India: Ruling on seconded employees creating Service PE in India
International Tax Review is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

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

India: Ruling on seconded employees creating Service PE in India

nayak.jpg

aastha.jpg

Rajendra Nayak


Aastha Jain

Recently, the Delhi High Court (HC) ruled on the tax implications arising from the secondment of employees to India in a case involving Centrica India Offshore Private Limited (Taxpayer). Taxpayer is a company incorporated in India and is a subsidiary of a UK Company (UK Parent). UK Parent has two other subsidiaries in UK and Canada (collectively the Group Entities) engaged in the business of supplying gas and electricity to consumers across the UK/Canada. Group Entities outsourced their back office support functions to third party service providers (Vendors) in India. Group Entities engaged the Taxpayer under a service agreement (SA) to act as their local interface with Vendors and to ensure that Vendors complied with the quality guidelines. Further, under a secondment agreement, Group Entities seconded some employees (assignees) to assist the Taxpayer in fulfilling its role under the SA. The salary of the assignees was disbursed overseas by Group Entities and thereafter recovered from the Taxpayer. HC adjudicated on the issue of taxability of payments made by the Taxpayer to Group Entities.

The HC adopted a substance over form approach and held that Assignees continued to remain employees of Group Entities during the secondment period for the following reasons:

  • Taxpayer was not formally obliged to pay salary to Assignees. Further, Assignees could recover their salary only from Group Entities.

  • Taxpayer had no right to terminate legal employment of Assignees with the Group Entities.

  • Employment with Group Entities was permanent. Assignees were not 'released' from it and they were to return to the Group Entities after completion of the secondment.

  • The Assignees participated in retirement and social security plans of Group Entities.

  • Legal employment with Group Entities could not be disregarded as they were not conduits and the relationship was not a false facade.

Accordingly, payments made by the Taxpayer were for services rendered by the Group Entities through Assignees and it qualified as fees for technical services (FTS) under the India-UK treaty. Further, as the Assignees were imparting their technical expertise and 'making available' know-how to Taxpayer's employees for future consumption, payments qualified as 'fees for included services' under the India-Canada treaty. The HC accorded that the 'make available' condition in the UK treaty is distinct from the rest of the FTS provisions and need not be satisfied. Furthermore, the HC relied on the Indian Supreme Court's decision in the case of Morgan Stanley and held that Assignees constituted a Service PE for Group Entities in India.

In line with other decisions of Indian Courts, this decision endorses a substance over form approach for determination of employer, though HC has overlooked some established principles in favour of certain factors of employment. Further, HC's interpretation of the 'make available' clause under the UK treaty as well as its conclusion on Service PE could be prone to an alternative view. While the views adopted by the HC are debatable, litigation on account of it cannot be ruled out.

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 & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Laura Hinton would have been the first-ever woman in that position
The former US Treasury official calls time on his government stint; in other news, the G-24 maintains pressure over international tax policy
Proposed regulations on corporate excise tax pose challenges on different fronts, experts tell ITR
The finalists for the 13th annual awards have been revealed
Mazars needs to do all it can to capitalise on TP as a growth area, ex-Deloitte TP director Jeremy Brown has told ITR
Sanjay Sanghvi and Raghav Bajaj of Khaitan & Co provide a practical guide for foreign investors looking to capitalise on Indian’s investment potential
The newly launched Tax Responsibility and Transparency Index will assess the ethicality of companies’ tax practices against global standards and regulations
The reported warning follows EY accumulating extra debt to deal with the costs of its failed Project Everest
Law firms that pay close attention to their client relationships are more likely to win repeat work, according to a survey of nearly 29,000 in-house counsel
Paul Griggs, the firm’s inbound US senior partner, will reverse a move by the incumbent leader; in other news, RSM has announced its new CEO
Gift this article