed by the assessee u/s.10A of the Act.
3. After considering the rival submissions and perusing the relevant material on record, it is observed that similar disallowance was made by the AO in the immediately preceding assessment year i.e. 2005-06. The Tribunal, vide its order dated 31-01-2012 in ITA No.4089/Mum/2011 for such preceding year has restored the matter to the file of AO for taking a fresh decision in the light of the guidelines laid down in para-13. Both the sides are in agreement that the facts and circumstances of the instant year are mutatis mutandis similar to those of the immediately preceding year. Respectfully following the precedent, we set aside the assessment order on this point and direct the AO to re-decide this issue in consonance with the observations made by the Tribunal in the immediately preceding year.
4. Ground no. 2 is against making of disallowance u/s.14A. On this issue also, both the sides are in agreement that Tribunal in the immediately preceding year has restored the matter to the file of AO for deciding this issue afresh in the light of the judgment of the Hon’ble jurisdictional High Court in the case of Godrej & Boyce Mfg. Co. Ltd. vs. DCIT (328 ITR 81). Respectfully following the precedent, we direct the AO to decide this issue afresh in conformity with the directions contained in the Tribunal order for the preceding year in para15-16 of the order.
5. Ground no. 3 is against the addition on account of transfer pricing adjustment amounting to Rs.19,14,71,693/-.
6. The ld. counsel for the assessee contended that the DRP in its order dated
at the time of determination of arm’s length price by the Transfer Pricing Officer, the segmental accounts were not available which resulted into adoption of the figures of the assessee as a whole instead of the figures of international transactions with the associated enterprises. The ld. AR stated that the assessee is now having segmental results prepared from the books of account regularly maintained in respect of each segment. Relying on the order passed by the Mumbai Tribunal in Technimount ICB (P) Ltd. vs. ACIT (2011)11 taxman.com 49 (Mum), the ld. AR contended that the tribunal in such circumstances has held that where the assessee did not initially had segment-wise audited accounts but subsequently got such segmental results prepared, the matter required fresh examination by the AO. In this case, the tribunal has restored the matter back to the file of AO/TPO to determine the addition, if any, on account of transfer pricing adjustment by considering such segmental accounts. It was, therefore, prayed that since the assessee has now segmental accounts in respect of international transactions, the matter may be sent back to the AO for determining the assessee’s operating profit margin to total cost from the international transactions. The ld. DR did not raise any objection to this contention raised on behalf of the assessee.
7. After considering the rival submissions and perusing the relevant material on record, it is obvious that the said addition of Rs.19.14 crore has been made on the basis of the assessee’s operating margin from its total operations within and outside
uncontrolled transactions of outside parties. Under the TNMM, the process is simple to initially find out the average of the operating profit margin of the comparable cases. This benchmark margin is then compared with the operating profit margin from the assessee’s international transactions with its associated enterprises. It is not possible to compare the assessee’s total margin emanating from national and international transactions with AEs and non-AEs with the average operating profit margin of the comparable cases. It is axiomatic that the base has to remain the same. Since the assessee has now got segmental accounts, in our considered opinion, it will be just and fair if the impugned order is set aside and the matter is restored to the file of AO for determining the adjustment on account of transfer pricing, if any, by comparing the assessee’s operating profit margin from the international transactions with the associated enterprises with that of arithmetic means of the comparable cases in respective categories. Needless to say the assessee will be allowed a reasonable opportunity of being heard in deciding this issue afresh as per law.
8. In the result, the appeal is allowed for statistical purposes.
Order pronounced on the 02nd day of April, 2012.
Sd/- Sd/-
(AMIT SHUKLA) (R.S. SYAL)
JUDICIAL MEMBER ACCOUNTANT MEMBER
Mumbai:
NG:
Copy to:
1. Assessee.
2. Department.
3 CIT concerned.
4 DIT concerned .
5. DR,”L” Bench,Mumbai.
6. Master file.
(TRUE COPY)
BY ORDER,
Asst. Registrar, ITAT, Mumbai.
|
Details |
Date |
Initials |
Designation |
1 |
Draft dictated on |
29-03- 2012 |
|
Sr.PS/ |
2 |
Draft Placed before author |
29-03- 2012 |
|
Sr.PS/ |
3 |
Draft proposed & placed before the
Second Member |
|
|
JM/AM |
4 |
Draft discussed/approved by Second Member |
|
|
JM/A M |
5 |
Approved Draft comes to the Sr.PS/PS |
|
|
Sr.PS/ |
6 |
Kept for pronouncement on |
|
|
Sr.PS/ |
7 |
File sent to the Bench Clerk |
|
|
Sr.PS/ |
8 |
Date on which the file goes to the Head
clerk |
|
|
|
9 |
Date on which file goes to the AR |
|
|
|
10 |
Date of dispatch of order |
|
|
|