India: Creation of service PE by activities of employees deputed to India

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

India: Creation of service PE by activities of employees deputed to India

nayak.jpg

jain.jpg

Rajendra Nayak


Aastha Jain

The Mumbai Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (Tribunal) recently ruled on the taxability of payments received under a deputation arrangement in the case of Morgan Stanley International (taxpayer). Taxpayer, a resident company in the US, was engaged in the primary activity of providing support services to group companies located in various countries, including India. During the tax year under consideration, the taxpayer deputed five of its employees to its Indian subsidiaries (I Cos), who worked under the control and supervision of the board of directors of I Cos. Further, I Cos were responsible for the day-to-day activities of the deputed employees. The taxpayer paid salary to the deputees on behalf of I Cos after withholding taxes as per the provisions of the Indian Tax Laws (ITL). Subsequently, the taxpayer recovered the amount of salary paid (without any mark-up) from the I Cos. The issue was with regard to the taxability of the salary amounts recovered from I Cos.

Taxpayer contended that the amount received from I Cos was in the nature of pure reimbursement of salary costs and, since there is no income element embedded in it, it was not taxable in India. However, the Indian tax authority rejected the above claim with a view that the deputed employees were highly qualified and technical persons providing consultancy services to I Cos. Further, the technical knowledge, experience, skill, know-how and so on were "made available" to I Cos through these services. Hence, the payment is taxable as fees for technical services (FTS) or as fees for included services (FIS) under the ITL as well as under the India-US double taxation avoidance agreement (DTAA).

The Tribunal observed that the taxpayer was the "real employer" of the deputed employees. Drawing support from the Supreme Court decision of Morgan Stanley (292 ITR 416), it was held that the deputed employees created a service permanent establishment (PE) for the taxpayer in India, since they continued to be on the payroll of the taxpayer or continued to have lien of their jobs with the taxpayer and they rendered services on behalf of taxpayer in India. Further, it was held that once a service PE is created, the provisions of FIS article under the DTAA would not apply. This is clear from the express terms of the FIS provision of the DTAA, which excludes profits in connection with PE from its ambit. The Tribunal directed the tax authority to compute the income of the taxpayer as per the "business profits" provision of the DTAA, by treating the payment received from I Cos as a business income in the hands of the taxpayer and by allowing the salary costs of the deputed employees as deduction in the hands of I Co.

This ruling of the Tribunal clarifies the non-applicability of FIS article of India-US DTAA, where a PE is created and helps taxpayers to evaluate their taxability under similar arrangements.

Rajendra Nayak (rajendra.nayak@in.ey.com) and Aastha Jain (aastha.jain@in.ey.com)

EY

Tel: +91 80 6727 5275

Website: www.ey.com/india

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Digital tax reform is dissolving the old ‘temporal buffer’, forcing systems, institutions, and professionals to adapt as real-time reporting reshapes governance, capability, and compliance
Our first instalment features analysis of Deloitte’s landmark EMEA merger, Donald Trump’s Supreme Court tariff showdown and Venezuela’s tax evolution
While some believe it could have a positive effect on the wider advisory landscape, others argue that HMRC’s ‘red tape’ exercise won’t deter bad actors
The political optics of the US’s carve-out deal are poor, but as the Fair Tax Foundation’s Paul Monaghan writes, it preserves pillar two’s guiding ethos
The big four firm reportedly sent ‘threatening’ correspondence to Unity Advisory over its hiring of ex-PwC partners; plus tax recruitment news from the week
Tom Goldstein, who was represented by US law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson, denied wilfully cheating on his taxes and blamed errors on his staff
Multinationals face rising TP scrutiny as global rules diverge. As Daniel Moalusi argues, strong, consistent documentation is now essential to minimise audit risk and protect tax positions
The profession is fundamentally restructuring itself around what tax and accounting work should be, a Thomson Reuters leader told ITR
The big four firm is consolidating 16 entities across the region to create a single 6,000-partner behemoth
Brazil’s tax reform unifies consumption taxes to simplify rules, centralise administration and reduce legal uncertainty
Gift this article