‘Equipment' includes ship, fee
paid for use of ship to be considered as royalty under sec. 9(1)(vi).
Meaning of the word ‘plant’ as defined under Sec. 43(3) would be
relevant to determine meaning of the word ‘equipment’.
The
aggrieved assessee appealed against order of Tribunal holding that the
payment made for taking ship on time charter basis would constitute
‘royalty’ as defined under Section 9(1)(vi)(b) of the Income Tax Act
(‘the I-T
Act’). Assessee contended that the ship was not equipment and,
consequently, there was no question of use or right to use of any
equipment which could be construed as ‘royalty’.
The High Court held in favour of revenue as under:
1)
The consideration paid for use of the industrial, commercial and
scientific equipment is ‘royalty’ in view of clause (iva) of Explanation
2 to Section 9(1)(vi) of the I-T
Act. The word ‘equipment’ is not defined under Section 9, however, the
word ‘plant’ has been defined under Section 43(3). In view of Section
43(3), the word ‘plant’ is widely defined to include a ship;
2)
In absence of any definition of ‘equipment’ under the I-T Act and
considering the business of the foreign enterprise, the definition of
‘plant’, as including ‘ship’ would be appropriate for understanding the
scope of the expression
‘equipment’;
3)
‘Plant’ includes every tool, apparatus, equipment or machinery, not
limited to machinery used in tool. Thus, with the inclusive definition
of plant embracing within its fold so diverse a matter from a ship to a
book, or medical equipment, every tool, apparatus, ‘plant’ includes all
equipments used by an assessee for carrying on his business;
4)
The word ‘equipment’
construed in the light of Section 9(1)(vi) extends the normal meaning of
the word to cover even those specified categories of machinery or plant
that would themselves not be construed within its plain and ordinary
meaning. As rightly pointed out by the Revenue, the only limitation that
one may read into the word ‘equipment’ would be that which is
specifically excluded;
5)
In context of Section 9(1)(vi)(b), the presence of the word ‘any’
preceding the word ‘equipment’, clearly
points out the need for construing ‘equipment’ widely, so as to embrace
every article employed by the employer for the purposes of his business.
‘Equipment’, by whatever name called either as an apparatus or as plant
or machinery, so long as they are employed for the purposes of one’s
income, the same shall stand covered by clause (iva) of Explanation 2;
6)
Therefore, in absence of any word of limitation other than what was
explicitly provided for, we do not find any legal
necessity of reading a limitation on the word equipment. Thus, ship
being a plant, an equipment with which the ship owner operates the
business and commercially exploits it for earning the income from
chartering of ship, the payment thereof would be clearly in nature of
‘royalty’ - Poompuhar Shipping Corporation Ltd. V. Income-tax Officer,
International Taxation - II (2013) 38 taxmann.com 150 (Madras)
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