⚙️ J.M. Voith Se & Co. Kg v. DCIT (IT)
Delhi ITAT on Offshore Supply Profit Attribution and Estimation under India–Germany DTAA (2024)
📌 Background
Attribution of profits to a Permanent Establishment (PE) in India for offshore supply of equipment continues to be a contentious issue under Section 9(1)(i) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, particularly in cross-border contracts involving supply and installation components.
In J.M. Voith Se & Co. Kg v. DCIT (IT) [(2024) 230 TTJ 837 / 241 DTR 137 / 161 Taxmann.com 734 / (2025) 121 ITR 402 (Delhi)(Trib)], the Delhi Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) addressed whether the profit estimation rate adopted by the Commissioner (Appeals) at 5% on offshore supply income was justified when the assessee had documentary evidence showing a global profit rate of 3% in its relevant business segment.
The Tribunal held that such ad hoc estimation was not sustainable without proper analysis and remitted the matter to the Assessing Officer (AO) for de novo adjudication, reaffirming the principle that profit attribution must be based on actual facts and evidence, not arbitrary estimations.
📂 Facts of the Case
- Assessee: J.M. Voith Se & Co. KG, a company incorporated in Germany, engaged in the manufacture and supply of plants, machinery, and equipment for the paper industry.
- Assessment Year: 2015–16.
- Nature of Business:
The assessee entered into contracts with Indian clients for supply of plants, equipment, and spares, including associated services such as installation supervision. - Contractual Structure:
The assessee’s operations in India were partly executed through a Permanent Establishment (PE), which handled onshore support and services, while offshore supplies were made directly from Germany.
During assessment:
- The Assessing Officer (AO) attributed profit on the offshore supply portion to the PE in India and estimated taxable profit at 5% of the gross receipts.
- The assessee contended that the global profit rate for its paper division was 3%, supported by audited segmental accounts and international benchmarks.
- The CIT(A) upheld the AO’s 5% estimation without considering the documentary evidence.
Aggrieved, the assessee appealed before the ITAT, Delhi.
❓ Point of Dispute
Whether the profit attribution rate of 5% on offshore supply income fixed by the CIT(A) was justified when the assessee had furnished documentary evidence of a lower global profit rate (3%) for the relevant business division under the India–Germany DTAA (Article 5 & Article 7).
📑 Submissions by the Assessee
- Offshore supplies:
- The assessee supplied equipment and spares from outside India; title and risk passed abroad, and payments were received outside India.
- Hence, only profits attributable to the PE for activities in India could be taxed.
- Profit attribution:
- Furnished segmental financial statements showing a 3% global profit rate for the paper division.
- Claimed that the CIT(A)’s estimation at 5% was arbitrary and unsupported by facts or benchmarking analysis.
- DTAA protection:
- Under Article 7 of the India–Germany DTAA, only profits “attributable to the PE” can be taxed in India, not notional profits from global operations.
- Relied on Hyosung Corporation v. DIT (2013) 35 taxmann.com 299 (Delhi HC) and Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Ltd. v. DIT (2007) 288 ITR 408 (SC) for the principle that offshore income should not be artificially attributed to a PE.
📑 Submissions by the Revenue
- The Revenue argued that:
- The assessee had a business connection and PE in India; hence, a portion of the offshore supply profits was attributable to Indian operations.
- The 5% profit estimation was reasonable, considering the nature of industry and functions performed in India.
- The global profit rate claimed by the assessee could not be blindly accepted without verification of transfer pricing documentation or comparable industry margins.
⚖️ Tribunal’s Analysis & Findings
1. Evidence of Global Profit Rate
- The Tribunal noted that the assessee had submitted documentary evidence establishing a 3% global profit rate in its paper division—which was directly relevant to the contracts executed in India.
- The CIT(A) had ignored this evidence without offering any reasoned finding.
🧾 “When the assessee has furnished evidence to show that the global profit rate in the paper division is 3 per cent, the estimation of profit at 5 per cent by the CIT(A) cannot be accepted.”
2. Ad hoc Profit Estimation Unsustainable
- The Tribunal emphasized that profit attribution to a PE cannot be based on ad hoc or arbitrary estimations.
- The CIT(A)’s rate of 5% lacked any functional, asset, or risk (FAR) analysis, and no comparative data had been brought on record to justify the figure.
- The AO is required to compute profits scientifically, considering:
- Nature of business,
- Functions performed by the PE, and
- Actual margins from global operations.
3. Application of DTAA – Article 5 and Article 7
- The Tribunal reiterated that Article 7 of the India–Germany DTAA governs business profits, allowing India to tax only those profits “attributable to the PE”.
- Under Article 5, a PE includes a fixed place of business through which the enterprise carries out business. However, merely having a PE does not imply that global profits are automatically taxable in India.
- The profit attribution principle must align with OECD Model Commentary, attributing only those profits that the PE would earn if it were an independent enterprise.
4. Restoration for De Novo Adjudication
- Since the CIT(A) failed to provide a proper reasoning and the AO did not conduct a detailed examination of the segmental profitability evidence, the Tribunal restored the matter to the AO for de novo adjudication.
- The AO was directed to:
- Examine the evidence of the assessee’s global profit margins,
- Apply appropriate transfer pricing and FAR analysis, and
- Determine the correct profit attribution to the Indian PE in accordance with the India–Germany DTAA.
🏁 Held
The Delhi ITAT held that:
✅ The assessee’s evidence showing a 3% global profit rate could not be ignored.
✅ The CIT(A)’s 5% estimation was arbitrary and unsustainable.
✅ The matter was remanded to the Assessing Officer for fresh adjudication, based on factual and functional analysis.
✅ Practical Implications for Taxpayers
- Evidence-based attribution: Tax authorities must rely on documented evidence such as segmental profit margins, industry benchmarks, and FAR analysis, not arbitrary rates.
- DTAA protection: Only profits attributable to PE activities in India can be taxed; offshore profits are exempt.
- Functional segregation: Clearly distinguish between offshore supply, onshore services, and project management activities in contracts and financial records.
- Compliance strategy: Maintain global segmental accounts and transfer pricing documentation to substantiate profit margins.
🔑 Key Takeaways
- Ad hoc estimations rejected: Profit attribution must be grounded in verifiable data, not arbitrary percentages.
- Evidence matters: Global profit rates supported by audited financials carry substantial weight.
- Article 7 DTAA: Only PE-attributable profits are taxable in India, following the separate enterprise principle.
- Judicial consistency: Aligns with Hyatt International (Delhi HC, 2024) and Ishikawajima-Harima (SC, 2007) in limiting Indian taxation to activities performed within India.
📢 Why This Case Matters
The J.M. Voith Se & Co. Kg decision reinforces that profit attribution under DTAA cannot be arbitrary. Tax authorities must adopt a fact-based and economically justified approach when determining taxable income of foreign enterprises having operations in India.
This judgment provides critical guidance for multinational EPC contractors, engineering firms, and industrial equipment suppliers engaged in cross-border projects, ensuring fair and evidence-based taxation aligned with international standards.
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