MS Software licensing payments are royalty and taxable

<http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2010/10/31/stories/2010103151760100.htm>

The Delhi Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) has
held that payments received by Microsoft
Corporation from end users (in India) through
distributors for sale of Microsoft software, are
taxable as royalty. This would be applicable for
all the payments made before January 1, 1999, the
ITAT has said.

Until this date, Microsoft Corporation, a US
company, had direct arrangements with various
Indian distributors for sale of Microsoft software
(off- the-shelf/shrink-wrapped), on a
principal-to-principal basis.

>From January 1, 1999, the business model was
changed and Microsoft granted exclusive licence to
Gracemac Corporation of the US to manufacture the
Microsoft software and distribute it in terms of
the licence agreement. Even under the changed
business model, the ITAT has now held that
payments for software licensing should be treated
as royalty for tax purposes.

Disposing a batch of appeals relating to three
different entities — Microsoft Corporation,
Gracemac Corporation and Microsoft Regional Sales
Corporation (MRSC) — relating to different
assessment years, the ITAT bench upheld the ruling
of CIT (appeals) that consideration received from
licensing of computer software would be in the
nature of royalty under the Indian Income Tax law
and India-US DTAA.

Revenue Dept

This ITAT ruling comes in the Revenue Department's
favour. Microsoft has been contending that
payments made towards licensing of computer
software cannot be treated as royalty, but should
be considered as business profits. If considered
as business profits, the software major would have
had no tax liability here as it does not have a
permanent establishment in India.

Meanwhile, in the case of Gracemac Corp, the ITAT
has held that payments made in respect of
copyright in Microsoft software are taxable as
royalty in its hands.

Under Microsoft's changed business model from
January 1, 1999, Gracemac had entered into a
licence agreement with Microsoft Operations Pte
Ltd, a Singapore-based wholly-owned subsidiary of
Microsoft Corporation, for non-exclusive licence
to reproduce Microsoft software in Singapore.
Microsoft Operations sold all its Microsoft
software copies to MRSC branch in Singapore. MRSC
had delivered Microsoft software copies to Indian
distributors, ex-warehouse in Singapore, who in
turn sold them to re-sellers/end users in India.

Microsoft Operations paid royalty to Gracemac. The
royalty was based on a percentage of net selling
price received by MRSC from distributors in
various countries, including India.

The Delhi ITAT has also ruled that MRSC cannot be
taxed again on the same income, by way of royalty,
for exploitation of same rights which had been
taxed in the hands of Gracemac Corporation. Any
such move would constitute double taxation and
therefore the ITAT has deleted the additions in
the hands of MRSC for all the three years.

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