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June 2009

TDS on Discount on Airline Tickets

By Pradip Kapasi, Gautam Nayak, Chartered Accountants
Reading Time 16 mins
Controversies

1. Issue for Consideration :



1.1 Airlines generally sell air tickets through travel
agents who are paid a commission on sale of such tickets which commission is
worked out on the basis of the minimum fares prescribed by the airlines. Tax
is deducted by the airlines on this commission u/s. 194H of the Act. Where the
tickets are provided to the travel agent by the airlines at a price below the
published fare, the difference, known as ‘discount’, or a part thereof is
retained by him while selling the tickets to the passengers, which is in
addition to the regular commission earned by him. No tax is deducted by the
Airlines on this amount retained by the travel agents. All airlines are
required to file a list of their standard fares with the Director General of
Commercial Aviation, which are called published fares. Usually tickets are
provided by airlines to travel agents at significant discounts to the
published fares and sold by the agents to their customers by passing over the
difference in full or part. Under IATA rules, the travel agents receive their
commission as a percentage of the published fares, in respect of which tax is
deducted at source by the airline under Section 194H.

1.2 S. 194 H defines ‘commission or brokerage’, vide
Explanation(i), as under :

” ‘Commission or brokerage’ includes any payment received
or receivable, directly or indirectly by a person acting on behalf of another
person for services rendered (not being professional services) or for any
services in the course of buying or selling of goods or in relation to any
transaction relating to any asset, valuable article or thing not being
securities.”

1.3 In recent years, tax authorities have sought to take a
stand that the discount from published fares given by airlines to travel
agents (which in turn is generally passed on by the travel agent to the
customer in full or part) amounts to an additional special commission, and
that TDS is deductible on this amount under Section 194H.

1.4 The issue has now reached Courts and the Bombay High
Court has held that such discount is not in the nature of brokerage or
commission and no tax is deductible thereon. The Delhi High Court has taken a
view that tax is deductible on such discount.


2. Qutar Airways’ case :


2.1 The issue came up before the Bombay High Court in the
case of CIT vs. Qutar Airways (Income Tax Appeal No.99 of 2009),
ITATOnline.org.

2.2 In this case, it had been claimed by the Revenue that
the difference between the published price and the minimum fixed commercial
price amounted to an additional special commission, and that TDS was therefore
deductible by the airline on this amount under Section 194H.

2.3 The Tribunal had granted relief to the airline,
following its earlier decision in the case of Korean Air vs. DCIT,
holding that TDS was not deductible in similar circumstances.

2.4 Before the Bombay High Court, the counsel for the
Revenue contended that it was not the Revenue’s case that the difference
between the principal price of the tickets (as published) and the minimum
fixed commercial price amounted to brokerage.

2.5 The Bombay High Court noted that though an appeal had
been preferred against the decision of the Tribunal in Korean Air’s case, the
appeal had been rejected by the High Court for non-removal of office
objections under rule 986. The Court noted that for Section 194 H to apply,
the income being paid out by the airline must be in the nature of commission
or brokerage, and must necessarily be ascertainable in the hands of the
recipient.

2.6 On the facts of the case before it, the Bombay High
Court noted that the airlines had no information about the exact rate at which
the tickets were ultimately sold by the agents, since the agents had been
given discretion to sell the tickets at any rate between the fixed minimum
commercial price and the published price. It was noted by the Court that it
would be impracticable and unreasonable to expect the airline to get feedback
from their numerous agents in respect of each ticket sold. The Court was of
the view that if the airlines had discretion to sell the tickets at a price
lower than the published price, then the permission granted to the agent to
sell it at a lower price could neither amount to commission or brokerage in
the hands of the agent. The Bombay High Court however clarified that any
amount which the agent earned over and above the fixed minimum commercial
price would naturally be income in his hands and would be taxable as such in
his hands.

2.7 The Bombay High Court therefore held that no TDS was
deductible under Section 194H in respect of such discount over the published
fares given by airlines to travel agents.


3. Singapore Airlines’ case :

3.1 The issue again recently came up before the Delhi High Court in the case of Singapore Airlines and 12 other airlines — CIT vs. Singapore Airlines Ltd. (ITA Nos.306/2005 and 123/2006).

3.2 In this case, a survey was conducted on the airlines. This revealed that supplementary commission was being paid to travel agents. The travel agent, after sale, would send the details every two weeks to an organisation Billing Settlement Plan (‘BSP’), which was an organisation approved by the International Air Transport Association, which would prepare an analysis of the billing and send it to each airline. In this analysis, this amount was shown as supplementary commission. The airlines either accounted for this as supplementary commission or incentives/deals. Some travel agents confirmed that such supplementary commission had not been passed on by them to customers. From April 2002, the procedure was changed and tickets were sold at the net price. The Department started proceedings against the airlines for non-deduction of TDS under Section 194H on such supplementary commission.

3.3 The Commissioner (Appeals) upheld the stand of the Department. The Tribunal however allowed the airline’s appeal, holding that the airline received only the net fare from the agent, that any surplus or deficit from such net fare was the profit or loss of the agent, and since such profit or loss was on account of his own efforts and on his own account, did not emanate from services rendered to the airline.

3.4 Before the Delhi High Court, on behalf of the Department it was argued that:

    i) the relationship between the assessee-airline and the travel agent was that of a principal and agent and not one of principal to principal.

    ii) the supplementary commission retained by the travel agent was not a discount as claimed by the assessee-airline since it was paid for services rendered by the travel agent in the course of buying and selling of tickets;

    iii) the submission of the assessee-airline that they had a dual/hybrid relationship with their agent, that is, insofar as the transaction which involved payment of standard commission was that of agency, while that which involved the retention of supplementary commission by the travel agent, that is, price obtained over and above the net fare, was a result of a principal-to-principal relationship ought to be rejected, for the reason that no evidence whatsoever was placed by the assessee-airline to establish that there was such a dual relationship between the parties. The Standard Format Agreement (as approved by lATA), that is, the Passenger Sales Agency (PSA) Agreement executed by the assessee airline was silent as regards any such dual relationship to which the assessee-airline had adverted to;

v) the main provision of Section 194-H included within its ambit payment by cash, cheque, draft or by any other mode. Thus retention of money by the travel agent was covered by the main provisions of Section 194H. It was not the case of the assessee-air line either before the Assessing Officer or the CIT(A) that the travel agent was required to only remit the net fare to the airlines, and this was not even a condition in the PSA Agreement. The net fare was actually arrived at by deducting from the gross fare, tax, standard commission and supplementary commission. While standard commission was fixed by lATA the supplementary commission was variable, as it was dependent on the policies of the airline vis-a-vis their agents. If net fare was the basis for the entire transaction, then there was no necessity of intervention of BSP to carry out a billing analysis, as then the amount payable by the travel agent to the assessee-airline could easily be calculated by taking into account the product of the number of tickets sold and the net fare; and

vi)     the amount of supplementary commission which had to be paid on each transaction was embedded in the deal code which was known only to the three concerned parties, that is, the assessee-airline, the travel agent and BSP.Since the assessee-airline was the person responsible for payment of supplementary commission to the travel agent, the tax could have been deducted as and when the billing analysis statement was handed over by the BSP to the airline. It was thus contended that the supplemen-tary commission fell within the ambit of the explanation to Section 194H.

3.5 On behalf of the assessee-airlines, it was argued before the Delhi High Court that:

    i) supplementary commission was only a nomenclature which finds mention in the billing analysis statement of BSP.The said supplementary commission denotes a notional figure which is the difference between the published fare less standard IATAcommission (9% or 7%). The net fare is the amount received by the assessee from its travel agents. In other words, the

supplementary commission is not a commission within the meaning of Section 194H;

    ii) supplementary commission can only be brought within the ambit of Section 194H, if it fulfils the following criteria as prescribed under the said provision-

    a. the sum received must be in the nature of income,

    b. such income must denote any payment received or receivable directly or indirectly by the payee from the payer, that is, the assessee, and

    c. the recipient should be a person acting on behalf of that another person, and that, the sum received or receivable whether directly or indirectly should be for services rendered in the course of buying and selling of goods, that is, tickets in the present case.

    iii) the Department had not been able to produce any evidence to show that the difference between the published fare and the net fare (i.e., the fare the assessee received from the travel agents) was realised by the travel agents. The difference as reduced by standard commission and taxes which is referred to as supplementary commission is only a notional figure and this cannot be termed as a commission within the meaning of Section 194H. What the assessee is entitled to receive is only the net fare. There is no right in the assessee-airline to receive the published fare from the travel agent on sale of tickets;

    iv) the notional figure of supplementary commission as appearing in the billing analysis statement of the BSP is neither income nor can it be construed as payment received or receivable, directly or indirectly by the travel agents in its capacity as the agent of the assessee-airline for any services rendered to the assessee-airline. The billing analysis statement of BSP is not a statement of account as contended by the Revenue;

    v) since there was no evidence to suggest that the difference between published fare and the net fare was actually received by the travel agent, there was no obligation on the part of the assessee-airline to deduct tax at source on such notional commission which had not been realised;

    vi) in these circumstances the provisions of Section 194H were unworkable;

    vii) the travel agents had paid tax on the said supplementary commission and hence the Revenue was precluded from raising demands on the assessee-airline.

3.6 Analysing the provisions of Section 194H, the Delhi High Court noted that the provisions of Section 194H would be attracted only if:

    i) there is a principal-agent relationship between the assessee-airline and the travel agent;

    ii) the payments made by assessee-airline to the travel agent, who is a resident is an income by way of commission;

    iii) the income by way of commission should be paid by the assessee-airline to the travel agent for services rendered by the travel agent or for any services in the course of buying or selling of goods;
 
    iv) the income by way of commission may be received or be receivable by the travel agent from the assessee-airline either directly or indirectly; and

    v) lastly, the point in time at ‘which obligation to deduct tax at source of the assessee-airline will arise only when credit of such income by way of commission is made to the account of the travel agent or when payment of income by way of commission is made by way of cash, cheque or draft or by any other mode, whichever is earlier.

3.7 Analysing the terms of the PSA agreement and the manner in which the airlines and travel agents functioned, the Delhi High Court concluded that:

    i) the travel agent acted on behalf of the airline to establish a legal relationship between an airline and a passenger, and was therefore an agent of the airline, which was his principal;

    ii) since it was undisputed that the amount received and retained by the travel agent over and above the net fare would be assessable to tax in his hands as his income, and tax had actually been paid by agents on such income, supplementary commission was ‘income’ within the meaning of Section 194H;

    iii) the supplementary commission is not a discount, on account of the fact that the payment retained by the travel agent is inextricably linked to the sale of the traffic document/ air ticket, and the travel agent does not obtain proprietary rights to the traffic documents/air tickets;

    iv) there are no two transactions, for one of which commission is paid to the agent, and the second of which is between principal to principal, but just one transaction of sale of tickets on behalf of the airline to the passenger;

    v) the amount received by the travel agent over and above the net fare is known to the airline when it receives the billing analysis made by BSP.

The Delhi High Court therefore held that the amount received and retained by the travel agent over and above the net fare was in the nature of commission, liable to deduction of TDS under Section 194H.

4. Observations:
4.1 The conclusions of the Delhi High Court are weighed by one of the facts that the travel agent is an agent of the airline and therefore all and any receipt by him represents commission in his hands, including the difference between the published fare and the net fare.

4.2 The difference between the published fare and the net fare really consists of two components – one component is that of commission as a pre-agreed percentage of the published fare, which is undoubtedly commission covered by the provisions of Section 194H. The other component is the amount not realised by the agent from the client, and therefore not paid to the airline.

4.3 To illustrate, take a situation where the published fare is Rs.50,OOO, the agent’s commission is 7% (Rs.3,500), and the agent sells the ticket to the passenger for Rs.27,500. The agent would collect Rs.27,500 from the passenger and pay Rs.24,OOO to the airline as net fare (ignoring tax), after deducting his commission of Rs.3,500. In this case, the difference between the published fare and the net fare is Rs.26,OOO, consisting of the agent’s commission of Rs.3,500 and the discount passed on to the client of Rs.22,500. This amount of Rs.22,500 is really a discount given by the airline to the passenger through its agent, the travel agent. The travel agent is therefore holding such discount of Rs.22,500 in trust for the passenger, to whom the airline has permitted him to grant such discount.

4.4 With respect to the concerned parties, it was not impressed upon the Delhi High Court that the difference between the published fare and the net fare, in fact was a discount given to the passenger by the airline through the agent and it was the airline alone, ‘which undoubtedly had proprietary rights in the tickets, till such time it was sold to the passengers and the benefit derived by the passenger was a benefit passed on by the airline and not by the agent who received it in trust for the passenger. If the difference is viewed as a discount given to the passenger routed through the agent, as was done by the Bombay High Court, the view taken by the Delhi High Court might have been quite different. As rightly appreciated by the Bombay High Court, the factual position is that the airline has merely granted a permission to the agent to sell the tickets at a lower price, which discount granted through the agent can certainly not be regarded as commission.

4.5 The issue, if any, arises only where in the above example, the travel agent pays to the airline, Rs. 23,000 and not Rs. 24,000 and in the process retains for himself an amount of Rs. 1000. It is this Rs. 1000, whose true nature has to be examined w.r.t. the provisions of s. 194H. This difference so retained may not be a commission within the meaning of Section 194H, unless it is brought within the ambit of Section 194H by proving that the sum received was in the nature of income received or receivable directly or indirectly by the payee from the payer, (that -, IS, the airlines.) and the recipient, (that is, travel agent,) should be a person acting on behalf of that another person, and that, the sum received or reeivable, whether directly or indirectly should be for services rendered in the course of buying and selling of goods, (that is, tickets in the present case). The difference cannot be termed as a commission within the meaning of Section 194H. What the airline is entitled to receive is only the net fare. There is no right in the assessee-airline to receive the published fare from the travel agent on sale of tickets. It cannot be construed as payment received or receivable, directly or indirectly, by the travel agents in its capacity as the agent of the airline for any services rendered to the airline.

4.6 Therefore, the view taken by the Bombay High Court that such discount is not liable to deduction of TDS u/s.194H seems to be the better view of the matter, as compared to the view taken by the Delhi High Court.

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