⚙️ Automation Anywhere Inc. v. Dy. CIT (IT) – Delhi ITAT on Software Licence Income, Business Connection & Absence of Permanent Establishment under India–USA DTAA (2024)
📌 Background
The taxation of software licence income and determination of a Permanent Establishment (PE) under Section 9(1)(i) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, continue to be debated in international tax cases. The issue often turns on whether a foreign software provider has a business connection or PE in India, and whether income from software sales can be attributed to such a presence.
In Automation Anywhere Inc. v. Dy. CIT (IT) [(2023) 153 Taxmann.com 629 / (2024) 227 TTJ 287 / 234 DTR 295 (Delhi)(Trib)], the Delhi Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) held that income from the sale of software licences by a US-based company was not taxable in India, as the assessee had no PE under Article 5 of the India–USA DTAA, and no activities relating to the development or sale of the software were performed in India.
The decision reinforces the principle that mere sale of software to Indian customers, without a physical or functional presence in India, does not create a taxable nexus.
📂 Facts of the Case
- Assessee: Automation Anywhere Inc., a company incorporated in the United States, engaged in developing and selling Robotic Process Automation (RPA) software platforms.
- Assessment Years: 2018–19 and 2019–20.
- Business Model:
- The assessee licensed its proprietary RPA software to Indian customers directly or through resellers.
- Licences were sold and delivered digitally from outside India.
- Payments were received outside India in foreign currency.
Revenue’s Position:
- The Assessing Officer (AO) alleged that the assessee had a business connection and PE in India under Article 5 of the India–USA DTAA.
- The AO contended that income from software sales was royalty or business income attributable to a PE in India.
- The CIT(A) upheld the assessment.
The assessee appealed to the ITAT, Delhi, arguing that it had no operations, employees, or assets in India, and that the sale of software licences was entirely offshore.
❓ Core Issue
Whether the sale of software licences by a US company to Indian customers constituted income deemed to accrue or arise in India under Section 9(1)(i) and whether such income was taxable as business income or royalty under Articles 5 and 12 of the India–USA DTAA.
📑 Assessee’s Submissions
- No PE or Business Connection in India:
- The assessee did not maintain any fixed place of business in India.
- No employees or representatives visited India to develop or sell the software.
- All contracts were concluded outside India, and licences were delivered electronically.
- Nature of Income – Business Profits, Not Royalty:
- The software licence only granted users a limited, non-transferable right to use the software, without transferring any copyright or intellectual property.
- Cited Engineering Analysis Centre of Excellence (P.) Ltd. v. CIT (2021) 432 ITR 471 (SC), where the Supreme Court held that payments for software licences are not royalty under Section 9(1)(vi) or DTAA provisions.
- DTAA Protection – Article 5 & Article 12:
- Under Article 7 (Business Profits) of the India–USA DTAA, business income of a US resident is taxable in India only if it is attributable to a PE.
- Since there was no fixed place PE, dependent agent PE, or service PE, no taxation could arise.
- Activities Entirely Offshore:
- No development, marketing, or technical support activities were carried out in India.
- Income arose entirely from offshore software licence sales.
- Additional Ground:
- The assessee sought to raise an additional ground challenging the characterization of income.
- However, this involved mixed questions of fact and law, and hence was not admitted.
📑 Revenue’s Submissions
- Business Connection Established:
- The Revenue argued that the assessee had a business connection in India since its software was sold to Indian customers and used within India.
- It claimed that the software sales were part of a systematic and continuous business activity connected to the Indian market.
- Presence through Agents or Support Personnel:
- The Revenue suggested that Indian affiliates or resellers acted as dependent agents, creating a DAPE (Dependent Agent Permanent Establishment) for the assessee in India.
- Characterization as Royalty:
- It was contended that the software licence granted the right to use intellectual property, and therefore constituted royalty under Article 12(3) of the DTAA and Section 9(1)(vi) of the Act.
⚖️ Tribunal’s Findings & Legal Reasoning
1. No Evidence of Operations in India
- The ITAT found that none of the assessee’s employees came to India for development, sale, or any activity related to the RPA software platform.
- No part of the software creation, marketing, or execution occurred in India.
- All sales and deliveries were conducted digitally from the USA.
🧾 “There was nothing to demonstrate that the assessee carried out any activity, either wholly or partly, in relation to sale of software licence through the alleged PE in India.”
2. No Permanent Establishment under Article 5
- Article 5(1) and 5(2) of the India–USA DTAA define a PE as a fixed place of business or a dependent agent.
- The Tribunal held that the Revenue failed to establish that the assessee:
- Had a fixed place of business in India, or
- Operated through a dependent agent who habitually concluded contracts on its behalf.
- Therefore, no PE existed.
⚖️ “The conditions of Article 5(1) read with Article 5(2) were not satisfied. Hence, there was no PE in India.”
3. No Income Attributable to Alleged PE
- Since there was no PE, no income from the sale of software licences could be attributed to India under Article 7 (Business Profits).
- Even assuming a PE existed, there was no evidence that any part of the profits arose from activities carried out in India.
4. Software Licence ≠ Royalty
- Following the Supreme Court’s ruling in Engineering Analysis Centre of Excellence (P.) Ltd. v. CIT (2021), the ITAT confirmed that:
- Sale of software licences without transfer of copyright does not constitute royalty.
- The Indian customers received only a limited right to use, not the underlying intellectual property.
5. Additional Ground Rejected
- The assessee’s additional ground raised before the Tribunal involved mixed questions of fact and law, requiring verification of new factual aspects.
- The Tribunal declined to admit it, noting that no pure question of law arose.
🏁 Held
The Delhi ITAT held that:
✅ The assessee had no Permanent Establishment (PE) in India under Article 5 of the India–USA DTAA.
✅ The income from sale of RPA software licences was not taxable in India.
✅ No part of such income could be attributed to India.
✅ The additional ground raised by the assessee was not admitted.
✅ Practical Implications
- Foreign software vendors operating from outside India can avoid Indian taxation if they:
- Do not have a fixed place of business or employees in India.
- Conduct sales entirely offshore, and
- Maintain arm’s length arrangements with any Indian distributors.
- Revenue authorities must demonstrate substantial business presence or activity in India to tax offshore software income.
- This decision aligns with the OECD Model Convention and SC’s Engineering Analysis ruling, ensuring consistency in cross-border digital transactions.
🔑 Key Takeaways
- No PE = No Tax: Absence of employees, fixed office, or dependent agents in India negates taxability of software sales.
- Software licence ≠ Royalty: Offshore sale of software licences without copyright transfer is business income, not royalty.
- Offshore delivery insulated: Digitally delivered software from outside India remains non-taxable under DTAA.
- Additional grounds: Mixed fact–law issues cannot be raised as fresh legal questions at appellate stages.
📢 Why This Case Matters
The Automation Anywhere (2024) ruling is a key precedent in India’s evolving digital taxation framework. It fortifies the position that offshore software transactions, without a functional presence in India, are not taxable under Section 9(1)(i) or DTAA provisions.
This case is especially relevant for global SaaS providers, automation technology companies, and digital platform businesses, clarifying that digital software licensing remains outside Indian tax jurisdiction in the absence of a PE or royalty characterization.
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