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TAXABILITY OF ROYALTY AND LICENSE FEE
A Customs law Perspective
ROYALTY AND LICENSE FEE
Royalty is the sum of money paid to the proprietor
('the Licensor') of Intellectual Property (IP) Rights
for the benefits derived, or sought to be derived,
by the user ('the Licensee') through the exercise
of such rights. Royalties may be paid for the use
of copyright, patent, registered design, knowhow,
trademark or a combination of them.
CALCULATION OF ROYALTY
The royalty amount can be:1. One time fixed lump sum payment;
2. Formula based, specified in the license
agreement which defines the royalty rate and the
unit base on which it is to be applied.
Unit base can be value or volume of production of the licensed products.
SECTION 14 OF THE CUSTOMS ACT, 1962 Transaction Value:
the price actually paid or payable for the goods when sold for export to India for delivery at the time and place of importation, or as the case may be, for export from India for delivery at the time and place of exportation.
where the buyer and seller of the goods are not related and
price is the sole consideration for the sale subject to such other conditions as may be
specified in the rules made in this behalf`
CUSTOMS VALUATION (DETERMINATION OF VALUE OF IMPORTED GOODS) RULES,
2007
As per Rule 10(1)(c) of the Valuation Rules ‘07
Royalty is includible in the transaction value if it fulfills
the following conditions:
1. Royalties and license fee is related to the imported goods;
2. The payment of royalty forms condition of the sale of the
goods being valued;
To the extent that such royalties and fees are not included in the price
actually paid or payable is required to be added in the price of the goods.
It is immaterial as to whether the payment for royalty or license fee or technical know-how has been in lump-sum or on regular basis: Matsushita case
Generally, the IPR holder and the Licensor
enter in to a multiple but separate
agreements for various activities. it is always
difficult to establish that royalty payment is
one of the conditions of sale of capital
goods/components/raw material. it is all the
more difficult for the Customs to load value
in absence of an explicit condition in the
agreement.
IPRS: INTANGIBLES: TAXABLE?
Customs Duty mostly is applicable over only tangible goods.
But, when other attributable intangible properties add-up to the value of the tangible goods, then, the issue to those intangible property arises.
WHAT IS TAXABLE? SECTION 12 of the Customs Act, 1962 Dutiable goods. – (1) Except as otherwise provided in this
Act, or any other law for the time being in force, duties of customs shall be levied at such rates as may be specified under the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975)], or any other law for the time being in force, on goods imported into, or exported from, India.
Thus, the issue which arises is that whether IPRs or for that matter other intangible properties qualify to be ‘goods’?
Tata Consultancy Services v. State of Andhra Pradesh
The Hon’ble Supreme Court opined: “the term ‘goods’ includes all types of movable
properties, whether those properties be tangible or
intangible.
In India the test to determine whether a property is
‘goods’ for the purpose of sales tax, is not whether the
property is tangible or intangible or incorporeal. The test
is whether the item concerned is capable of abstraction,
consumption and use and whether it can be transmitted,
transferred, delivered, stored, possessed, etc.
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Sun T.V. Ltd
It was held:
“… ‘goods’ may be tangible property or intangible
one. It would become goods provided it has the
attributes thereof having regard to (a) its utility; (b)
capable of being bought and sold; and (c) capable
of being transmitted, transferred, delivered, stored
and possessed. If the above attributes are satisfied,
the same would be goods”.
Collector of Customs (Prev.), Ahmedabad v. Essar Gujarat Ltd. (1996) 88 E.L.T. 609
The Hon’ble Supreme Court has held:
“technical service charges and payments made for
training cannot be included in the value on which
customs is levied. A new Duty Free Import
Authorisation Scheme has been introduced by the
Government according to which, the inputs
required for export production are exempt from
basic customs duty, additional customs duty,
education cess, etc.”
Reading all these agreements together, it is not possible to uphold the contention of Mr. Salve that the pre-condition of obtaining a licence from Midrex was not a condition of sale, but a clause inserted to protect EGL. Without a licence from Midrex, the plant would be of no use to EGL. That is why this overriding clause was inserted. This overriding clause was clearly a condition of sale. It was essential for EGL to have this licence from Midrex to operate this plant and use Midrex technology for producing sponge iron in India. Therefore, in our view, obtaining a licence from Midrex was a pre-condition of sale.
The entire purpose of Section 14 is to find out the value of the goods which are being imported. The EGL in this case was purchasing a Midrex Reduction Plant in order to produce sponge iron. In order to produce sponge iron, it was essential to have technical know-how from Midrex. It was also essential to have an operating licence from them. Without these, the plant would be of no value. That is why the pre-condition of a process licence of Midrex was placed in the agreement with TIL.
CUSTOMS VALUATION RULES: A SHIFT FROM 1988 RULES TO RULES
‘07
The Customs Valuation Rules ‘07 brings in the 1998 Rules, as it was, only with a explanation as an addition.
The explanation to Rule 10(1)(c) of the CVR ‘07 (Rule 9(1)(c) of the CVR ’88 reads as:
“Explanation.- Where the royalty, licence fee or any other payment for a process, whether patented or otherwise, is includible referred to in clauses (c) and (e), such charges shall be added to the price actually paid or payable for the imported goods, notwithstanding the fact that such goods may be subjected to the said process after importation of such goods.”
CC vs. M/s. J.K. Corporation Limited (2007-TIOL-15-SC-CUS)
the Apex Court held that assessment of customs duty must have a direct nexus with the value of goods which was payable at the time of importation.
If any amount is to be paid after the importation of the goods is complete, inter alia by way of transfer of license or technical know-how for the purpose of setting up of a plant from the machinery imported or running thereof, the same would not be computed for the said purpose
CC vs. Toyota Kirloskar Motor Private Limited (2007-TIOL-94-SC-CUS)
In absence of any direct nexus of the royalty with the imported capital goods, the same cannot be included in the transaction value.
The above two landmark judgements had almost settled the legal position in so far as it relate to payment of royalty/license fee on imported goods. In the above rulings, the Apex Court laid down the basic principal that if the royalty is in relation to any activity done after importation, the same would not be included in the assessable value of imported goods.